Mr. Moody's Last Moments - A Triumphant Passing Away - Funeral Services - 
      Addresses by Dr. Scofield, Dr. Weston, Dr. Chapman, Bishop Mallalieu, Mr. 
      Torrey, and others. 
        
It would be difficult to imagine 
  a more representative company of Christian workers than that which assembled 
  about the casket holding all that was mortal of him who was said by many to 
  have been the most remarkable man of this generation. The friends had been gathering 
  for two days. The Holiday joys in their own homes and the natural desire that 
  every man has to be with his own family at such a season of the year could not 
  keep them from paying this last tribute to the man who had been a friend, indeed 
  more than a friend to every one of them; for, if ever any one came to know D. 
  L. Moody well, he loved him. Paul once wrote in his Epistle to the Philippians, 
  " I thank my God for every remembrance of you," arid all who came 
  close to this man of God could write the same concerning him.   SO LIKE MR. MOODY HIMSELF    The Hotel Northfield had been opened by the family of Mr. Moody for the accommodation 
  of those who would come to the services, and Mr. Ambert G. Moody, his nephew, 
  who has been so closely associated with Mr. Moody's Northfield work, was there 
  to receive the coming friends and bid them welcome, just as his distinguished 
  uncle would have had it done. It was so like Mr. Moody himself to care for the 
  comfort of these sad-hearted pilgrims. I found myself, as I was planning for 
  the journey and had received notification that the Northfield was opened for 
  us, saying, "Well, that is like him in all his careful thought for others. 
  I suppose that he has ordered that the house be thrown open, and that it be 
  made comfortable for all who would accept the invitation to come," and 
  then it came to me like a shock that D. L. Moody was dead, and could care for 
  us no more except as the influence of his sainted memory would guide and control 
  for many a long day. Many of his co-laborers were in Northfield the evening 
  of Christmas Day, and the life of this dear friend was talked over; always with 
  love, and frequently with tears blinding the eyes of those who would attempt 
  to speak. Those who were qualified to testify told of his last days and the 
  closing hours of his life. One said, "It was just such an experience as 
  we would have supposed he might have. It was glorious."    HIS LAST MOMENTS AND HIS WILL    Another told how just before the last he said, "Can't a man die sitting 
  up as well as lying down," and when the doctor said yes, they took him 
  up and let him rest for a moment or two in his chair, but it was only for a 
  little while, and then they put him back again in his bed. It was the last time 
  he was to rise, and he who told it said with a sob, "I cannot bring myself 
  to realize that he has gone from us." Another told how, when he was aroused 
  from his stupor and saw all his loved ones about him, he said in his old way, 
  so characteristic of himself, "What's going on here," and when they 
  told him that he had been worse for a little time, and that they had come to 
  be with him, he closed his eyes and seemed to fall asleep again.    Still another told of the will he made, unlike any other will that any man had 
  ever made; when he gave the care of Mt. Hermon to his son, William R. Moody; 
  the Northfield Young Ladies' School to the care of Paul, his son, a junior in 
  Yale; the special oversight of the Bible Institute to Mrs. Fitt and her husband, 
  Mr. A. P. Fitt, the latter having for years been Mr. Moody's closest and most 
  confidential helper, particularly in the Bible Institute in Chicago and the 
  Colportage Library work. The Northfield Training School was to be the care of 
  Mr. Ambert G. Moody, his 'nephew. And when something was said about Mrs. Moody, 
  he had said she was the mother of them all, and they must all care for her. 
  An old friend gave the account of his words to his boys when he said, "I 
  have always been an ambitious man, not ambitious to lay up money, but ambitious 
  to leave you all work to be done, which is the greatest heritage one can leave 
  to his children."    A TRIUMPHANT PASSING AWAY    Still another gave the picture of his last hours. No more memorable sentences 
  on one's deathbed have ever been spoken. It was just such a triumphant passing 
  away as his dear friends would have wished. Where have you ever read better 
  sayings than these   
 
  "Is this dying? Why this is 
    bliss. 
    "There is no valley. 
    "I have been within the gates. 
    "Earth is receding; Heaven is opening; God is calling; I must go.  
 
And when he went away from them for 
  a little time and came back, he said that he had seen his loved ones in Heaven, 
  giving their names, and when it was suggested that he had been dreaming, he 
  assured them it was not so, but that he had actually been within the gates of 
  Heaven. Thus his noble life went out, but he being dead yet speaketh, and is 
  continuing to speak, and tens of thousands rise up to call him blessed. Such 
  intimate associates as Mr. Ira D. Sankey, Mr. George C. Stebbins, Rev. George 
  C. Neediham, Prof. W. W. White, Mr. William Phillips Hall, Mr. John R. Mott, 
  Mr. Richard C. Morse, Rev. George A. Hall, and many others talked until the 
  evening was gone, and then retired each to feel that his was a personal bereavement, 
  because D. L. Moody was dead.   WANTED TO SEE HIS FACE ONCE MORE    Special trains were run from the surrounding New England towns, and they were 
  filled with people who wanted to see his face once more. Farmers drove from 
  distances of twenty miles away that they might pay respect to the memory of 
  him in whom they all believed. The students were many of them away for their 
  Christmas vacations, but there was a sufficient number present to bear his body 
  from the house, which had become so much a part of himself, to the church in 
  which he was so deeply interested.    At last the day of the funeral came. It was a sad company of friends that met 
  in the Grand Central Station in New York City the morning of the funeral. There 
  was the Hon. John Wanamaker, who had been in close fellowship with him for years; 
  the Rev. A. C. Dixon, D.D., who had been as near to him in Christian work as 
  any man in the country, who showed by every expression of his face that he was 
  in sorrow, yet " not as others who have no hope    Mr. and Mrs. Janeway, of New Brunswick, New Jersey, devoted friends of the great 
  Evangelist for years, and intimately and officially connected with the Northfield 
  work. There were very many others, but notably, there was the veteran evangelist, 
  the Rev. Dr. E. P. Hammond, who had known Mr. Moody as long as any one in the 
  company. It was a sad group of people that journeyed toward the little town 
  where the devoted friend was lying dead. Many of them had not seen Northfield 
  in winter. They had visited it when the trees were in full foliage, when the 
  grass was green on the hill-sides, and when the birds sang their joyous welcome, 
  but at this visit all nature seemed in sympathy with the many who sorrowed' 
  because their friend was not, but rejoiced as well because God had taken him, 
  and because of the abundant entrance given him into His presence.    At last the church was reached. Special seats were reserved for the late coming 
  friends, and the most memorable funeral service in all the experience of the 
  most of those who knew him began.    During the morning Mr. Moody's family had been with the body, which had been 
  lying in the death-chamber since the time of death. But soon after ten o'clock 
  the body was laid in the heavy broadcloth casket and removed to the parlor of 
  the home, where a simple service of prayer was conducted by Mr. Moody's pastor, 
  the Rev. C. I. Scofield, assisted by the Rev. R. A. Torrey, of Chicago.    FUNERAL SERVICES AT THE CHURCH    At the close of this service the casket was placed on a massive bier, and thirty-two 
  Mt. Hermon students bore it to the Congregational Church, where it was to lie 
  in state. During the next three hours fully three thousand persons looked for 
  the last time at the face of the great, good man. The casket was placed directly 
  in front of the altar, and around it were banked many floral tributes.    The gathering at the church for the funeral service at 2:30 was notable. Men 
  from all walks of life - clergymen, business men, tillers of the soil - came 
  side by side to pay a last tribute. The services were as simple and as impressive 
  as if he himself had planned them. The voice of the loved one was still, but 
  his presence was felt.    The hymn, "A Little While and He Shall Come," was followed by the 
  Rev. C. I. Scofield's prayer. The Rev. A. T. Pierson read the Scripture lesson 
  from II Corinthians, iv. ii. This was followed by a prayer by Rev. George C. 
  Needham, after which the congregation sang "Emmanuel's Land," the 
  music being directed by Mr. A.. B. Phillips, Professor of Music in the Northfield 
  Institute.    The Rev. Dr. Scofield then pronounced the eulogy, saying:    
 
