| TO the General Assembly of 1881 were sent from the 
      Presbytery of Manitoba two overtures big with potentialities for the cause 
      of Presbyterianism and of religion in Western Canada. One of these 
      overtures received the approval of the Assembly and resulted in the 
      appointment of the Rev. James Robertson, Minister of Knox Church, 
      Winnipeg, as Superintendent of Missions for Manitoba and the Northwest 
      Territories. The fate of the other overture hung in the balance for some 
      months. It was an overture to authorize the creation of a fund to aid in 
      the erection of churches and manses in the West. The origin of this overture was to 
      be found in the experience of the minister of Knox Church, Winnipeg, while 
      acting as Convener of the Presbytery’s Home Mission Committee. During his 
      various missionary tours it was pressed upon his mind with painful 
      insistence that the missionaries in charge of the outposts of our Church 
      were called upon to suffer what seemed to him unnecessary privation from 
      the lack of comfortable homes, and that congregations were seriously 
      retarded in their development from the lack of suitable buildings in which 
      to worship. For men and women of culture and of 
      fine instincts to be forced to live in mud-roofed shacks, or board with 
      families in houses of a single room, where all the domestic activities 
      were carried on, could not fail to seriously impair the efficiency of 
      their service. Nor was there much hope of a permanent settlement being 
      effected in a congregation till a home could be found for the minister and 
      his family. Further than this, while so large a proportion of the settlers 
      were young men, unmarried and living wretchedly uncomfortable lives, it 
      was not difficult to imagine how great an impetus would be given to the 
      work of the Church and how vastly increased would be the hold of the 
      minister upon his flock, had he a comfortable home into which he might 
      welcome the stranger and the homeless of his congregation. Mr. Robertson had often experienced, 
      too, the depressing effect of uncongenial surroundings in connection with 
      public worship. He had been forced to preach to the people in curious 
      places, in shacks through whose sod roofs the rain trickled in muddy 
      streams upon the head and down the face of the preacher. He tells us how, 
      upon entering a sod-roofed shack during a rain-storm one day, he found the 
      children arranged like soldiers on parade along the centre of the little 
      room. Closer observation revealed the wisdom of this arrangement, for the 
      only dry place in the little shack was the line underneath a wide beam 
      that formed the ridge pole of the roof. Another time, while the missionary 
      was nearing the climax of his sermon, from under the bed whereon a portion 
      of the audience had found sittings, there came the premonitory clucks of a 
      hen indicative of a virtuous sense of duty fulfilled. At once there ensued 
      a struggle for the attention of the audience between the zealous 
      missionary and the industrious fowl. More and more eloquent waxed the 
      missionary’s periods, louder and louder the cluckings of the hen, till 
      finally emerging into the open, with a few surprised if not indignant 
      clucks at the unwonted invasion of her privacy, and then with a wild 
      volley of frantic clucks and cluckoos, she flew through the open door, 
      leaving the vanquished missionary to gather up the scattered members of 
      his body of divinity and the shattered attention of his audience. In buildings of all kinds and 
      devoted to all purposes religious services were held, in schoolhouses, 
      where there were any, in unfinished stores, in blacksmith shops, in 
      granaries, hay-lofts and stables, often redolent of other than the odour 
      of sanctity. Liberal use, too, was made of the offer of its station-houses 
      on the part of the Canadian Pacific Railway. But often the effect of the 
      sermon and of the whole service was marred by uncongenial and incongruous 
      surroundings. This was notably the case when the only available spot for 
      service happened to be the bar of a hotel. Once Mr. Robertson, coming to a 
      settlement late on a Saturday evening, where the largest building was the 
      hotel and the largest room the bar, inquired of the hotel man "Is there any place where I can hold 
      a service to-morrow?" "Service?" "Yes, a preaching service." "Preaching? Oh, yes, I’ll get you 
      one," he replied with genial heartiness. Next day Mr. Robertson came into the 
      bar which was crowded with men. "Well, have you found a room for my 
      service ?" he inquired of his genial host. "Here you are, boss, right here. Get 
      in behind that bar and here’s your crowd. Give it to ‘em. God knows they 
      need it." Mr. Robertson caught the wink 
      intended for the "boys" only. Behind the bar were bottles and kegs and 
      other implements of the trade; before it men standing up for their drinks, 
      chaffing, laughing, swearing. The atmosphere could hardly be called 
      congenial, but the missionary was "onto his job," as the boys afterwards 
      admiringly said. He gave out a hymn. Some of the men took off their hats 
      and joined in the singing, one or two whistling an accompaniment. As he 
      was getting into his sermon one of the men, evidently the smart one of the 
      company, broke in. "Say, boss," he drawled, "I like yer 
      nerve, but I don’t believe yer talk." "All right," replied Mr. Robertson, 
      "give me a chance. When I get through you can ask any questions you like. 
