l‘l M I N IS 'I‘ RATION 0 1“ ANGELS. f f‘ter angels have their tasks assigned. If men ’...
Transcript of l‘l M I N IS 'I‘ RATION 0 1“ ANGELS. f f‘ter angels have their tasks assigned. If men ’...
T l l l‘l M I N IS'
I‘
RATION 0 1“ ANGELS . f
f‘
ter angels have their tasks a ssigned . I f men’
tand not the o ffices o f angels‘
now ,they&will
,
Men . Angels shall erect tbe ~throne &~ angels0
ds shall escort the &udge & angels shall reap,
the earth angels shall bring the harvest home & angels
d jthe ungodly for the burning & angels shall
the recorded guilt & angels recal the forgo tten,
sins angels shall at t end the last great jubilee
throng the pavilion of undyn praise. O ,&th
be much ,
‘
it w ill be well & nigh every thing , t o have&“
n angel’s holiness on earth &It w ill be wel lf
who have sought to do for Christ
has hidden,and who have
and perfect , even as that for w
t to pray , nay which they teach themse
as they bow the knee , and say,
“ Thy
earth,as it is in heaven .
&
firinl tb lag 33mm . Qat lirr, (f ornmarhrt , cam .
THE & A ITING ISLES .
S E R M O N
PR EACHE& A T THE
j arrinrll Sabin&
M ISSION TO THE SAN && ICH ISLAN&S,
IN & ESTM IN STER ABBE&,
&&L& 23, 1 8 62 .
B& THE R IGHT R EV.
THE BISHOP O& HONOL&L& .
LON &ON
BIVIN GTON S, WATERLOO PLACE .
1 8 62 .
S E R M O N ,
(S‘
C .
ISA I AH xlu . 4.
The isles shall wait for His law .
B& that “ Law for which in the vision of the
prophet the isles were t o wait must be underst ood
the revelat ion of love and mercy set forth t o the
world in the incarnat ion,suff erings
,death
,and
exaltat ion of the & ivine Redeemer,carried on in
it s progress t owards complet ion , and rendered etfec
t ual t o the individual soul,by the Holy Spirit in
the Church . I t implies a t once the inward spiritual
agency described by our Lord as a “ kingdom
within us,
& and what must ever be it s outward ex
pression and embodiment,—the kingdom of Christ
visible here on earth,His Myst ical Body
,the
blessed company of all faithful people, His Holy
Catholic Church .
This is that new dispensat ion for which the
Apost le Paul declared to the Romans “the whole
creat ion was groaning and travailing in pain to
A 2
4 THE WAITING ISLES.
ge ther . In all her supernatural aids , through all
her sacrament al gifts, the virtue of the great Mys
t ery of the Incarnat ion is seen &owing int o hu
mani ty,raising what was before base and defiled to
become again sanct ified and fit for the Mas ter’s
use,worthy of Him who creat ed it . So that in
wai t ing for His Law the i sles,that is
,the whole
Gent ile world,were in very t ruth “ wait ing for the
adopt ion ,&to wit
,th e “ redempt ion of the body .
And often has this wait ing been illustrated in
the his tory of the Church generally, and of our ownin part icular. The known readiness of K ing E thel
bert t o hear the Gospel,no less than the sigh t of
the Saxon boys in the market & place a t Rome,seems
t o have moved Gregory the Great in sending A u
gust ine over t o evangelize the kingdom of K ent .
In that of Northumbria, t oo, was there not an
eviden t wait ing for the Gospel message, when before the arrival of Paulinus the Angles there rose
up and d es troyed t heir exist ing idols , their high
priest himself t aking the lead, and assert ing his
belief that “the wooden images hithert o worshipped
were no gods a t all,
& for that “there was only one
Supreme Being dwelling in the heavens &&
The whole his tory of that far & distant group of
island s with which we are concerned is an exempli
ficat ion of the predict ion,
“ The i sles shall wait for
His law .
