Strong: The Twentieth Century City, IV.
IV. Are our school facilities, actual or prospective, likely to prove
sufficient for the demands made upon them?
Riis: How the Other Half Lives, XV, XVI.
Wood: Americans in Process, X.
Hunter: Poverty, V.
_The Christian Churches in America stand face to face with a
tremendous task. It is a challenge to their faith, their devotion,
their zeal. The accomplishment of it will mean not only the
ascendancy of Christianity in the homeland, but also the gaining of
a position of vantage for world-wide evangelization._--E. E.
Chivers, D.D.
VIII
THE HOME MISSION OPPORTUNITY
The question of supreme interest to us is the religious question. What
share shall the Church have in making Christian Americans of these
immigrants? How may Church and State work together for the solution of
the problem, on the solution of which very largely the future prosperity
of the State and the Church depends.--_Charles L. Thompson, D.D._
The future success of missions will be largely affected by the success
of the Church in dealing with problems that lie at her very door. The
connection between home and foreign missionary work is living.
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