  "We know,' 'We are always 
    confident,' That is the Christian attitude toward the mystery of death. 'We 
    know,' so far as the present body is concerned, that it is a tent in which 
    we dwell. It is a convenience for this present life. Death threatens it, so 
    far as we can see, with utter destruction. Soul and spirit instinctively cling 
    to this present body. At that point revelation steps in with one of the great 
    foundational certainties and teaches us to say We know that if our earthly 
    house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God, a house 
    not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.'  
     
    There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body. But that is not all. 
    Whither after all shall we go when this earthly tent dwelling is gone? To 
    what scenes does death introduce us? What, in a word, lies for the Christian 
    just across that little trench which we call a grave? Here is a new and most 
    serious cause of solicitude. And I here again revelation brings to faith the 
    needed word: 'We are confident, I say, and willing rather to be absent from 
    the body and to be at home with the Lord.'  
     
    "Note, now, how that assurance gives confidence. First, in that the transition 
    is instantaneous. To be absent from the body is to be at home with the Lord. 
    And secondly, every question of the soul which might bring back an answer 
    of fear is satisfied with that one little word 'home.'  
     
    "And this is the Christian doctrine of death. 'We know.' 'We are always 
    confident.' In this triumphant assurance Dwight L. Moody lived, and at high 
    noon last Friday he died. We are not met, dear friends, to mourn a defeat, 
    but to celebrate a triumph. He 'walked with God and he was not, for God took 
    him.' There in the West, in the presence of great audiences of 12,000 of his 
    fellow-men, God spoke to him to lay it all down and come home. He would have 
    planned it so.  
     
    "This is not the place, nor am I the man to present a study of the life 
    and character of Dwight L. Moody. No one will ever question that we are laying 
    to-day in the kindly bosom of earth the mortal body of a great man. Whether 
    we measure greatness by quality of character or by qualities of intellect, 
    Dwight L. Moody must be accounted great.  
     
    "The basis of Mr. Moody's character was sincerity, genuineness. He had 
    an inveterate aversion to all forms of sham, unreality and pretence. Most 
    of all did he detest religious pretence or cant. Along with this fundamental 
    quality, Mr. Moody cherished a great love of righteousness. His first question 
    concerning any proposed action was: 'Is it right?' But these two qualities, 
    necessarily at the bottom of all noble characters, were in him suffused and 
    transfigured by divine grace. Besides all this, Mr. Moody was in a wonderful 
    degree brave, magnanimous and unselfish.  
     
    "Doubtless this unlettered New England country boy became what he was 
    by the grace of God. The secrets of Dwight L. Moody's power were: First, in 
    a definite experience of Christ's saving grace. He had passed out of death 
    into life, and he knew it. Secondly, Mr. Moody believed in the divine authority 
    of the Scriptures. The Bible was, to him, the voice of God, and he made it 
    resound as such in the consciences of men. Thirdly, he was baptized with the 
    Holy Spirit, and he knew it. It was to him as definite an experience as his 
    conversion. Fourthly, he was a man of prayer; he believed in a divine and 
    unfettered God. Fifthly, Mr. Moody believed in work, in ceaseless effort, 
    in wise provision, in the power of organization, of publicity.  
     
    "I like to think of D. L. Moody in Heaven. I like to think of him with 
    his Lord and with Elijah, Daniel, Paul, Augustine, Luther, Wesley and Finney. 
     
