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m. il Aim AGE.
:
THE BBDOKLSM DEOTE’S SUN¬
DAY sehmon.
Sftbiect:—“The Sunrise.”
Text: cum,>is dt~ har«2.’ ? —Roman;
TriiL, 32.
Back fre-jx the mcemtains arid-the seaside
and the; springs, ana 'the farmhouse, youi
cheek-broBced and jsonr spiritsUghted.: I hail
you honaeegain wittithe words of Gehazitc
the Shunafiimite: ■‘JIs it well with thee:- is
it well .wifcL thy husband? Aa it-well with flic
chiSdr’ i Or sonie faces I see the. mark of re.
cent grief,--but all. asK’-ng the track' of tears I
see the • stasy, of .TesRirrection. end reunwB
■when all tears are done; the decs plbwing of
the keel, followed .by the flash of the phos
phareseaee Now' thatT' have •rked if: regard tc j
you how I
your vvelfav.-, you naturally ask am the
very>well,.thank you. 'Whether it was
bracing, air '-of i tbe> Colorado mcamtaius, 11-.
000 feet above the level of the sea, or the
tonic atmapphere of rthe Pacific coast, or. -E
bath in the" surf of .l ong Ishuid beach,- or
whether it k-the joy of-standing isi this great
group of warm hearted friends,* er whether
it is a. new. appreciation, of the gxxxhiess I of
God, I .cannot tell. J .simply know asm
gransily -and gloriously said and tliat inexpres¬ John
sibly happy. It fft-i !
Moffatt, the great .Methodist preacher,
occasionally .got fast ic his sermon, and toi
extricate hirmelf wouMeOiy “Halklujah I” I
am in no such predicament to-day, but I am
full of the-sanr: rhapsodic ejaculation. Start¬
ing out this mt-rningi on .-a new ecclesiastical
year, J want ie give you the key note of my
next twelve me-nths’ ministry. Invent to set
it to toe tune<of Antioch, Ariel and Coi-ona
tion. Some time ago we had a new stop put
in this: .organ—ta new' tinrnpet. stop—and I
want teput a m-w trumpet stop into my ser¬
mons.
In a® our Christian work you anti I want
more c-f the element of gU-dness. That man
has no might to say that.Glirist never toughed.
Do youi,appose .that He wasglum at the wed
ding in *Cana of Galilee? Do you -suppose
Christ was unresponsive when the children
clamber ed -over Has knee and shoulder,-at His
own invitation? Elo you suppose tout the
evangelist meant nothing when he said of
Christ: •‘•’He rejoieed in spirit?” De you
believe Ohat toe Divine Christ who .pours
all the water over the reeks at Bernal
Falls, Yose.mite. does not believe in the
sparkle a»I gallop and -tumultuous joy
and rushleg raptures of .hnniaii life? I
believe not -only that she morning arid-that laughs.-and
that the moiasitains laugh, the seas
laugh, and that the cascades laaigh, but that
Christ laughed. Moreover, fake a .laugh and
a tear into an alembic, asid assay them, and test
them, and analyze them., and you will often
find as much <sf the pun-: gold of religion always in a
laugh as in* tear. Deep spiritual joy !
shows itself facial illumination. Joins
Wesley said he was sure of a good religious
impression being produced beea-uae -of what
he calls the great laughter he saw among the
people. Godless merriment is blasphemy
anywhere, but -expression of Christian joy is
appropriate everywhere. of the world ought
Moreover, the outlook
to stir us to gladness. Astronomers recently
disturbed many people by telling them that
there is danger of stellar collision. We have
been told through the papers by these as¬
tronomers that there are worlds coming shall have very
near together, and that we
plagues and wars and tumults and perhaps
the world’s destruction. Do not be scared.
If you have ever stood at a railroad center,
where ten or twenty or thirty rail
tracks cross each other, switch and seen
that by the movement of the one or
two inches the train shoots this way and that,
without colliding, then you may understand
how fifty worlds may come within an inch
of disaster, and that inch be as good as a mill¬
ion miles. If a human switchtender can
**>ot the trains this way and that without
harm, cannot the Hand that for thousands
of years has upneld the universe Christian keep our lit
• tie world out of harm’s way? million geo¬
logists tell us that this world was of
•.years in building. Well, now, I do
snot think God would take millions of years
ito build a house which was to last only six
^thousand years. There is nothing in the
.world or outside the world, terrestial or
-Astronomical, to excite dismay. I wish that
.some stout Gospel breeze might scatter all
toe malaria of human foreboding. The sun
•rose this morning at about half-past 5, and
I, think that is just about the hour in toe
world’s history. “The day is at hand. ”
The first ray of the dawn I see in the
-gradual substitution of diplomatic skill for
human butchery. Within the last twenty
five -years there have been international
differences which would have brought a
•shock .of arms in anv other day, but which
were peacefully adjusted, the pen taking the
place.of > the sword.
