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The Presbyterian Church
It Emphasizes The Bible As Fundamental In
Education.-A Zealous Missionary Organization.-As
Catholic In Spirit As The Gospel.
"Walk about Zion, tell the towers thereof; mark ye well her bulwarks, that ye
may tell it to the generation following." David
The
Presbyterian Church has always stood for
Religion and Education-Religion as the basis
of true education, and Education as the
promoter of positive practical religion.
Christian Leaders
The Presbyterian Church wishes to see the
young people of every generation provided
with the best means for their intellectual
and spiritual progress. It wishes to see
them prepared, not merely for active and
successful participation in the onward work
of the world, but also in full and hearty
sympathy with the great work of Christ and
his people, for the spiritual salvation of
the nations. It knows there is no good
reason, why a stirring leader of men should
not be a Christian; nor why a Christian
should not be eminently successful, in
taking his place among men as a forceful
factor in the life of the world.
The Presbyterian Church believes in the
system of state schools from the primary,
public and high schools, to the University.
These schools provide for general education.
Millions of children would never be in
school, were it not for these state
provisions and for compulsory public
education. These schools are however not all
perfect, since they do not provide for moral
and religious training, the great underlying
principles of reverence and righteousness,
that must enter into every life in order to
fit it for the performance of Christian and
patriotic duty.
The Presbyterian Church takes a patriotic
interest in our whole public school system,
and believes that all the children should be
trained in those that are under public
direction, so that all the children and
youth of the nation shall be a united,
intelligent and patriotic body, fitted for
good citizenship.
At the same time it believes in special
Church institutions of higher learning that
shall be adapted to train our young people
for intelligent leadership in the Church,
and enable them to become doubly useful in
the home, social circle and in public life.
Our Christian academies and colleges are
valuable institutions. These furnish to the
Church and the world the greatest number of
ministers, missionaries, college presidents
and Christian statesmen. Parents everywhere,
find these Christian institutions furnish
the best advantages, and that they are the
safest and most economical. No institutions
furnish higher or more profitable culture.
They combine all that is best in real
culture and education of the intelligent
faculties, with a true religious conception
of life; so that all who yield to their best
influences go forth from them pure-hearted,
stronger and better prepared to engage in
life's duties successfully; for they take
with them the personal assurance of the
gracious presence and abiding blessing of
our Father in Heaven.
In a Christian educational institution, the
spirit of the instructor is one that regards
the student, as of more value than the
subject taught. Its aim including the
Christian college is not research, the work
of a university, but to make men. The
ordinary branches that are taught are
regarded as instrumentalities, for making a
well trained man of the student.
The key to success in the battle of life is
found in the struggle, which insures control
of one's self. This is the secret of a good
education. In an important sense, all
education must be self-education. Professor
Huxley gave good emphasis to this thought
when he wrote: "Perhaps the most valuable
result of all education, is the ability to
make yourself do the thing you have to do,
when it ought to be done, whether you like
it or not; it is the first lesson which
ought to be learned, and, however early a
man's training begins, it is probably the
last lesson he learns thoroughly." An
eminent educator used to say to his class:
"He, who will become a scholar, must learn
to command his faculties."
The Presbyterian Church honors God and
exalts him to the throne of absolute
supremacy over all his creatures. It honors
Him by using the instrumentalities he has
appointed. It receives the Bible, as the
very word of God, and adopts it as the only
rule of faith and practice.
The Presbyterian Church from the beginning
has been a zealous missionary organization.
At the meeting of the First General Assembly
arrangements were made to send the gospel to
"the regions beyond,"-the frontiers and the
various tribes of American Indians. The
agencies, then organized as committees, have
become the great Boards of Home and Foreign
Missions, that now receive and distribute,
each, more than a million dollars annually.
A Zealous Missionary
Organization
It is gratifying to know that the colored
people, although emotional and
demonstrative, have nevertheless an
intelligent appreciation of the views and
methods of the Presbyterian Church.
A prominent minister of a southern Church is
quoted as having said: "The Presbyterian
Church can do for the colored people of the
south what no other Church can do."
Fable of Persian Tent
There is a Persian fable that tells of a
young prince who brought to his father a
nutshell, which, when opened with a spring,
contained a little tent of such ingenious
construction, that when spread in the
nursery the children could play under its
folds; when opened in the council chamber
the King and his counselors could sit
beneath its canopy; when placed in the court
yard the family and all the servants could
gather under its shade; when pitched upon
the plain, where the soldiers were encamped,
the entire army could gather within its
enclosure. It possessed the qualities of
boundless adaptability and expansiveness.
This little tent is a good symbol of our
Presbyterian system. It is all contained
within the nutshell of the Gospel. Open it
in the nursery, and beneath its folds
parents and children sit with delight;
spread it in the court yard, and beneath its
shadow the whole household assembles for
morning and evening worship; open it in the
village and it becomes a Church, under whose
canopy the whole town may worship. Open it
upon the plain, and a great sacramental army
gathers under it. Send it to the heathen
world, and it becomes a great pavilion, that
fills and covers the earth.
The Presbyterian Church
is as Catholic as the Gospel in its spirit
of brotherly love, and readiness to
co-operate with all who love our Lord Jesus
Christ. It recognizes the ordination of the
Episcopalian and the baptism of the Baptist.
It joins cordially with those who would
place the crown upon the brow of Jesus by
singing only the Psalms of David, and
responds with an approving echo to the
hearty "Amen" of the Methodists. It is
capable of an expansion, that will include
all shades of our common humanity, and is
working valiantly to usher in the day, when
the prayer of our Lord Jesus shall be
fulfilled: "That they may be one; as Thou,
Father art in me, and I in Thee, that they
also may be one in us; that the world may
believe that Thou hast sent me."
"The Presbyterian Church stands," says Rev.
W. H. Roberts, D. D., "as it has stood
during its entire history, for the
unconditional sovereignty of God, for the
Bible as the only infallible rule of faith
and life, for simplicity of worship,
representative government, a high standard
of Christian living, liberty of conscience,
popular education, missionary activity and
true Christian Catholicity."
President Benjamin Harrison said of it: "The
Presbyterian Church has been steadfast for
liberty, and it has kept steadfast for
education. It has stood as stiff as a steel
beam for the faith delivered to our fathers,
and it still stands with steadfastness for
that essential doctrine-the inspired Word.
It is not an illiberal Church. There is no
body of Christians in the world that opens
its arms wider to all who love the Master.
Though it has made no boast or shout, it has
yet been an aggressive missionary Church
from the beginning."
Lincoln University
Lincoln University in Chester county,
Pennsylvania, was established in 1854 under
the leadership of Rev. John M. Dickey, D.
D., pastor of the Presbyterian Church of
Oxford, for the classical and theological
education of negroes. The extent and
thoroughness of the courses of instruction
at this institution have been amply
justified by the success of its graduates;
many in the ministry, and others, in
founding similar institutions of a high
grade in the south, as at Columbia, S. C.,
Salisbury, N. C., Holly Springs, Miss., and
a number of other places. Its aim is to
furnish trained professional leaders, and it
is accomplishing this object in splendid
form. Established before the Freedmen's
Board, it has continued to be maintained
without its aid.
Choctaw Freedmen
This site
includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place. These
items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
implied .
Choctaw Freedmen and Oak Hill Industrial
Academy, 1914, Robert Elliott Flickinger
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