<SPAN name="chapter_xi"></SPAN>
<h2 class="chapter_title"><span class="chapter_number">XI</span><br/> The Future Church</h2>
<p class="chapter_summary">
The time is coming when the Church will
awake to its great opportunities. The greatest
industry in America but the most backward and
inefficiently operated, is still in the stage-coach
class.</p>
<p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">Of</span> course the Church is very far
from developed. The Church is
in the same position to-day as
were the water-powers fifty years ago.
The Church has great resources; but these
resources are sadly undeveloped. From
an efficiency point of view, from an organization
point of view, from a production
point of view, the Church to-day is in
the stage-coach class. It holds within itself
the keys of prosperity. It holds
within itself the salvation and solution of
our industrial, commercial and international
problems. Yet it is working, or at
least the Protestant branch is open, only
three or four hours a week. The Church
has the greatest opportunity to-day of any
industry. It is the least developed industry,
the most inefficiently operated, and
the most backward in its methods.</p>
<p>Let us shut our eyes and look ahead at
what it will be twenty-five years from now.
Let us imagine five churches within a radius
of five miles. All of them now operating
independently. Each one open only
a few hours a week. Twenty-five years
from now these five churches will be linked
up together under a general manager who
will not be a parson, but who will be a
business man.</p>
<p>To-day the preacher of our churches is
a combination of preacher, business manager,
and salesman. He is the service department,
the finance department and
everything but the janitor. The Church
is being operated to-day as a college would
be operated with one professor, who would
be president, treasurer, general manager,
and everything else. The Church is
being operated to-day as a factory with
simply a production man and no one to
tend the finances or the sales. Manufacturers
reading this book know how long
a factory could be run with only a superintendent
and no one to sell or finance the
proposition.</p>
<p>Twenty-five years from to-day, instead
of the pastor being at the head of the
church and a few good people doing voluntary
work, there will be four or five
churches of the same denomination united
under one general manager. I do not
mean by this that four of them will be
closed. They will all be open much more
than they are now; but they will all be
under one general manager and will be
taking orders from that general manager.
Twenty-five years from to-day the
churches will be self-supporting. The
days of begging will be over. Religion
has been cheapened by singing about “salvation’s
free for you and me.” When we
have our legal difficulties, we go to a lawyer
and pay him; when we have a pain we
go to a doctor and pay him; if we want our
children taught we pay the price; but if
we want our children instructed in the
fundamentals of prosperity upon which
their future depends, we send them to a
Sunday School for a half-hour a week
with the possibility of having them taught
by a silly girl who doesn’t know her work.
In any event the parent seldom takes the
trouble to ascertain the quality of the
teaching.</p>
<p>The time is coming when the Church
will awake to its great principles and opportunities.
The greatest industry in
America is still the most backward and
most inefficiently operated. When these
four or five churches are combined, the
preacher will not have to spend half the
week in preparing a different sermon
every Sunday. He will have two weeks
or a month to prepare that sermon. He
will have time and have the “pep” and
energy to deliver it to you so you won’t go
to sleep while sitting in the pews. The
audience will then hear the same preacher
only once each month, and the preacher
will then have more than one congregation
to appeal to.</p>
<p>The same man is not going to be expected
to preach on Love, Hate, the
League of Nations, How to Settle Labour
Disputes and the Health of the Community
and every other subject. All of these
men will preach the salvation of Jesus, but
each one will specialize in one particular
phase of the Christian life, such as Faith,
Integrity, Industry, Coöperation. Then
we will take more stock in our preachers
because they won’t pretend to know every
subject. Then the preacher will not be of
lesser intelligence than the average audience.</p>
<p>Fifty years ago the ablest men in every
community were the preachers, the doctors,
and the lawyers. They were the
only college graduates of the town and
were looked up to. To-day, while we pay
our salesmanagers from $15,000 to
$20,000 a year, and lawyers and doctors
large fees, we pay our preachers
only miserable salaries. It’s a damnable
disgrace to all of us. I often
think that if Jesus were to come back
to us, that He would take for His text
that thought from the Sermon on the
Mount, “If you have aught against your
neighbour, before you enter into your
worship go and square up.” I think that
when He came in to speak to us on Sunday
morning, He would say:</p>
<p>“Gentlemen, I suggest that before we
have this service, we raise funds to pay the
preacher a decent salary.”</p>
<p class="thought_break">******</p>
<p>Just before I went to Brazil I was the
guest of the President of the Argentine
Republic. After lunching one day we
sat in his sun parlour looking out over the
river. He was very thoughtful. He
said, “Mr. Babson, I have been wondering
why it is that South America with all
its great natural advantages is so far behind
North America notwithstanding that
South America was settled before North
America.” Then he went on to tell how
the forests of South America had two
hundred and eighty-six trees that can be
found in no book of botany. He told me
about many ranches that had thousands of
acres under alfalfa in one block. He mentioned
the mines of iron, coal, copper, silver,
gold; all those great rivers and water-powers
which rival Niagara. “Why is it,
with all these natural resources, South
America is so far behind North America?”
he asked. Well, those of you who
have been there know the reason. But,
being a guest, I said:</p>
<p>“Mr. President, what do you think is
the reason?”</p>
<p>He replied: “I have come to this conclusion.
South America was settled by
the Spanish who came to South America
in search of <em>gold</em>, but North America was
settled by the Pilgrim Fathers who went
there in search of <em>God</em>.”</p>
<p>Friends, let us as American citizens
never kick down the ladder by which we
climbed up. Let us never forget the
foundation upon which all permanent
prosperity is based.</p>
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