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THE HONG KONG DAILY PRESS

.

TUESDAY,

MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR THE LATE REV. F. C. YOUNG.

REV F. SHORT'S, TRIBUTE TO WORK FOR RELIGIOUS UNITY IN HONG KONG.

"A VERY WINNING PERSONALITY.”

A memorial service for the late! It was never exclusive; imagining Rev. F. C. Young was conducted the benefits of religion to be the at Union Church, Hong Kong, on monopoly of the few, be that Sunday morning by the Rev. Frank "few" class, nation, race, or thoso Short, of the London Mission. whose theological ideas or ecclesias. There was a large congregation, tical views were akin to his own. which included many members of It was never narrow; imagining the healthy use of God-given powers in the Navy, Army aud Air Force.

Prayers were offered for Mri sport or recreation to be necessarily Young and Andrew, for kindred outside the circle of religious in- and "friends, and for the Church terest, and offensive to the Divine which had lost its minister, while Onlooker. thanks were offered to God for "the

radiance of his life and faith, for his loyal and consecrated service of thy Gospel; for all that he has ministered of Thy love, and reveal ed of Thy spirit; for the inapira tion that he has given, the Inith that he has awakened, the good that he has strengthened, the sorrow that he has lightened, the joy that he has shared, the loneliness that he has cheered; but above all for our surer knowledge of Thee-because of his life and teaching."

In the course of the service Mr. Short read the following letter which he had received from the Bishop of Victoria (the Right Rev. C. B. Dappuy, D.D.):---

Bishop's Tribute.

"Dear Mr. Short--I should like through you to express deepest sympathy with the Union Church congregation in the loss of its

minister. "

Mr. Young's ministry in this place was only a very short one, but it is one which has undoubted ly made a deep and abiding mark upon us all. I am sure it is no exaggeration to say, that by his winning consecrated personality Mr. Young in & peculiar degree won the confidence and affection of us who were privileged to know.

him.

"As you are aware, several of us for a number of months have met informally on the subject of unity, and our, gatherings ware en- riched by the presence and beautiful spirit of Mr. Young,

"Nor can I forget that on the very Monday before he went to hos- pital Mr. Young gave an address in St. John's Cathedral on the subject of unity, characterized by all the breadth of charity for which Mr. Young stood so pre-eminently.

"Nothing could have exceeded the kindliness and goodwill of ir. | Young in all our personal relation

ships, and at a time when my wife was ill last autumn I shall not casily forget the ready helpfulness of both Mr. and Mrs. Young, In eammon with many others who serve in the Church of which I am Bishop, I feel I have lost a generous friend.

"I would again express deepest sympathy with the congregation of the Union Church, who mourn the loss of one whose ministry here in Hong Kong, though so short, was exceedingly rich in so many ways, overflowing to many of us who were not technically members of the Union

Church. With brotherly sympathy, I am, Yours sincerely,

C. R. VICTORIA, HONG KONG,

It never outraged the moral con. science or the intellectual sincerity of men by an insistence on those early and mediaval theological doc trings which we have come to see are so expressed as to be contrary to our conceptions of God as Love and Beauty, Goodness and Truth.

But more than this, his religion was never an alternative or auxiliary to life; never that which somehow failed to sasociate God completely with the life it is given us to live. Never was there any justification in him for the thought that all religious duty might be reserved for and expressed on the Sabbath day in prayer and worship,

For him, religion was positive; dealing with the great issues of life and the ultimate problems of existence. It was concerned with what, was to be done, with the men and the women we were meant to be, with the manhood and the womanhood that bo curs. For him, religion was possessed of that which gave meaning and worth to life and personality,

No Intellectual Karrowness. For him, religion was charged with liberty.. and it was the gift of God to all peoples and to all life. The rederaption which Christ brought was not simply to take our souls safely to Heaven; it was to lift all our living, our childhood, our education, our busi- ness and cur commerce, our arts and sciences, our parsuit of truth and our service of our fellowmen, our sport and our recreation, and to make it well-pleasing to God.

