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THE PRES
of the
V0L ' ATLANTA, OA., J
(This Week-=
The Federal Council.
Science Prcves the Bible.
The Book's Unity.
The Calvin Anniversary.
The Writings of John Calvin.
Vows
A House Not Made With Hands.
A Prayer For the New Year.
When Teacher Gets Cross.
By and By.
Little Esther's Cross.
Sally Sweet-Shoe.
!i "Ye must be born again."' These words staggered
Bj Nicodemus. Yet every man who has ordinary intelli
-H gence recognizes their truth. Every unregenerate man
| Ucnows there is something wrong within. Your friends
^and neighbors may have a high opinion of you, but
I somehow this fails to make you feel comfortable. In
1 fact, it acts just the other way. You say to yourself, "I
1 am a hypocrite, if these people who speak so highly of
1 me only saw me as I see myself thev would despise me
2
as I despise myself." Education, and culture, and rthne-.
ment, and morality have polished up the exterior until
1 it is fair to look upon, and still there is an uncomfort 1
able feeling in the heart. Experience proves that the
1 outside of the house may be painted and repaired until
V it looks like a new house, and still the inside swarm
I writ 1"? ? T T '* *
...augiiaiii germs. now oixen nave we telt that it
is indeed woe unto us when men speak well of us, for
their good opinion often expressed may only serve to
blind us to our real condition. That clean exterior,
which ought to be the result of a clean interior, may,
and no doubt often does, stand directly in the way of
that earnest seeking for cleansing which alone fits us for
the service of Christ.
The child is father of the man, but sometimes he is
' childless.
I
One good day of real life is better than a hundred
years of suspended animation.
i ?
mt
1i ne scene of the fearful earthquake and tidal wave in
Messina and Reggio, in Sicily and Calabria, is famed in
mythology. Scylla and Charybdis were supposed to be
in the narrow strait which separates the island of Sicily
from the mainland. Reggio is also mentioned in th^
Bible. It was the ancient Rhegium, where Paul's vessel
touched the day before he landed at Puteoli, near the
modern Naples.
BYTERIAN
South
ANUARY, 13, 1909. NO. 2.
Anent the Roosevelt letter on Romanism and the
Presidency, we should like to see this question answered
: How many of the priests of that faith in the
United States are American born and how many foreign
born? We think it likely that the answer would surprise
many.
A goodly proportion of the advice given us in connection
with many of the numerous "movements" around
us comes from mere theoretical acquaintance with the
work and from men who have themselves done very
little in the way of the activities of the church, in bearing
"the heat and burden of the day."
The German Emperor has gone one step further in
his policy of personal reform by becoming a teetotaler.
He has pledged himself to abstain from all alcoholic
drinks for the remainder of his life. That is just what
we understand the American President-elect, Mr. Taft,
has done. It is a good time for King Edward to stand
up and be counted among the abstainers. And a great
company of Senators and other public men might find
room in the water-wagon. The State Bar Associati<5h
of North Carolina will have no hard drinks a: their annual
banquet.
A very dear friend of ours, one as little given to claiming
what is not his own as any man we ever knew, is
horrified to see published over his nam:, in another
church paper, as if he were the author, certain lines from
Cardinal Newman's famous hymn, "Lead, Kindly
Light." The wonder to .us is how the thoughtful editor
could have allowed such a palpable error to get into his
paper.
ur? i '
?*t ud\c a tuirespondent, m .\e\v York, who underscores
at least half his words. He thinks it strengthens
them and gives them force. He is entirely mistaken.
He does so much of it that nearly everything being emphasized
the marks cease to be distinctive, the unitalicized
becoming, if anything, the most noticeable to the
eye and mind. When emphasis is so common that it
ceases to be distinctive it is no longer emphasis.
Some writers seem not to have discovered the fact that
the day of italicizing words in letters and articles has
entirely passed. So much is it out of vogue that in
many of the printing shops containing new outfit one
cannot find such letters for use. There's reason in this
practical rejection of the italics. It has been well said
tnai tne use ot them is either a reflection upon the
reader, in that it intimates that he cannot undc.sianr.