34 HISTORY OF THE PARLIAMENT.
nary, Louisville, wrote : "Let an honest effort be made to get at the facts of religious experience, and the truth of God will take care of itself."
Rev. James Kerr, of Glasgow, wrote :
The conception of such a Parliament of Religions is worthy of so great an occasion. The faith of Christ, of which I am a witness, cannot suffer any eclipse in the presence of any or all of the great historic faiths of the
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world. The comparisons and the contrasts between the Gospel of the once crucified but now exalted Jesus, and the other gospels that have proffered their healing balms for humanity, which such a Parliament will present and accentuate amid the world's civilization at the close of this nineteenth century of the Christian era, must, I am fully confident, draw world-wide attention to the song of the heavenly host on the plains of Bethlehem, " Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace, good will to men."
Rev. Lyndon S. Crawford, an American missionary in Broossa, Turkey, wrote :
The very thought of such a gathering sends a thrill of joyful hope