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14
Jesus and His Enemies
. (Continued from page 2.)
If I know anything at all about
the teaching of the Lord Jesus it
is that God holds no man responsi
ble for living in the dark who has
never seen the light. Oh, he can
not to be sure enjoy the benfits of
the light, but he will not be punish
ed for the extent of the darkness.
And this is the basis of our appeal
for missions. It is not that the
heathen are lost to hell who have
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■1 y *7 O«1 <7C Personally Conducted
Bj_ ■ *’<lJ J 3 Seeing the Great City
S h| Every Item of Expense Covered
BU Z i W E WILL SHOW YOU the great city of New ¥ork for
Rf I 1 | \ ** $47.50 —which includes every necessary cent of ex-
pense from the time you step off the train in New York until seven
fel'illh --■rtlOolFly days later you enter the train for your return. VThis tour would cost you
without our plan 2or 3 times as much. Every minute except when you
felJ are asleep in your hotel will be filled with interest and without a necessary
moment of worry or anxious thought. Every detail of the seven days is planned
Egjik/' for you and on a generouss cale. You stop at good hotels with their luxurious and
BEjiPl | ‘ complete service and have the best of food. You are conveyed to various points of in
""k * terest in comfortable sight-seeing autos—around the city in a safe and comfortable
steamer, and everything seen under the direction of intelligent and conscientious guides. Women can go alone on this
trip without the least hesitation or fear of annoyance. You can send your boys and girls knowing they will be taken
care of. You can arrive in New York any day you please between the Ist of June and the 10th of July and for the seven
days after you arrive you are cared for. You do not need to come in groups, you can come alone. Some change in
itinerary may be made on account of weather or other unforseen emergencies.
MONDAY
Start from Hotel in auto-busses for the first sight-seeing trip and go
up Fifth Avenue. This absorbingly interesting trip takes us past a score
of buildings, churches, statues and other landmarks of national reputa
tion, including the Flatiron Building, Metropolitan Tower, Waldorf-
Astoria, etc. Our route now takes us through Central Park, situated in
the very heart of the city, which for size and beauty is not surpassed by
any park in the world. After this we go over to Riverside Drive and get
great views of the Hudson and the Palisades. Up the Drive, past the
Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument, with a stop at Grant’s Tomb. From
there to Columbia University and the Cathedral of St. John. Then
■down the whole length of Central Park to an exit at the Maine Memorial
into Broadway at a point where it is lined with automobile stores and
is called Gasoline Row. Then comes Times Square —Herald Square and
we see the Great White Way by daylight. Lunch at the Hotel. After
lunch we embark again for a downtown trip for the sights of lower Man
hattan. We will see Post-office Square, with the world-famous Wool
worth Building rising 750 feet above the ground —the new Municipal
Building—the canyon of lower Broadway, We will see St. Paul’s Chapel
with General Washington’s pew and at the head of Wall Street, beauti
ful Trinity. The Singer and Trinity buildings and the Financial Dis
trict-Wall Street, the Stock Exchange, the U. S. Custom House, U. S.
Sub-Treasury and the new J. P. Morgan Building. Then down Broad
way to Bowling Green. Here is the new Custom House and across the
water we get a glimpse of Governor’s Island with its fortifications.
Dinner at the Hotel. Evening at the Theatre.
TUESDAY
We now treat you to an entire change by a ride in the Subway and Elevated to
New York’s most northern limits for a day’s outing in Bronx Park and the Botanical
■Gardens. Bronx Park is New York’s great nature playground, with perhaps the
finest collection of captive wild animals in the world. You have been to the circus
in vour town and have seen the menagerie—well, Bronx Park is a dozen menageries
thrown into one. Luncheon will be furnished by the Hotel and we will eat out on
the open. And part of the afternoon we will spend in the Botanical Gardens, with
trees and plants and flowers from as many parts of the world as come the animals
in Bronx Park, and to some it will be even more interesting. After dinner at the
Hotel the evening will be spent at some speciallentertalnment provided for the mem
bers of the Tour.