      If I can I will answer them, if I can’t, I’ll do my best." The reply appealed to the sense of 
      fair play in the crowd. They speedily shut up their companion and told the 
      missionary to "fire ahead," which he did and to such good purpose that 
      when he had finished there was no one ready to gibe or question. After the 
      service was closed, however, one of them observed earnestly: "I believe 
      every word you said, sir. I haven’t heard anything like that since I was a 
      kid, from my Sunday-school teacher. I guess I gave her a pretty hard time. 
      But, look here, can’t you send us a missionary for ourselves? We’ll all 
      chip in, won’t we, boys?" A missionary was sent in and it was 
      not long till a strong congregation was established in that community. But 
      in the hands of a weaker man such a result was hardly likely to follow the 
      services conducted in the barroom. In pressing the overture upon the 
      attention of the Presbytery of Manitoba, Mr. Robertson urged the necessity 
      of such a fund, not only in the interests of a more harmonious and 
      effective preaching service and a greater efficiency in Church work 
      generally, but upon a ground which he crystallized in a great phrase that 
      has become historically associated with the memory of its creator. He urged the importance of a church 
      building as giving "visibility and permanence" to the cause of religion. 
      That phrase, "visibility and permanence," became a battle-cry on his lips 
      during his campaign for this fund, and a great battle-cry it proved. Those 
      who have lived their lives within sight of a church and within sound of a 
      church bell, will find it diflicult, if not impossible, to estimate at 
      full value the ethical effect of the mere building upon the moral life of 
      the community. But men of the frontier have learned by experience how 
      great this effect is. A missionary writing in regard to 
      the change wrought in the mind of the community by the building of a 
      church says: "Before the church was built in this 
      village only the decidedly religious people could be got to attend 
      service. The store was open, the bar was full, the ordinary business of 
      the week went on as usual. But the very day the church was opened all this 
      was changed. The store closed up, the bar was empty of all except a few 
      recognized and well-seasoned ‘toughs,’ the ordinary work of the week 
      stopped, and many came to church who would not think of coming to 
      the service in the shack. The silent appeal of that building with 
      the Gothic windows was a more powerful sermon than any I had ever 
      preached. " But Mr. Robertson was not at the 
      Assembly of 1881 to press his overture. The Assembly was doubtful. A money 
      scheme to many of the fathers and brethren is ever a suspicious 
      innovation. Opposition developed. The overture was in the hands of 
      Professor Bryce and the Western representatives. So serious did the 
      opposition become that its supporters lost heart and a motion was proposed 
      by Mr. W. T. Wilkins, seconded by Professor Bryce, asking leave to 
      withdraw the overture. But to the rescue came the venerable Dr. Reid, 
      seconded by that always champion of Western Canada, Principal Grant, with 
      an amendment to remit the overture to the Home Mission Committee. The 
      amendment carried, and the Church and Manse Building scheme was saved for 
      the time being. In the Home Mission Committee, 
      however, there was opposition, but here Mr. Robertson, now become 
      Superintendent, was able to show the large advantage that would accrue to 
      Home Mission work from such a fund. He was further able to report that 
      already a considerable amount had been promised for the fund. The first 
      contribution, to the amount of one thousand dollars, had come from a 
      friend in Newfoundland. Presbyterians in the West had promised support. 
