Religion: Prayer in Industry

  • Share

Just a month ago John Emmett Edgerton, president of the National Association of Manufacturers,* addressed the third quadrennial Conference on the Economic Order, conducted at Evanston, Ill. by the Methodist Federation for Social Service. The general subject was "The Layman and the Economic Order."† The religious as well as the daily Press paid little attention to the meeting. It seemed purely a Methodist talk fest. Last fortnight, however. The Nation discovered a paragraph in Mr. Edgerton's paper which Methodist publications seem to have ignored.

The paragraph: "I am proud to say that the morning-prayer exercises in my factory have had the finest economic effect. Workers are producing far more goods than before the prayer system was started some years ago. We have made it almost impossible for anyone but a Christian to get a job. We examine applicants for work to see if they have any dangerous ideas. We have been able by that process to keep our plant free of trouble."

Comment by The Nation: "Mr. Edgerton's prayer system will undoubtedly spread, as it certainly deserves to, in the present 'inevitable period' of unemployment. In these recent materialistic years the workers have suffered from the scourge of work without faith. If prayer has aided production as much as Mr. Edgerton indicates, we see no reason whatever why with proper faith it should not prove equally effective as an entire substitute for production in difficult times like the present. It is high time in any case that the work ers learned to live by faith, not work. As for those weaklings who may fall by the wayside and starve to death, let the country bury them under the epitaph: Better Dead than Red."

Further excerpts from Mr. Edgerton's speech:

"We have become too much concerned with the rights of men and too little with their obligations. . . .

"There is simply too much talk about rights and leisure, living wages, rewards . . . and too little about the obligation to work and to earn the things men need and will enjoy. It has actually come to pass that work is being generally regarded as a curse sent upon man rather than as a privilege and a duty. A certain portion of the citizenship has been counted off into a class called 'workers,' who are being made to believe, through much talking about them and their particular rights, that all other people are loafers and parasites. We have established a legal holiday known as 'Labor Day,' and have imparted to it a significance which I believe tends to increase and intensify class consciousness. On this day no one is accorded the right to march in a parade except those who enjoy the distinction of being 'workers,' as opposed presumably to 'nonworkers' All of this, in my opinion, impedes the spirit of brotherhood among all people, and is contrary to the teachings of Jesus Christ. . . .

"But I believe in justice to him who hath as much as to him who hath not, and I think envy is as great a sin as greed. . . .

Time.com on Digg

POWERED BY digg

Quotes of the Day »

EXCERPT FROM DOCUMENTS given by the CIA to British intelligence officials about Ethiopian-born British resident Binyam Mohamed, who alleges he was tortured at the behest of U.S. authorities after his 2002 arrest in Pakistan
For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.