Excerpt from A Sermon Delivered Before the Foreign Missionary Society of New-York and Brooklyn: On Sabbath Evenings, November 3 and 10
The spirit of the Master, the nature of the truths Which he taught, the instructions Which he gave, from the very beginning of his ministry; the final injune tions to his apostles, and their commission, all clearly show that Jesus came on no personal errand, to open no provincial school, to establish no national religion, but to declare a religion radical, penetrative, recon structive, universal, and ever-enduring. These are the peculiarities of the Christian faith. It is radical. It is penetrative. It is revolutionary and reconstructive It is universal. It is everlasting.
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Henry Ward Beecher was an American preacher and reformer, born in Litchfield, Connecticut. He was the eighth child of Lyman and Roxana Foote Beecher, and brother of Harriet Beecher Stowe.
Reared in a Puritan atmosphere, he has graphically described the mystical experience which, coming to him in his early youth, changed his whole conception of theology and determined his choice of the ministry.
It was in the pulpit that Beecher was seen at his best. His mastery of the English tongue, his dramatic power, his instinctive art of impersonation, which had become a second nature, his vivid imagination, his breadth of intellectual view, his quaint humor alternating with genuine pathos, and above all his simple and singularly unaffected devotional nature, made him as a preacher without a peer in his own time and country.
He was stricken with apoplexy while still active in the ministry, and died at Brooklyn on the 8th of March 1887, in the seventy-fourth year of his age.
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