      The Home Mission Committee, still uncertain as to the ultimate effect of a 
      canvass for a new fund upon their Home Mission revenue, were still 
      unwilling to bestow their benediction, but allowed the Superintendent to 
      go on with the canvass. With all the concentrated energy of 
      his being, the new Superintendent "goes on," putting his hand to a work, 
      the magnitude of which not even he has begun to estimate. With shrewd 
      foresight he begins in the West. His old congregation in Winnipeg backs 
      him up with a handsome contribution; other congregations subscribe in 
      proportion. Leading Presbyterians of the West, catching the spirit of the 
      Superintendent, give largely. Then to the East he proceeds, sowing 
      broadcast over the Church a Catechism on the Church and Manse Building 
      Fund. It was not, indeed, the Shorter Catechism of high and honourable 
      fame, but a new edition of the Mother’s Catechism, as one said, "for it 
      was in the interest of the boys." Wherever he can get an opening he pleads 
      his cause. On every hand he meets opposition, from lethargic pastors, from 
      penurious congregations, from men with rival schemes, but with unfailing 
      good humour and with indomitable perseverance he keeps pushing the Church 
      and Manse Building scheme. Writing from Cobourg, under date 
      March 7th, 1882, to his wife, he, as always, takes her fully into his 
      confidence: "To-night I have no meeting. I tried to arrange and the 
      telegraph failed me. Came here last night and had a good meeting, 
      collections $34.46. But the congregation is without a pastor and in a bad 
      state. Tried to do something for our Church Building Fund, but met with 
      little success. Got only about $190, but have promises of more. Hope to 
      make it $500. Peterboro I was not able to canvass. Several things promised 
      and I am going back there some time. I think $1,500 or $1,800 could be got 
      there. This part of the country is not very hopeful and the young people 
      are leaving. To-morrow I go to Madoc I am vexed at being sent to a place 
      so little likely to do anything for our cause, but I must go." He is 
      labouring under the direction of his Committee, and apparently not 
      altogether unhampered. Again from Kingston he writes: "Got 
      here Saturday afternoon and am with Dr. Smith. He met me at the hotel. 
      Called on McQuaig and Rev. Andrew Neilson about services. Preached for 
      McOuaig yesterday morning. Congregation not large, but I understand that 
      his is the most wealthy in Kingston. I did not get him to give a 
      collection for the Home Mission Committee. Took tea there, however. He is 
      soured at something about the Home Mission Committee. Which indisposition, 
      however, is only temporary, his good sense coming to his aid. Preached for 
      Neilson in the evening. There was a good deal of interest manifested, and 
      I trust good will be done. But no collection was taken up for our fund. 
      Last evening Principal Grant came to Dr. Smith’s and we had a chat on 
      matters. He goes to Ottawa to attend the Legislature anent the Union Act. 
      The anti-Unionists are doing all they can to defeat the measure and Sir 
      Hugh Allan, Hickson of the Grand Trunk, etc., are lobbying with the Antis. 
      But the bill will go through, I think. "This morning I was trying to get 
      men out to our meeting to-night so as to get them interested in our Church 
      Building scheme. They fight shy of the measure, but several promised to be 
      there. Dr. D—. went with me. We are going out this afternoon again. 
      Belleville gave but little for our fund, but I trust to go back there 
      again and we will do better. I address the students here to-morrow. We 
      want as many as possible of them out there—of the right kind. The desire 
      to go out is general, and I hope we may get the right men." "Money and men !" He does not know 
      it, but he has entered upon his life-long hunt. Ever as he tramps the 
      streets of these Ontario towns and drives his long drives against storm 
      and sleet, he is thinking of the little homeless congregations on the 
      prairie and of the homeless missionaries and missionaries’ wives he is 
      trying to settle in those homeless congregations. And, therefore, he 
      cannot yield to discouragement, and no matter who or what may oppose, he 
      presses hard upon his mission. From Brockville on this same tour, 
      under date March 22d, 1882, he writes: "I have just got down-stairs to 
      write you a note before I leave for Ottawa. I got here last evening and 
      held a meeting. The day was very stormy and my attendance somewhat slim. 
      The collection ‘ditto.’ I called on several before the meeting and they 
      all appeared to be interested, but the night was such as would deter 
      people from going out. I have no time to wait this morning to call on any 
      for the Church and Manse Building Fund, but think that I will call here 
      again. They think that $1,000 can be got, at any rate. I saw ex-Governor 
      Morris at Ottawa and got $1,000 from him! I never expected the half of 
      it." Though it is safe to say he never allowed His Honour to suspect any 
      such modesty in his canvasser. "But I had a regular ‘set to’ with him in 
      Toronto and hence he came down handsomely. Dr. Schultz promised me land to 
      between $500 and $1,000, and I got $300 from Senator Sutherland. I am 
      going to see some of the other men in Ottawa to-day and hope to do 
      something. I must go to Montreal for to-morrow evening. Our meeting in 
      Ottawa was large on Monday evening. Principal Grant, Macdonnell, and 
