“I thank my God upon every remembrance
of you.”
Memorial Plaque at Entrance
to Christ Church.
“You can’t change me,
old man. I am the last of the black Protestants.”
In this whimsical way Frank Nelson spoke of himself
one day in conversation with a friend on some point
of ritual. It is abundantly evident that he was
in no way a bigoted churchman, and with all his fine,
broad sympathies he stood forth as a Protestant.
He represented that aspect of the Catholic-Protestant
structure of the Episcopal Church, he conducted the
services in Christ Church from that angle, his preaching
reflected it, and the absence of the clerical collar
emphasized it. There is a measure of truth in
his droll description of himself.
In the first decades of this century
Mr. Nelson was one of a group of broad-churchmen whose
influence was just beginning to be felt. Theologically
he was a liberal with reservations, and stood in what
is now called “Central Anglicanism” in
the sense of “essential orthodoxy, continuity,
and breadth and liberality within limits, checked by
the principle of discipline, and an outlook, above
all, theocentric; fidelity to Christianity as the religion of the Incarnation,
and of the Church viewed as Christs mystical body."
The truth is that he was different
from certain brands of so-called liberals. Like
many of them he was an individualist but not, as in
the popular conception of that word, an eccentric.
His individualism resided in his strong personality,
whole and complete rather than partial. He had
an immense scorn of the petty narrow-minded points
of view. He said, “There is no one so narrow
as the broad-minded liberal! Look out! Be
sure that you do not develop a closed mind toward the
other man’s point of view!” Frank Nelson
stood in the stream of the best traditions of historic
Anglicanism. He had, for instance, a tremendous
feeling of reverence for the Altar and the appointments
for the celebration of the Holy Communion; and his
manner of conducting the Lord’s Supper brought
that service very close to the most sensitive of worshipers.
On the first Sunday of each month the Holy Communion
was celebrated at eight and at eleven A.M., and he
made it the chief factor in building up the younger
members of the parish into the Church. Usually
Christ Church was crowded for the first as well as
the later service, and it was immensely impressive
to contemplate the congregation that came at the early
hour of eight o’clock from all parts of the city
and from distant suburbs. There is communicated
serenity as well as reverence in the stately, liturgical
service, but that feeling-tone is dependent on the
minister conducting it. Mr. Nelson was a medium
for the communication of the very spirit of Christ
in that service. The ancient, familiar words
were given a fresh beauty by his manner and his natural,
virile voice. His methods reflected certain qualities
of his character. It was his custom to read the
service up through the Sanctus from the north end
of the Altar, moving to the center for the remainder,
and at the moment of the consecration of the Bread
and Wine to turn halfway around so that the congregation
could see the blessing of the Elements. It was
in part an observance of the Apostolic custom of the
minister’s standing behind the Altar and facing
the congregation, and one which he had learned from
his days at St. George’s under Dr. Rainsford.
In a time of much disparagement, Frank
Nelson and his parish upheld the fair reputation of
the Church. Bishop Hobson says, “Many a
minister and many a church have taken heart and courage
because of his ministry.” Because he was
unafraid to experiment and venture on fresh approaches
to old problems, he risked misunderstanding and criticism.
He had a marked sense of the dignity of his office,
and all who worked on the staff of Christ Church were
aware that he was the rector, a czar if you will, but
one with a gloved hand. He ran the parish, but
not for his own sake nor from delight in power.
As a matter of fact, he distrusted power, particularly
when wielded by small men in the office of Bishop,
and because of that distrust, and because of the democratic
nature of the government of the Episcopal Church,
he held the leadership of rectors to be equal in value
to that of the Episcopate.
In the management of the parish, he
was “a man set under authority.” He
expected hard work of those to whom he delegated responsibility.
Though he occasionally interfered, he invariably backed
up his leaders even when they were in the wrong.
He did not hesitate to criticize: a retiring
choir-master said to his successor, “He is a
tyrant, and you won’t last three months.”
After eighteen years, he is still there! There
were those who sometimes found Mr. Nelson abrupt, but
as they came to understand his temperament and to
appreciate his insistence that things should be run
decently and in order, they were the very ones who
would have stood on their heads for him because his
nature inspired endless devotion. It is easy
to lose sight of human values in a large institution,
but he was the kind of person who was quick to apologize
for any rudeness, and if the instance had to do with
some fine point of procedure, he would grin and say,
“But I was right!” and he was.
