Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB
[graphic][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed]

The President of

THE YOUNG CHURCHMAN CO.

Begs to announce that that company has
now been reorganized and will in future
be known as the

MOREHOUSE PUBLISHING CO.

As such it begs a continuance of the cordial support of Churchmen that has so generously been given to it in the past. FREDERICK C. MOREHOUSE, President

From

THE BISHOP OF PENNSYLVANIA

I am very glad to express my personal approval of the "American Church Monthly" and my conviction that it will more and more come to occupy an important place in our church life. It fills a very real need, and fills it very well. I shall very heartily commend it to our people and earnestly trust that its subscription list may be very greatly increased in the near future.

From

UTICA, NEW YORK

PHILIP M. RHINELANDER.

My appreciation of what the magazine means to the American Church is a very deep one, for I consider that it meets a long-felt want and is, and will be, a great assest to both clergy and laity. Rev. ERNEST J. HOPPER, Rector of Trinity Church

From

JAPAN

Such a magazine as this is an achievement.

Rev. JOHN COLE MCKIM.

for August

The Right Rev. Dr. Osborne was the Bishop of Springfield until his resignation in 1916. In his article on "Love and Hate," he discusses the moral problem, which has perplexed many of late, as to the meaning of the Christian obligation to love our enemies.

The Rev. Bernard Iddings Bell has been chaplain at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station during the past year, and therefore speaks from actual experience on the subject of "Religion at a Naval Training Station." He was formerly Dean of S. Paul's Cathedral, Fond du Lac, Wisconsin; and has been a frequent contributor to magazines.

The Rev. J. G. H. Barry, D.D., the Rector of the Church of S. Mary the Virgin, New York, needs no introduction to our readers. He contributes in this number an interesting estimate of "The Lutheran Reformation-Up to Date," suggested by President Macmillan's recent work on "Protestantism in Germany.”

Dr. Ralph Adams Cram, the well-known architect and man of letters, has recently written books of a prophetic character which have caused many of us to recast some of our fondest prejudices. In his paper on "The Sacramental Principle and the Future," he discusses Sacrament and Sacrifice, the two great realities which the world has cast away during the era now drawing to its end.

The Rev. A. Parker Curtiss is the Rector of S. Mark's Church, Oconto, Wis., and has spent almost his entire priesthood in ministering to the people of small towns. If the principles set forth in his article on "The Priest in the Small Town" had been more generally put in practice by our clergy, the story of the Church in this country would be very different.

The Rev. Henry Smart, the Rector of S. Stephen's Church, New Hartford, N. Y., in the article on "The Burial of the Dead" deals with a very practical pastoral problem, and makes certain suggestions for reform in our conventional methods of conducting a Christian Burial.

The Rev. Frederick C. Grant, Curate of S. Luke's Church, Evanston, Ill., in "Peter Sat by the Fire," gives us a new treatment of what has recently become a very familiar magazine subject. He shows to us another side of the picture, not only of S. Peter, but of all who are dazed by the sad plight of the world.

[graphic][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed]
[merged small][graphic][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors]
« AnteriorContinuar »