Africo-American Presbyterian “AND YE SHALL KNOW THE TRU^TH, AND THE TRUTH SHALL MAKE YOU FREE.”-John viii:82. VOL. LIX. CHARLOTTE, N. C., THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 15, 1938. TKE LADDER BUILDERS I>y The Kev. Samuel W. Purvis, D.I). (A sermon reprinted from The Phil adelphia Evening Bulletin) Text: Behold a ladder ^set up on the earth, and the top of it reached to heaven. Genesis 28:12. Hereafter ye shall see heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man. John 1:51. strange to say, some objects familiar to us are not mention ed in the Bible. For instance, bridges are not mentioned at all, and a ladder but once—and that here. Yet a'bridge and a ladder are not unlike in their frequent needfulness, forming as they do a means of commu nication between two places not otherwise connected. A ladder, like a bridge, is a means to an end. It helps us ascend where we could not by our own height or reach. It joins where we are, with where we would be. The story connected with this laddm- vision is, like all Bible stories, full of intense human interest. Jacob, the son of Isaac, has robbed his brother Esau of a spiritual heritage. Isaac said to Esau, “Thy brother came with subtlety and hath taken thy blessing.’’ From that hour Esau watches his chance for revenge. Under the scourge of fear Jacob flees. We read, “And Jacob went out.” The same words were written of Cain, “And Cain went out from the presence of the Lord.” What a lash sin has! It drives out! Judas “went out” and hanged himself. Peter “went out” into the darkness weeping bitterly. So Jacob “went out” from his home in Beersheba on a perilous journey of 460 miles toward Pandanaram. There will be hard going, scanty fare, bad weather, exposure to mur- dero'ic! mpri ^wild ; plenty enough to remind this prodigal that there’s no place like home. But there is a worse thing than all these: A secret whisper at each (step, “It need not have been.” The day is far spent. The night’s coming on. Night’s the time for heartache. There are more tears shed at night than in day.^ Jacob had traveled 48 miles since daybreak. Fast go ing! Fear drives like Jehu. The runaway boy has come to his first night from home. The darkness in his heart is deep er than the shadows of night. He lies down to rest. The sky for a roof, sand for a mattress, stones for a pillow. It is easy to sill—it is not easy to lie on sin’s pillow. “The way of the trans gressor is hard.” Sin says, “You made your bed—lie in it!” There’s no softness in sand, and rocky pillows are not feath ery. Jacob lies down to sleep. Soon the hoot of an owl in a tree, the cry of a jackal in the desert, the howl of a lone wolf on the moor, lull him to sleep. In that cloudless Syrian sky Heaven quickly lights her eve ning lamps. Jacob’s spirit is now in the hands of God. Man’s helplessness is God’s opportu nity. “And he dreamed.” The barren mountain side becomes jasper. Its rocky tiers become gold. He’s at Heaven’s front door. A ladder set on earth is reaching to Heaven Angels are descending and ascending. At the top is God, “Tarn with thee and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest.” What! God the God of Jacob, the sin ner? True! God often speaks, not to the man that is, but to the man that is to be. We sometimes think God is far oiT when He is only a ladder length away! The Labor of Ladder-Climbing Climbing ‘ is hard work, but it is worth it—if you are going up! In these days of air-minded ness we give much thought to flying machines, and not much to ladders. We talk in terms of wings and motors when oft en faithful climbing is far more to the purpose. Autos and air planes suggest speed—a lad der slow, painful progress. You do not fly up a ladder, but climb, step by step—only that each rung brings you one round nearer the top. It is tiresome work. Every muscle is called into play. Hands must grasp the side, feet must be - securely planted, legs must bear the weight of the body, the - head must maintain its steadiness. It is no place for pranks. Fool ishness may cause a fall. And there’s a tragedy! Once you start to climb, one misstep, one loose grasp, and you fall, possibly not to rise again. The higher one ascends the more caution is necessary—and that’s true to life! At first- rungs a fall may not be serious —a bump or bruise. But from the heights falls are nearly al ways fatal. We must set the ladder of our life plans on the earth, well based on our work-a-day world. Then uprising desires, like shining angels, will climb the mystic staircase. What is a staircase but a covered ladder. We do not begin our career as radiant angels, but as fallen mortals. We are all alike in this: The holiest saints began as sinners. To go up a ladder one begins at the bottom. He puts his foot on the lowest round. And that must be the beginning in earth’s tasks, too. Whether with a music book or a reading primer. I say books, because books are ladders to the heights of literature and learning. We have to climb to reach all earthly heights; do we not speak of “the ladder of fame” and “the ladder of suc cess?” And what if we do not reach those heights here? At