WEDNESDAY
This is a day on the water. Taking our auto-busses at the hotel we take another
trip to the Battery; old Castle Garden, once the landing place of millions of immi
grants but now the city’s Aquarium filled with all manner of fish, seals, sea lions,
and after seeing the Aquarium we embark on a water trip around'Manhattan Island.
Up the East River under the great bridges—the Brooklyn—the Manhattan—the Wil
liamsburg. and then the greatest of all the Queensboro. On this trip we pass Brook
lyn Navy Yard and see the great warships coaling or in drydock or building. We
gothrough Hell Gate, then pass through the Harlem River under the Washington
and Aqueduct bridges and very soon around the end of Manhattan Island into the
broad and majestic Hudson at Spuyten Duyvil. We now see the Palisades, River-
Side Drive, Grant’s Tomb from the water, and then past the great ocean liners. We
lunch on the boat while she passes down past the Statue of Liberty. Ellis Island and
down the Narrows between Forts Hamilton and Wadsworth, past Staten Island and
out into the Broad Atlantic for a real ocean sail and some taste of salt air. You will
HOW TO ENROLL FOR THIS TOUR
Send the coupon attached to this advertisement with $lO. I will send you my contract, and 10 days before the date you have set as the day you are to come, I will send you C.
0. D. a book of Coupons covering the entire 7 days stay in New York for which you pay the balance of $37.50.. You can change the date of your tnp by notifying me 10 days ahead.
And the tour you buy is transferrable to anybody else if you cannot come. Anything you don’t understand, write to me.
HENRY KING HANNAH, 277 Broadway, N. Y.
FOR REFERENCES! Any Magazine, the Advertising department of any Daily Paper in the big cities or the publishers of important
.Religious Publications.
COUPON
HENRY KING HANNAH Desk JL, 277 Broadway, N. Y. * , , . , „ ,
/enc/oit $lO. OO as first payment on your Grand' Tour of New York. My name, address and date when I expect to arrive in new York.
sire written below. Please send contract.
THE GOLDEN AGE FOR WEEK OF JULY Z 3, 1914
never had the light, that is a mat
ter entirely to be settled by God
Himself and He will settle it upon
the basis of His love, His mercy,
His judgment and His justice; but in
that of the light, the light which is
in Christ Jesus; and state of dark
ness they can never realize the hies*
sing by reason of this they are kept
in a state of perpetual moral and
spiritual degradation. It is to save
arrive at your hotel for dinner, and at 8 ;p. m. all aboard for Chinatown for its un
usual sights and sounds. 4
THURSDAY *
This day will be called Arts and Science Day, for we go in the morning up to
the Metropolitan Museum. The Metropolitan is fast becoming one of the world’s
most notable collections of Sculpture—Paintings—Antiquities—Tapestries, Armor
and Pottery. '.Here is now to be seen the great Morgan Collection of Art valued at
thirty millions of dollars. ....
After luncheon at the Museum we walk across the Park to the Museum of Natur
al History. Here are collections of the mounted petrified I bones of prehistoric
animals which inhabited the land millions of years before man—over 50 feet in length
and 20 feet tall; great collections of mounted animalsand birds reproducing their
natural surroundings. There are mounted specimens here of almost every animal,
bird and Insect. These two great institutions will fill the day and make you ready
for your dinner. This evening will be spent seeing one of the great feature films
now so popular in moving pictures.
FRIDAY
We will crowd into Friday morning several interesting things. 'First a visit to
one of the great towers of lower New York, either the Singer or the Woolworth
Tower Then by boat to Bedloes Island for a visit to the Statue of Liberty which
rises 305 feet above the ground and is the most conspicuous landmark as one sails
up the New York Harbor. This statue is hollow and for those who like climbing an
opportunity will be given to explore the inside. Then to Ellis Island which is near,
where all the immigrants from the Old World are first landed and their credentials
passed upon.
In the evening you are free to join those who desire to spend an evening on
their own responsibility at some of the manylFreneh-Italian-Hungarian restaurants
which are easy of access.
