Patriotic men wrote earnest letters to their representatives in Congress, asking them to be firm, yet conciliatory; and clergymen of every degree and religious denomination — Shepherds of the Church of Christ, the Prince of Peace — exhorted their flocks to be firm in faith, patient in hope, careful in conduct, and trustful in God. “This is no time for noisy disputants to lead us,” wrote Bishop Lay, at Fort Smith, Arkansas. “We should ask counsel of the experienced, the sober, the God-fearing men among us. We may follow peace, and yet guard our country's rights; nor should we, in concern for our own, forget the rights and duties of others.” 1--“In our public congregations, in our family worship, in each heart's private prayers,” wrote Bishop McIlvaine, of Ohio, “I solemnly feel that it is a time for all to beseech God to have mercy upon our country — not to deal with us according to our sins — not to leave us to our own wisdom and might — to take the counsels of our senators and legislators; and all in authority, into His own guidance and government.” 2--“These evils are the punishment of sin,” wrote Bishop McFarland, of Hartford, Connecticut, to the clergy of his diocese, “and are to be averted only by appeasing the anger of Heaven. You will, therefore, request your congregation to unite in fervent prayers for the preservation of the Union and the peace of the country. For this intention, we exhort them to say, each day, at least one ‘Our Father’ and one ‘Hail Mary;’ to observe with great strictness the Fast-days of this holy season; to prepare themselves for the worthy reception of the Sacraments of Penance and the Holy Eucharist, at or before Christmas; to give alms generally to the poor, and to turn their whole hearts in all humility to God.” 3 More than forty leading clergymen of various denominations in New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania united in sending forth
January 1, 1861. |
So early as the close of October,
October 80, 1860. |