A unique thing about his rectorship was his willingness
to take the blame upon himself when something went
wrong. He felt he was at fault for not having
given his subordinates the right training. The
conception he held of his office of rector impelled
him to give each year a comprehensive report of his
parish work along with an audited financial accounting
of all monies that he had handled personally.
In the services of Christ Church,
Frank Nelson’s individuality found complete
expression. The Prayer Book offices were marked
by an absence of ceremonial, but filled with a profound
simplicity and a noble dignity. People coming
from other parishes and accustomed to considerable
ritual and better architecture (Christ Church has been
likened to a Moorish mosque!) learned that such externals
occupy in reality a subordinate position in the Christian
life, as the rector’s manner and forceful preaching
lifted them to the plane of spirit-filled worship.
He was concerned not with the creation of an atmosphere
in which to bathe with satisfaction one’s feelings
about God but with the living message of the Gospel.
One came at last to love the old church building because
there the spirit was fed, the mind enlightened, and
the will impelled to action.
People came to be in his presence. They found a new, bright
sense of the glory of religious faith; they felt how precious is the least of
the human vessels into which God pours His Spirit. The man in himself
communicated a personality so wholly infused with the grace of the Lord Jesus
that his hearers were stirred to action, which result stems from the authentic
note in preaching. Effective preaching can only mean effective in the sense of
doing Gods work." Frank Nelson did Gods work. He stirred people to do
Gods work. The atmosphere of conviction generated by the preacher is due to his
whole personality rather than to his words; hence the impact made upon his
hearers at the moment of his speaking is never conveyed through the printed
page. Its influence, however, continues in their lives, and measured by this
standard Frank Nelson was a powerful and effective preacher. The gift of swift,
magnetic, eloquent speech was his. Words with the quality and vigor of intuitive
imagination poured out of him. Yet preaching was never easy for him, and as it
was dominated by his characteristic intensity and fervor, he was nervous
beforehand and exhausted afterward. His emotional range sometimes led him off
the main thread of a discourse; at times he ranted; and more than once preached
an entirely different sermon from the one outlined in his written notes. His
preaching was feeling warmed up to vision, and the word of God passed through
him to men. He believed tremendously in preaching; there were few services in
Christ Church at which he did not preach, but he was not a so-called
popular preacher; crowds did not constantly fill the
pews. To some his driving power was wearing,
and even some of his admirers would exclaim, “Oh,
I do wish Mr. Nelson would not tear his throat so when
he preaches.” But his very force of delivery,
and his vehemence were a part of the man, and he no
more could have preached in another manner than have
changed his stature.
But these characteristics had compensations
or off-setting factors. After Mr. Nelson’s
exchange with the rector of St. Paul’s Church,
Rome, Italy in 1912, a certain dowager commented,
“Mr. Lowrie’s sermons made me feel comfortable,
but Mr. Nelson makes me feel a miserable sinner!”
A newcomer, on his first Sunday in Cincinnati, went
to Christ Church intending to “sample”
several churches before casting his lot with one.
The choir came in, followed by a young, boyish-looking
clergyman whom the man presumed to be the assistant.
During the sermon Mr. Nelson continually entangled
himself in his stole and gave the impression of one
so inextricably caught up in his message that he was
a part of it, stole and all! The newcomer was
Frederick C. Hicks, later the President of the University
of Cincinnati. He did not go elsewhere but continued
at Christ Church and eventually became a vestryman.
Mr. Nelson did not talk in an amiable
sort of way about the Christian virtues; his sermons,
thank God, were not colorless essays on the doctrine
of God, and the Church. He preached with abandon,
and there issued forth a fiery stream of conviction
that stabbed his hearers into life. Within those
in whom the seed found good soil there was reproduced
his hunger for righteousness, his integrity of character.
What we heard from the pulpit of Christ Church was
the product of hard-won battles, the forthrightness
of a man stirred by his struggle to live as a follower
of Jesus Christ. He was no respecter of persons
but of personality, saying “We don’t dare
to be Christians.” Some said Frank Nelson
did not preach doctrinal sermons, but if not, then
church doctrine needs another name, for this man preached
the Christian faith, pouring it forth in great bucketfuls.
If after hearing him one didn’t know something
about the revelation of God in Jesus Christ, then there
is no such thing as doctrine.
The rector was sensitive about his
failure to attract larger congregations, and deprecated
his ability as a speaker. He was forever saying
that he could not preach, and that he preached too
long, but jested that he was too old to change!