the grave of a mountain guide Alp^^.a-iiuKihie --grave- ■ stone simply says, “He died climbing.” Fine! And, at last, is not death itself an ascent— an achievement? The Ladder Builders I cannot help thinking of the forces that lift men up—the ways and means of our rising in the world. The top limb of a tree is highest, but it did not lift itself up there! Can we count the number of forces or persons whose com bined eiforts resulted in so commonplace a thing as the making and placing of a loaf of bread on our breakfast table? When you and I came upon the scene of life the alphabet was formed, figures fashioned, mul tiplication table composed When we came forests had been leveled, rivers bridged, mountains tunneled; not only were these rocks and rills, these woods and templed hills, that we sing about, made ac cessible by rail and road, but their liberties and ■ laws were secured at Valley Forge and Gettysburg. The bottom of these ladders are placed not only at Arlington Heights, but on many another known and unknown patriot’s grave. Our churches were built, our hymns composed, our creeds inscribed in the blood of mar tyrs. Who were these ancient ladder-builders for the race which now is, was, and is to come? Many of us are ladder folks —others are rising on our shoulders. Humble parents toil that their children may go to school. As the life of the window cleaner may depend on the helper beneath holding faithfully, so the future of many a professional man has been maintained by the faith fulness of some humble one at home. Life’s Longest Ladder “And he dreamed, and be hold a ladder.” It couldn’t be stated more truly or more beautifully! Every road in the Roman Empire led to Rome. Any Roman lad could step out his door and strike the highway with certainty of reaching the palace of Caesar. Any sun beam, followed to the end, leads to its effulgent source. The foot of the ladder on the spot on which yoir’ stand can lead straight to heaven and God. You do not have to go to Jerusalem, Rome or Mecca to find the first round of it. Try this just now. Close your eyes to concentrate your thoughts. Now lift that thought to God. Straight as the sunbeam’s tracks, swifter than its flight, you are in the Divine presence. God has a telephone receiver and sender in the heart of ev eryone. How like the angels going back and forth are our thoughts and His! Jacob’s ladder represented communication between earth and heaven. The lalkier must, of course, touch earth or no mortal could rise to it; it must touch heaven or no angel can descend upon it. Ho'^ever high heaven may be, the ladder of prayer reaches it. It is not like the Tower of Babel, a human construction, and so failing of heaven’s heights. God’s ladder reaches! No matter the depth of human guilt, it is not too low for the Saviour’s reach. The Carpenter of Nazareth con structed a saving .a4der—that ladder was a sacrificial Cross. The crowning factor in the vision of Jacob’s ladder is stat ed in the words, “The Lord stood above it.” God at the top. Man at the bottom! “In the gusty hall of life. Doors slamming, windows rat tling, I stand in the dark on the low est stair Looking up, and affirming God; He is surely there.” Angels “ascending and de scending.” Isn’t .the order somehow reversed? Shouldn’t they have descended before they could ascend? Who and what are these angels, anyhow? I wonder if thfey might not be the angels of our better na tures,. our higher as^rafions— repentance, hiamfl!l‘^”‘fait1lr prayer—all starting at the foot of the ladder and going upward ? ^ And the gifts of par don, healing, assurance, grace, comfort, strength—be angels coming down the ladder from heaven? The angels of Jacob’s prayer were rising, and the answers were returning —“I am with thee, and will keep thee in all the places thou goest.” Make sure your life’s ladder reaches! Remember the old- time illustration ?— Said a younger man to his college pro fessor, “When I finish school I have brilliant prospects before me: I ought to become rich and famous.” “And then?” “I shall marry and travel much.” “And then?” “I shall settle down and enjoy life.” “And then?” “I shall grow old and take things easy.” “And then?” “Oh, I suppose like other peo ple, I must die.” “And then?” He stopped before that last “and then.” His ladder did not reach to heaven. In every place where there is a lonely life there is a ladder, especially for the sin-weary and the prodigal who is an ex ile from his Father’s house. Prayer is life’s longest ladder. Have one end on earth—the other in heaven. When both ends are on earth, it is only a step-ladder, you have to come down without reaching heav en’s heights. If the earth’s end rests on prayer it doesn’t matter where it is placed. It may be in the field where Isaac went to meditate at even-tide, or in the lion’s den where Dan iel was thrown, or by the Brook Jabbock where Jacob wrestled, or in the prison where Joseph served, or in the jail where Paul and Silas prayed at mid night. Some, like the early martyrs, make ladders out of their crosses. Jesus, the Son of God, is the staircase by which we bridge the distance between earth and heaven. He said: “Hereafter ye shall see heaven open, and angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man.” Christ is the ladder of our salvation. The foot of the ladder is at the foot of the Cross—its summit is at the throne of God. THESE COLLEGE GRADUATES OF OURS By DR. KELLY MILLER The August number of the Crisis is its annual educational issue which is devoted to the American Negroes in College 1937-38, and 3,079 graduates with collegiate and professional degrees are listed. This im posing list of graduates fairly suggests interesting indications and gives rise to serious re flections. I. The Rapid Rise in the Num ber of Negro College Graduates The rapid rise in the number of Negroes with Academic De grees is noticeable and highly significant during the past few decades. To an observer like me who has witnessed the curve of Negro college graduates rise almost from the zero point to its present high registry and which is still on its sharp up ward trend, these figures are peculiarly significant. Does this intellectual enrichment of the race connote corresponding in crease in power and social effi ciency of an educated leader ship? This query must be pondered seriously. II. Co-eds The increase in the female contingent is the most surpris ing. While the Crisis does not furnish exact statistics of the proportion of the sexes, yet we know from collateral informa tion that the co-eds constitute a large majority of the 24,000 Negro college students and of the 3,000 graduates. Fifty years ago a colored woman col lege graduate was regarded like “The Female Novelist” of Gilbert and Sullivan’s Mikado, as a “peculiar anomaly.” The first colored woman to gradu ate from the college of How ard University was my class- ^^TTSf^Josepfilrre T. Washr ma ington, who is now retired as Dean of Women of Wilberforce University. For a number of years thereafter such gradu ates were like angels’ visits, few and far between, but to day the womeh constitute 1,- 121 against 1,119 men in How ard’s total enrollment. If we subtract the students prepar ing for such masculine profes sions as physicians, dentists, druggists, pi'eachers, lawyers, engineers and architects, the female preponderance would be still more glaring. I It is also noticeable in Howard University, that the female students usually carry away the scholarship honors. The Crisis carries the photo graphs of twenty-one female and nine male graduates. It is presumed that the editor of the Crisis selected the list with ref erence to scholarship standing and was not influenced by pul chritude. The higher educa tion of the Negro has already become feminized. III. Negroes in Northern Colleges The number of graduates from white colleges cannot fail to excite attention, in which there were 2,625 students and 192 graduates. New York Uni versity had 494 students, Ohio State 451, Wayne 431, Univer sity of Kansas 192, University of Indiana 168, Hunter College 150, University of Illinois 112. Negroes in Northern colleges are more numerous than our entire collegiate enrollment two decades ago. Negro students are admitted practically to ev ery college and university in the United States outside of the proscriptive region of the Master of Science. No Negro university is yet equipped to confer creditably the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. There were nine Negro graduates with the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, all of which were conferred by Northern Univer sities. There were 211 Masters of Arts and Science degrees of which 98 were conferred by white institutions, 45, by How ard, 42 by Atlanta, 18* by Fisk, 4 by Hampton, 4 by Virginia State. Neither Howard nor Atlanta has a complete graduate setup but limit their curricula to the Master of Arts and Master of Science, the first graduate de gree, which contemplates one year of advanced study beyond the Baccalaureate. This grad uate work is designed primari ly to give the student addition al insight and grasp upon his college courses so that he may more effectively teach in sec ondary schools. It will be some years, perhaps fully a genera tion, before they can acquire the requisite, equipment, staff, and student body to justify the higher graduate degree. I find that these reflections on our college graduates ■nr^e so engaging that I shall have to continue them in my next re lease. ECHOES FROM THE AT LANTIC SYNODICAL SUM MER CONFERENCE By Rev. H. M. Scott South. This increase of Negro tinned for the “The song is ended, but the music lingers on.” To all those who attended the Atlantic Syn odical Summer Conference at Irmo, S. C., Aug. 6-12, 1938, ■fhbfee "'Wards ■rrtightM)^®‘fey^ ap plied. It was really a great Conference. It was with great interest that we noted car after car drive on the beautiful, rolling campus of Harbison Institute, Aug. 6, loaded with happy del egates, coming to attend the Conference. Dr. and Mrs. Porter were, with their co workers, all ready to receive the delegation. Rooms were waiting for the delegates to oc cupy them; the pantry was stocked with supplies for the appetite, and class rooms and chapel arranged for the smooth running of the daily program. The stage is now set, and the curtains rise! Now, who was there? You ought to have been there and “seed fur yu’ sef.” They came from parts of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. There was a delega tion of five all the way from Key West, Fla.