&
After their discovery by Cook in 1 778 sailors
and traders seem frequent ly to have t ouched a t
THE & AITING ISLES . 5
their shores . These men,chie&y English or Ame
ricans,themselves of licent ious and abandoned
habit s,coming int o cont ac t with a highly sen
sualized people, no doubt diffused among them a
fearful amount of vice . A t the same t ime such an
in tercourse could not be carried on w i thout the
nat ives growing in civilizat ion and enlight enment .
Two men,&ohn &oung and Isaac & avies
,the for
mer a Liverpool shipwright , fell into the hands of
the chief of Hawaii—one who had an int ense wisht o raise his people t o the level of those st rangers
who,he saw
,were so far beyond himself in the
power which superior knowledge always gives . They
t ook up their permanent abode wi th him,and be
came his chief advisers . & issat isfact ion ere longsprung up in the m ind of K amehameha, —for thatwas the name of the chieftain,—w ith the then exist
ing religious sys t em ,and when Vancouver
,after
repeat ed visi t s t o the islands during several years ,finally t ook leave of them in 1 794, he begged th e
cap tain t o procure t eachers from England t o in
s truct his people in the faith of Chris t . That um
happily was not a missionary age . I t was a t ime
of unreality and spiritual deadness in the Church
of England &“the love of many had waxed cold &
and it is not therefore t o be wondered at,though
sadly t o be regret ted, that such an opportunity was
lost . Had it been seized,how diff erent from the
actual one migh t have been the religious history of
the various archipelagoes of the Pacific & Inst eadA 3
6 THE WAITING ISLES .
of owing whatever of Christ ianity they do possess
to communions we believe,t o say the leas t
,far less
likely than our own t o deal successfully w ith the
nat ive character,they migh t have been among the
most glorious t rophies of our Church’s conques t s
,
and from th is group as a centre migh t have pene
tra t ed into many a dark corner of that ocean—andeven among the Indians of Vancouver’s Island and
Brit ish Columbia—the rays of the blessed Gospelof the Son ofGod & The request was renewed again
when another English cap tain visited the islands in
the years 1 804—1 806 He describes the s tat e of
civilizat ion which even then this old chief and his
people were fast at taining,and the openings presented
for the introduct ion of Christ ianity among them .
That blessed g ift was not to be obt ained, however,from this country . Aft er the death ofK amehameha,st ill in a st at e of heathenism and unbapt ized, we find
his successor Rihoriho i ssued an edict abolishing
idolat ry arid the old religion . This met with some
opposit ion & a bat t le was fought , but victory proved
on the side of the reforming party . And i t was
when the way had been thus remarkably prepared
that some Congregat ionalist Missionaries visit ed
them from th e &n ited States of America. They
were not permit ted t o land t ill the king had assured
himself by consultat ion with Mr . &oung that they
would speak of the same God and Saviour as the
English missionaries , whom they had been in vain
Captain Turnbull .
THE WAITIN G ISLES . 7
expect ing for the quart er of a century,which had
then elapsed since the pet i t ion made t o Vancouver .
Christ ianity under this form made rapid progress
among the people . R ihoriho and his queen came
over to England in the year 1 8 23 , and, it will be
remembered,died in London . The account s of his
visit ment ion how the royal party at t ended the ser
vices of Westminst er Abbey,
“ with which they
were much pleased . The music aff ect ed them a
good deal, and they were impressed with venerat ion
for the place Was it not this which prompt ed the
t ouching applicat ion he is s t at ed t o have made t o
K ing George the &ourth before his death ,“ I have
t o ask your Majesty t o send missionaries to t each
my people the Prot est ant religion as t aught in the
Church of England && He probably longed t o
t ransplant in h is own count ry some reproduct ion ,however inadequat e it migh t be
,of the solemn and
beaut iful worship he had at t ended & ithin these
venerable walls .
May we not regard the series of applicat ions
which have reached our Church from these island s
during seventy y ears or more , as a significant com
ment ary on the prophet ’s words,
“ The isles shall
wait for Thy law
And now in more recent t imes , when the group
has assumed an import ance it had not before,when
the development of it s product ions w ith various
2 Hulbert ’s R oyal Biography, Memoirs of the Kings Kamehameha I . and II .
8 THE WAITING ISLES .
forms of t rade has collected in Honolulu a foreign
population,when a sys tem of nat ional educat ion
has brough t the Hawaiian in to a comparat ively
advanced s tate of civilizat ion , when , t oo, Chris
t ian ity, in the form of Congregat ionalism or the
Roman Church,has become nominally the religion
of the islands,the cry for help has again reached
our shores , and this t ime h as not been heard in
vain .
The circumstances of the origin of the mission
are too well known to need any de tail of them on
the present occasion . Nor need I remind you of
several features in the work i t self no t w i thout in
t erest to th e Church generally & how that we have
here the firs t ins tance of our Reformed Church
being invi ted by an independent sovereign t o plan t
i t self in his dominions &how,too
,by the format ion
of this new diocese the only link is supplied which
was want ing t o make the girdle of her in&uence
encircle t he globe . By that of Melanesia in th e
South,and that of Honolulu in the North Pacific
,
the space be tween Bishop Selwyn’s province of
New &ealand and the diocese of Bishop Hills in
Columbia i s bridged over,and we may fain h0pe
that in many an isle of that vast ocean, but yes ter
d ay, perhaps, the home of savages and cannibals,the voice of our &ion shall be heard on high ,and there
,as here
,she shall speak in accent s
that bring hope, and t rus t,and peace
,and joy
,t o
un told thousands . Happy shall I he should it be
THE WAITING ISLES . 9
ih y lot to mee t in some cent ral isle of the Pacific
my brother, the Bishop of Melanesia& happy if
there we may hold refreshing in tercourse on the
progress of our great work,and kneeling down on
the sea& shore t ogether,offer up a prayer for God
’s
blessing on our effort s for the ext ension of His
kingdom .
I t is,however
,rather on the nature and object s
of the work t o be done, than on it s general aspect s
I ought now t o dwell .&irst , then , as regards the nat ive populat ion .
We shall have t o remind them of those & ivine
t ruths, which have been hitherto sadly over
looked in the syst em of Christ ianity familiar t othem & that by His Incarnat ion the Son of God
has made Himself one w i th them,entered in to
all their sufferings , t emptat ions, and joys & that in
Him all manly,all t ender graces combine & that th e
more they grow in to His image, the purer, the
braver, the t ruer, the more loving will they be
come & that religion was never designed t o make
their innocent pleasures the less 3 & that it is com
The want of t his t eaching is described in the followingext ract from t he Polynesian Gazett e,
& Honolulu,April 26 th
,
1 862“ BON &I RE .
— Ou Monday evening last,a number of the
German resident s, in commemorat ion of an ancient cust om intheir ‘ Vat erland ,’ which they were prevent ed by rain on theevening of East er Sunday last from performing
, lit a large andsplendid bonfire, preceded by rocket s and fireworks , on one ofthe spurs of Punchbowl Hill.
10 THE WAITING ISLES .
pat ible wi th the free indulgence in all manly and
athlet i c exercises,be ing not designed to crush their
We w ould like to see severa l of the good ancient cont inent alcustoms revived here upon great festival occasions . Surelyreligion i s not all psalm& singing and gloom . While the heavyof heart and the unforgiven are welcome to groan and lament t hatover their souls no gladness and light have ari sen, yet we w ouldlike t o see merriment and rejoicing, in t hose whose spiri t s areso attuned, exhibit t hemselves especially on t hose great Christ ian occasions so eminent ly calcul ated t o invite the mind t ojoy
,thanksgiving, and gladness, such as Christmas & ay , Easter
Sunday,and Ascension & ay . We not ice t hat this land is said
t o have been convert ed to Christ ian ity , and yet the most remarkable event s in the life of the Founder of that faith are notcommemorat ed by the people & are, on the cont rary, studiouslyignored by t heir t eachers
,who thus forego one of the great est
element s of rendering that relig ion national as well as rat ional &ingrafting it upon the cust oms of the people from earliestchildhood
,rich in many bright memories from the morning of
life,t o which the soul may look back and gather fresh courage
from t hem,when rocked by the t empest and prost rate by woe ,
and which , in all ages, have softened the manners and openedthe heart , by the int ermingling of all classes for one commonobject , and that a lofty and holy one . But independent ly ofreligious fest ivals , why shoul d not a properly nat ional one ofdomest ic origin be revived or inst it ut ed & We would like tosee some of the old&world secular festivals int roduced, such asMay & ay
’ for inst ance,to be celebrat ed w ith nat ional sport s ,
jubilee, and bonfires through every village and hamlet in thecount ry . Were this properly t aken in hand
,it coul d not fail
of the best result s . As it now i s,t he nat ion
,as such
,has no
festival either religious or social,but gropes in the ashes of the
past for some st ray ember of a half& forgot t en mele,
’which it
chaunt s w ith fear and t rembling,lest it s sound may provoke the
ban of the preacher or the rebuke of religious mart in et s .Such were our re&ect ions on see ing the bonfire on Monday
last , and we turned away in sadness .&
THE WAITING ISLES . 1 1
natural inst inct s,nor to form,
as unhappily all ad mit
i t has hitherto done,a sort of crust around and ex
t ernal t o their daily life,bu t rather to work w i th those
ins t inct s and hallow that daily life & that the bodies
o f Christ ians are become t emples of the Holy Ghost,
and that “& hoso defileth the t emple of God
,him
shall God des troy that He is honoured by the
consecrat ion of all that is beaut iful in nature and
art to the worship of the Sanct uary & that it is as
we seek to realize Him in all the duly & appoint ed
channels of grace we may expect t o hold“ com
munion with the &ather and the Son through the
Spirit .& By the blessing of God upon the in
culcat ion of these principles,and by giving them
pract ical eff ect in the organizat ion and discipline
o f the Church,we may hope for the elevat ion of
the nat ive races t o a higher and purer ideal of
their manhood . All who visit th e islands bear
t est imony t o the sad want of any thing like moral
purity among them 4
,in part due t o the sensualit y
engendered by their luxurious climat e, in part to
the licent iousness of European sailors and t raders s.In t ouching accent s the king lately complained
t o his Legislature Our act s are vain unless we
can stay the was t ing hand that is destroying our
people . I feel a heavy responsibility in this mat ter .&
He has accordingly suggested the inst itut ion of
See Tilly ’s “ Voyage at the mouth of the Amoor and in thePacific & Hill’s “ Tour in the Sandwich Isles && Mr . ManleyHopkins’s Hawaii
,
&&c. &c.
See Ext ract s from the King’s Speeches, Appendix A .
A 6
1 2 THE WAITING ISLES .
boarding& schools for the educat ion of nat ive girls&t aking them from home a t an early age
,and raising
t hem by the t ra ining of Christ ian ladies t o a higher
appreciat ion of their digni ty as women . The
Sis ters of th e Sacred Hear t have opened such
schools in connexion wi th the Roman Church , and
defect ive indeed will be our machinery if no pro
vision is made by us for furthering the same object
in ways consonant wi th the pract ice and dist inct ive
character of the English Church . I am cert ain
that devot ed women can be found t o engage in this
work,if only funds are forthcoming. It is to me a
mat t er of thankfulness that there are in our party
going out those who, having devot ed the bes t part
of their lives to labour of this kind, are eminent ly
fi t t ed to organize and superint end ins t itut ions such
as those proposed to be established . Without this
ins trumentali ty we shall be indeed shorn of half our
s trength . Rome will cont inue her onward progress,for when does that corrupt Church & in men’s
heart s more e ff ectually than when seen in the
gent le ministrat ions of self& denying women & Those
m inistrat ions, though directed nominally t o the
removal of moral and physical evil,are ever found
to end in proselyt izing t o that communion, & i thoutthe pale of which they believe there is no salvat ion .