Once in the midst of an after-dinner speech, he paused
to make an aside to his friend, J. Hollister Lynch,
“Am I talking too long?” “Yes,”
whispered Dr. Lynch, but he kept right on! Cincinnati
is not a church-going city like Pittsburgh, for instance,
but, as one witty observer has remarked, “Cincinnati
has fewer moral lapses!” In making judgments
on this point, one should take into consideration
the fact that there was a large Roman Catholic constituency,
and that the predominant German population of Cincinnati
which came in such large numbers during the middle
of the nineteenth century, was definitely anti-religious.
Christ Church, moreover, is a downtown church, and
the greater number of the communicants live in suburbs.
His parish took him for granted as was inevitable
over a forty-year period, but when we recall his multiple
civic associations, and the fact that whenever he spoke
there was a religious foundation to his address and
in his presence, we perceive that Mr. Nelson’s
preaching reached far beyond the bounds of Christ
Church.
The sermons of Frank Nelson were pervaded
with a fine ethical perception. He was in the
succession of the ancient Hebrew prophets in their
profound love of justice and concern for humanity.
He had a keen, quick feeling for spiritual values,
and succeeded in relating them in vital fashion to
the throbbing stress of daily living. Beyond his
piercing eloquence, captivating as it most certainly
was, was the compelling fact that in his interpretation
of the religious significance of human experience
he stood forth like a pine tree towering above scraggly
growth. No one can ever forget that tall, dynamic
figure in the spacious pulpit of Christ Church preaching
the Word of God with gripping power. It was not
merely the power of virility and eloquence, but the
power of grasp, of comprehension, the ability to communicate
truth and make it come alive, and cry out for expression
in the hearts and lives of his hearers. We felt
the majesty of the human spirit, the impatience of
sure faith with the rags and blemishes of doubt and
cynicism. “Like rain upon the mown grass,
as showers that water the earth,” Frank Nelson
poured out his soul, and revealed the grand proportions
of human destiny.
In his beautiful address at the Helen
S. Trounstine Memorial Service, a portion of which
follows, we find one of the best examples of Mr. Nelson’s
ability to interpret human experience, as well as of
his intuitive understanding of another’s travail
of soul:
And then her courage. There are the
lesser courages and the greater. There
are many who dare face danger and undertake hard tasks,
and face ridicule and failure. It is a fine and
a true courage and I do not underrate it. Helen
Trounstine had it and had it to the full. She
tackled hard tasks; she faced some men whose interests
she opposed. She fought out her fights against
all comers, and never flinched. She would go
into the court or into the saloon or dance hall,
the places of commercial recreation, and fight her
fight with all, for what she believed to be right;
and she won most of the time. It was a noble thing
to see that delicate woman unafraid before the problems
and evils of the world.
Yet that was not the finest courage she
had. That other finer courage is the one that
I would emphasize. It was given her to reconcile
a spirit filled with high ideals and great desires,
with a body weak, often bent and torn with pain,
unsuited to the tasks she longed to do, until at
last she was stricken with utter helplessness waiting
for the end. For only a few brief years was her
body adequate, even a little, to her will. And
instead of bending before that limitation and saying
that she could do nothing because of it, instead
of growing bitter with resentment at a fate that
had so burdened her, she but grappled with it the
more determinedly. With utter courage of heart
and mind, she fought her inner fight and won the
victory of cheer and energy and peace. With
no excuse and no complaints, and no relaxing of her
will before the limitations of her strength, she lived
and loved and served as if she had the health she
longed for. The limitations of her stricken
body meant the giving up of many dear desires, of
hopes that would have made life sweet and joyous, of
work she yearned to undertake.
Any of you who have had much to do with
one stricken with a sore disease, who knows he never
can be well again, know that it is not the sickness,
the physical weakness and pain that make the problem
and the tragedy. It is the reconciling of the
will to surrender life’s hopes and the readjustment
of the life to the conditions that have got to be,
that nothing can change. That was Helen Trounstine’s
problem and her tragedy. She sat down with her
fate and fought that fight and won it. It must
have meant many hours of untold darkness and suffering
and bitter questioning and struggle. But of
such hours she gave us no outward sign. At least
I saw none in the years I knew her, except that finest
one of all, the victory of her soul in the glad
and joyous doing of what remained within her power.
It is not surprising that his addresses
on Good Friday and his sermons on Easter Day were
more nearly adequate to those great days than is commonly
the case. He cared for these days tremendously,
and never ceased to be heartened by the throngs that
crowded the old church, filled up the chancel, and
stood in the vestibule through the Three Hours on
Good Friday. It seemed as if the whole city was
aroused as people from offices and factories, and
from the outlying districts came to these special
services year after year during his long rectorship.
