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CENTRAL MISSION.

The Central Slissiou service at the King's Theatre last evening was largely attended. In place of tho - usual address the Rev. j;. O. Blaniires gave a story recital, by Harold Begbie, telling of the fashion in which a London plumher, given over to dissolute courses, was reclaimed and transformed into a good citizen. Mr. Blamires emphasised the words with which Mr. Begbio concludes liis Siory: AY hat other-force can society devise, which will take such a man as this plumber, bred .iu drunkenness and crime, and convert him from a thief, a dipsomaniac, and a domestic tyrant, into an upright honourable aud Dure-minded citizen? Whatever conversion may be, whatever, its physical .machinery, it is religion and only religion which'can put tho machinery in motion to make a bad man a good man, a brutalised and daugerous citizen a useful member of society. The minds of politicians and sociologists should find hero in religion the oße great hope of . - regeneration, . the one single guarantee—as the whole of Tolstoy's work teaches—of a noble posterity." Pianoforte selections were capably rendered at intervals in tho servioe by Miss .Tones, of Masterton, and Mr. P. C. Newton.'

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19110123.2.82

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Dominion, Volume 4, Issue 1032, 23 January 1911, Page 8

Word count
Tapeke kupu
194

CENTRAL MISSION. Dominion, Volume 4, Issue 1032, 23 January 1911, Page 8

CENTRAL MISSION. Dominion, Volume 4, Issue 1032, 23 January 1911, Page 8

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