ANGLICAN CHURCH MISSIONS. 
299 
and man her navies ; so may it likewise be the 
boast and glory of our Church, that her calls for 
aid ever receive as ready and ample a supply 
both of men and sinews, for waging her spiritual 
wars against the enemies of " the great captain 
of our salvation." 
The probabilities of success, are also suffi- 
ciently strong and numerous, to induce the 
most apathetic to believe, that those efforts, if 
now put forth with zeal and energy, will be 
crowned with fruit and success. The dispo- 
sitions of the Kaffirs are naturally good and 
easily impressed, and appear only to be vitiated 
through heathenism. Their early training and 
national forms of government, all tend to induce 
them to prefer, and to reverence, everjrthing 
presented in a system, above that which is 
unmindful of external forms and discipline. 
And hence, the superior Episcopal order of 
the Church of England, together with the fact 
of her presenting all the purity of truth in her 
doctrines, with these yet enshrined within the 
external discipline, forms and regularity of that 
Church, peculiarly adapt her for teaching the 
Kaffirs with acceptance, and receiving their 
respect and attention. 
The religion presented to them by those al- 
ready in the field, appears, as it were, of too 
spiritual a kind (if we may be allowed the 
