The trouble with most of the ideals which express themselves in diversified worship, is that they are peculiar to the life of leisure, they are a part of "the leisure class standard." Many teachers and preachers reiterate similar demands which can only be responded to by people who do not have to work.

From this leisure class standard our ideals must be changed to the standard of work, and the man who has vision is he who shall see the economic, the industrial unities, and who with compelling voice, will call men together to worship in a new consciousness of kind.

Ministers in the country are feeling this very deeply. The pastor who ministers to a whole community, boasts of it. He realizes he is serving a true social unit. This is the joy of many country churches which might be named, and the lack of it is the blight of many other country communities. It must be clearly born in mind, however, that the church can not organize a unity that is apart from the life of men. Religion is the expression of social realities. There can be no "federation" of those who are not conscious of their likeness and of their resemblances. This means that the religious teaching of days to come must be a teaching of the real unities of mankind. For in these true bonds of union men are brought together. The efforts to assemble them in artificial bonds, however ideal, will be futile.

FOOTNOTES:

[35] "Descriptive and Historical Sociology," by Prof. Franklin H. Giddings, p. 275.


SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY

BOOKS

The Conservation of Natural Resources in the United States,
Chas. R. Van Hise, The Macmillan Co.
The Rural Life Problem of the United States,
Sir Horace Plunkett, The Macmillan Co.
Principles of Rural Economics,
Thomas Nixon Carver, Ginn and Company
The Country Life Movement in the United States,
L. H. Bailey, The Macmillan Co.
Ireland in the New Century,
Sir Horace Plunkett, E. P. Dutton
The American Rural School,
Harold W. Foght, The Macmillan Co.
The Country Town. A Study of Rural Evolution,
Wilbert L. Anderson, The Baker & Taylor Co.
Descriptive and Historical Sociology,
Franklin H. Giddings, The Macmillan Co.
Rural Denmark and Its Lessons,
H. Rider Haggard, Longmans, Green & Co.
Quaker Hill, A Sociological Study,
Warren H. Wilson, Privately printed
Youth,
G. Stanley Hall, D. Appleton & Co.
The Presbyterian Church in the United States,
Robert E. Thompson, Chas. Scribner's Sons
Chapters in Rural Progress,
Kenyon L. Butterfield, The University of Chicago Press
The Country Church and the Rural Problem,
Kenyon L. Butterfield, The University of Chicago Press
The Story of John Frederick Oberlin,
Augustus Field Beard, The Pilgrim Press
The Church of the Open Country,
Warren H. Wilson, Missionary Education Movement
The Day of the Country Church,
J. O. Ashenhurst, Funk & Wagnalls Co.
The Distribution of Wealth,
John Bates Clark, The MacMillan Co.