SATURDAY
Many of our tourists twill want to do some shopping while in New York and
Saturday morning has been put down as Shopping Day. New York is celebrated
for its great pepartment stores where anything cau be bought under one roof and
on this morning we will make a visit to one of them both for shopping and sight
seeing. To many the inside of a great store is almost as interesting as a museum or
ana Back tolhe hotel for luncheon land after luncheon we take our auto-busses
downtown across Brooklyn Bridge and into Brooklyn through Prospect Park, out
on to Coney Island Avenue, and after a twelve-mile ride arrive at Coney Island, New
York’s great summer resort. Arrangements will be made to see one of the great
amusement places or an opportunity forthose whowanttogo bathing. We will
take our dinner at Coney Island inorder to see it at night with its wonderful dis
play of lights and its carnival of light hearted visitors. Back to New York in time
for a trip up the Great White Way while it is at the height of its illumination and
crowded with New York’s night life.
SUNDAY
Many of New York’s most noted preachers may be away in mid-summer but
their places are suppl ied by able preachers from other cities. This day’s activities
will be the only ones not personally conducted, but each member of the tour will be
given careful directions forlflnding the particular church he or she desires to at
tend Your Hotel will probably be near many of New York’s most noted churches.
Also for those who desire, lunch will be provided and a trip will be taken up
the Hudson to West Point and a visit made to the Grounds of the U. S. Military
Academv The new architecture of the Post and its setting just at the entrance of
the Hudson Highlands make it one.of the most beautiful spots lin America- This
will be an all day trip and if you begin the tour Monday will close a week of sight
seeing which you will long remember.
them and induct them into the light
that our appeal for the support of
missions is to be made. It is to
bring the heathen world to see and
live in the light of Jesus Christ. Oh,
our obligation to them is a far deep
er one than many of us have ever
seen. It is to be estimated in pro
portion to the love of God manifest
ed. When we come to look at our
obligation to the world in heathen
darkness in this light we will begin
to see something of the fire that
burned upon the altar of the heart
of Jesus when He prayed on the
cross for His enemies.
But we must remember that this
principle applies only in case of ir
responsible ignorance. It (is when one
is in the dark who has never had an
opportunity to avail himself of the
light. The man who knows the light
and wilfully refuses Jesus Christ, who
is Himself the Light of the world, has
no part in this truly wonderful prayer
of Jesus on the Cross.
Finally, let us leave the prayer and
raise the question as to its operation.
Was it effective? Was it? At first
glimpse we would say, “No, it was
not” for the mob waxed more and
more vile as He uttered it, and im
mediately following it we are intro
duced to a scene of revelling and gam
bling. They mock Him, they jeer at
Him, they rail upon Him, they spiP
upon Him. It would seem that the
prayer that He made for their for
giveness resulted in their hardening.
Besides, immediately after His death
we have them gambling over His gar
ments. Horrible picture! No parent
can paint it, and no tongue can tell it*
Jesus dying on the Cross, paying the
penalty for the world’s sin, and about
Him men gambling for His clothes.
But if we follow the crowd we will
soon find them gathered in Jerusalem
for the great Pentecostal feast. Mean
while Jesus has risen from the dead
and ascended into heaven, and the
timid fearful disciples have had their
period of waiting in the upper room
where they were baptized with the
Holy Ghost. It is a great occasion
in Jerusalem, people from all parts of
the known world have gathered to
gether, and His disciples are bap
tized with the Spirit and begin to
preach. Much of what is said is con
cerning Jesus on the cross, and the
Holy Ghost takes charge not only of
the disciples but also of the multitude,
and even of the space that filled the
room. As these men preach and tes
tify about Jesus, these wicked, vile
men begin to cry, “Men and brethren,
what shall we do?” In that crowd that
make that request are members of that
mob that crucified Jesus, for whom
He had prayed for their forgiveness,
and 3000 of them were converted in
a day and added to the Church. Now
I do not at all propose to dogmatize,
but I believe that either on the day of
Pentecost or subsequently to it all
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