"GOING OUT INTO ALL THE WORLD H Ä T W E D O I f l G Q •J ¡t 0 5 m I i- u. 0 a 0 C * s s (0 % 0 0 U] 1 K. 0 K a ui :» Ul FOH O ^ - C A T H o ü i c s ? " And other sheep I have which are not of this fold :. '.them also I must b r i n g ; and there shall be one fold and one .«shepherd." REV. ARTHUR H. C L A R K . N E W Y O R K : The Catholic Book Exchange, 120 West 6oth St. H % m t> 0 i *i Ì m 0 0 to 1 m p s 0 m ^ m * 0 « m -I c il Ri 1893. SA va mv no A HJ.IM INV / anoHsa T H E A P O S T O L A T E OF T H E P R E S S FOR T H E CONVERSION OF NON-CATHOLICS. How can "we use the Press for the conversion, of our non-Catholic brethren ? There is not I person who cannot do SOMETHING in this direction if he chooses '. , Do you ever read anything that is Catholic ? Do you take a Catholic newspaper? You ought to; do so, if you do not: There is no use in complain- ing that they are not well , edited as long as they , are hot , well sup- ported. Besides, that is no longer true. Thëre is a large num- ber of Catholic newspapers that are well up to the standard of what a newspaper ought to be, aud you should take one of them. Your Pastor will' gladly tell you what they are. Now that you have read your paper or your magazine, what do you propose to do with it? Surely you w i l l n<5t forget 'every onre else, and let' it lie on your table or throw it into'the waste-basket ? Will .you not spend one cent ; to help in the conversion of non. Catholics ?" Jl'ut a wrapper on it and send it ,to some of your non- Catholic friends:- If you do not wish to do that, then send to A. M. C L A R K ; 120 W 60th St., / N e w York, N. Y., and get the name of à non-Catholic to whom you can send it. There is. no knowing to what good results this Will lead. And all for one cent. For 3-cents you can send your copy of T I I K C A T H O L I C W O R M ) to some non-Catholic. Will you do so? ' W H A T ELSE ONE CENT CAN 1)0. O N E C E N T can buy Ten cards containing the P R A Y E R F O R T H E C O N V E R S I O N O F U N B E L I E V E R S . O N E C E N T can buy Tuv 4-page L E A F L E T S to give away to non-Catholics. O N E CENT, can mail to any address in the United States one copy of the pamphlet, " W H A T A R E W Ë D O I N G F O R N O N - C A T H O L I C S ? " O N E C E N T , IN QUANTITIES:.; o p ONE HUNDRED, c a n d o a l m o s t S Anything which we advertise to do in this. . , W h y don't you take T H E C A T H O L I C W O R L D ? W h y don't you b u y it from your news agent ? / / If vou want further information in regard to the work of the Apostolate of the Press, send to A. M. C L A R K , I2Q W. 6oth S t , New York, N. Y. Pass this pamphlet to your Neighbor. Ô ê g ë l É é d • E live in an a g e of apostolic life, energy, and zeal. A l t h o u g h idolatry is now extinguished a m o n g civil- ized nations, yet the time is similar to the days of St. Paul. Material prosperity advances with rapid strides, and intellectual strength increases daily. T h e rich become richer, and the poor poorer as the times advance. A s St. Paul went forth into just such | a state of society, so w e are called to meet this mass of people w h o either have no religion at all, or w h o at best have but a f r a g m e n t of the truth. T h e r e is the same class of men w h o are a l w a y s inquiring for something new, like the men of A t h e n s . T h e r e is the same class of men w h o have no G o d in the world, but are given up to self-indulgence. T h e r e is a large class of men and w o m e n w h o keep the natural law written on their hearts. T H E P A S T . T h e particular movements w h i c h produced this state of mind on religious matters are worth considering. T h r e e hundred and fifty years a g o there c a m e the g r e a t deluge of apostasy and rebellion against the Church. It flooded the western w o r l d ; it rolled up in threatening billows to the g a t e s of the V a t i c a n . It demanded the overthrow of the Church, or else its subjection to the state. Like thunder from a clear sky c a m e the a n s w e r — t h e g r e a t Council of T r e n t and its