How deeply the king feels the wan t of such agency
appears from his speech at the las t Opening of his
Legislature —“ I regret that there has been bu tsmall progress in the inst itut ion of schools for the
THE WAITING ISLES . 1 3
educat ion and moral t raining of females . This
subject ought t o be considered paramount t o any
other in considering t he educat ional necessit ies of
the people . I therefore hope that this Legislature
will devise some means for more fully carrying out
my view s expressed in my address upon this sub
ject to the last Legislature, and in connexion there
with,I cannot forego the opportunity, as the head
of this nat ion,t o express my acknowledgment s and
appreciat ion of the services already rendered to
this cause,either by individuals or organizat ions .
As an English Mission, it is hoped, we may
render valuable aid t o the cause of primary edu
cat ion in the islands . I t is in contemplat ion to
give a more indus trial and pract ical character t o
the syst em pursued in the St ate Schools,and
gradually to bring about a displacement of theHawaiian for the English t ongue throughout the
nat ive populat ion . How inadequat e the old lan
guage is as a vehicle of th ought or moral t rainingappears from the fact that there are no words in it
whereby t o express hope, grat itude, or chast ity .
In the address , quoted before, the king says,“ The
importance of subst itut ing English for Hawaiian
schools I have already earnest ly recommended &and
in again bringing the subject under your at tent ion ,I would t ouch upon a mat ter which I think of
equal import ance,and that is the raising the
standard of element ary educat ion in the Common
14 THE WAITING ISLES .
Schools . This lat t er object may be secured by
the inst i tut ion of Normal Schools,as recommended
by the Presiden t & but combined w i th the t eachingof the English as a general thing throughout the
kingdom ,i t mus t place the object beyond a per
adventure .
&
The foreigners centred there for the purposes
of t rade and agriculture,chie&y English and
Americans,cont aining many professedly members
of our Reformed Church or others who are
willing t o unit e with her,though in the absence
of any other alt ernat ive they have chosen,it may
be,one or other of the ext reme forms a t present
in the islands, w ill have to be t ended and fed with
Christ ’s holy Word and Sacrament s . Especial
at tent ion must be paid to the spiritual want s of
the sailors, who, during their s t ay in the port s
visit ed,so oft en run int o evil
,through want of
any in terest being t aken by those around them in
their t emporal or spiritual welfare .
Las t ly, among the heathen islands we may
operat e from Honolulu as a base . There is no
reason why we should not have a college,& here
the Hawaiians may be t rained t o go out as mis
sionaries to Micronesia,including the Caroline
and other groups t owards &apan,as w ell as to
Southern Polynesia . Their language,physical
t emperamen t , and general similarity of race, would
well qualifv them for this work & and that they
1 6 THE WAITING ISLES .
lies a subst ratumof truth in the admission of thegreat historic fact s of the Creeds
,which may well
increase their faith in those fact s,and lead to
greater charity and forbearance in our treatmentof those Art icles of the &ai th which are called in
quest ion . We are t o speak the t ruth,but it mus t
be in love & and we are to give all who have been
hi therto labouring wi th so much devo t ion and
earnestness in their Mast er’s cause,while we have
been looking & ou with cold indi fference,the credit
they deserve . We must make it clear we do not
go forth t o ignore or override what has been done
by others .