It stirs the imagination to think of that gathering,
the rich and the poor, the highly-cultivated, and
the meekly endowed, shop girls and clerks, the faithful
and those groping for faith, all drawn by the mysterious
fire kindled by this man of God. There was a concentrated
intensity to his preaching on these occasions, for
he saw clearly and felt deeply the tragedies of life.
In that vibrant voice and in his passionate concern
for the soul of men, there burned a white-souled homage
to God, and a faith and love that spoke to each one’s
condition. Out of his long brooding over the
darkly colored stream of history, and the chequered
progress of Christianity of which his daily contact
with the city’s life as well as his study gave
him profound knowledge, there came forth “great
out-bursts of unshakable certainty which stand up like
Alpine peaks in the spiritual landscape of humanity.”
The integrity of the man along with the power and
dramatic quality of his speech was unveiled for all
the world to see. One recalls in this particular
a certain Good Friday after World War I when he took
up Sarah Bernhardt’s ghastly reversal of the
First Word from the Cross, “Father, do not
forgive them for they know what they do,”
and with terrific intensity literally shouted, “That
is a lie straight from hell.”
His preaching always illumined a fine
feeling for the mastery of language, and those who
heard him over the span of the years were conscious
that in his Good Friday addresses he employed plain,
Anglo-Saxon words, fundamental, strong words that lent
a cumulative effect to his speech. Because of
his modesty he never consented to the publication
of any of his Good Friday addresses, which is lamentable
for without a doubt they represent his best preaching.
A full, stenographic report, however, was made of
his last addresses in 1939, and certain paragraphs
from the Third Word may well be quoted. This Word
from the Cross, “When Jesus therefore saw his
mother and the disciple standing by whom he loved,
he saith unto his mother, Woman, behold thy son!
Then saith he to the disciple, Behold thy mother!”,
was greatly loved by his people because he gave to
it an interpretation that was entirely original:
As those of you who have been here on
other Good Fridays know, I give that my own interpretation.
Some say that I am wrong: that when Jesus Christ
said “Woman, behold thy son,” He meant
He was directing her attention to His friend, St.
John, who would be a son to her now that He was
going away. Perhaps. But I like to think
the other way: that He was revealing to that mother
of His the thing that should justify her motherhood,
and her faith, and her love. He was saying,
as it seems to me, things like this:
“Behold, your Son, bone of your
bone, flesh of your flesh. Known and yet unknown.
The Son whom the angel announced to you long ago among
the Judean hills. The things that you have treasured
and pondered in your heart must be brought out now
to allow God to open to you their hidden meaning.
For I am your Son, your first-born. In these
years of wonder and strangeness I have not forgotten
the love and care and protection given me. Through
you I grew up in the knowledge of the Scriptures
and the love of God’s House. No, I have
not forgotten those years in the carpenter’s
shop in Nazareth, and the laboring for daily bread.
Neither was it easy to break away, and leave home,
but God called me, and deep down in your heart you
were glad that God chose me it was the
confirmation of all that the angels had whispered
in your heart. You were proud of me, sure that
God had somewhat in store for me that had never
been known in the world, never known to the mothers
of other sons. And then murmurs came to you of
opposition, of the hostility of men high up in the
synagogues, weird reports of my deeds, and strange
teachings, and finally all that I said and did seemed
to go against the authority and sanctions of your
religion, and you were fearful of my mind. And
now I have come to this disgraceful end. This
cross is the fruitage of those thirty years spent
with you and in the fulfilling of God’s pleasure.
This fruitage of the Cross is not the fruitage that
God gives to the sons of evil as seems to be the
just fruitage of these thieves crucified beside me.
In reality this Cross is the crown of my life, and
some day the world will see it, and take Me unto
itself, and the Cross will have become a throne.”
It is the word of justification and comfort
that Jesus gives the broken-hearted Mary. It
is the word of God to woman. “Now we see
through a glass darkly, but then face to face.”
In Jesus, the son of Mary, we see what the world
will be like ’when the years have died away.’
It was on these special occasions
that he so frequently was inspired. Easter Day,
for instance, with its many services and huge congregations
stimulated him to the utmost, and to many of us it
seemed as if we stood in one of the vestibules
of immortality, certainly in the temple of this man’s
faith. He preached at both the eight and the eleven
o’clock services, and each time with undiminished
vigor and clarity of thought. In the interim,
he personally greeted all the parishioners who remained
after the first service for breakfast in the parish
house.