     
    "Farewell for a little time, great heart, may a double portion of the 
    spirit be vouchsafed to us who remain."  
 
The next address was by the Rev. 
  H. B. Weston, of Crozier Theological Seminary, Chester, Pa., who said:   REV. H. B. WESTON'S ADDRESS    
 
  "I counted it among one of 
    the greatest pleasures of my life that I had the acquaintance of Mr. Moody; 
    that I was placed under his influence, and that I was permitted to study God's 
    words and work through him.  
     
    He was the greatest religious character of this century. When we see men who 
    are eminent among their fellows, we always attribute it to some special natural 
    gift with which they are endowed, some special education they have received, 
    or some magnetic personality with which they are blessed. Mr. Moody had none 
    of these, and yet, no man had such power of drawing the multitude. No man 
    could surpass him in teaching and influencing individuals - individuals of 
    brain, of executive power. I am speaking to some of such this afternoon. Mr. 
    Moody had the power of grouping them to himself with hooks of steel, and many 
    of them were good workers with him many years; and they will carry on his 
    work now that he has passed away.  
     
    "Mr. Moody had none of the gifts and qualifications that I have mentioned: 
    no promise, and apparently no possibility, in his early life; no early promise, 
    if he had any promise, of the life he had to lead. What had he? There was 
    nothing else as interesting in Northfield as Mr. Moody to me. I listened to 
    him with profound and great interest and profit, as the one who could draw 
    the multitude as no one else in the world. He entered fully into the words, 
    'Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out 
    of the mouth of God.' So he fed upon that word; his life was instantly a growth, 
    because he fed on the Word of God, so that he might have it ready for every 
    emergency.  
     
    All this was not for himself, but for others. He did not study the Bible for 
    himself alone, but that he might add to his stock of knowledge. He did not 
    study his Bible in order to criticize, but to make men partakers of that light 
    which had enlarged his own soul, and that, I appeal to you, was the first 
    desire of his heart, that other men might live.  
     
    "With this one conception in his heart he dots his plain all over with 
    buildings which will stand until the millennium. His soul was full of joy, 
    and that definite joy finds its expression like the Hebrew prophet. I don't 
    think he himself sang, but he wanted the Gospel sung, and I used to listen 
    to song after song and remember all the time this was simply the expression 
    of that joy that welled up in his heart, the joy of the Lord Jesus Christ. 
     
     
    "You remember last summer how hopeful he was, constantly, as he compared 
    himself to 'that old man of eighty years, and I am only sixty-two, and I have 
    so much before me to live for.' Because D. L. Moody had mastered, or the power 
    of Christ had so mastered, every fibre of his being; because of that completeness 
    of consecration - I hardly dare say it - were Jesus Christ given the same 
    body, the same mental caliber and surroundings, He would fill up his life 
    much as Moody did, and that is the reason to-day that I would rather be Dwight 
    L. Moody in his coffin than any living man on earth."  
 
The next speaker was the Rev. R. 
  A. Torrey, who said:   
 
  "It is often the first duty 
    of a pastor to speak words of comfort to those whose hearts are aching with 
    sorrow and breaking underneath the burden of death, but this is utterly unnecessary 
    to-day. The God of all comfort has already abundantly comforted them, and 
    they will be able to comfort others. I have spent hours in the past few days 
    with those who were nearest to our departed friend, and the words I have heard 
    from them have been words of 'Rest in God and triumph.'  
 
REV. R. A. TORREY'S ESTIMATE OF 
  MR. MOODY   
 
  "As one of them has said: 
    'God must be answering the prayers that are going up for us all over the world. 
    We are being so wonderfully sustained.' Another has said: 'His last four glorious 
    hours of life have taken all the sting out of death,' and still another, 'Be 
    sure that every word to-day is a word of triumph.'  
     
