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<h2> V. GIFT FOR INSPIRING OTHERS </h2>
<p>THE constant earnestness of Conwell, his desire to let no chance slip by
of helping a fellowman, puts often into his voice, when he preaches, a
note of eagerness, of anxiety. But when he prays, when he turns to God,
his manner undergoes a subtle and unconscious change. A load has slipped
off his shoulders and has been assumed by a higher power. Into his
bearing, dignified though it was, there comes an unconscious increase of
the dignity. Into his voice, firm as it was before, there comes a deeper
note of firmness. He is apt to fling his arms widespread as he prays, in a
fine gesture that he never uses at other times, and he looks upward with
the dignity of a man who, talking to a higher being, is proud of being a
friend and confidant. One does not need to be a Christian to appreciate
the beauty and fineness of Conwell's prayers.</p>
<p>He is likely at any time to do the unexpected, and he is so great a man
and has such control that whatever he does seems to everybody a perfectly
natural thing. His sincerity is so evident, and whatever he does is done
so simply and naturally, that it is just a matter of course.</p>
<p>I remember, during one church service, while the singing was going on,
that he suddenly rose from his chair and, kneeling beside it, on the open
pulpit, with his back to the congregation, remained in that posture for
several minutes. No one thought it strange. I was likely enough the only
one who noticed it. His people are used to his sincerities. And this time
it was merely that he had a few words to say quietly to God and turned
aside for a few moments to say them.</p>
<p>His earnestness of belief in prayer makes him a firm believer in answers
to prayer, and, in fact, to what may be termed the direct interposition of
Providence. Doubtless the mystic strain inherited from his mother has also
much to do with this. He has a typically homely way of expressing it by
one of his favorite maxims, one that he loves to repeat encouragingly to
friends who are in difficulties themselves or who know of the difficulties
that are his; and this heartening maxim is, "Trust in God and do the next
thing."</p>
<p>At one time in the early days of his church work in Philadelphia a payment
of a thousand dollars was absolutely needed to prevent a law-suit in
regard to a debt for the church organ. In fact, it was worse than a debt;
it was a note signed by himself personally, that had become due—he
was always ready to assume personal liability for debts of his church—and
failure to meet the note would mean a measure of disgrace as well as
marked church discouragement.</p>
<p>He had tried all the sources that seemed open to him, but in vain. He
could not openly appeal to the church members, in this case, for it was in
the early days of his pastorate, and his zeal for the organ, his desire
and determination to have it, as a necessary part of church equipment, had
outrun the judgment of some of his best friends, including that of the
deacon who had gone to Massachusetts for him. They had urged a delay till
other expenses were met, and he had acted against their advice.</p>
<p>He had tried such friends as he could, and he had tried prayer. But there
was no sign of aid, whether supernatural or natural.</p>
<p>And then, literally on the very day on which the holder of the note was to
begin proceedings against him, a check for precisely the needed one
thousand dollars came to him, by mail, from a man in the West—a man
who was a total stranger to him. It turned out that the man's sister, who
was one of the Temple membership, had written to her brother of Dr.
Conwell's work. She knew nothing of any special need for money, knew
nothing whatever of any note or of the demand for a thousand dollars; she
merely outlined to her brother what Dr. Conwell was accomplishing, and
with such enthusiasm that the brother at once sent the opportune check.</p>
<p>At a later time the sum of ten thousand dollars was importunately needed.
It was due, payment had been promised. It was for some of the construction
work of the Temple University buildings. The last day had come, and
Conwell and the very few who knew of the emergency were in the depths of
gloom. It was too large a sum to ask the church people to make up, for
they were not rich and they had already been giving splendidly, of their
slender means, for the church and then for the university. There was no
rich man to turn to; the men famous for enormous charitable gifts have
never let themselves be interested in any of the work of Russell Conwell.
It would be unkind and gratuitous to suggest that it has been because
their names could not be personally attached, or because the work is of an
unpretentious kind among unpretentious people; it need merely be said that
neither they nor their agents have cared to aid, except that one of the
very richest, whose name is the most distinguished in the entire world as
a giver, did once, in response to a strong personal application, give
thirty-five hundred dollars, this being the extent of the association of
the wealthy with any of the varied Conwell work.</p>
<p>So when it was absolutely necessary to have ten thousand dollars the
possibilities of money had been exhausted, whether from congregation or
individuals.</p>
<p>Russell Conwell, in spite of his superb optimism, is also a man of deep
depressions, and this is because of the very fire and fervor of his
nature, for always in such a nature there is a balancing. He believes in
success; success must come!—success is in itself almost a religion
with him—success for himself and for all the world who will try for
it! But there are times when he is sad and doubtful over some particular
possibility. And he intensely believes in prayer—faith can move
mountains; but always he believes that it is better not to wait for the
mountains thus to be moved, but to go right out and get to work at moving
them. And once in a while there comes a time when the mountain looms too
threatening, even after the bravest efforts and the deepest trust. Such a
time had come—the ten-thousand-dollar debt was a looming mountain
that he had tried in vain to move. He could still pray, and he did, but it
was one of the times when he could only think that something had gone
wrong.</p>
<p>The dean of the university, who has been closely in touch with all his
work for many years, told me of how, in a discouragement which was the
more notable through contrast with his usual unfailing courage, he left
the executive offices for his home, a couple of blocks away.</p>
<p>"He went away with everything looking dark before him. It was
Christmas-time, but the very fact of its being Christmas only added to his
depression—Christmas was such an unnatural time for unhappiness! But
in a few minutes he came flying back, radiant, overjoyed, sparkling with
happiness, waving a slip of paper in his hand which was a check for
precisely ten thousand dollars! For he had just drawn it out of an
envelope handed to him, as he reached home, by the mail-carrier.</p>
<p>"And it had come so strangely and so naturally! For the check was from a
woman who was profoundly interested in his work, and who had sent the
check knowing that in a general way it was needed, but without the least
idea that there was any immediate need. That was eight or nine years ago,
but although the donor was told at the time that Dr. Conwell and all of us
were most grateful for the gift, it was not until very recently that she
was told how opportune it was. And the change it made in Dr. Conwell! He
is a great man for maxims, and all of us who are associated with him know
that one of his favorites is that 'It will all come out right some time!'
And of course we had a rare opportunity to tell him that he ought never to
be discouraged. And it is so seldom that he is!"</p>
<p>When the big new church was building the members of the church were
vaguely disturbed by noticing, when the structure reached the second
story, that at that height, on the side toward the vacant and unbought
land adjoining, there were several doors built that opened literally into
nothing but space!</p>
<p>When asked about these doors and their purpose, Dr. Conwell would make
some casual reply, generally to the effect that they might be excellent as
fire-escapes. To no one, for quite a while, did he broach even a hint of
the great plan that was seething in his mind, which was that the buildings
of a university were some day to stand on that land immediately adjoining
the church!</p>
<p>At that time the university, the Temple University as it is now called,
was not even a college, although it was probably called a college. Conwell
had organized it, and it consisted of a number of classes and teachers,
meeting in highly inadequate quarters in two little houses. But the
imagination of Conwell early pictured great new buildings with
accommodations for thousands! In time the dream was realized, the
imagination became a fact, and now those second-floor doors actually open
from the Temple Church into the Temple University!</p>
<p>You see, he always thinks big! He dreams big dreams and wins big success.
All his life he has talked and preached success, and it is a real and very
practical belief with him that it is just as easy to do a large thing as a
small one, and, in fact, a little easier! And so he naturally does not see
why one should be satisfied with the small things of life. "If your rooms
are big the people will come and fill them," he likes to say. The same
effort that wins a small success would, rightly directed, have won a great
success. "Think big things and then do them!"</p>
<p>Most favorite of all maxims with this man of maxims, is "Let Patience have
her perfect work." Over and over he loves to say it, and his friends laugh
about his love for it, and he knows that they do and laughs about it
himself. "I tire them all," he says, "for they hear me say it every day."</p>
<p>But he says it every day because it means so much to him. It stands, in
his mind, as a constant warning against anger or impatience or over-haste—faults
to which his impetuous temperament is prone, though few have ever seen him
either angry or impatient or hasty, so well does he exercise self-control.