famous decrees of reformation. T h e echoes of that g r e a t reply to infidel demands still come b a c k to us in the legislation of the C h u r c h , and will until the end. Calmly, then, the Church w e n t on her w a y with renewed life and vigor, strengthening the faith of her m e m b e r s ; instructing them more thoroughly than for many generations before in the reasonableness and necessity of Catholic T r u t h . T h o s e w h o left the old ship of Peter, in a very short time w e r e w r a n g l i n g among themselves on the fundamental doctrines of faith. Before fifty years had passed they w e r e split , into a hundred sects, each m a k i n g war on the others. T o protest w a s 2 their life. Founded on principles of contradiction and of oppo- sition, they could exist only b y fighting. T o - d a y this revolt has worked itself out. It has had its day. L i k e the torrent which s w e e p s down the mountain sid|e in the spring, and is dried up by the summer sun until no sigh of moisture is left, so calm reason and faith in a higher power have dried up the passions of men, and the a w f u l day of ruin and desolation is closed. T H E P R E S E N T . Round about us to-day stand a crowd of people hungry for the word of G o d . T h e i r hearts are deeply religious, but they have no sense of the supernatural, and w i t h mere natural reli- gion they are never satisfied. T h e y need a revelation from G o d ; they know not w h e r e to find it. T h e y must be brought to investigate the truth, the beauty, the goodftefes, and the divine authority of the Catholic Religion. T h e r e is in many of these people a deep-seated, ingrained pre- judice against u s ; it is for us to break down its walls. T o these and to all others w h o are non-Catholics w e are sent. Here, then, is the urgent work of the day in the religious world. T h e time has passed w h e n Catholics can sit down calmly and fold their hands while men are perishing b y hun- dreds of thousands for the w a n t of the Catholic Faith. T h é time has passed w h e n Catholics can b e content merely to hold the faith and teach it to the favored children of the faithful. N o longer do w e dread the axe, the g i b b e t , or the hangman's rope ; no longer do men drive us to mountain fastnesses and caves of the earth to p r a c t i s e - o u r r e l i g i o n ; no longer reigns bigotry so supreme over men's minds that they will not listen to us. T h e day of aggressive spiritual warfare is again at hand. T h e time has come for action ; the hour has struck, and w e are called upon by G o d to sally forth from our strongholds and preach to unbelievers the faith once delivered to the saints. T h e r e has as yet been no organized plan of campaign. It is for us to arouse ourselves to the task, for w e alone can ex- claim with St. John, " W e know that w e are of G o d . " T h i s is the providential mission of the Church in the United S t a t e s — t h e conversion of the p e o p l e ; this is the work laid down by her Divine Master. It has been the work of Catholics in every a g e , and it must be their w o r k in this. Little has yet been done. T h e comparatively f e w converts w h o come to us every year are not, as a rule, the fruit and re- sult of the labors of evangelic and apostolic men' and women w h o have devoted themselves especially to this work. Many have come to us in spite of u s — w e must confess it with shame and sorrow. T h e y have .come after months of solitary study and thought, in spite of discouragement; in the face of a w f u l obstacles they have made the sacrifice. It is the g r a c e of God pure and simple w h i c h has led them o n ; they have been assisted b y no earnest work of ours. But now the time has arrived w h e n w e are able to say to such souls w h o are timidly standing w i t h o u t : " Here are w e the messen- g e r s of Christ; w e pray you in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to G o d . " It w a s a thin, small stream that flowed under the virgin hands of Bernadette at L o u r d e s ; but it became a