And this suggest s another d anger, that of seek
ing to prosely t ize . I t is an admit t ed fact that a
large number of the people are in act ive com
munion with none of the exist ing bodies,and
among them we must seek to labour, not doubt ing
that , as we thus exhibit and carry to them the
Church ’s message in all fideli ty,and zeal
,and
love,she & ill at tract many others
,whom she would
eff ectually repel were she t o assume a posture of
unfriendliness or aggression . If we keep before
our eyes the fact , that the great object of the
mission is the salvat ion of the souls and bodies
of those among whom we are going t o labour,and
not the numbers we can count as members of our
communion,we may h0pe
,by God’s blessing
, to
escape this danger .
In the complex character of the populat ion , we
THE WAITING ISLES . 1 7
may see another ground for the exercise of pru
dence and caut ion . An adaptat ion of the for
mularies and syst em of the Church to the feelings
and requirement s of any one element may prove
very unsuit able and mischievous in the inst ance of
another .
In the nat ional jealousies,t oo
,which usually
prevail in a centre of resort such as this,—one
owing it s independence t o the forbearance and
protect ion of its more powerful neighbours ,—we
have reason for care and circumspect ion .
But if the difficult ies t o be apprehended are
great , so t oo are our encouragement s .“ N ot by
power or might,but my Spirit
,saith our God .
And t o the end of t ime the promise g iven by our
Lord t o His Apost les shall be t rue in the ins tance
of their successors,Lo
,I am wi th you alway, even
unt o the end of the world .
& There are also con
s iderat ions subordinat e to this . The in terest feltby the present very int elligen t , high & principled
,and
even accomplished king in the realizat ion of an
English episcopat e, the clinging on th e part of theislanders from the first to England as the coun try
t o supply them with a religion they could t rus t , the
co & operat ion of the English and many of the Ame
rican residen t s in preparing for the recep t ion of
the mission 7
,the bapt ism of the Prince of Hawaii
,
7 The Polynesian & of April 1 9 th last describes a meet ingwhich t ook place w ith this object in the Court House, theKing t aking a part in the proceedings. A committ ee was
1 8 THE WAITING ISLES .
our own beloved Q ueen standing , by proxy, as the
sponsor, with which ceremony the Church will, so
t o speak, be inaugurated— these are all hopeful
signs . When, t oo, I consider the warm sympathy
and support ext ended t o the Mission by my coun try
men and fellow & churchmen during the months thathave elapsed since my consecrat ion
,—shown by
their liberal contribut ions no less than in the hearty
prayers they have ever been ready t o off er for its
success,—there is indeed reason “
to be of good
cheer and t ake courage .
&&or those loving t okens
of interest and sympathy how can I ever be grateful
enough
And now,on the eve of d eparture wi th those
brethren who have thrown in their lot wi th me,and
are devot ing themselves to this arduous ent erprise,I have t o ask you, on their behalf as well as my
own,a cont inuance of your Christ ian sympathy
and your prayers . &ou will follow with in t erest
and,when such help may be needed, further with
your alms the work of building up the walls of our
&ion,as it progresses, in these central isles of the
Pacific . &ou will remember us in your private de
vot ions,your lit anies and common prayers
,among
those that t ravel by land or by wat er, that they
who go forth t o “sow the seed of e t ernal life beside
all waters & may be safe in the Everlast ing Arms &but especially that they may be endued with “
the
formed to obtain donations for the Cathedral and MissionFunds , and nearly 10001. was promised t o the former object .
THE WAITING IsLEs. 1 9
Spirit of power,of love
,and of a sound mind
,
&that
the great work,they are engaged in
,may not be
marred by human corrupt ion or by the infirmi ty
of those t o whom it is commi t t ed,that many an
islander of the Pacific,now wait ing for Christ ’s law
in grat eful adorat ion for benefit s received from this
mission of our Church,may hereafter rise up and
call Her Blessed .
A P PE N & I & .
