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Henry Sloane Coffin grew up to be one of the great clergymen of his day-and it was a day when clergymen were rarely listened to. But Dr. Coffin spoke out so that almost everyone had to hear. He preached on everything from labor legislation (he was for it) to prohibition (though a teetotaler, he was against it) to female clergy (he was for it). In his sermons he was apt to quote The New Yorker as well as the Bible. He preached quietly, but with an actor's skill, and in a voice so rich and delicate that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Heart First | 12/6/1954 | See Source »

Fish & Sanctity. The first church that young Dr. Coffin took over (he was fresh out of Manhattan's Union Theological Seminary) was near a Bronx fish market; in time, "the odor of sanctity overcame the odor of fish." Later, he moved to the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church. When he found that the church maintained a chapel for poorer parishioners who could not afford to rent pews in the church proper, Dr. Coffin closed the chapel, abolished the pew rents and merged the two congregations. He often took a portable organ to tenement districts to hold services for workers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Heart First | 12/6/1954 | See Source »

...Coffin became president of Union Theological Seminary. "Uncle Harry," as his students called him, campaigned for the great liberal causes that are safe and almost old-hat today, but which then still suggested the revolutionary's bonnet: internationalism, equality among the races, unity among Protestant sects, a common spiritual front among Protestants, Jews and Roman Catholics. Sometimes he went to extremes (e.g., he favored euthanasia), but he served to show that religion was not reactionary or doctrinaire or dead...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Heart First | 12/6/1954 | See Source »

...Self-Sufficiency. In 1945 Dr. Coffin retired as head of Union, but kept on preaching and writing. Last week, at 77, still a light to lighten that race of "men of adventurous spirit" he had pledged himself to foster at Union, he died-on Thanksgiving...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Heart First | 12/6/1954 | See Source »

...might well remember a Thanksgiving Day sermon Dr. Coffin preached ten years ago. Americans, he said, were always "self-reliant, not to say cocky," but only "penitent, pardoned and therefore truly humble Americans" would do any good in the world. It was a favorite theme of his: "Selfsufficiency is the very essence of sin ... What a lot of rubbish has been written about being masters of our fate and captains of our soul! We have not realized that in threescore years and ten, man does not pass much beyond the kindergarten stage . . . Let a man be aware that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Heart First | 12/6/1954 | See Source »

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