Those who have long known him well have said to me that they have never
heard him censure any one; that his forbearance and kindness are
wonderful.</p>
<p>He is a sensitive man beneath his composure; he has suffered, and keenly,
when he has been unjustly attacked; he feels pain of that sort for a long
time, too, for even the passing of years does not entirely deaden it.</p>
<p>"When I have been hurt, or when I have talked with annoying cranks, I have
tried to let Patience have her perfect work, for those very people, if you
have patience with them, may afterward be of help."</p>
<p>And he went on to talk a little of his early years in Philadelphia, and he
said, with sadness, that it had pained him to meet with opposition, and
that it had even come from ministers of his own denomination, for he had
been so misunderstood and misjudged; but, he added, the momentary
somberness lifting, even his bitter enemies had been won over with
patience.</p>
<p>I could understand a good deal of what he meant, for one of the Baptist
ministers of Philadelphia had said to me, with some shame, that at first
it used actually to be the case that when Dr. Conwell would enter one of
the regular ministers' meetings, all would hold aloof, not a single one
stepping forward to meet or greet him.</p>
<p>"And it was all through our jealousy of his success," said the minister,
vehemently. "He came to this city a stranger, and he won instant
popularity, and we couldn't stand it, and so we pounced upon things that
he did that were altogether unimportant. The rest of us were so jealous of
his winning throngs that we couldn't see the good in him. And it hurt Dr.
Conwell so much that for ten years he did not come to our conferences. But
all this was changed long ago. Now no minister is so welcomed as he is,
and I don't believe that there ever has been a single time since he
started coming again that he hasn't been asked to say something to us. We
got over our jealousy long ago and we all love him."</p>
<p>Nor is it only that the clergymen of his own denomination admire him, for
not long ago, such having been Dr. Conwell's triumph in the city of his
adoption, the rector of the most powerful and aristocratic church in
Philadelphia voluntarily paid lofty tribute to his aims and ability, his
work and his personal worth. "He is an inspiration to his brothers in the
ministry of Jesus Christ," so this Episcopalian rector wrote. "He is a
friend to all that is good, a foe to all that is evil, a strength to the
weak, a comforter to the sorrowing, a man of God. These words come from
the heart of one who loves, honors, and reverences him for his character
and his deeds."</p>
<p>Dr. Conwell did some beautiful and unusual things in his church,
instituted some beautiful and unusual customs, and one can see how narrow
and hasty criticisms charged him, long ago, with sensationalism—charges
long since forgotten except through the hurt still felt by Dr. Conwell
himself. "They used to charge me with making a circus of the church—as
if it were possible for me to make a circus of the church!" And his tone
was one of grieved amazement after all these years.</p>
<p>But he was original and he was popular, and therefore there were
misunderstanding and jealousy. His Easter services, for example, years
ago, became widely talked of and eagerly anticipated because each sermon
would be wrought around some fine symbol; and he would hold in his hand,
in the pulpit, the blue robin's egg, or the white dove, or the stem of
lilies, or whatever he had chosen as the particular symbol for the
particular sermon, and that symbol would give him the central thought for
his discourse, accented as it would be by the actual symbol itself in view
of the congregation. The cross lighted by electricity, to shine down over
the baptismal pool, the little stream of water cascading gently down the
steps of the pool during the baptismal rite, the roses floating in the
pool and his gift of one of them to each of the baptized as he or she left
the water—all such things did seem, long ago, so unconventional. Yet
his own people recognized the beauty and poetry of them, and thousands of
Bibles in Philadelphia have a baptismal rose from Dr. Conwell pressed
within the pages.</p>
<p>His constant individuality of mind, his constant freshness, alertness,
brilliancy, warmth, sympathy, endear him to his congregation, and when he
returns from an absence they bubble and effervesce over him as if he were
some brilliant new preacher just come to them. He is always new to them.
Were it not that he possesses some remarkable quality of charm he would
long ago have become, so to speak, an old story, but instead of that he is
to them an always new story, an always entertaining and delightful story,
after all these years.</p>
<p>It is not only that they still throng to hear him either preach or
lecture, though that itself would be noticeable, but it is the delightful
and delighted spirit with which they do it. Just the other evening I heard
him lecture in his own church, just after his return from an absence, and
every face beamed happily up at him to welcome him back, and every one
listened as intently to his every word as if he had never been heard there
before; and when the lecture was over a huge bouquet of flowers was handed
up to him, and some one embarrassedly said a few words about its being
because he was home again. It was all as if he had just returned from an
absence of months—and he had been away just five and a half days!</p>
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