      myself spoke. Grant made a capital speech. Macdonnell and myself were not 
      so happy, but I got a good chance with them on Sabbath. I will go west 
      from Montreal to Toronto, likely on Monday or Tuesday." Stormy days and slim attendances do 
      their worst, but men with vision of the coming greatness of the West are 
      beginning to take an interest in his scheme, and so with better heart he 
      goes to meet his still doubtful Committee. From Toronto he writes on the 29th 
      of March: "I got here yesterday and was until 
      late at the Home Mission Committee meeting. Not much business yet done. I 
      do not know when we shall be through, but will go up to see you all as 
      soon as I can get away, likely to-morrow. "My Church and Manse Building scheme 
      has not yet the approval of the Committee. They want the General Assembly 
      to be seized of the matter and they recommend changes. I did not object 
      and hence all, I trust, will go well." He has the genius that can wait and 
      that knows when it is good to wait. The Committee, too, wise heads that 
      they are, know that it will do nothing but good to allow the Assembly to 
      view this work from many sides. He continues: "I found Montreal hard to 
      move, but after Sabbath’s services things went better. Several told me 
      that they were much pleased with the account given of the Country and 
      would help in this scheme. Some even went so far as to call on me about 
      the matter next morning." They are slow to move, these Montrealers, but 
      their day for moving will come, and when they begin to get the 
      "vision," they will be found in the line of advance. One of them has his 
      eyes wide open already, for we read: "Dined with D. A. Smith yesterday 
      evening, and he gave me $1,500. This is the only subscription from 
      Montreal yet." Courage! A goodly number will follow Mr. Smith’s excellent 
      lead. So from town to town and from 
      congregation to congregation he pushes his relentless canvass with the 
      help of his somewhat cautious Committee, and without it, till he arrives 
      at Toronto, the stronghold of Presbyterianism in Canada. He is expecting 
      much, but he is doomed to grievous disappointment. "I am just getting ready to go out 
      canvassing to-day. Spent a part of two days and got $1,500 more. Toronto 
      is hard to get at. Knox College has a scheme of endowment and people have 
      got a hint to reserve their strength for that. Toronto was always selfish. 
      It is Toronto first, last, and always. They will support what will build 
      up Toronto, but for outside objects they give as little as they decently 
      can." Which all goes to show that Toronto 
      is like other cities and like mankind generally, endowed with a very 
      considerable amount of human nature. But Toronto, like Montreal, will 
      change her mind about this man and about his work. The day will come when 
      she will respond with loyal and eager enthusiasm when he leads. So off he 
      goes to Montreal, where he remains till the meeting of the General 
      Assembly which this year takes place in St. John. With a brave heart he meets this 
      august and venerable body and, indeed, he well may. It is his first 
      appearance as Superintendent of Missions. To most of the fathers and 
      brethren he is quite unknown by face. But already there is rumour 
      attaching to him, and it is with keen expectancy that they wait his first 
      appearance. He is asked to address the house in regard to the Church and 
      Manse Building Fund. Tall and spare of form, rugged of face, and with the 
      burr of the land of his birth still ringing in his voice, he rises to 
      address the Assembly. Modestly, but with masterly management of his facts 
      and with quiet touches of pawky humour here and there lighting up his 
      narrative, he recounts his initial experience as a canvasser for Church 
      funds. It is the story of an extraordinary 
      triumph. He has succeeded in enlisting the moral and financial support of 
      leading Presbyterians of both East and West. He has secured from the 
      Canadian Pacific Railway Company the promise to transport all building 
      material at two-thirds the ordinary rate. Manitoba has already pledged 
      $36, 000 for the fund. With a very partial canvass he has subscriptions 
      from the East amounting to nearly $28,000. His total subscriptions to date 
      amount to the magnificent sum of $63,726 and this, with promises more or 
      less definitely given, he has reason to believe will give a grand total of 
      $66,626! While he is addressing the Assembly 
      he holds in his hand a small black note-book. Ah, that note-book! What 
      dismay it has struck to the heart of many an unwary critic! What 
      foreboding it has brought to the mind of an unhappy and unwilling 
      contributor! But what cheer and inspiration to many a doubtful Church 
      court and depressed congregation! The Assembly listen amazed. That by
      a single man during the few months at his disposal, with the 
      hesitating support of a Committee not yet fully committed to the scheme, 
      this large sum— and for those days it was, indeed, a large sum—should have 
      been raised, seemed an almost impossible achievement. The effect upon the 
      minds of the fathers and brethren was great and immediate. There and then 
      they, and especially the great leaders among them, took their new 
      Superintendent to their hearts and gave him their confidence. He will have 
      many a battle yet to fight; opposition, hostility, criticism, are yet in 
      store for him, but from this moment his Church will not waver in following 