That Alabama question in any other
*ge •off the world would have caused
•war between the United States and
England. How was it settled? By
men of-v?ar .off the Narrows, or off the
Mersey? By the Gulf Stream of the ocean
crossed by & gulf stream of human blood?
By the pathway of nations incarnadined? No.
A few wise men go into a quiet room at Gen¬
eva, talk the matter over, and telegrs.ph settled.’ to
Washington and to London: “All
Peace. Peace. England pays to the United
States the amount awarded—pays really
more than sh-e-ought’to have paid. But still,
all that Alabama broil is settled—settled for
ever. A-rbitratkm instead of battle.
So, the quarrel -eight or nine years age
about the Canadian fisheries in any other age
would have caused war between the United
States and England. England said: “Pay
rae for the invasion of ajv .Canadian fisher
ies” The United States said: ‘Twill not pay
anything.” Well, the two nations say: “I
guess we had better leave the whole matter
to a commission,” The commission is ap¬
pointed, and the commission examines the
affair, and the commission reports, and pay
we ought, pay we must, pay we do. Yot a
pound of powder burned, not a cartridge bit¬
ten off, no one hurt so much as by the
scratch of a p'n. Arbitration instead of
battle. in other
So the Sornoan controversy any and
age would have brought Germany the
United States in blooay collision. But all is
settled. Arbitration instead of battle.
France will never again, I think, through
peccadillo of ambassador, bring on a battle
with other nations. She sees that God, in
punishment of Sedan, blotted out the French
.
Empire, and the onlv aspirant of that throne
who had anv right of expectation dies in a
war that has not even the dignity of being
respectable. What is that blush on the
cheek of England to-day? What is the leaf
that England would like to tear out of her
history? The Zulu war. Down with the
sword and up with the treaty.
We in this country might better have set¬
tled our sectional difficulties by arbitration
i fam by the thrust of the sword. Philan¬
thropy said to the North: “Pay purchase down of a cer- the
fain amount of money for the
slaves, and let all those born after a certain
time be born free.” Philanthropy pt the same
time said to the South: “You sell the daves.
and get rid of this great national contest and
trouble.” The North replied: “I won’t pay
a cent.” The South replied: “I won't sell.”
War! War! A million dead men. and a na
taonal debt which might have ground this na¬
, powder.
tion to
Whv did-we nett let TV illiam H. S»*e.\rd, ot
Hew 'York, ead Alexander H. 'Stevens, of
Georgia, go out and -spend a Sew days under
the trees on the banks of the Potomac nud
talk the matter over, and settle it, »? settle
it thev could, rather than the North pay in
cost of war. four billien seven hundred mil
lion dollars, and the South pay four billion
seven hundred and fifty million dollars, the
destroying augel leaving the first born dead
in so many houses all the wav from, the Pen
obseot to the Alabama. Ye aged think men,
whose sous fell in the strife do you not
• -that wo uld have been better?* Oh, yes! we
huve coni© to believe, i think, in t>his coun
try, that arbitration is better than battle.
I may be mistaken, but I hope that the
last war between Christian nations is ended,
Barbarians may mix their war paint,
and Afghan f and Zulu hurl poisoned-errows, havn
but think tfcristian nations
gradually learned that war ds disaster
to victor as well a# vanquished, a«d that
almost anything bought by blood is
bought at too dear n price. I wisK to
this nation arbitration. might be a model of
willingness for No need of
killing another Indian. No need of
sacrificing any more brave General ©asters.
Stop exasperating the red man,and there will
be no more arrows shot out from the reserva
iron, a General of the United States army.
in hiscli repute throughout this land, and
who, perhaps, lias been in more Indian wars
than any other officer, and who has been
wounded again and again in behalf ot'our
Government in battle against the Indians,
told me that all the wars that had ever oc
curved between Indians and white men had
been provoked by white men. and that there
was no exception to the rule. While we are
arbitrating with Christian nations, let us to
ward barbarians carry ourselves in a manner
i unprovocative I large of contest. and the waters
inherit, a estate, are
-rich with'fish, and the woods are songful with
birds, and my cornfields are silken and golden.
