The Kingdom in India, its progress and its promise . apparent the un-speakably saddening effects of unholy rivalries andinterferences with one anothers work. There hasbeen great waste of effort, as well as of consecratedfunds, and Christ has been again wounded by Hisprofessed friends, and that in the presence of theheathen. Wherefore this waste? Wherefore this woundingof Christ afresh ? How long must it continue? Howcan it be made to cease! How can that prayer,^Hhat they may all be one, be realized? How canthese unholy rivalries be ended, and the I^^ativeChurches in each land be so unified tha


The Kingdom in India, its progress and its promise . apparent the un-speakably saddening effects of unholy rivalries andinterferences with one anothers work. There hasbeen great waste of effort, as well as of consecratedfunds, and Christ has been again wounded by Hisprofessed friends, and that in the presence of theheathen. Wherefore this waste? Wherefore this woundingof Christ afresh ? How long must it continue? Howcan it be made to cease! How can that prayer,^Hhat they may all be one, be realized? How canthese unholy rivalries be ended, and the I^^ativeChurches in each land be so unified that, as prayedthe Crucified One, ^ the world may believe that Thouhast sent Me,^ and, coming, clasp those blessed feet? For this ^Unification of the Native Churches aJohn the Baptist movement must take place amongthose who have planted, and who now hold, in per-haps too-tightly-drawn leading strings, those ISativeChurches, for no movement for their unification canavail until liberty of action has been granted themby their controlling bodies at An open roof of bamboo and thatch, under which a village congregation isgathered, when first received under Christian instruction.


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