| Administrative History | In July 1890, a group of CMS friends attending the Keswick Convention wrote a letter to the Secretaries and Committee of CMS, calling for a large scale advance, and suggesting an appeal for 'no less than a thousand additional workers'. They also called for: 1. evangelists to be sent out in groups, each associated with a leader; 2. larger employment of lay workers; 3. the groups to include 'mechanics and working men and women whose hearts God has touched' so the CMS would have the means to provide for industrial training; 4. special provision for the training of the proposed new classes of workers; 5. facilities for contributions to be appropriated for special topics.
Three sub-committees were appointed 14 October to consider certain of the suggestions: sub-committee A to consider suggestions 1, 2, 3 and 5 of the Keswick Letter (candidates and training issues); sub-committee B on industrial work and sub-committee C to consider appropriated funds. |