Frank Nelson loved the ministry, and
his convictions glowed and radiated pervasively.
Innumerable scenes flood the memory, and I recall an
ordinary Sunday which included the early celebration
of the Holy Communion at eight forty-five A.M.; an
address to his Chapel Class at nine forty-five; and
a sermon at eleven o’clock; in addition to all
these he went, in the afternoon, to a labor union memorial
service. There he repeated the morning’s
sermon from the text, “The last enemy that shall
be destroyed is death.” It was the fruit
of all his ministry to the bereaved, and of his penetrating,
sympathetic insight into the loneliness and devastation
of death’s inroads. As he brought the Christian
faith to bear upon the problem, he imparted by clarity
of thought and eloquence of words as well as by accent
and genuineness of emotion that certitude which is
possible only for one who himself possesses that which
he proclaims. This sermon was a notable example
of Phillips Brooks’ definition of preaching,
“Truth conveyed through personality.”
The few notes here included give only a glimmer of
the range of his thought, and do not adequately convey
the personal factor which made one want to rise up
and call him blessed:
Men have ever striven to conquer death,
and never succeeded. Christ too died and though
He rose from the dead, He did not return to this
life and take up its habits and tasks again. St.
Paul was not thinking of overcoming death in this
way, but rather of the new consciousness and gift
of power that Christ has given men. Christianity
is a conquering power. Faces what appears to
be the impossible, what experience declares to be
impossible, but does so with the word that “all
things are subject to Christ.” “We
see not yet all things put under him but
we see Jesus.” There is nothing that
may not become subject to the spirit of man through
Christ.
Christ facing human problems: the
fear of God’s wrath, superstitions arising
from doubt of God’s moral goodness, sickness,
sorrow, hopelessness, sin, worldliness, bitterness
of spirit and mind, suffering, and at last conquering
death as an enemy by His resurrection.
Death’s mastery over us is not a
physical thing. It is its power over our spirits,
its apparent defeat of hope, of work begun, of love
entered into, of faith laid hold upon, and the bitterness
that is the fruit of that defeat. Through Christ
the power of achievement was strengthened, and released
by death. We resent death perhaps reason
for shrinking is that so impersonal and physical
a process should be able to overcome a spiritual consciousness
and experience. We resent always the victory of
a lower over a higher order. (Fe, 1926)
Frank Nelson combined a happy idealism
with common sense, and when the occasion moved him
to inspired utterance, he drew upon the deep wells
of his being, and spoke without effort as waters flow
from a fountain. This quality characterized many
of his speeches, such as the one in Music Hall after
the Armistice of 1918 which he himself considered his
best, and those at Masonic gatherings when men flocked
to drink in his words and to be in his presence.
He overshadowed other speakers, and what Henry Ward
Beecher said of another is doubtless applicable to
Mr. Nelson: “When he speaks first, I do
not care to follow him, and if I speak first, then
when he gets up I wish I had not spoken at all.”
The worth of so much preaching troubled
him at times, and he too had his darker moments.
Sometimes he paced up and down Howard Bacon’s
study never saying a word, or perhaps bursting out
in boyish petulance, “When I am down, the parish
is down. Why can’t they stay up?”
At a staff meeting one morning he told the incident
of an organization that had requested him to address
them, and when he asked on what subject, the reply
was “Oh! just talk!” He passed this off
as a sort of reflection on his fluency of words.
Preaching was desperate business to
him because “the burden of the Word of the Lord”
lay upon him, and if he rose to great heights, he also
was dashed down to the depths. To preach for
forty years from the same pulpit is an exacting task,
and the net result of such an experience is no better
summed up than in the remark of a humble parishioner
by whose house he was walking one morning with Frederick
C. Hicks. It was Monday, and the woman was hanging
out her wash. Mr. Nelson said, “Let’s
stop and ask her what she remembers of my sermon.”
The good soul was non-plussed, and could not recall
even his text. And then with a leap of inspired
insight she said, “But Mr. Nelson, this cloth
is whiter every time I pour water over it.”
Perhaps this is the lasting effect on every humble
soul who patiently waits as God communicates His truth
in earthen vessels.
People came to be in Frank Nelson’s
presence. He never let them down. He had
said of William S. Rainsford’s preaching:
We came here as church people, professing the faith,
and as “we sat before him we saw poured forth
the reality of the thing we had professed to believe
in ... He took us to whom religion was a profession,
and made it a passion.” Christ Church people
find these words set up poignant echoes of a day when
they sat before Frank Nelson and heard the living Word
of God.