For him, religion, was no intel- lectual narrowness; with him there was no trace of that intellectual suicide which ties itself to the ancient cosmogonies and theologies. Though some did not feel that they could always accept his theological inferences or Biblical expositions, yet I think the great majority have valued the broader, the tolerant exposition of religious truth which marked his preaching, what perhaps is more important is the conviction that anivation does not rest upon theological orthodoxy: and that religion need nover, and should never, do violence to truth.. For Mr. Young science and philo- sophy were not antagonistic to re- ligion; rather were they complemer. tary, using other methods and other napects of life.

more

For Mr. Young religion was the vers essence of life; needing always to be taken seriously, followed. enthusiastically, served sacrificially and applied consistently, and it gave richly and abundantly to thoga who followed its ideal revealed in P.S.-The Dean, to whom I Jesus Christ. Manhood was the have shown this letter, desires to finer, life the cleaner and richer, associate himself with what I have the future brighter with Eope for written, and I am sure many others those who learned to serve the one would desire to do the same.who had said, "I came that ye C.R.V."

MEMORIAL ADDRESS.

In the course of his address at the memorial service the Rev. Frank Short recalled that little more than a year ago he was given the opportunity of preaching in the Rev. F. C. Young, with whom he followed a theological course at Hackney and New College, London, where, even in those early days, tho gifts of Mr. Young's rich personality came to the fore. Again and again be heard of his friend's sacrificial and consecrated labours in Belling ham, Kent, and of the love with which men regarded him.

|

FEBRUARY 25, 1930.

Friendship with those in authority and those under nuthority; with, men of every walk of life, with those with whom he laboured in this Church, and with those with whom he laboured in the great Church of which it is a part, which is tho Body of Christ. Friendship with those outside the Church, who had grown cold to its influence. Ho touched life everywhere with the instinctive courtesy and sympathy of a friend. "

Church of England Friends, I would take this first opportunity of making public acknowledgment of what has been more than a tribute of friendship; it has but tianity as friendship. I refer to the been another example of Chris- interest and the constant prayers, bath public and private, on behalf of Mr. Young, of our friends" of the Church of England. It is too sadly true that the public outside them little realise how closely the bow real is the friendship and affec Churches are drawn together, and tion between their ministers. It is indubitably true that there is more unity in the Church than is usually recognized The memory of the gracious participation of the Bishop of Victoria in Friday's service, his ancramental reading of the Psalm, his helpful and sympathetic friend ship, the letter which has been rend to you, the presence of all the clergy of the Church of England in Hodg Kong and Kowloon at the funeral service, will remain an abiding possession.

This Church has been touched by and has received the spirit of the religion which is friendship. There should be in it a new capacity for friendship and a new willingness to bo a friend. May the Church guard, whatever the future hold, this great gift and give back in the service of God and man the friend- ship revealed in the life of its

minister.

"Religion" Is Service."

But religion is not simply friend- ship, it is service. He said at the outset of his ministry here," I have come to Hong Kong with no illu- sions. Maybe I shall find it hard, but you won't hear me say much about that. I shall go straight ahead with the work, do it as well

as I can, and leave the rest to God; but I shall make very certain that

do not leave it all to Him." He kept his word, restraining counsels went unheeded: he went on with

Service. his practice of the Gospel of

I am not going to attempt to enumerate the various points at which. he touched the life of this Church. and Colony. As wide as his Gospel of life and religion, so wide has his service been. He will long be re- membered in naval and military circles, in bospitals and in prisons, in homes and in businesses, in churches and in societies, for the way in which he followed the Christ's example, "I would be among you as one that serveth."

I want very briefly to refer to Mr. Young's influence a pointing out the proper perspective of re- religious activity--a- ligion and world horizon. Gathered at the graveside laet Friday, were two. ministers of the Church of Christ in China, and several members of the Hop Yat Church. Both minis ters had only that day returned to Hong Kong, but both wished to be. present to share in that service of faith and thanksgiving for one who shared with them the "unspeak able gift of Christ.

Interest in World Work.

I know how keen was Mr. Young's interest in the world work of the Church, and how much the activities of the New Territories Evangelizz- tion Society were upon his heart. For he had heard the Christ say, "Go ye into all the World."

And now? Do you remember those fine words of Mr. Johnston's might have life, and have ito more at the meeting of "welcome to Mr. abundantly."

Young Chicers greeted the faith- With such a religious outlook in herald who, having carried the is not surprising that the outsta ing influences of his life and preich ing should be found in jes natural faith in God, in its conception of religion as being instinctive with friendship and service, and bounded by a perspective of a world horizon.

Natural Faith in God.-

fiery cross of Christian testimony from month to month and year to year, finished, his course with hour. But the burning witness must go on. The torch now passes into younger hands and amid renew- ed cheers another herald pricks for. ward, fresh and enger, in the saine crusade."

