“A
rough country and short grub,” was the terse description
of Illinois in early times by a pioneer circuit rider
preacher of Pope County. With courage equal to the hardships
encountered, the circuit rider preacher told of riding on
horseback for fourteen miles, conducting two services and
then helping his host to beat the meal for the dinner bread.
Later in the day, he traveled on several miles through a
cypress swamp and preached again in the evening. For the
year’s work, he received in cash $62.50.
While
D.L. Moody was attending a convention in Indianapolis on
mass evangelism, he asked his song leader Ira Sankey to
meet him at 6 o’clock one evening at a certain
street corner. When Sankey arrived, Mr. Moody
asked him to stand on a box and sing.
Once a crowd had gathered, Moody spoke briefly and then invited the people to follow him to the nearby convention hall. Soon the auditorium was filled with spiritually hungry people, and the great evangelist preached the gospel to them.
Then the convention delegates began to arrive. Moody stopped preaching and said, “Now we must close, as the brethren of the convention wish to come and discuss the topic, ‘How to reach the masses.’”
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