Practical Bible Training School - Theologue Yearbook (Johnson City, NY)

 - Class of 1934

Page 23 of 108

 

Practical Bible Training School - Theologue Yearbook (Johnson City, NY) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 23 of 108
Page 23 of 108



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Page 23 text:

He Lived For OllJe1'J 19 crowd was now, and where Mr. Mills was leading the singing, and that he sang at that time Blest Be the Tie That Binds. He especially requested that the same song should be sung, which was done tenderly. He put his arms around Mr. Mills and thanked him. The people broke up a little after ten to hasten to their own services. The Davis and Mills mission began with the Hanson Place Church in the evening with a house filled. The large platform, the largest the church has ever had, was filled with singers. Mr. Davis filled his sermon last evening with rich personal ex- periences which showed that he had much of that power which made Gipsy Smith's sermons so effec- tive. Mr. Davis can be wonderfully tender at times and at others he makes the building ring with his voice. It is impossible to compare Mr. Davis with any other evangelist. He discards all formalities in his dead earnestness. So absorbed was the audience that probably few knew that twice he sat down in the chair, and when people thought that they had before them fully a half hour of testimony he so suddenly closed the meeting that they sat quiet a few moments before moving. He declared the service was closed and leaped from the platform all in the same moment. The sermon was on 'Soul-winning,' and was from Daniel 12:3. 'And they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmamentg and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever.' He declared that every man can be a soul-winner, and that he pitied the person that had never won a soul to Christ. The day following the service the letter below was received from Mr. Sankey, and is here used by spe- cial permission. 148 So. Oxford Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Jan. 28, 1908. Messrs. Davis and Mills, Hanson Place M. E. Church, Brooklyn. Dear Brethren: I wish to thank you and your choir with all my heart for singing for me last night. It was very kind of you indeed to remember me, and I hope that we shall sing together some day in the land that is fairer than day. With best wishes for your continued success, and with kindest regards, I am, Fraternally yours, Ira D. Sankey per C.R. During the two years of his stay in Brooklyn, Evangelist Davis was mightily used of God to win hundreds of precious souls and build up the spiritual life in the following churches of the city: the Sumner Avenue Baptist, the Embury Memorial Methodist, the lanes Methodist, the Washington Avenue Baptist, the Hanson Place Baptist and the Simpson Methodist. While he was thus engaged in presenting the Glad Tidings in Brooklyn, he received a call from the pastors of the city of Altoona, Pennsylvania, where thirty evangelical churches were willing to unite in the movement. After some correspondence, Mr. Davis was so impressed with the need and the great opportunity, that he concluded, after much praying, that it was the call of God and decided on the close of the Brooklyn campagn to open the work there. Consequently one Saturday evening late in March, 1908, Mr. Davis arrived in Altoona and as he stepped from the train with some members of the committee, who had gone down the road a few miles to meet him, he was given a most cordial greeting by the 200 or more persons gathered at the station. They sang the hymns, God Will Take Care of You, and Victory Through Christ, under the leadership of singer Mills who had preceded Mr. Davis to the field. No such enthusiasm had ever been evidenced in the city before. The crowd marched through the station, out to the street, where Mr. Davis was in- troduced to the workers, and an open air service was held by a large number of the Christian workers and citizens of the city. A prayer was offered by Mr. Davis and after some remarks and the singing of a number of hymns the very atmosphere seemed charged with the spirit of the revival, and the cam- paign was on! From the opening service it was apparent that there was no building in the city adequate to hold the great crowds. So the committee decided to di- vide the city into three sections, with Davis and Mills in the center, and his co-workers Rev. William H. Pike in the second section, and Rev. Charles H. Har- rington in the third. Even this provision proved inadequate, for all three places of meeting were soon over-crowded. Therefore, the committee considered the advisability of erecting in a central location a tabernacle capable of seating at least 3,000 people. The meeting was held on a Saturday afternoon, and the contract awarded. The following Tuesday morn- ing the erection of the building began. In five days the great tabernacle was completed, the floor laid, the lights installed, the seats arranged, and every- thing was in readiness for the service on Sunday afternoon, at which 3,000 men gathered. Even this huge tabernacle was not sudicient to accommodate the crowds, and hundreds were turned away. During the closing days many would come to the afternoon service, bring their lunch and remain in the building in order to insure their securing a seat for the evening services. So great were the crowds that Evangelist Davis thought it wise to open a campaign on the south-side of the city. This was done and the meetings there were carried on with splendid results. Thomas B. Dilts, the General Secretary of the Y.M.C.A. at Latrobe, Pennsylvania, a city of about 'LWe give thanks to God and the Father of our Lord jesus Christ, praying always for youf' Col. 1:21.