Yet onec more the course is It seems to me that Mr. Young. taught and exemplified this natural finished, and those younger hands faith in God. There never was the have surrendered their torch; and least sense of pose, pietistic or in surrendering have given back parsonic. He was always just him that torch to this Church. Only as self, and taught and lived that it we take up the torch and adventure And now (continued the preacher) was natural to believe in the God in the same crusade shall his work you too have learned to love him. of Jesus Christ; natural to trust live on. Yet once more the ques He has laboured for you, and with Him, to turn life towards Him, and tion issues forth: "Who follows in you toiled for the realisation of the to worship and serve Him in and his train " purpose of God for this Church through the Church.

That is why it was comparatively can imagine to finer testimony than that which accompanied that symbol casy to talk to Mr. Young of re- of remembrance:-" From Three ligion Sure of his affinity with you, Fellows who are grateful for the it was easier to see how natural inspiration of the past, and are sure it was to turn to God God grant that his work cannot die."

that it may be true through the years that, because of his servant, we may all turn more easily to the "Father.net

men.

The service concluded with the rendering of the Dead March in "Saul," the congregation standing meanwhile...

CONVICTS AT LARGE IN SINGAPORE.

DASH FROM GENERAL. HOSPITAL.

There was never the feeling that his religion was something added to his personality, representing one aspect of life, and perchance not Many will feel that there has been fitting very well. Religion, life, and no greater service rendered, nothing personality were so intermingled more characteristic of Mr. Young. that they were a unity, ministering than in the revelation of religion Three long-term convicts from the to us all of God and His ways with not simply as friendly but as friend Singapore Criminal Prison, are at bip. He has followed Christ's present at large, having made a A Positive Palih.

tradition. He has been the friend sensational escape from the lock- Mr. Young's religion was never of you all, whether you were wont up ward of the General Hospital.

The three prisoners who were merely negative; never, simply lifted to gather in this Church for wor up in righteous condemnation or ship or not. It seemed to me, serving various terms for robbery, censorious judgment of the world standing by his grave, and seeing were sent to the hospital for treat in which he lived, or of the men that large company of representa- ment and were confined in the pri amongst be moved. It was never tire people, that it was a superb soners ward. About 12.30 a.m. merely, restrictive, seldom if ever testimony to the friendship which yesterday (February14.) the police expressed in those prohibitions was in Mr. Young's heart for every-on duty found them missing. which the casual critic of religion man. It was there just because it considers to be of the very essence was his religion, for religion is

friendship with of the Christian Way.

and God.

Investigation showed that the men had cut through the lavatory window bars and made their escape.

Haig

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CROSSWORD PUZZLE.

Horizontal.

1. Small beast of burden. 6.To hold too closely..

6

17 la

10

12

125

[15 16.

17

11. Goddesses of vengeance. 12. Form of ceremony. 14-Native of Asiatic country. 15.-Cuts.

17.-Bun "ged. 18.-Bick

18. To play favoured card on. 20.-Tatter.

21.-Musical note, 22.-To get up... 23.-Wipe man. 24-A table green. 26.-Stream. 27.-Opulent.

28.Transaction for money. 20-Measure.

31.-One who constructe. 34-Makes laor

35. To mar.

38. A continent (ahbr.

37. A number, 33-People

40-Forty.

41.-Pica of absence:

42-Floating snow mountain.

13. To annul,

45.-To come out. 47.—Sowa,

48.-Full of hardy grass.

Vertical.

1. Coarse cloth. 2-European mountains. 3.A bone. 4.-Musical note. 5-A large bird. Felonious act. 7-Lacking stiffness. 8.-Belonging to.

Greek letter.

48

10.-Motor livery. 11.-Lacks success.. 13.-A kind of beer. 10. To hurry.

32.33

1336

18. To follow by tracks. 20.-Stormed.

22-Indigo dyes.

23.-Inane. 25.-Angry.

26.-8colds.

26. More sullenly cross, 29.-One indifferent to pain. 30.-Tent material.

31.-Underground

ance.

32. "Pep. 33.--Extent 35.-Eartha. 38-Ran away. 38.Flock... 41.High card. 42-An insect. 44-Compass point. 40.-Pronoun.

plant protuber

YESTERDAY'S SOLUTION,

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