Newspaper Page Text
VOL. I. ATLANTA, OA., N
| M This Week K
Page.
Our Laymen * 2
Jesus' Boyhood 3
Teaching by Parodox 3
What is Our Committee of Publication For? 4
Agnes Scott College 4
Candidates for the Ministry 5
The Church and the Age 6
Loyal Presbyterians 6
Report of American Consul General 14
The New Orleans Meeting 15
Prayer and More Candidates 19
Memorials of Ministers 24
| Editorial Notes |
The solution of sociological problems which the
Church can offer is not in training and study but in witness
for Christ, in keeping the Lord Jesus ever before
the world, in declaring the will of God, in preaching
repentance of sin, in showing "the way, the truth,
and the life." The gospel alone, in its simplicity and
power, will permanently change evil social conditions.
The Church is undoubtedly just now more "under
fire" than usual. The fact should arouse Christians to
a keener sense of duty and greater devotion and activiHr
T?~- 11 - ^1 1 1 '
i ui, diici <tii, me unurcn is wnat its people make
it. If they adorn the doctrine of God our SAviour,
there need be no fear of the world's acknowledging
its permanency and power.
Is the Laymen's Missionary Movement accomplishing
anything? The answer comes from Toronto. Increases
in mission contributions are reported as follows
: In four Methodist churches: from $8,000 to
$16,000, from $7,000 to $15,000, from $4,000 to $13,000,
and from $3,000 to $5,000. In four Anglican churches
$7,000 to $15,000; $5,000 to $15,000; $1,000 to $4,000;
$200 to $1,000., In three Presbyterian congregations:
$12,000 tO $I5,O0O; $7,000 tO $12,000; $6,500 tO $I2,50O.
to $12,500.
Of course every paper this week will have something
to say about the dime novel. One boy in Indiana
and one in Kansas, within a fortnight past, has been led
* 7
. r r " i "V .til
[?flf ^ TrtE S0U71ZWES7T:Rfi PftESBYTTRfANJ
z MM TtiE(?r/TRAL PRESBYTER/AN 6
^OUTh?mf PttSBYTERtAn
IOVEMBER 24, 1909. NO. 47.
to robbery and murder, confessedly through the reading
of these sensational booklets. Of course they
ought to be suppressed. The question how to do it?
It is a difficult one. The best answer we can give is,
let every parent look to the reading in his own household.
But there is another evil in the line of literature that
needs watching. Despite all the work of Anthony
Comstock and his associates, there is yet an immense
amount of impure literature and impure pictures
afloat. And it is intensely impure, impure beyond the
imagination of any pure minded parent. It is carried
? 1 1 il-i? ?- - * -
i.yj 3V.11UU1 uy pussiuiy one Doy in a nunarea, Dut that
one boy may show it to twenty. Even our girls are
not free from the infection. Teachers of girls' schools
have told of things that are shameful. While the parents
watch against blood and thunder, they may well
watch also against the vicious.
Almost a household word among the officers of our
Church is the name of Dr. W. A. Alexander. As the
auther of the Digest of the acts of our General Assembly,
he is known as the most accurate and painstaking
of men. By his labors as stated clerk of the
General Assembly, he has commended himself to all
its members year after year. His labors as professor
at the? Southwestern Presbyterian University, where
he held the chair of Biblical Languages and Literature,
have left an impress upon all the students of that institution.
The faithfulness and care with which he
has discharged every duty will not be fwrerotten. After
our issue of last week was printed, word came to us
that the life of this noble man had been suddenly terminated.
Me was in the railroad depot at Memphis,
on his way to the Synod of Mississippi, when the messenger
of the Lord called for him. He wv. spared
any long stekness and was taken almost immediately
to his Master's presence. He was still a young man,
being only fifty-two years old. He was a native of
Kosciusko, Miss., and a graduate of the University of
Mississippi. Five churches in that State (Lexington,
Franklin, Yazoo City, Canton and Madison) enjoyed
his services as pastor before he went to the University.
T U 1J ?' -? .? ?
a iic suuuenness 01 nis aeatn Drings a message to all
of us. God sends these sudden calls in order that we
may have before us the duty of constant readiness for
the Master. Would that every one of us may be ready
for the Master as was Dr. Alexander!