Page:Distinguished Churchmen.djvu/98

 the romance, so to speak, of what is generally known as missionary work. But it is at least as important and effective; its solidarity with the work of the Church at home is more obvious, and, caring as it does both for our own people, “the children of the Dispersion,” and for the heathen races within the sphere of their influence, it is, perhaps, the means of the most natural and solid progress of the Kingdom of God.