great stream whose w a t e r s are spread in all the earth. So the few heroic souls w h o have come to Us are the earnest of a great flood of conversions; they are the first-fruits of a harvest of converts w h o shall in -a f e w years be gathered into the fold by the zealous apostolic laborers whom G o d is sending forth into the field to reap. » T h e man w h o is not alive to this work, or in earnest about it, is dead to the day in which he l i v e s ; is not alive to the providential lesson of the hour. A l m i g h t y God will ask of this generation, w h e n they "stand before him in the day of judgment, " W h a t did you do to teach the Christian truths to the non- Catholics w h o lived with you w h e n you w e r e in your trial-state ? It is for us to make answer now. L e t us arise in our might, the might of truth, conscious of our strength, confiding in God, and g o forth to win the battle, fighting against error. T H E F I E L D O F T H E H A R V E S T . T h e last census shows the population of the United States to be a little over sixty-four millions. Of this great multitude scarcely one-seventh profess the Catholic F a i t h . W e are not in 4 the field to discuss the reasons w h y there are f e w or many w h o are annually lost to the Church. W e know our numbers, and that w h i c h concerns us is, W h a t means shall w e take to gain the r e m a i n d e r ? T h i s remainder of the population, fifty-six millions, is made up of t w o c l a s s e s : those w h o are and call themselves Protestants, and those w h o are of no religious belief at all. T h i s latter class is g r o w i n g larger day by day. T h e uncer- tainty of teaching in non-Catholic pulpits drives daily g r e a t numbers into unbelief. Pleasure, vice and its. attractions, placed within the reach of all, are likewise doing their share in m a k i n g unbelievers. W e stand as a small body indeed, but w e should never forget how the Church w e n t forth in the fourth century into a world of pagans, and with w h a t results. But w e have before us an audience to-day that is ready, e a g e r , and anxious to listen to w h a t w e have to say. T h e y have heard of us from our enemies l o n g e n o u g h ; that their tales concerning us w e r e fables, they are certain. N o w , w h a t is the truth concerning us ? is the question w h i c h w e are called upon to answer. T h e A m e r i c a n people are fair- minded, ready to look at both sides of a question before they make up their mind. N o longer will they submit to be blinded by passion, nor will they let the incubus of any b u g b e a r rest on their minds. W H A T IS T O B E D O N E ? E X A M P L E . Some Will, no doubt, urge that w e should first sanctify our own people and make tRem w h a t they ought to be. T h i s is no doubt a pressing need, and it is certain that of all the obstacles in the w a y of the conversion of our country none is greater than the scandalous lives and shocking example of some bad Catholics. Intemperance and saloon-keeping are Catholicity's deadliest foes. W e profess a pure and perfect religion, and unbelievers are aware of our profession; and the non-practising Catholic is not the w e a k e s t enemy to the spread of truth. One thing that attracted men to the Catholic religion in the early a g e s of the 5 Church w a s the examples of soberness and charity w h i c h Christians manifested in their lives. T h e heart thrills with joy when one contemplates a vast multitude of good Catholic families in harmony and peace, dwelling together. Into these households never comes the de- mon of discord, but the angel of peace continually, abides with- in them. T h e r e daily arises the sacrifice of prayer and thanks- g i v i n g from the family altar. T h e r e mutual forbearance prevents wordy quarrels and unseemly disputes. T h e r e temperance and sobriety reign, and kindness and gentle influence rule where harshness and evil-speaking would quickly make a household of Satan. From these families comes forth no child to fill a drunkard's grave, a felon's cell, or the