Here is mv sister’s grave. Out yonder, on
der that large tree, my father died. An in
v.irter comes, and proposes to drive me oft'
and. take possession of my property. He
crowds me back, he crowds me on. and
crowds me into a closer corner, and still
closer corner, until after a while I sav :
“Stand back, don't crowd me any more, or
I’ll-'..trike. What right have you to come
here and drive me off my premises? I got this
farm from mv father, and he got it from
his father. IVliat right have you to come
here-and molest me?” Aon blandly sav:
“fdi. I know more than you do. I belong to
a higher Civilization I cut my hair shorter
than you do. I eould put this ground to a
great deal' better use than you do. And
you keep crowding me back and crowding me
cn into -a closer corner and closer corner un
til one daw T look around upon suffering ton
dy.am. fired by their hardships I hew you
in twain. Forthwith all the woild comes
to your 'funeral to -pronounce eulogium,
comes to mv -execution to anathema
-tize me. Y ou are the hero, I am
culprit. Behold the Ilmted States Got an
ment and the North American Indian. The
red man has Stood more wrongs than I
wonld, or you. Be 'would have struck
sooner, deeper. That which is right in de
fense of a Brooklyn home or a New York
home 1 Y’ 1 f r ^iu,defense m a home^on tonof
red the Rocky race dies Mountains. T completely-out, Before I this wish dwindling that this
generation might, by eommonlustice, atone
he in humanifv judgment,to of its predeces. -would ois. rathe
the day-of j Gods
there be a blood-smeared • than
a swindling JO mtedlStates officer on an In
dian reservation. One man was a barbarian
and anything a savage, but a barbai and never lan and Pretended a savage. to be
Other man pretended to be a representahve
of a Christian nation. Notwithstanding andtbt all
th ^’ the general disgust with war
substitution of diplomatic skill for theght
tering k® 0 ® st ? e ! 1R f UIirnlstaka ~
ble that the day is at 1 hand.
I find another ray of the dawn in the com
pression of the worlds distances. vVhat a
slow, snail-like, almost impossible rectification thing
would have been the worlds
with fourteen hundred millions of population
“t n 5,Sh S
s?«
Vv'C not read the Queen’s speech at the
proroguing of Parliament tiw day before m
London? It tlia1< be so, is it anything ma
dSs;
SS^thTSoS^rSSriilpSe morning the Son of God from that
to-morrow a
r-tfittW&s »
&pS rld H. “siuff. sr's you“"!l»?mdM
S Goltlnm to p“?dSn all I
heal all your sorrow; to prove that am
a supernatural being, I have just descended
from the clouds; do you believe Me. and do
vou believe Me now?” Why, all the tele
ter a shipwreck. I tell you all these things
to show you it is improbabilities not among the impossibili- Christ
ties or even the that
will conquer the whole earth, and do it in
stanter. wheu the time comes. There are
foretokenings in the air. Something
great is going to happen. I do not
think that Jupiter is going to run us down
or that the axle of the world is going to
break; but I mean something great for world’s the
world’s blessing and not for the
damage is going to happen. I think the world
has had it hard enough. Enough, the Lon
don plagues. Enough, the Asiatic choleras.
Enough, the wars. conflagrations. Enough, the I shipwrecks. think
Enough, the our
world could stand right well a procession of
prosperities lookout. and Better triumphs. Better observa- be ou
the nave your
tories open toward the heavens, and
the lenses polished/ of your most powerful telescopes Leyden
well Better have all your
iars ready for some new pulsation of mighty
influence. Better have new fonts of type in
your printing offices to set up some astound
ing good news. Better have some new ban
ner that has never been carried, circumfer- ready for
five thousand miles of the world’s
ence are shriveling up into insig
nificant brevitv. Hong Kong is near
er to New York than a few years ago New
Haven was: Bombay, Moscow* Madras, Mel
bourne within speaking distance. Purchase
a telegraphic chart, and by the blue lines see
the telegraphs of the land, and by the red
lines the cables under the ocean. You see
what opportunity this is going to give A fortress for the
final movements of Christianity. building, but after
may be months or years in
it is constructed it may do all its
work in twenty minutes. Christianity has
been planting its batteries for nineteen cen¬
turies, and may go on in the work through
other centuries; but when those batteries are
thoroughly planted, those fortresses are fully
built, they may all do their work in twenty- the
four hours. The world sometimes derides
church for slowness of movement. Is science
any quicker? Did it not take science five
thousand six hundred and fifty-two years to
find out bo simple a thing as the
circulation of the human blood?