Page 22 text:

18 He Lived For Ollferru pected to see the like and told of the good that had come to their churches. Laughter and tears followed along the enthusiastic wave as men, women and chil- dren continued rapidly telling, in varied form, of the joy that had come into their lives. It was the great- est religious demonstration ever held in this city and fittingly closed the campaign, which has been a chain of most remarkable incidents from the beginning. Davis' and Mills' remarkable meetings have left a deep impression on this city of churches. They hold a campaign in Baltimore May 12-19, 09075 in the centre of the city, a union of the churches, an out- growth of their great work there last December. From Brooklyn, Davis and Mills went to Balti- more, another one of the large cities of the East. It was a united campaign embracing fifteen churches, out in a section of the city near Goucher College, north of the Pennsylvania depot. This campaign was also very successful as indeed was every campaign carried on by them. At the close of these meetings a newspaper account reads as follows: Not since the days when Moody and Sankey so mightily stirred the city of Baltimore has so great an evangelistic cam- paign been held as that recently closed by those con- secrated men, Davis and Mills, who have been hold- ing a series of meetings in North East Baltimore, fifteen churches uniting, representing five different denominations as well as the mission interests of that part of the city. The greatest harmony and a choice sweetness pervaded the whole series, and nothing was said by those tactful, and yet fearless workers, that in the least jarred the fine spirit in the union effort. The resolutions passed, state that much of the harmony was due to the masterful way in which Evangelist john A. Davis looked after the details and held the grasp of every service. The re- markable work in large measure was due to the forc- ible Gospel sermons preached by Mr. Davis, exposi- tory and topical in their make-up, and his broad and liberal attitude which has been likened to that of Spurgeon. Marked evidence of his special ability and training for the special work of an evangelist, were seen in every service and people were turned away night after night while great crowds attended the meetings. F. A. Mills had charge of the great chorus choir, and his masterful ability as a singer and leader soon aroused a spirit of song which stirred the whole section of the city. Night after night people gath- ered in front of the building or congregated on street corners singing the hymns of the meetings, and it was often a familiar sound, to hear above the hum of the on going trolley cars the sweet strains of the familiar hymns sung by those homeward bound. The results of the meetings were great, many were quickened to strong religious interest and many started in the new way of living. Indeed the inter- est became so great and the influence extended over so wide a territory, that the greatness of the work cannot be computed. From Baltimore, Mr. Davis returned to Brooklyn at the request of the up-town churches. lt was on this return visit that he held a union service at the Hanson Place Baptist Church, and from which the choirs and audience marched to the South Oxford Street residence of Ira D. Sankey, the great singer, who was co-laborer with D. L. Moody. Under- neath the window of his room the great chorus gath- ered while hundreds listened to the old familiar hymns he had made famous, and which were carried to him through the opened windows. The choir sang, 'When the Mists Have Rolled Away,' 'There'll Be No Dark Valley,' 'While the Days Are Going By,' 'For You I Am Praying,' and Mr. Mills sang the solo. 'The Ninety and Nine.' It was a time never to be forgotten, as the singers heartily joined, while hundreds from the surrounding dwellings threw open windows to catch the inspiration of the moment, and some of the members of Mr. Sankey's family came with tear-dimmed eyes to look upon the scene. One metropolitan daily reported the incident as follows: One of the most remarkable services ever held in Brooklyn was that yesterday morning at 7:30 at the Hanson Place Baptist Church. It was the oc- casion of a union Easter morning service led by Davis and Mills, who have been holding evangelistic serv- ices in the city for several months. Fully a thousand people, representing many churches, filled the church, galleries and all, and the meeting could scarcely be closed by 9:30. The evangelistic choirs from the Janes Methodist, the Sumner Avenue Baptist, the Embury Memorial Methodist, and the Wasliington Avenue Baptist churches filled the large platform built for the occasion and nearly half the gallery on either side. Most of the songs sung were the familiar ones learned by the audience in the various campaigns in the borough. Mr. Davis gave a soul-stirring talk, and then followed a rapid-hre testimony meeting which has scarcely been equalled anywhere. Often a half dozen were on their feet at once waiting eager- ly their chance to speak. Near the close, Mr. Davis revealed to the audi- ence a plan that he had kept as a surprise, and to- gether a thousand people marched four abreast around to the residence of Ira D. Sankey, the singer now blind, who made song so famous in the Moody campaigns, and there under his window sang his favorite selections. The Rev. Dr. C. D. Case, the Rev. John R. Knox, and Davis and Mills headed the procession. One song that Mr. Sankey espe- cially requested them to sing was, There'll Be No Dark Valley. The people next proceeded to the residence of Dr. Theodore L. Cuyler. who also lives on South Oxford Street, a little below the home of Mr. Sankey, and sang for him. The doctor was on his porch and responded to the song with a short appeal. He said that nearly five years ago Ira D. Sankey sang the last time in public just where the Dip the pen of the tongue in the ink of the heart.