      his lead. The future of the Church and Manse Building Fund, by the 
      statement of the new Superintendent, was fully assured. The raising and organizing of the 
      Church and Manse Building Fund was, indeed, an achievement which might 
      entitle any man to a high place in the esteem and the remembrance of his 
      Church. The history of the growth and the operations of this fund only add 
      to the lustre of his name who had the eye to see its necessity, the 
      courage to plan, and the genius to carry out to a successful issue a 
      scheme so fraught with blessing to the whole of Canada, both West and 
      East. The phenomenal success of the first canvass made the further 
      prosecution of the work an easier task. The Newfoundland friend who had 
      given the first thousand dollars, hearing of the work being accomplished 
      through the fund, secured from sympathetic friends a second thousand. A 
      Toronto contributor returning from a tour of the West and seeing the work 
      done through the country, expressed himself as highly pleased, and offered 
      to increase his subscription. "When a leading Episcopalian was speaking to 
      me," he said to the Superintendent, "about the energy of our Church and 
      her success, I felt proud of being a Presbyterian." Another contributor of 
      Toronto, similarly impressed with the value of the fund, volunteered to 
      become a life-subscriber. Before five years had passed, the subscription 
      list had grown to $114,792, though it is fair to say that owing to the 
      severity of the financial depression following the collapse of the boom in 
      the West, a considerable portion of the money subscribed could not be 
      collected. In his campaigning for funds, the 
      Superintendent literally obeyed the Scriptural injunction to be instant in 
      season and out of season. He never let an opportunity slip. On one 
      occasion a good friend of his living in Ottawa, a university classmate, 
      learning that the Superintendent was one of a party snow-bound for two or 
      three days on the line between Pembroke and Ottawa, met him at the train 
      on its arrival and with warm hospitality carried him off to his home, 
      where he entertained him for some days right royally. As a further 
      courtesy, the Ottawa gentleman put him up at the Rideau Club. Running his 
      eye one day over the list of club members, the Superintendent made the 
      happy discovery of some forty or fifty names of good Presbyterians. It 
      looked like good hunting to him, and, like a hound upon the scent, he took 
      up the trail. Not a man of them escaped, and it was many months before his 
      Ottawa friend heard the last of the joke he had unwittingly played upon 
      his unsuspecting club members. Eager though he was to secure 
      contributions for his cause, the Superintendent never sacrificed his 
      self-respect and never allowed any man either to bully or to patronize 
      him. On one occasion when in Ottawa he met a Canadian Pacific Railway 
      magnate coming out of the Parliament Buildings. "Well, Mr. Robertson," said the C. 
      P. B. magnate, "I suppose you are on one of your begging tours." "I am doing your work, sir," replied 
      the Superintendent with dignity. "My work?" "Yes, sir. You are a Presbyterian, 
      you are a Canadian, and you are interested in the West." And he proceeded 
      to indoctrinate his listener in regard to his duty and privilege as a good 
      Presbyterian and loyal Canadian towards the country from which he drew no 
      inconsiderable portion of his income. "Well," replied the great man, "I’ll 
      give you fifty dollars." "No, sir. I can’t take fifty dollars 
      from you." "‘Why note" was the indignant reply. "I am going this afternoon to see 
      Mr. X, Mr. Y, Mr. Z," 
      mentioning the names of prominent wholesale men in 
      Ottawa. " If they see your name down for fifty dollars they will at once 
      put down their names for ten." "You won’t take fifty, then?" "No, sir, I can’t afford to." "Well, good-morning," was the reply, 
      and off went the C. P. R. magnate with his head in the air. The Superintendent rolled up a good 
      subscription list in Ottawa and Montreal, and the year following met the 
      railway gentleman in the Parliament Buildings at Ottawa. "Well, Mr. Robertson," was his 
      greeting, "you are still on the warpath." "Still at your work, sir," was the 
      reply. "What will you take this year?" "What will you give, sir?" was the 
      cautious answer. "I’ll give you $250, but don’t come 
      back again." "I’ll take this," was the reply, 
      "and thank you, sir, but I make no promises for the future. Good-morning, 
      sir." And with that swift downward grip of his he left the railway man 
      looking after him with covetous eyes. It was a pity that such a man should 
      be wasted on canvassing for Church funds. Not often did the Superintendent 
      suffer abuse, and not always did he suffer in silence. During a canvass in 
      the city of Toronto a friend who had subscribed liberally to his fund 
      inquired, "Why not call upon my friend Mr. Blank? He is a Presbyterian and 
      wealthy. He ought to give you something." He did not add that the friend 
      in question was notoriously and constitutionally averse to subscription 
      books of all kinds soever. In due time the Superintendent tapped at this 
      wealthy Presbyterian’s office door. "Come in," called a gruff voice. He opened the door and stood with a 
      pleasant smile, waiting an invitation to enter. "Oh, I know you. You’re after money 
      for that Godforsaken country of yours," was the almost fierce greeting 
      hurled at him over the desk. "Well, I tell you, you needn’t come in here." 
