It is now more than five years since
Mr. Nelson’s death, and today the old church
in the hands of his successor, Nelson M. Burroughs,
whose first name singularly suggests a prolongation
of the Nelson dynasty, and whose spirit and abilities
are a worthy continuation of an unusual rectorship,
is still animated by Frank Nelson’s vision, his
joy in service. His ideals live today in the
parish of Christ Church, which has not failed him
but carries out that which he committed unto them in
his farewell address:
The Church is the important thing to all
of us. We need the Church, for faith, for courage,
for guidance. The Diocese needs this Parish its
loyalty its support its fellowship as
we need the Diocese. The City needs this Church.
You will never forget, will you, the Vision, and
the power that came with it, that Mr. Stein gave
us forty years ago, viz; that the Church
is the Body of Christ, not a club, to minister,
and not to be ministered to. The people all
about us, the whole city, are our concern, to bring
them the Gospel of Christ. So, I pray God you
will go forward into the new day with high faith
and enthusiasm. You have a mission from God.
The mission goes on in the spirit
of readiness to embark on great ventures, and of youth
not knowing defeat, for on Easter Day, 1941 the authorities
of Christ Church announced it as their purpose to erect
a glorious new building on the site of the present
edifice as the only adequate memorial to Frank Nelson.
As in the dark days of 1917 the parish audaciously
built the Centennial Chapel, so the tragic repetition
of world war sees in the present rector and people
no diminishing of that daring and firmness of vision.
This plan is, as Mr. Nelson would have it, not for
his own glory, but for the larger range of the Church
in the service of the city. He had said, “This
is the work of those who will come after me.”
Christ Church will one day be clothed
in garments of new beauty because Frank Nelson preached
the Gospel that is the hope of a better democracy.
The grandeur of his accomplishment impels men to undertake
this task; and thus it is a living fact that his vision
is still an influence in the city, and is the choice
heritage of an unnumbered host.
If because of human frailty we think of heaven as rest, his
spirit corrects us. If in our partial understanding he seems to deserve release
from labor, yet for the very reason that he wrought with tireless hand through
crowded days," we know
in our moments of vision that for so knightly a spirit
the only possible reward is authority over ten cities.
From that kingdom of the spirit, he
speaks to us across the abyss of time, and nowhere
is his voice stronger, his thought clearer than in
the first chapter of the Epistle to the Philippians.
Here, forever sealed in the enduring words of Saint
Paul, is the heart of Frank Nelson’s ministry,
a ministry valiant and without blemish:
I thank my God upon every remembrance
of you ... for your fellowship in the gospel from
the first day until now; being confident of this
very thing, that he which hath begun a good work
in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ.