14 Tachwedd 1919
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Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru
5 erthygl ar y dudalen hon
Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau
5 erthygl ar y dudalen hon
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Tar, PTRL of Shrewsbury has accepted the presidency of the Society for Relief of Dis- tressed Jews (Abraham's Vineyard, Jerusalem) vacant by the death of Mr. F. A. Bevan, presi- dent and treasurer.
OLD ..CHRONIC COUGHS. i
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LIFE AND LIBERTY CONGRESS.
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LIFE AND LIBERTY CONGRESS. ENTHUSIASM OYER ENABLING BILL. & 'mil » THE Congress of the Life and Liberty Movement was contirmed on Thursday and Friday antid great enthusiasm at the Church. House, Westminster. The scene when Canon Temple announced that the Enabling Bill had passed the Second Reading will not soon be forgotten On Thursday morning the Congress listened to speeches on The Spirit of Fellowship in the Movement. Thenrst was from the Rev. J. G. MeCormick, who laid it down that fellowship was essen- tially Christian, membership, fellowship and comradeship being three of the great notes sounded by the Christian com- munity. Why was it, he asked, that whether in the Fellowship or in the Church they demanded that wide powers be given to the general body of members P Was it because democracy was in itself divine? Not in the least; the Church had never said vox populi, vox Dei. On the contrary, it substituted for one of the cardinal principles of majority rule that minorities must suffer the Christian principle that minorities must be cared for, on the ground that if a minority of one suq-ers ,ill the members suffer with-it. VThe 'two principles that had made the Fellowship what it was were the putting of prayer in the foreground and the determination that the Movement should be an offensive one. The Rev. F. Under- hill spoke of the -.wonderful unity in diversity which had marked the move- ment. R»rd things,were never said, but plain tilings had been said frankly, and had been heard with kindness and toler- ance. He was followed by Mr. Q. xl. Smith, who urged the necessity of the idea of fellowship being, brought into the minda of business men. -He recognised the difficulty of masters paying higher I wages than their competitors, but held that if fellowship were a first considera- tion, and profits secondary, the difficulty would vanish. The men had fellowship among themselves; but he regretted the tendency not to give a full day's work for a full day's pay. Commander Noel Marshall, R".N„, speaking on," The Spirit of Fellowship in the Church," said he believed the Church was on- the point of b-eing pressed hard to show the unique- ness, of Christ., The"' Church must be capable of infinite expansion. Our fel- lowship must be in touch with the stream of life to-day, and we must reach out to the future—to the great fellowship of the Church expectant. Fellowship, he said, must also extend laterally, finding points of contact with veryinteret and move- ment in the life of our own times. The Chrch needed men for what they were -—soldier, sailor, artist, mechanic, and the' rest as slch. Commander Marshall urged, too, the need of the Church keep- ing in touch with physical science, for God was revealing Himself to scientists almost quicker than they could bear. M a j or-General Sir Frederick Maurice was unfortunately not able to be present, and his paper was read by Mr. McCormick. In the course of it he said fellowship depended chiefly on /hree' things common tradition, common issues, and common effort. He dealt at some length with the need of fostering esprit de corps in the Church, and showed how, by the analogy of other in- stitutions, it might be done. He instanced in particular the manner in which.-a recruit is taught the history and traditions of his regiment, and urged that much the same might be done with young men asd women in the Church. He was also of opinion that too much was provided for Churchpoopla without effort on their part, and hoped in the future to see a lay Chancellor of the Church Exchequer producing annually a Church Midget, .and throwing respon- sibility for meeting the needs of the Church on the laity. A The discussion was continued by Mrs. W. Piercy, Mrs." Cobbold, and others. In the afternoon the treasurer pro- duced a financial statement, which snowed a heavy deficit, and some discus- sion ensued as to the best means of raising the £ 1,009 needed for the work of the Movement.. Church Property. In some w-ays the last item of the afternoon was the most important. It was a proposal by Mr. Duncan Jones that the first duty of tile National Assembly, if the Enabling Bill became law, should be to ask the Government to institute a judicial inquiry into the endowments of the Church. It would, he thought, be a great gain to know whether or no the endowments should belong to the Church as a whole, and that if they did, to, know that they would not be interfered with. Endow- ments were, in their present form, a great stumbling block to Nonconformists. As a Church they had ift justify them- selves in the eyes of the nation, and there was no one matter upon which they could make a. change of heart more effec- tively than this. The great moral problems of the moment turned, said the speaker, on the rights and uses of property. Here the Church could give a lead as the first great act of its liberated existence. An animated discussion ensued, but no conclusion was come to owing to the inadequate time remaining for the con- sideration of the proposal. Victory Enthusiasm. On Friday the Congress sat in priv-ate, but wound up its-meetings with a great public meeting in the Church House. The first" words of the Chairman" (Dr. Temple) announced the result of the division in the House of Commons, and was received with* iiyime,,ise enthusiasm, the audience standing, first to cheer and then to join in singing the Doxology. Dr. Temple began his address by ex- plaining that it was to the Rev. II. R. L, Sheppard more than to any one person that the credit belonged of being the founder of their Movement. v It was he who' first conceived the idea. To this Mr. Sheppard later in the evening grace- fully retorted by saying that the-only credit he claimed was for recognising that he was. not big enough to carry the thing through, and for shifting the burden on to'the broad and capable shoulders of Dr. Temple. Dr. Temple's address was concerned largely with the origin of the Movement and the passage of events up to that moment. The main purpose of theMovement, of wfyich the Enabling Bill was a first stage, was,- he said,, to secure the effective witness of the Church to the sovereignty of God in every department of life. Effective and drastic Church reform would be one of 0' the first consequences of the Bill. Canon Daldy moved an address of thanks and congratulation to Lord Wolmer.- It was carried with acclama- tion; for it put into words what all were feeling regarding Lord Wolmer's magni- ficent work he had done in the House on behalf of the Bill. The address in- cluded also the Members of the Parlia- mentary Church and State Committee. Canon Daldy spoke of the need in the Church for corporate strength and unity. The Life and Liberty Movement had learnt the secret of unity in diver- sity, and. must now teach the Church. Commander; Noel Marshall, R.N., said the Holy Spirit was taking direct action here and now, and spoke in similar terms to. those of the address reported above. He also raised the ques- tion of the tenure of endowments. The Rev. H. R. L. Sheppard. was in' exceedingly happy vein, and having, in- fected the meeting with his own gaiety, asked it for the needed £ 1,000. The meeting ended with the blessing of the Bishop of Southwark. i..