      And without pause, the loyal Presbyterian poured forth his indignation and 
      contempt upon the surprised canvasser and his cause. But he had chosen the 
      wrong man upon whom to vent his fury. With growing wrath the 
      Superintendent listened till the man had quite exhausted his breath and 
      his vocabulary, then took a turn himself. "Mr. Blank, I came to your office, 
      sir, at the suggestion of a friend of yours," he said in that vibrant 
      voice of his. "I thought I was coming to see a gentleman. I was mistaken. 
      You didn’t even offer me a seat. You gave me no opportunity to tell my 
      business, you have heaped abuse upon me, but more than that, sir, you have 
      vilified the cause which is the cause of the Church of which you profess 
      to be a member, sir." And with cold and merciless deliberation he 
      proceeded to remove the successive layers of pachydermatous tissue till he 
      had the man on the raw. Then he poured forth an array of facts in regard 
      to the country and the work he had in hand, driving them home with that 
      long, bony index finger till the man was glad to get him out of his office 
      with a proper apology and a check for one hundred dollars. Neither of 
      them, however, saw the humour of the situation till the following year 
      when the Superintendent was calling for his next annual installment. When once a man whose conscience was 
      normally active allowed the Superintendent to get him at short range, the 
      result was almost always a subscription. On one of his hasty tours through 
      British Columbia he took the opportunity of calling upon a Provincial 
      Cabinet Minister, a gentleman of considerable wealth and devoted to the 
      Presbyterian Church. The Superintendent laid the necessities of his cause 
      before his sympathetic hearer and was gratified to receive a prompt 
      response. The Cabinet Minister drew forth his check-book and writing out 
      his check, handed it to his visitor. The Superintendent glanced at the 
      check without reply. It was drawn for one hundred dollars. "Well," said the subscriber with 
      considerable surprise, "is not that satisfactory?" "Hardly, from you, sir." "Why, how much do you want?" "Just another nothing, sir," 
      pointing to the last figure on the check. "What! A thousand dollars?" "A thousand dollars, sir," replied 
      the Superintendent, and sitting down, he drew his chair close to that of 
      the Cabinet Minister, leaned towards him and with his hand upon his knee, 
      went seriously at the business of revealing to him his privilege in the 
      matter. It took one hour’s talk, but as the Superintendent naively 
      remarked, "It was worth it. I got my thousand dollars!" The summary of what the fund had 
      accomplished during the first five years of its history is the most 
      complete justification of its existence. This summary is found in a 
      statement by the Superintendent accompanying the Annual Report of the Board for the 
      year 1887, and forms so remarkable a paper that it should have a place in 
      the memory of all Presbyterians who love their Church and of all Canadians 
      who love their country. It is as follows: "The Church and Manse Building Fund 
      was born of necessity. For several years before the Northwest was 
      connected with the outside world by rail, settlers in considerable numbers 
      were coming in. Their numbers increased as the prospects of a railway 
      brightened. A large proportion of the newcomers were Presbyterians. Many 
      of them were young, with characters unformed and with religious 
      convictions unsettled. Some were in quest of homes, others of wealth. The 
      wholesome restraints of settled society were wanting. With the break-up of 
      home associations and the absence of restraint there lay the danger of the 
      religious instincts becoming enfeebled and the sense of moral obligation 
      blunted. If religious institutions were not planted among them and the 
      teachings of early life followed up, indifference, irreligion, and vice 
      were certain to become prevalent. The facts were laid before the Church, 
      and prompt and energetic action was taken. Missionaries were appointed, 
      and money voted to support them. "But no sooner did missionaries 
      appear on the ground than other difficulties presented themselves. There 
      were neither churches in which to hold services, nor houses to shelter 
      missionaries and their families. The Foreign Mission Committee 
      appropriates its money to erect chapels, purchase bungalows, or procure 
      health retreats. The moneys of the Home Mission Committee can only be 
      voted to help to pay the salaries of missionaries. "My first tour through our mission 
      fields opened my eyes. Settlement was being rapidly effected, but for the 
      eight years between 1874 and 1882 only fifteen churches had been erected. 
      Schoolhouses were very few in number, and when available the low seats and 
      narrow spacing proved rather trying to the long leg and longer thigh of 
      the athletic Manitobans. I shall say nothing of the trials of female 
      dress, with its projections and distentions. Services were, consequently, 
      held for the most part in private houses, and as the ceiling was sometimes 
      low and formed of hay or sod, it seemed a blessing to be short of stature. 
