FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46  
47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   >>  
stately cathedral, which is, on the one hand, the well-nigh universal mark of all who profess and call themselves Christians, is yet the battle-ground of fierce dispute and bitter disagreement. The present crisis is undoubtedly deepening in our minds the exceeding value of this blessed gift of Christ to His Church. It is deeply suggestive of the spirit of our young officers that a group of old public-school boys, just about to leave for the front, should have begged their late schoolmaster--now a Bishop--to give them a Celebration of Holy Communion in his own private Chapel on their last Sunday in England. What a beautiful send-off! Then, turning to the scene of operations itself, we find a touching witness in the simple record sent by Admiral Sir John Jellicoe to his brother at Southampton. "We spent our Christmas Day waiting for the Germans, who did not appear. But we managed to find time for church and for three celebrations of Holy Communion, although the whole time we were cleared for action and the men were at their guns." Who can contemplate unmoved that spectacle of the men, not gathered in the peaceful security of the House of God, but out upon the ocean, expecting attack, realising the possible nearness of the end, leaving their guns but for the moment, then back again, strengthened for life or death by the sacred Body and Blood. Or take the witness of Rev. E.R. Day, one of our Senior Army Chaplains serving with the Expeditionary Force. While home on a few days' leave he preached at Lichfield Cathedral, and, touching upon the efficacy of prayer, testified how enormously it was valued by our soldiers now serving at the front. The Holy Communion was especially appreciated. On Christmas Day there were no fewer than seven hundred communicants from one regiment and four hundred from another, and the service was held in a ploughed field with a packing-case for an altar. He had conducted these services sometimes in the back-parlour of a public-house, in a stable, in a loft, in a lean-to shed, and in the open; anywhere, in fact, where room could be found. Out on the battlefield there was hardly any need for a compulsory parade service; the men had only to hear that a service was to be held and they would crowd to it. Most of the reasons given by those who stop away from Communion centre in self. "I am not worthy." Of course not, nor is the priest who celebrates, nor is any member of the congregation. W
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46  
47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   >>  



Top keywords:

Communion

 

service

 

touching

 

witness

 

serving

 

public

 
Christmas
 

hundred

 

member

 

preached


Lichfield

 

Cathedral

 
prayer
 

parade

 

celebrates

 

priest

 

valued

 
soldiers
 
enormously
 

congregation


testified

 
efficacy
 

sacred

 
strengthened
 
Chaplains
 

Senior

 

Expeditionary

 

appreciated

 
services
 

conducted


parlour

 

centre

 

stable

 

moment

 

reasons

 

battlefield

 

communicants

 

packing

 

ploughed

 
regiment

worthy

 
compulsory
 

spirit

 

suggestive

 
officers
 

deeply

 

blessed

 

Christ

 
Church
 

school