    "Two thoughts has God laid upon my heart this hour. The first is that 
    wonderful letter of Paul in I Corinthians, xv. 10: 'By the grace of God I 
    am what I am.' God wonderfully magnified His grace in the life of D. L. Moody. 
    God was magnified in his birth. The babe that was born sixty-two years ago 
    - the wonderful soul was God's gift to the world. How much that meant to the 
    world; how much the world has been blessed and benefited by it we shall never 
    know this side the coming of Christ. God's grace was magnified in his conversion. 
    He was born in sin, as we are, but God, by the power of His word, the regenerating 
    power of His Holy Spirit, made him a mighty man of God. How much the conversion 
    of that boy in Boston forty-three years ago meant to the world no man can 
    tell, but it was God's grace that did it.  
     
    "God's grace and love were magnified again in the development of that 
    character. He had the strength of body that was possessed by few sons of men. 
     
     
    "It was all from God. To God alone was it due that he differed from other 
    men. That character was God's gift to a world that sorely needed men like 
    him. God's grace and love were magnified again in his service. The great secret 
    of his success was supernatural power, given in answer to prayer.  
     
    "Time and again has the question been asked, What was the secret of his 
    wonderful power? The question is easily answered. There were doubtless secondary 
    things that contributed to it, but the great central secret of his power was 
    the anointing of the Holy Ghost. It was simply another fulfilment by God of 
    the promise that has been realized throughout the centuries of the Church's 
    history: 'Ye shall receive power, after that the Holy Ghost shall come upon 
    you.  
     
    "God was magnified again in his marvelous triumph over death, but what 
    we call death had absolutely no terrors for him. He calmly looked death in 
    the face and said, 'Earth is receding. Heaven is opening. God is calling me. 
    Is this death? It isn't bad at all. It is sweet. No pain. No valley. I have 
    been within the gates! It is beautiful. It is glorious. Do not call me back. 
    God is calling me.  
     
    "This was God's grace in Christ that was thus magnified in our brother's 
    triumph over that last enemy, Death. From beginning to end, from the hour 
    of his birth until he is laid at rest on yonder hilltop, Mr. Moody's life 
    has been a promulgation of God's everlasting grace and love.  
     
    "The other thought, that God has laid upon my heart in these last few 
    hours are those words of Joshua i. 2: 'Moses my servant is dead. Now, therefore, 
    arise, go over this Jordan, thou, and all this people, unto the land which 
    I do give to them'.  
     
    "The death of Mr. Moody is a call to his children, his associates, ministers 
    of the Word everywhere, and to the whole Church: 'Go forward. Our leader has 
    fallen.' 'Let us give up the work,' some would say. Not for a moment. Listen 
    to what God says: 'Our leader has fallen. Move forward. Moses my servant is 
    dead, therefore arise, go in and possess the land. As I was with D. L. Moody, 
    so I will be with you. I will not fail thee nor forsake thee.'  
     
    "It is remarkable how unanimous all those who have been associated with 
    Mr. Moody are upon this point. The great institutions that he has established 
    at Northfield, Mt. Hermon, and Chicago, and the work they represent, must 
    be pushed to the front as never before. Many men are looking for a great revival. 
     
     
    "Mr. Moody himself said when he felt the call of death at Kansas City: 
    'I know how much better it would be for me to go, but we are on the verge 
    of a great revival, like that of 1857, and I want to have a hand in it.' He 
    will have a mighty hand in it. His death, with the triumphal scenes that surround 
    it, are part of God's way of answering the prayers that have been going on 
    for so long in our land for a revival.  
     
    "From this bier there goes up to-day a call to the ministry to the Church: 
    'Forward!' Seek, claim, receive the anointing of the Holy Ghost, and then 
    go forthwith, to every corner, preach in public and in private to every man, 
    woman, and child the infallible Word of God."  
 
THE WORDS OF BISHOP MALLALIEU 
    The Rev. W. F. Mallalieu, bishop of the Methodist church, said:    
 
  
     '' 'Servant of God, well done, 
      Thy glorious warfare's past, 
      The battle's fought, the race is won, 
      And thou art crowned at last.'  
   
  "I first met and became acquainted 
    with him, whose death we mourn, in London in the summer of 1875. From that 
    day, when he moved the masses of the world's metropolis, to the hour when 
    he answered the call of God to come up higher, I have known him, esteemed 
    him and loved him. Surely we may say, and the world will endorse the affirmation, 
    that in his death one of the truest, bravest, purest and most influential 
    men of this wonderful 19th century has passed to his rest and his reward. 
    With feelings of unspeakable loss and desolation we gather about the casket 
    that contains all that was mortal of Dwight L. Moody. And yet a mighty uplift 
    and inspiration must come to each one of us as we think of his character and 
    his achievements, for he was:   
  
     'One, who never turned his back 
      but marched breast forward, Never doubted clouds would break, 
      Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would triumph.'  
   
  "In bone and brawn and brain 
    he was a typical New Englander; he was descended from the choicest New England 
    stock; he was born of a New England mother, and from his earliest life he 
    breathed the free air of his native hills and was carefully nurtured in the 
    knowledge of God and the holy traditions and histories of the glorious past. 
    It was to be expected of him that he would become a Christian of pronounced 
    characteristics, for he consecrated himself thoroughly and completely and 
    irrevocably to the service of God and humanity. The heart of no disciple of 
    the Master ever beat with more genuine, sympathetic and utterly unselfish 
    loyalty than did the great, generous, loving heart of our translated friend. 
    Because he held fast to the absolute truth of the Bible, and unequivocally 
    and intensely believed it to be the inerrent Word of God; because he preached 
    the Gospel rather than talked about the Gospel; because he used his mother 
    tongue, the terse, clear, ringing, straightforward Saxon; because he had the 
    profoundest sense of brotherhood with all poor, unfortunate and even outcast 
    people; because he was unaffectedly tender and patient with the weak and sinful; 
    because he hated evil as thoroughly as he loved goodness; because he knew 
    right how to lead penitent souls to the Savior; because he had the happy art 
    of arousing Christian people to a vivid sense of their obligations and inciting 
    them to the performance of their duties; because he bad in his own soul a 
    conscious, joyous experience of personal salvation - the people flocked to 
    his services, they heard him gladly, they were led to Christ, and he came 
    to be prized and honored by all denominations, so that to-day all Protestantism 
    recognizes the fact that he was God's servant, an ambassador of Christ, and 
    indeed a chosen vessel to bear the name of Jesus to the nations.  
     
    "We shall not again behold his manly form animated with life, hear his 
    thrilling voice or be moved by his consecrated personality but if we are true 
    and faithful to our Lord, we shall see him in glory, for already he walks 
    the streets of the heavenly city, he mingles in the song of the innumerable 
    company of white-robed saints, sees the King in his beauty, and waits our 
    coming. May God grant that in due time we may meet him over yonder." 
     
 
DR. CHAPMAN'S ADDRESS.   The Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman of New York, the next speaker, said:    
 
  "I cannot bring myself to 
    feel this afternoon that this service is a reality. It seems to me that we 
    must awake from some dream and see again the face of this dear man of God, 
    which we have so many times seen. It is a new picture to me this afternoon. 
    I never before saw Mr. Moody with his eyes closed. They were always open, 
    and it seemed to me open not only to see where he could help others, but where 
    he could help me. His hands were always outstretched to help others. I never 
    came near him without his helping me."  
 
At this point the sun came through 
  a crack in a blind, and the rays fell directly on Mr. Moody's face, and nowhere 
  else in the darkened church did a single beam of sunshine fall.   
 
  "The only thing that seems 
    natural is the sunlight now on his face. There was always a halo around him. 
    I can only give a slight tribute of the help he has done me, I can only especially 
    dedicate myself to God, that I, with others, may preach the Gospel he taught. 
     