murderer's chair. From such families come forth the men and w o m e n w h o love the L a w of God, and respect the law of the land for G o d ' s sake! T h i s , then, shall be the first means of converting unbeliev- e r s : by showing ourselves by our example to be the true dis- ciples of Jesus Christ. BY T E A C H I N G . T h e next means of advancing the Catholic Religion among our non-Catholic brethren is by teaching it to them. T h e r e is every opportunity for Christians to meet unbelievers. T h e y are with them in business, in work, and in recreation. Questions are asked everywhere about our Faith, and w e all ought to be ready to give a reason for the faith that is in us. If w e would take such an active interest in our Religion that these people would be moved to question us about it, how great is the good that could be a c c o m p l i s h e d ! W h e n a Mission is given in the parish to which w e belong, w e could easily ask our non-Catholic friends to g o with us. Converts are often made in this w a y , as well as by invitations to sermons and lectures likely to interest honest inquirers. T H E APOSTOLATE OF T H E PRESS. T h e Press of this country is busy. It daily pours forth tons of worthless and evil literature to satisfy the depraved intellec- tual palate of the reading public. T h e r e is much also that is good, very good, w h i c h is constantly being put into print. But w h e n w e contemplate the possibilities that are before us, and the good that can be done by the spread of first-class Catholic literature, w e are fired with enthusiasm for the task. A little band of half a dozen, w h o are willing to give them- selves and all that they have for the glory of God, could, in a very short time, flood this country with good Catholic literature at a reasonable figure. T h e r e need be no difficulty about the books, pamphlets, and 6 leaflets proper for the purpose. T h e r e are plenty of them now in existence. W h a t w e w a n t is organized effort and a little money to secure local distribution. MISSIONS TO NON-CATHOLICS. T h i s is to be the work which will make a noise in the w o r l d . It will be the trumpet-sound of the advance-guard of the hosts of the Lord coming to take captive and bind with the s w e e t yoke of Christ the sinner and the unbeliever. L e t us, with the approbation of the bishop and at the request of the pastors, g o into the smaller towns and there, in halls hired for the purpose, speak to unbelievers all the words of Christ. T o meet their difficulties, their needs and wants, G o d must raise up men fit for the w o r k . T h e s e w e shall see coming forth, even as St. John the Baptist, St. Francis and St. Dominic, did in their days, bring- ing the good tidings of peace. T h e s e people w e must meet a l - so in private and talk with them kindly, and bear with their ignorance or prejudices concerning the truth, distributing mis- sionary literature everywhere. T h i s is the w o r k w h i c h is about to begin in the coming au- tumn. W e hope at some future day to chronicle the success w h i c h shall meet its first advances. P R A Y E R . " W h a t s o e v e r you shall ask the Father in my name he will give it y o u . " T h a t is to^ say, whatsoever w e ask concerning salvation shall be ours. L e t every Catholic, then, w h o desires the conversion of his country pray daily for that end. Prayer can avail w h e n naught else is of any use. St. Monica prayed seventeen years, and the world and the Church gaihed a St. Augustine. L e t a million of faithful souls put their prayers up to G o d daily, and w h a t shall w e not be able to do ? " It is time now to arise from s l e e p ; the night is far spent; the day is at h a n d : let us cast off the w o r k s of darkness, and put on the armor of l i g h t " ; let us g o forth, then, in our might of truth, with the strength and courage of our c o n v i c t i o n ; . and by example, teaching, preaching, and prayer convert to the faith the greatest country in the world. N e v e r went missionaries to a land more easy to convert. N e v e r c a m e they before a more fair-minded audience. W e cannot fail. " G o d wills it," and it shall be done. N O T E . — A p o s t a l card addressed t o A . M. C l a r k , 120 W e s t 60th S t . , N e w Y o r k , w i l l secure a printed prayer f o r the c o n v e r s i o n of A m e r i c a , o v e r a hundred thousand copies of which have already been distributed. P U B L I C A T I O N S O F THE CATHOLIC BOOK EXCHANGE, 120 West 6 0 t h Street, New York, N. Y. THE U F E OK FATHER HECKER. By Rev. Walter Elliott. Price $ 1 . 