Page:The old stone house.djvu/31

Rh larger chance for idleness than the close-drawn ranks of business life. He had felt the inward call which is given to but few, and he obeyed it instantly. To him the world was literally a harvest field, and he, one of the hard working laborers; he had no worldly ambition ; he looked upon life with the eyes of a true Christian; his little chapel was as much to him as a large city church, influential and wealthy, could have been, as he loved his small and somewhat uninteresting congregation with his whole heart. Older men called him an enthusiast. Would that the world held more enthusiasts like him ; men who have forsaken all to follow Him, men to whom the whole world and its riches are as nothing compared to the souls waiting to hear the tidings of salvation. For even in Christian America, there are in all our streets, souls who have not heard the tidings. It is their own fault, do you say? They can come to our churches at any time. Nay, my friend ; we must go out into the highways and hedges and force them to come in with kindly sympathy and brotherly aid.