     
    "When I was a student, Mr. Moody found me. I had no object in Christ. 
    He pointed me to the hope in God; he saw my heart, and I saw his Saviour. 
    I have had a definite life since then. When perplexities have arisen, from 
    those lips came the words, 'Who are you doubting? If you believe in God's 
    Word, who are you doubting?' I was a pastor, a preacher, without much result. 
    One day Mr. Moody came to me, and, with one hand on my shoulder and the other 
    on the open Word of God, he said: 'Young man, you had better get more of this 
    into your life,' and when I became an evangelist myself, in perplexity I would 
    still sit at his feet, and every perplexity would vanish just as mist before 
    the rising sun. And, indeed, I never came without the desire to be a better 
    man, and be more like him, as he was like Jesus Christ. If my own father were 
    lying in the coffin I could not feel more the sense of loss."  
 
REV. A. T. PIERSON'S ADDRESS. 
    The Rev. A. T. Pierson spoke next, saying:    
 
  "When a great tree falls, 
    you know, not only by its branches, but by its roots, how much soil it drew 
    up as it fell. I know of no other man who has fallen in this country having 
    as wide a tract of uprooting as this man who has just left us.  
     
    "I have been thinking of the four departures during the last quarter 
    of a century, of Charles Spurgeon of London, A. J. Gordon of Boston, Catherine 
    Booth, mother of the Salvation Army, and George Muller of Bristol, England, 
    and not one made the worldwide commotion in their departures that Dwight L. 
    Moody has caused.  
     
    "Now, I think we ought to be very careful of what is said. There is a 
    temptation to say more than ought to be said, and we should be careful to 
    speak as in the presence of God. This is a time to glorify God.  
     
    "Dwight L. Moody was a great man. That man when he entered the church 
    in 1856 in Boston, after ten months of probation, was told by his pastor that 
    he was not a sound believer. That pastor, taking him aside, told him he had 
    better keep still in prayer meeting. The man the church held out at arm's 
    length has become the preacher of preachers, the teacher of teachers, the 
    evangelist of evangelists. It is a most humiliating lesson for the Church 
    of God.  
     
    "When, in 1858, he decided to give all his time, he gave the key to his 
    future. I say everything D. L. Moody has touched has been a success. Do you 
    know that with careful reckoning he has reached 100,000,000 of people since 
    he first became a Christian?  
     
    You may take all the years of public services in this land and Great Britain, 
    take into consideration all the addresses he delivered, and the audiences 
    of his churches, and it will reach 100,000,000. Take into consideration all 
    the people his books have reached and the languages into which they have been 
    translated; look beyond his evangelistic work to the work of education, the 
    schools, the Chicago Bible Institute, and the Bible Institute here. Thousands 
    of people in the world owe their hope to Dwight L. Moody who was the means 
    of their consecration.  
     
    "I want to say a word of Mr. Moody's entrance into Heaven. When he entered 
    into Heaven there must have been an unusual commotion. I want to ask you to-day 
    whether you can think of any other man of the last half-century whose coming 
    so many souls would have welcomed at the gates of Heaven. It was a triumphal 
    entrance into glory.  
     
    "No man 'who has been associated with him in Christian work has not seen 
    that there is but one way to live, and that way to live wholly for God. The 
    thing that D. L. Moody stood and will stand for centuries to come was his 
    living only for God. He made mistakes, no doubt, and if any of us is without 
    sin in this respect, we might cast a stone at him, but I am satisfied that 
    the mistakes of D. L. Moody were the mistakes of a stream that overflowed 
    its banks. It is a great deal better to be full and overflowing than to be 
    empty and have nothing to overflow.  
     
    "I feel myself called to-day by the presence of God to give eye that 
    what is left shall be consecrated more wholly to him. Mr. Moody, John Wanamaker, 
    James Spurgeon (brother of Charles), and myself were born in the same year. 
    Only two of us are still alive. John Wanamaker, let us still live wholly for 
    God."  
 
