The War Cry . H •?. Extracts From a Salvation Army OfficersLetters to an Infidel, Showing the Effi- r »?* __*_. t» _ r* :i-j J cacy 01 ±-cibi» nayci—^uiuijii^li mmArranged by Arnold. Introduction. An infidel—one who really disbelieved in apeiional God, and ignored the Bible as a bookof fables and a conglomeration of supersti-tious writings, collected and blundered to-gether by ignorant and designing into an Array meeting. Becoming. impressed with the earnestness and devotionof an officer, he wondered Where the inspira-tion came from, and reasoned it out thus: -Now, here is a
The War Cry . H •?. Extracts From a Salvation Army OfficersLetters to an Infidel, Showing the Effi- r »?* __*_. t» _ r* :i-j J cacy 01 ±-cibi» nayci—^uiuijii^li mmArranged by Arnold. Introduction. An infidel—one who really disbelieved in apeiional God, and ignored the Bible as a bookof fables and a conglomeration of supersti-tious writings, collected and blundered to-gether by ignorant and designing into an Array meeting. Becoming. impressed with the earnestness and devotionof an officer, he wondered Where the inspira-tion came from, and reasoned it out thus: -Now, here is a human being who certainly•appears to have something that I have notgot. What is that something? It is an enthusiasm for an established sup-erstition. Is it? But where does the power comefrom that proceeds from the officer to myheart? And what is that power? That power coflips from the depths of hu-man sympathy, and is conveyed from one toanother by a magnetism of thought, clothedwith unexplainable emoti
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectsalvati, bookyear1904