Page 24 text:

20 He Lived For Olherf' 12,000 people, situated some forty miles east of Pittsburgh, was mightily stirred by the reports that came to him from Altoona concerning the great things the Lord was doing for that city, and his heart longed for a similar work for his own home town. After much prayer he and a fellow worker decided to spend a Sunday in Altoona to see if the reports were not exaggerated and if possible to catch some of the fire of the revival. It was toward the close of the Altoona campaign that he and L. A. Stahl visited the meetings, and as they expressed it after- ward, soon learned that the half had not been told them. They at once entered into communication with the evangelists to learn if it were possible to secure their services for a campaign in Latrobe, and upon what terms. After correspondence the way opened, and an invitation was extended to Davis and Mills to conduct a campaign in that city. The meetings were held in the skating rink which was arranged so as to accommodate over 2,000 peo- ple. At the first Sunday afternoon service, the fol- lowing communication was read by General Secretary Thomas B. Dilts: Midnight, Oct. 2, 1908. Altoona, Pa., My dear Brother: At an enormous gathering of people in the Second Presbyterian Church tonight, I was unanimously and enthusiastically authorized to send the following mes- sage: The churches of Altoona send Christian greeting to the churches of Latrobe, bespeaking for our beloved evangelists their warm-hearted, earnest co-operation and prayers, being well assured as we are that divine approbation and blessing will rest in fullest measure upon them in the saving of souls and for this we will ever pray. Henry Howard Stiles, Pastor, Second Presbyterian Church It would be practically impossible to tell all the in- cidents that indicated the power of God as it was manifested in this campaign. Dance Called Off-Merchants 'Failed to Put in Appearance. Under the above head the following article ap- peared in the Latrobe Daily Bulletin, and is here given to indicate the great interest aroused by the workers in the evangelistic campaign. lThere's no use trying to have a dance while this religious revival is going on,' said Prof. R. E. lakes, the dancing teacher, late yesterday afternoon, when he called off the dance which he had announced for last evening in the Doherty Auditorium, and stated that he would discontinue his weekly dances until after the evangelistic campaign comes to an end. This means that there will be no dance in school until early in November at least. Prof. jakes stated that a number of his regular patrons had requested him to discontinue the dances during the revival, and as the attendance had been falling off very noticeably since the evangelistic meetings started, he believed the proper thing to do was to call off his dances. The effort to have a big meeting of the business men of the town for the purpose of rehabilitating the Merchants' Association, proved unavailing last evening, less than a dozen business men having as- sembled at the city hall. Consequently, the meeting had to be called off. The reason for the non-attend- ance of many merchants was to be found in the fact that they were at the evangelistic services at the rink, a number of them being in the choir, and others being in the audience. It is likely that no further effort will be made to hold a big meeting until after the evangelistic campaign has been concluded, in- asmuch as so many of the merchants are actively iden- tified with the religious movement, making them loath to miss any of the services. A prophet is not without honor except in his own country. It is the exception that proves the rule. There proved to be an exception to this rule when Davis and Mills returned to Mr. Davis' home city, Binghamton, to conduct a campaign, in 1907. The story of the inception of the Binghamton campaign is a story of the power of the Holy Spirit's work to bring about the will of God. For two years previously a few godly women.had met at different times to pray for an outpouring of the Spirit of God upon the city of Binghamton. In God's own way the an- swer came. And in a article by Rev. F. O. Belden in Echoes, our Bible School paper, on the prepara- tions for the revival, he says: If I were asked to tell when preparations began for the great spiritual awakening, known to us as the Davis and Mills meetings, I should answer, 'God foreordained it before the foundation of the world.' He began to reveal it to some in the city, however, several months ago. While it was not known who would 'command the battle,' yet there were groups of praying men and women that were laying hold of God's great promises and believing that the time of refreshing from the hand of the Lord was near and He was about to 'pour water upon him that was thirsty and floods upon the dry ground.' The way the three churches, the West Pres- byterian, the Tabernacle Methodist and Main Street Baptist came to unite in this work is of special inter- est. In fact, to those to whom Christ committed the work it is sacred, because of the manifest leading, as we believe, of the Holy Spirit. Last spring two of the pastors were together attending a commence- ment at Colgate Univeristy. While they were talk- ing over their work and plans for the fall, to their great surprise it was found that the same desire and The way of the cross is the way to the crown.

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