The church board had made its decision! Dwight’s
speech was too poor; he would not be allowed to speak in the church again.
So he began searching for Christian activities in and around town. After
many inquiries and no luck, the young man went to the Wells Street Mission
and asked if he would be able to help them with anything. The aspiring
minister told the man in charge that he couldn’t teach or preach, the
man said in a discounting way, "Why don’t you go out into the
alleys and streets to see what boys you can bring in?"
With the fresh marching orders, the young Dwight set out
to see what boys he could find, rounding up eighteen ragged, barefoot boys
on his first trip through the rough side of town. Later in life Dwight let
it be known that this was his best and most joyful Sunday ever! After
searching for two years to find out what his work was before he succeeded,
the zealous novice minister discovered his mission.
Like everything he was involved in, he threw himself
head first into the new adventure of finding kids. Or what he called
"drumming up scholars". One afternoon this, would be preacher
realized the boys didn’t much care for the formality and hard learning
of the Wells Street Mission. He could hardly blame them; he never cared
much for it either.
The idea struck with a forcible blow, it changed the
evangelical movement for good. After rounding up several boys, the novice
pastor asked them, "How’d you boys like to help us build a mission
Sunday school?" The first Sunday the freshly painted rail car that
was used to house the boys almost burst at the seams. Before too, long a
one and a half story house was purchased for them, it was once a saloon.
Numbers increased weekly due to the voracious outreach campaigns.
A well-known businessman once popped in to see the
thirty or so lot of sorry little munchkins, but to the aspiring minister
these children were precious jewels, and they made up the mission to which
God had called him. This young man was so devoted to the little ones
entrusted to him, that after cleaning the mission on Saturdays he spent
the rest of the afternoon and evening drumming up boys and girls and if he
needed to, he would reason with the children’s parents to allow them to
come and if need be he would even wash and dress the youngsters.
What a tremendous heart young Dwight had for the
children of Chicago! He was blessed by God to touch the world because he
first ministered to children. The children’s pastor who changed the
world for Christ? You know him as Dwight Lyman Moody, D.L. Moody, the
great American evangelist.
By Chris L. Williams