King's Business - 1921-06

T H E K I N G ' S B U S I N E S S

537

BY COURTESY OF COLLIER'S WEEKLY

There are many who have set themselves to resist all personal efforts sub^ept° ^ L them t \ aCCept E B i They do not like to converse on the IM l l dhey resent any urgmg. There is a great advantage in such cases in the impersonal character of a tract. The reader knows it is not aimed at him individually. If it is a well worded tract, curiosity compels v ad. ltl, T„he fac*s are there. He cannot argue back. They kLp taring him in the face. Some sentences stick. Incidents in his daily affairs bring them back to his mmd. Finally it becomes a recurring inward voice just this way?1S10I1‘ H°W Pe°ple haVe been brou=ht to the Lord in , Yas receQtly related that a tract which accidentally fell into the O b r f t i a y?un^ physician nearly a century ago, led to his acceptance of Christ and his going to the foreign field with his wife. After their lives mem£r 7 nfk+ rer/ th l r children Allowed in their steps until thirty members of the family have become Christian missionaries and have given coUeetively over five hundred years to the cause of spreading the G

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