Friday, July 13, 2007

General Grant's Religion

1885

Religion in the time of Grant has ceased to be a subject of difference. In his dying hours he said that he was glad to receive messages of cheer from persons of every religion and from those without any religion. Here is, perhaps, the greatest recognition from one in authority yet made on the quality of those without religious profession. Grant made it in the face of death, and how singularly clear his mind must have been of superstition is realized in that congratulation.

Every day was expected to be his last, and, having his hard back to the world, the man of faith said: "Thank you, who believe in all your different sects, for kindness to me, and my blessing on you, too, who have never thought on these subjects."

From the most radical type of Catholic to the most ancient type of Jewish Rabbi; from the Chinaman who washes clothes in the name of Confucius and takes note of every day's duties to the most sneering skeptic out of the German laboratory, the realm of toleration has grown through Grant more than through any preachers, priests or pontiffs.

He went abroad and saw how every body worshiped, looked into their temples and tied the world together with the chains of his observation and good will. — Gath's Sunday letter.

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