With the earth and thousand the sky full eight of electricity,
science took five hundred
rears before it even guessed might be that made there was
any practical use that of this
subtle and mighty element. When good men
take possession of all these scientific forces.
sudden processions. Better have the bells m
vonr ehuneh towers well hung,and rope with
in reach, that you may iing out the mar
riageof the King’s Son. Cleanse ail your
court houses, for the Judge of ail the earth halls
may appear. Let all your Lawgiver legislative be
be gilded, for the great thrones may ot
about to *ome. Drive tit toe
despotism dll the occupant', for the jvmg of.
heaven and earth may be about to reign,
The darkness of the night is blooming
and whitening into the idles of morning
cloud, and.tiie lilies redae&ng into the roses
of stronger tiay—St garlands whether white
or red, for Him oil whose head me many
crowds. **T!She day is at hand!”
One more ray of the damn I see m facts
chronological and mathematic®-. Come
now, do aac let us do another stroke ot
nntil we have sett one ma en
TV hat is going ^ be the issue oft us
great contest between sin^ and[ nghteous
” ess - hick is go g A
th® stronger, G p .. . ,
,
world to be^ all garden « wall « desert* desert
going have ths ] '
Now let us H,osea
we believe ^ah and Eilekiel ,and
and Micnh au i •
Peter, and Paul a d - » _ believe that
it is going t<hea ‘ ' R ... i e t us have
it settled. w v, P tv,er we are
working on toward , a success 01 toward toward a a
dead failure. If there is a child m youi
house sick, and you are sure he is going to
get well, you sympathize with present pants,
but all the foreboding is gone. It you are
in a cyclone off the Florida coast, and the
Captain assures you the vessel is staunch
and the winds are changing for a better
quarter, and he is sure lie will bring
iy you safe into the harbor, you patient
submit to present distress with the
thought of safe arrival. Now I want to
know whether we are coming on toward toward light dis
may, darkness and defeat, or on
and blessedness. You and I believe the iat
ter, and if so, every the year world’s we spend is and one
year subtracted from woe,
every event that passes, whether bright
0 r dark, brings us one and event by nearer all that a
happy inexorable consummation, in chronology and mathematics
is
I commend you to good arithmetic, cheer and if courage,
If there is anything in you sub
tract two from five and leave three, then by
every rolling sun we are coming Then on toward winter
a magnificent terminus. every
passed is one severity less for our poor world,
Then every summer gone by brings us nearer
unfading arborescence. Bible Put and your rejoice, algebra
down on the top of your
If it is nearer morning at 3 o’clock than it
is at if it is nearer morning at 4 o’clock
than it ^ at 3 ,then we are nearer the dawn of
th M , deliverance. God’s dock seems
£ s i owl y, but the pendulum swings
an fche h 'a„<ls move, and it will yet strike
noon The sun and the moon stood still once;
they ’ will never stand still again until they
8to forever. If you believe arithmetic as
well as your Bible, “The you must day is believe hand.” we are
nearer the dawn. at
There is a class of phenomena which makes
me think that the spiritual and the heavenly
world mav, after a while, make a demonstra
tioniuthis world which will briug all moral
and spiritual things to a climax. Now, I am
n o spiritualist; but every intelligent man has
nottced that there are strange and mys
terious things which indicate to him that
perhaps the spiritual world is not so far off
aB sometimes we conjecture, and that after a
while, from the spiritual and heavenly world world
there may be a demonstration upon our
f or it s betterment. We call it magnetism,
Qr we caP ifc mesmer j smi or we call it electric
^ . because we want some term to cover up
ignoranee j do not know wha t that is.
j never heard an audible voice from the other
WQrld j- am pur8uade d of this, however:
^at ^e veil between this world and the
next jg 6 get ti, lg thinner and thinner, and that,
perhaps after a while, at the call of God—
no t at the call of the Davenport brothers,
or Andrew Jackson Davis—some of the old
^ ptural warriors, some of the spirits of
other days mighty for God—a Joshua, or a
(j a i e h or a David, or a Paul—may come
au< ,, ^ , 55 1J . \ ^' ... ,__... ’
'
s £.%«**%**«*. T t ha
»
ni .d J timned * these old war
in ho thickest and richest
nastore ttaspsi to snand the a rest of their days foi*
2x,hS e s
«>««mnd«ofbattlo,.<md wh«lrfmto
!“%“» KfisvoS nde . rs ? n ^ e,r f b r a ° S S
s™* en aS e teed
r h trr r *l
Methinli, they will .prine into the
exchange crown for helmet, and palm branch
for weapon and come down out of the King s
g all enes into the arena crying: Make
room\ I must fight in this great Armaged
because X beloved I want p^pl. to I t-oil pr«eh with the sunlight
you old der
in your faces. I want you mwi to
Stand before you die that all the work you
did for God while yet your ear was akirtand
fl « et } s to be countedl up^in
tile final victories. I want all these youngei
peopie to understand that when they toil for
k 0(i always win the day that all
prayers are answered and all Christian work
is in some way effectual, and that the tide is
setting in the right direction and that all
heaven is on our sxde-saintly cherubic
seraphic, archangelic, omnipotent, chariot
and throne doxology and pror-ession pnnci
pahties and dominion. He who hath the moon
under His feet, and all the armies of heaven
on white horses.
