CHAPTER V
AN UNUSUAL SERMON
When the rector of Christ Church entered the
chancel on the Sunday morning following the funeral
of John Bradley, and looked out over the well-filled
pews, he had no reason to be dissatisfied with the size
of his congregation. Yet a full church was no unusual
thing. For many Sundays now, people had been coming
in ever greater numbers to hear him preach. They
were attracted not alone by his ability, his earnestness
and his spirituality; but also by the novelty of his
message to society concerning the proper relation of
the Church to the wage-workers and to the poor. It
was by the attendance of the wage-working class that
congregations had, for the most part, been swollen.
There were few accessions from homes of wealth. To
the rich and the exclusive the new interpretation of the
Gospel of Christ had not proved to be especially attractive.
They had not formally repudiated it. They
had not absented themselves from the services in order
that they might not hear it. They had not relinquished
any proper effort to uphold and maintain the dignity
and usefulness of the Church, notwithstanding the
divergent views of the rector on certain matters of no
little importance. So that, on this particular Sunday
morning, there was no evidence of desertion on the
part of the rich and the well-to-do. It was noted,
however, that the pews in the rear of the church, those
renting at low prices and therefore occupied by parishioners
in moderate or humble circumstances, were
the ones that were filled to overflowing. It was plainly
evident that more than one laboring-man and working-