REV. H. M. WHARTON'S WORDS 
    The Rev. H. M. Wharton, of Philadelphia, spoke in behalf of the southern States. 
  He 'said:    
 
  "I am sure, dear friends, 
    that if the people of the South could express their feeling to-day, they would 
    ask me to say we all loved Mr. Moody; we did love him with all our hearts. 
    It seems to me that when he went inside the gates of Heaven he left the gates 
    open a little, and a little of the light fell upon us all.  
     
    "As I go from this place to-day, I am more convinced that I desire to 
    live and be a more faithful minister and more earnest Christian, and more 
    consecrated in my life. We will not say 'Good night, dear Mr. Moody,' for 
    in the morning we will meet again."  
 
As Mr. Wharton ceased, Mr. William 
  Moody rose in the pew, and said he would like to speak of his father as a parent. 
  He said:   MR. W. R. MOODY'S TRIBUTE TO HIS FATHER    
 
  "As a son, I want to say a 
    few words of him as a father. We have heard from his pastor, his associates 
    and friends, and he was just as true a father. I don't think he showed up 
    in any way better than when, on one or two occasions, in dealing with us as 
    children, with his impulsive nature, he spoke rather sharply. We have known 
    him to come to us and say: 'My children, my son, my daughter, I spoke quickly; 
    I did wrong; I want you to forgive me.' That was D. L. Moody as a father. 
     
     
    "He was not yearning to go; he loved his work. Life was very attractive; 
    it seems as though on that early morning as he had one foot upon the threshold 
    it was given him for our sake to give us a word of comfort. He said: 'This 
    is bliss; it is like a trance. If this is death it is beautiful.' And his 
    face lighted up as he mentioned those whom he saw.  
     
    "We could not call him back; we tried to, for a moment, but we could 
    not. We thank God for his home life, for his true life, and we thank God that 
    he was our father, and that he led each one of his children to know Jesus 
    Christ."  
 
MR. JOHN WANAMAKER' S REMARKS 
    Dr. Scofield then called upon the Hon. John Wanamaker, of Philadelphia, who 
  said:    
 
  "If I had any words to say, 
    it would be that the best commentary on the Scriptures, the best pictures 
    of the Lord Jesus Christ, were in our knowledge of the beautiful man who is 
    sleeping in our presence to-day. For the first time I can understand well 
    the kind of a man Paul was, and Nehemiah, and Oliver Cromwell. I think of 
    Mr. Moody as a Stonewall Jackson of the Church of God of this century. But 
    the sweetest of all thoughts of him are his prayers and his kindnesses. It 
    was as if we were all taken into his family and he had a familiarity with 
    every one and we were his closest friends.  
     
    "There is not any place in this country where you can go without seeing 
    the work of this man of God. It seems to make every man seem small, because 
    he lived so far above us, as we crept close to his feet. It is true of every 
    one who sought to be like him.  
     
    "I can run back into the beginning of his manhood, and there have the 
    privilege of being close to him. I can call up personal friends that were 
    at the head of railroads, that were distinguished in finance and business, 
    and I declare to you, great as their successes were, I don't believe that 
    there is one of them who would not gladly have changed place with D. L. Moody. 
     
     
    "The Christian laborer, I believe, to-day looms up more luminous than 
    any man who lived in the century. It seems as if it were a vision when the 
    one who has passed away stood in Philadelphia last month, when, on his way 
    to Kansas City, and, with tears in his eyes, he said to me with a sigh: 'If 
    I could only hold one great city in. the East before I die, I think it might 
    help other cities to do the same.' Still trusting God, he turned his back 
    on his home and family, and went 1,000 miles carrying that burden, and it 
    was too much for him. A great many of the people of the sixties are quitting 
    work, and if anything is to be done for God, it is time we consecrate ourselves 
    to Him."  
 
		
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