      In summer, stables and stable lofts, byres and granaries, were fitted up; 
      but the crowing, clucking and cackling of irreverent poultry, the barking 
      of dogs, or the gambols of cattle, were too trying to the risibilities of 
      the young; and odours more pungent than pleasant gave the sensitive 
      nostril or the refractory stomach an excuse to rebel. "Railway stations and section 
      houses, unfinished stores and dwelling.houses, private and public halls 
      were extemporized into churches wherever available ; but the rent of halls 
      frequently left little of the revenue to be applied on salary, as such 
      halls were built ‘on spec,’ and supposed to pay themselves in three years. 
      Hotel parlours and dining-rooms, billiard and bar-rooms were secured, but 
      only occasionally. It was feared by the owner that the service might 
      interfere with the legitimate trade of the place. I have preached in the 
      front of a house when the proprietor was selling whiskey in the rear, but 
      I had the satisfaction of knowing that he was fined $200 and sent six 
      months to jail. Ludicrous incidents could be given and laughable stories 
      told. But missionaries compelled to labour in this way felt as if they 
      laboured in vain and spent their strength for naught. "The need of manses was greater 
      still. Missionaries could get houses to rent at only a few points, and 
      twenty dollars per month was asked for very inferior accommodation. When 
      it is borne in mind that the salary was only eight hundred dollars, it 
      will be seen that it was impossible for a minister to engage a house at 
      such a figure. I have visited delicate, refined women and cultured 
      ministers in houses scarcely fit to shelter cattle. Dr. Guthrie, in 
      appealing to Scottish audiences for money with which to build manses for 
      Free Church ministers, pointed his appeals with instances of heroic 
      suffering. Cases of greater hardships could be cited in the history of 
      missions in Manitoba. Disappointment, sickness, and diminished power for 
      work followed. Men lost their ‘spring ‘—their energy,—and the work 
      languished. An effort was made to reach the ear of the East, but a 
      wilderness lay between, and Eastern pastors were busy with their own work. "But why did not the people build 
      They could not. Many of them were poor—financial depression drove them 
      from the homes of their youth. For the first few years it was all outgo 
      and no income with them. Building timber could not be had but at a few 
      points; lumber and hardware were dear. Something had to be done to 
      encourage, to stimulate, else the work would fail. Such were the 
      circumstances that called the fund into existence, and similar 
      circumstances created funds in the American churches. "The effect of the fund on the work 
      of the Church has been unmistakable. It has given visibility to 
      Presbyterianism. There is not a village or town of any importance between 
      Lake Superior and the Rocky Mountains that is not provided with a church, 
      and many of the buildings are creditable structures. Rat Portage, Carberry, 
      Brandon, Oak Lake, Virden, Whitewood, Moosomin, Wolseley, Grenfell, Indian 
      Head, Qu’Appelle, Regina, Moosejaw, Medicine Hat, and Calgary, on the main 
      line of the C. P. R.; Gladstone, Neepawa, Minnedosa, Rapid City, 
      Strathclair, Shoal Lake, and Birtle, on the Manitoba and North-Western 
      Railway ; Morden, Manitou, Pilot Mound and Boissevain, on the Pembina 
      Mountain Railway, not to speak of Lethbridge and McLeod, Edmonton, 
      Battleford, Fort Saskatchewan, Carman, Fort Qu’Appelle and the rest, all 
      owe their churches to this fund. During the last five years eighty-two 
      churches, four church manses and seventeen manses have been built, or one 
      hundred and three structures in all, and of these ninety-four were 
      assisted from the Church and Manse Fund. For the eight years prior to the 
      existence of the fund only fifteen churches and manses were built, or not 
      quite an average of two, while since the existence of the fund the average 
      has been nearly twenty-one a year. "The possession of a church has 
      increased the audience, and widened the sphere for the ministers’ 
      usefulness. Jones would not attend services held in Brown’s house, and 
      Brown honestly paid Jones back; both attend services in the church. "A church affords facilities for the 
      prosecution of Sabbath-school work. In a country where religious training 
      is too often neglected at home, the Sabbath-school is scarcely less 
      important than the public service. The at-ten dance at the Sabbath-schools 
      has increased nearly tenfold since the fund was organized. "Churches have increased attendance 
      on public service and swelled the revenues of congregations. Until Port 
      Arthur had a church it received $300 from the Home Mission Fund; with the 
      dedication of its church the congregation became self-sustaining. The 
      contributions of Edmonton went up from $300 to $700, and those of Rat 
      Portage from $550 to $1,000. Calgary became self-sustaining in three 
      years, and now gives its pastor $1,200 per annum. Regina, Boissevain, 