—over 900 miles. Some one said that it was quite a contrast to the number who came from a distance of 25 miles. Again, some one said that it was a surprise that more within a radius of 26 miles did not attend. Nuf said. It might be of interest to note that Knox Presbytery had 23 delegates registered at the Con ference. Now did some say that Fairfield and McClelland had less than 23 combined? NO. We are mentioning only a few of the activities at the Con ference. We wish to congrat ulate the Student Council for the very fine way in which the daily activities in the dining room were handled. The Chair man of the Council will be con- NO. 37. The leaders who had charge of the evening programs brought to the Conference mes sages long to be remembered. At the close ^of the day, in the glow of the ’evening sunset, it was Dr. Cotton, of Henderson, N. C., who held the Conference spellbound with his inspiring messages at Vesper hour. Oth ers who gave the Conference messages fraught with power, inspiration, and information, were Rev. F. Gregg, Chairman of the Board of Directors; Rev. O. M. McAdams, of St. Peters burg, Fla.; Dr. De Barritt, of Key West, Fla.; Dr. A. C. Griggs, of Augusta, Ga., and Rev. J. H. Toatley, of Chester field, S. C., who gave us the fine sermon at the Sunday morning worship hour. In the midst of all the joy and happiness at the Confer ence, there were some very solemn moments. The Dean re grets that he will not have the opportunity to “introduce” or “present” a certain outstanding person as “Director” at the next Conference. The Confer ence will not soon forget the touching moments when, out of its appreciation and grati tude for services rendered by its former Director, Dr. A. B. McCoy, it presented to him a token of appreciation. We wish to thank Mrs. C. McC. Jamison, the daughter of the former Director, who so grace fully accepted the token on be half of him. “The song is end ed, but the music lingers on.” The Conference goes forward with its new Director, Rev. A. H. Prince, of Charlotte, N.C., and the Associate Director, Rev. C. H. Richmond, of Sa vannah, Ga. The curtains have fallen to rise again in Key West, Fla., August, 1939. All aboard for Key West, 200 strong! Box 24, Ocala, Fla. WORLD COUNCIL FAVOR WINS -ih- Twelve Communions in the ' United States have already formally approved, at least in principle, the constitution of the proposed World Council of Churches^ drafted at Utrecht, Holland, in May. They are the following: Presbyterian Church in the United States of Ameri ca, Presbyterian Church in the United States, Congregational- Christian, Northern Baptist, United Lutheran, Evangelical Lutheran Augustana Synod, Evangelical and Reformed, Re formed Church in America, United Presbyterian, Protestant Episcopal, Disciples of Christ and Methodist Episcopal. The next meetings of the American Sections of the Faith and Order and the Life and Work Movements, which are the basic bodies caring for plans for the World Councff, are to be held in New York City September 28. FOR FULL-GROWN CHURCHES next Conference, with her associates, we hope. The Blues and Reds waged a bitter battle, with the Blues coming out victorious in a close ly fought contest. To the re gret of the Reds, Miss James, i of Camden, suffered bodily in- How Churches can be devel oped on the foreign field which will be truly independent of the home Church and self-support ing is one of the chief prob lems to be faced by the World Conference at Madras, India, in December. At least half of the 450 delegates will repre sent the new Churches which foreign missions have develop ed during the past century. At the last previous world mission ary conference, held in Jerusa lem in 1928, less than a fourth of the delegates were from the Churches on the foreign field. FAMED S. C. LAWYER DIES students in Northern colleges and universities carries its own suggestion and significance. The Crisis does not list any professional degrees granted by Northern Universities. This seems to be an oversight and somewhat vitiates the ap-, • , , ... • , . praisement of the effectiveness her spirit remained in of Negro and Northern Colleges. IV. Graduate Courses Howard, Fisk and Atlanta op erate graduate schools leading only to the first graduate de gree of Master of Arts and the game. My co-worker and Dean of the Catawba Summer Conference, Rev. R. L. Jeans, injected a real spirit into the veins of the Reds. Shall we forget the parson’s sermon in the dining room? Columbia, S. C.—Sept. 9— Funeral services for N. J. Fred erick, a director of the Nation al Association for the Advance ment of Colored People, and a well-known lawyer, were held here today at 4 P. M. in the Wesley M. E. church. Mr. Frederick was 61. His most famous case involved his defense of the Loman family, whose horrible lynching at Aik en, S. C., by a white mob aroused the entire nation in October, 1926.