(A
AT a recent opening of his Chambers , the King addressed thefollowing imprompt u remarks in English t o foreigners residingin his dominionsTo be kind and generous to the foreigner, t o confide and
t rust in him,i s no new thing in the history of our race & i t i s
an inheritance derived t o u s from our forefathers & and I sayt o the foreigner he is welcome t o our shores, so long as hecomes w ith t he laudable object of promoting his own interest sand respecting those of his neighbour & but if he comes w ith nomore exalted motive than to build them up at the expense oft he native, to seek our confidence only t o bet ray it, then is hemost unwelcome .&
On the institut ion of the A gricultural Society, t he Kingdescribed t he climat e and its eff ect on the Hawaiian chareet erWhoever heard of w int er on our shores & When was it so
cold the labourer could not go t o his field & These difficultieshave no place in our beautiful group
,which rests on t he
swelling bosom of the Pacific like a water& lily .
&
He then reproaches them for no t making t he most of theiradvantagesThe great fault s of the Hawai ians are laziness and want of
perseverance . It i s a matter for our shame &but as a fatherto my people, I canno t hide the fact .
&
APPEN& I& . 2 1
(B )
THE CH&RCH IN THE N ORTH PACIFIC .
THE following st at ement was issued soon aft er the Missionwas originat ed
,and cont ains an out line of the principal fact s
connect ed w ith itThe Hawaiian Islands
,lying nearly twenty degrees nort h of
the Equat or, and nearly midway between the coast of Americaand t he east of Asia , were discovered by Capt ain Cook , whoperished t here in 1 779 . They contain a people of noblephysique, gent le disposition, and a remarkable apt it ude forcivilization , t owards which t hey are advancing w ith rapidsteps .Honolulu, the capital, possesses a fine harbour
,and has
become the rest ing& place of the commerce now finding it s pat hacross the Pacific between the Old and N ew Worlds . Somehundreds of ships resort t o this and other port s of the groupduring t he course of the year. Int ermixed w ith the nat ives isa large number of English, American, and other foreignresident s .The government is a constit ut ional monarchy
,under the
guarant eed protect ion of England, France, and the & nit edStates . Order and just ice are enforced, and educat ion promoted, while English is fast displacing the native t ongue .After t he t emporary cession of Hawaii by King Kameba
meha I . and his chiefs t o t he British Sovereign through Vancouver
,in 1 794, they begged the capt ain t o procure for t hem
on his return English clergymen t o inst ruct t hem in the
Christian faith . Vancouver pressed t heir pet it ion on Mr .Pitt
,but nothing was done . Meanwhile the way was remark
ably opened among these islanders for the int roduc t ion of theGospel by their spontaneous abandonment of idolatry in 1 8 1 9 .
“ After waiting in vain for a quart er of a century the fulfilment of Vancouver’s promise, some Congregat ionalist mis
22 APPEN &I& .
sionaries from Amer ica 1 arrived in 1 8 20. They preached,
est ablished schools,and laboured w ith much success . A t t he
present t ime t hey have places of worsh ip erect ed in many part sof the i slands .
A French Roman Cat holic mi ssion was finally int roducedin 1 839 . I t is presided over by a Vicar Apostolic, t it ularBishop of A rathia. The natives are gradually passing overint o it s communion, and it i s cert ain t hat Rome w ill , ere long,be firmly seat ed in t hi s ‘ Heart of the Pacific,’ if we againrefuse as we have done t o supply it with the formidablebulwark of our own Scriptural Church .