      Virden, Qu’Appelle, Oak Lake, and other centres experienced similar 
      benefits. "The increase in congregational 
      contributions has enabled the Church to extend her operations. The money 
      saved in older districts has been available for work in new fields, if 
      to-day there is no settlement of any size or a centre of any promise where 
      a missionary of the Church is not ministering to the religious wants of 
      the people, it is to a considerable extent due to the operations of the 
      Church and Manse Board. The fund has been a valuable aid in church 
      extension. "It has saved money directly to 
      missionaries and the funds of the Church. Seventeen manses have been 
      already erected. At an average rental of $15 per month, an annual saving 
      of $3,060 is effected. This sum capitalized at eight per cent., the ruling 
      rate of bank interest, would amount to $38,250, or four-fifths of the 
      total amount expended by the Board. Wherever the minister of an augmented 
      congregation is provided with a manse, he receives $50 less from the 
      Augmentation Fund. These manses have contributed to the comfort of our 
      missionaries, and so removed the reproach of neglect on the part of the 
      Church. It has increased their power to help young people, and so to weld 
      the congregation into a compact whole. "The timely aid extended has cheered 
      the hearts of missionaries and people; it has helped to make the Church 
      one and keep the West closely attached to the East. In their times of 
      political disintegration this is a national blessing. "With all that has been done, the 
      work of the Board is only beginning. New fields in considerable numbers 
      are being occupied every year. Four-fifths of the ministers are without 
      manses, and three-fourths of the points occupied are without churches. "During last summer several 
      contributors to the fund, from Toronto, Montreal, and other centres, 
      visited the Country. They expressed themselves much pleased with the work 
      of the Board, and they have increased their former contributions. Their 
      cordial approval influenced their acquaintances to help the work." And so from year to year this fund 
      will continue to be a source of blessing to both congregations and 
      missionaries and a mighty influence in the establishing of true religion 
      in the hearts and lives of the people of Western Canada. Long years 
      afterwards, in the last report which he will submit to his Church, this 
      significant record of nineteen years’ work will find a place: "It is nearly nineteen years since 
      the Board was organized; at that time the Presbyterian Church owned only 
      eighteen churches and three manses between Lake Superior and the Pacific 
      Coast. During these nineteen years, the Board has aided in erecting 393 
      churches, eighty-two manses, and three schoolhouses to be used as 
      churches, or 478 buildings in all, worth about $574,000." A year later, the report will open 
      with this pathetic word: "The report this year is drawn by a 
      new hand. The hand that for the last twenty years prepared the annual 
      statement of the work done by the Church and Manse Board is still, alas, 
      forever." And then the report will proceed to give this magnificent 
      summary of twenty years’ work: "It would be impossible to estimate the 
      value of the aid given by the fund to our whole work by the erection of 
      church buildings during the last twenty years. This fund has assisted in 
      the erection of 419 churches, ninety manses, and four schoolhouses, and 
      has put the Church in possession of property worth $603,835; but the value 
      to the Church in Western Canada cannot be estimated in dollars and cents. 
      The equipment in churches and manses is the least of the advantages that 
      have come to the Church by means of this fund." It is largely due. to the influence 
      of the Christian Church that in no part of Western Canada has there ever 
      been a "wild West" in the American sense of that word, and of that part of 
      the credit due to the Presbyterian Church for this, a large share must be 
      ascribed to the operation of this Church and Manse Building Fund, which 
      has helped to give "visibility and permanence" to religion in nearly 500 
      settlements widely scattered throughout Western Canada. In this 
      connection, a paragraph in the London Times of August 18th, 1904, 
      referring to the proposed visit of the Archbishop of Canterbury to Canada, 
      makes good reading: "Informal consultations with such 
      Canadian bishops as the Archbishop can find an opportunity to meet on 
      their own ground cannot but be an advantage for the future development of 
      their work. He will get far enough West to realize that prompt pioneer 
      work in the interests of the Anglican Church is essential, but he will 
      understand the urgency of such work and will admire the enterprise of his 
      fellow Scots, who are planting the Presbyterian ministry all over the 
      remote West." And in that planting the master hand 
      was his to whose seeing eye the possibilities of harvest were so vividly 
      evident, and to whose genius was due that splendid instrument of spiritual 
      garnering, the Church and Manse Building Fund. |