Brother, brother. all I am afraid of
is, . not that Christ will lose the battle,
but that you and I will not get into it
quick enough to do something worthy
of our blood bought immortality. Jh
Christ! how shall I meet Thee, Thou of
the scarred brow, and the scarred back,
and the scarred hand, and the scarred foot,
and the scarred breast, if I have no
scars or wounds gotten in Thy serv
ice? It shall not be so. I step out to-day m
front of the battle. Come on, you foes o'
God, I dare you to the combat. Come on,
with pens dipped in malignancy. Come on,
with tongues forked and viperine and adder
ous. Come on, with types soaked in the scum
of the eternal pit. I defy you! Come on! I
bare my brow, I uncover my heart Strike’
I cannot see my Lord until I have been
hurt for Christ. If we do not suffer witn
Him on earth we cannot glorify with Him in
heaven. Take good heart. U: n! On! On!
See! the skies ha ve brightened! See! the
hour is about to come! Pick out all the
cheeriest of the anthems. Let the orchestra
string their best instruments. “The night is
far spent, the day is at hand.”
l orn Kussian officers have made a
wager that they “can ride from St.
Petersburg to Paris, on horse back, in
forty five days.” As the distance is
only 1,500 miles, they certainly need
not take their spurs along. A Texas
ranger, avers Dr. Oswald in Drake’s
Magazine, in would than undertake month, and to make Mexi¬ the
trip less a a
can tagutro probably in two weeks.
THOMAS F. FARLEY
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Setter!. HUGH6ON Sc SULLIYAN,
^c>cxEaDGrxrmjR 9 " ar -
WkotoMde Manufacturer!,
THE VACUUM TIPPED ARROW
PISTOL.
0
Harmless, Accurate, Sure. Hare and trouble varr"h »hen
1 this toy id placed with the Children, or 1 'urmtt * h»a no
Equal tor the home, no sharp oornors or points to soar tho
I furniture, can he shot with safety at your window*, afl
I ! litres wherorer It strikes. Imres add no martt. for 30c. PisM, Arrow’,
and Target sent post-paid to any owe
BOYS’ ARCTIC DRIVING REINS.
This was
I just the
article I
wanted
when a
Boy.
ti is very
strong, pretty*
and durable.
250.
Post-paid.
VELOCIPEDE BELL
TO IT
cannot do r w. 1
!
without it y 1
if you j!i j?5
have ill m fi
a "j J
wheel. iis ■ . i
'[
Sent Post¬ m
paid for r;
p
2Zc. or the
■
articles
complete
for $1.00. 1
SAMUEL KIRBY,
Manufacturer of Bells, Toys, Ette.,
MIDDLETOWN, CONN.
I CUR
FITS!
When I say Core I do not mean merely them to
stop them torn time, and then have re
turn again. I MEAN A RADICAL CORK.
1 have made tho disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or
FALLING SICKNESS,
A life-long study. I tvakraht ray others remedy have to
Curb the worst cases. Because
failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure.
Send at once for a treatise and a Fheic BOTTLE
of my INFALLIBLE REMEDY. Give Express
and tost Office. It costs you Address nothing for a
trial, and it will cure yon.
H. C. ROOT, M.C., 1 83 Pearl St., New York
BAILKKT I \s l'GNIC
This Tonic is [inquired from Pure
Selected Jamaica Ginger, together with
other root) tin I herbs, and l inns a Pleas¬
ant anti Kiiic;ici"tis Tunic its u cure lor
Dyspepsit. Hear.burn. General Debility
und as an Appetizer :ti» unexcelled. Ku
dofsed by Pliyuiehuis. I ry it.
Manufactured by the Barrett Drug * o
Augusta, Ga.
For sale by TIilbt & William*.
Water, Acid* and Fro*t do
not affect It.
Prevents Bricks Turning White.
Keeps all Walls and Sur¬
faces Clean.
Waterproofs Brick and Stone.
Blank Walls made Water
proof.
You Can 7»aint Over
Cemented or Brick-Wall*
Treated with Preservative.
Any one can apply It.
par- Send for Price* and Catalogue*.