5 0 , postage free; wholesale $ x . THE LIFE OF FATHER. HECKER. By Rev. W i l l i a m Barry; D.D. Price I O cents, post- age free ; wholesale 5 cents. THE LIFE OF FATHER BAKER* By Very Rev. A. F. Hewit, D.D. Price 7 5 cents, post- age free; wholesale 5 0 cents. GUIDE FOR CATHOLIC YOUNG WOMEN. By Rev. George Deshon. Price, 75 cents. Special terms for the Guide: I n lots of 100, 40 cents a copy; i n lots of 50, 45 cents a copy; lesser quan- tities, 5 0 cents a copy. PROBLEMS OF THE AGE- By Very Rev. A. F. Hewit, D.D. Price $ 1 . 2 5 ; wholesale 80 cents. THE CHURCH AND THE AGE* By Very Rev. I . T. Hecker. Price $ 1 ; wholesale 7 5 cents. THE KING'S HIGHWAY; or, The Catholic Church the W a y of Salvation as revealed in the Holy Scriptures. By Very Rev. A. F. Hewit, D.D. New 3d edition. i2mo. In the Press. QUESTIONS OF THE SOUL* By Very Rev. I. T. Hecker. New 7th edition. Ready shortly. SERMONS PREACHED AT THE CHURCH OF ST. PAUL, the Apostle, New Y o r k , d u r i n g 1864-65-66! 2 vols. i2nio. $ 1 per vol. 6 0 LEAFLETS FOR DIS- TRIBUTION AMONG OUR NON-CATHOLIC BRETHREN. Send for Cata- logue. 4 pages. per 1,000. A BRIEF HISTORV OF RELIGION, FROM THE CREATION AND PALL OF MAN TO THE PRES- ENT DAY. F O R T H E U S E O F BUSY MEN. Compiled with care from the best sources by the P a u l i s t Fathers. 48 pages. Price 5 cents; $ 4 per 100. A COMPANION TO HIGH MASS, FOR THE USE OF NON-CATHOLICS. #3 p e r 1,000. A S P I R A T I O N S O F N A - TURE. By Very Rev. I . T. Hecker. New 5th edition. A New Book for every one to read: F R O M T H E H I G H W A Y S O F L I F E . 128 pages. Paper covers, 10 cents; cloth b i n d i n g , cents. This book contains most interesting accounts of the different ways i n which converts have been made. " M A S S - B O O K F O R N O N - C A T H O L I C S . " Compiled and arranged fprthe benefit of non- Catholics by a l a y m a n . Price I O cents; wholesale 5 cents. This is a good book for the Clergy to have at the door of the Church to put i n the hands o f strangers. F a t h e r Young's Church Music Publications. T H E C A T H O L I C H Y M - N A L * 8 v o, boards, 50 cents per copy. I n lots of 50 and more, 3 0 cents per copy. Contains 238 hymns, words aud music, appro- priate to the festivals and seasons of the Iyiturgical year, and for special devotions. A N O R D E R O F D I V I N E P R A I S E A N D P R A Y E R . 57 pages 24mo, paper. A number of prayers and hymns, with music, suitable for a congregational ser- vice. £ 3 per hundred. Specimen copies furnished ONL,Y on receipt o f 1 0 cents. 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" ' 8 pp. P r i c e , $6 p e r r,ooo. " • O F S I N C E R I T Y . T r u t h in itself t h e o b j e c t o f ^ t x T a x U ? 7 i S t l g a t l o n - 8 PP" P r i c e - #6 per i.ooo. J T H E N I G H T B E F O R E T H E F O R L O R N H O P E ; OR, PRAYER A RESOURCE IN ALL DANGER. A pp. Price jfa per I ooo W H A T S H A L L I D O T O B E S A V E D ? A g f i i s t t h e T u t h e r a n d 0 ^ % f ^ v a t . o n l j faith alone. 8 pp. P r i c e , | 6 per i,ooo. . , T H < - E p L E A O F U N C E R T A I N T Y . T r u t h for all m e n is o n e - therefore there can be n o u n c e r t a i n t y . 8 pp. P r i c e «6 Der i ooo ; t W H A T M Y U N C L E S A I D A B O U T T H E TOPE?Who'iTio interpret t h e Bible, t h e fallible i n d i v i d u a l or t h e i n f a l l i b l e C h u r c h ? 8 pp. P r i c e , $6 per i,ooo. H 0 ^ S H A L L W E F I N D T R U E C H R I S T I A N I T Y ? 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