In 1 844, 1 847 , 1 8 51 , and 1 858 , at tempt s were made,chie&y on the part of the English and other resident s
,t o
obtain Episcopal clergymen at Honolulu, but & ithout success.“ This year the King wrot e himself on the subject to HerMajesty the Q ueen, and by his min ist er t o the Primate
,ex
pressing not only his own earnest wi shes , but t hose of many ofthe principal resident s . He off ers to the mission such incomeas the limit ed means of the islands w il l afford , and w ill probably appropriat e a larger port ion of land t o it s future support .There are several feat ures of peculiar int erest in this
movement . 1 . We have the only inst ance of our Church beinginvit ed by an in dependent sovereign t o plan t it self in hisdominions. 2 . This invitat ion is the renewal of other urgentappeals sent us before
,and unhappily & it hout effect . 3 . Eng
land’s daught er Church of America des ires t o unit e wi th us inthis w ork . 4 . The Hawaiian Isles are the key t o many othergroups in the N ort h and South & east Pacific
,as yet belonging
to no missionary d iocese,and st ill heathen .
The Commit tee cont emplat e sending out w i th the Bishoptwo or t hree clergy, to be jo ined by others from the AmericanChurch . The Society for Promot ing Christ ian Kn owledge hasgrant ed 2002. per annum for five years
,and t hat for the Propa
gat ion of the Gospel 3002. for each of t hree years, t owards this
I t is a m istake to suppose the London M issionary or any English As
sociation has d one any th ing for the Christ ian iz ing of these islands, as th eyhave In the case of the groups of the South Pacific.
BEAR &E ONE ANOTHER’S B&R&ENS .
A PLAIN SERMON
THE LANCASHIRE &ISTRESS.
E v
'
TH E
REV. &AMES GALLOWA& COWAN ,
M IN I STER O& A ILCHBI SHOP TEN ISON’
S C HAPEL, REG EN T STREET .
IIHNEKHN
& ILLIAM SKEFFIN GTON , 1 63 , PICCA&ILL& .
1 8 62 .
themse l ves Chr ist ians , th is grea t w ork of Chr isti an char itycou l d never l angu ish for w an t of means. If e very one w ho
w as in easy c ircums tan ces wou l d de vote one & t enth of the i ryearly income to acts o f p iety, for the rel ief of the t empora lor spir i tua l necessities Of the ir fe l low & men
,how diff erent
w ou l d be the aspec t of our coun try How few cou l d th erethen be who w ou ld say , There i s no one who c ares for oursou l s—none who fee l for our stra i t s and necess it ies &’ A nd
y e t , thi s proport ion Of the ir annua l revenu e w as the veryl east amount wh i ch &ew i sh char i ty a l low ed to be enough tosat i sfy su ch cal ls . If those who s t int the measure of the i rbenevolence, w i th the View Of amass ing a fortune, and accumu lat ing w ea l th to aggrandise the ir fam i ly
,cou l d bu t fee l
w h at a drag th is w e igh t of w ea lth , thu s gotten , mu st proveto the i r heavenw ard ascen t —in th e path of godl iness h ere , aswe l l as in t he path to glory h ereafter—th ey wou l d be fa in ,before i t w as too l ate , to l ay up thei r treasure in h eaven, andto m ake themse l ves an ever last ing &r iend, by a r igh teou su se of the mammon of unr igh teou sness . But there i s anothersacr ifice bes ides that many may offer, and w hi ch many, w erej o i ce t o know ,
are w i l l ing to offer—and that i s, the ch asten ing in&uen ce , and the foster ing care Of s isterly love, whi chmay cherish the good seed implan ted in the pen i ten t h eart, soth a t i t sh al l br ing forth fru i t unto e ver last ing l ife. M ay suchgentle and w inn ing gu idance e ver be found to consp ire w i th
the movemen ts of the Holy Spir i t from abov e , in enabl ingthe return ing w anderer to be steadfas t and unmov able in her
Chr i st ian profess ion & th at, hav ing escaped from th e sorebondage o f s in , she may rejoi ce evermore in that l iber ty
w h i ch i s the pr iv i lege of th e ch i ldren of God , and may be
among those who sh al l chaun t the new hymn of pra ise to
Him who b ath redeemed us by His blood &
SPOTTI S& OO&E AN & CO. , PR IN TERS , N E& & ST REET SQ &ARE. LON &ON .