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Theme: The Call of God to the
Chaurch of Christ, ;
I\ " ——— kit s
Brooklyn, New York.—Preaching
at the Irving Square Presbyterian
Church, Hamburg avenue snd Weir
fleld street, the Rev. Ira Wemmell
‘Henderson, pastor, took as his theme
“‘The Call of God to the Church of
Christ.”” The text was Phil. 1:27:
“Stand f::v.s&l in one spirit, with one
‘mind striving together for the faith
of the Gospel; and in nothing terri
fied by your adversaries.” He said:
. Let us unfold the text and trans
lafe it with care for the richness and
exactness of meaning that it en
closes, that the authorized varsion
which we have read hardly sets forth.,
“‘Stand fast pérsistently in one spirit,
with one mind striving together for
the faith of the Gospel; and in noth
ing scared by your adversaries.” The
.apostle admonishes the people of
‘God to stand fast steadily not gpo
‘radically, 1o be of singleness of mind
and heari and soul in their devotion
to the work of the living Christ, to
sirive togetber with the best of team
play for tbe truth, to be unafraid of
their opponents. The figure is that
of a frigntened horge. Be not scared
like a runaway.
- This is the word of Paul to the
saints in Ohrist Jesus which were at
Philippi. It is the call of Him who
‘sitteth between the cherubim to His
.church to-day. This is the summons
'of God to those who are His peopnle
An the bonds of Christ. He promul
‘gates the plan for Christian action.
‘He elevates an ideal for service. Ie
asserts the positive and negative du
‘ties that relate themselves to Chris
tianity. He stipulates what is to be
the aim and what is the measure of
‘the efficiency of the church of the
living Lord. The téxt affords as
good a program for the. guidance of
those who are banded in the in
terests of the proclamation and ad
vancement of the Kingdom of God as
could well be devised.
And we may safely assert that it
is becavse the church has too largely
relinquished her grasp upon this pro
gram; lost, teco largely, her con
scivusness of the mandatory respon
sibilities that Cod has laid upon her,
‘her vision of her divinely endowed
ideals, her unanimous fidelity to the
plans and the purposes and inspired
gptivities of Emanuel, that she has
to a lamentable degree ceased to
command either the influence, the
respect or the love that within the
memory of many a man alive was
hers. And I believe that the moral
and spiritual wnhealthiness that is
manifest in America is a direct re
sult of the desultory and flaccid alle
giance that the church has granted
to her God. ;
. We have been too much afraid of
our enemies and too uncertain of
ourselves. We have over-empha
sized the power of the forces of en
trenched evil, and by implication dis
ccoung>d the capacity of the Deity
-successfully to energize His people
and to realize His will in them. We
have been silent when we should
have spoken fearlessly, and voluble
‘when silence better would have
served the time and the King’s busi
-ness, 'We have, especially in the
Protestant Church, let Christian lib
erty degenerate till in many quarters
it has become synonymous with
drreligious license. We have ex
¢changed prophecy for time-serving
and truthfulness for popularity, to
an extent that is as disastrous as it
is disreputable. We have lost the
note of authority. And in our
scramble to find the bait that will
dure the world toward God and that
will draw men so far under the in
fluence of the church that we shall
be able to demonstrate the good
heartedness of the Gospel and of the
Christian life we have become such
good fellows that we have lost our
aim, missed the heart of Christian
gervice and of Christian faith.
* The call of God to His church
means little to multitudes of people
who are on the rolls of the church
visible because they haven’t listened
lodg or intently enough to Him to
know what He thinks or says or
wants. It is not strange that they
do not “stand fast in one spirit, with
‘one mind striving together for the
faith of the Gospel.” How could it
be otherwise? Faith is simply a
catchword with them; the meat of
the Gospel is a mystery that they
hhave taken little effort to master; a
hard fight is the last thing that they
;want; salvation means about as much
to them as changing their clothes.
¢ Dr. Newman Smyth is not far
wrong when he asserts that a new
order of things will, in God’s provi
dence, supersede our present Chris
tian religious systems. If we are to
Judge them by the fidelity of the
majority of their members to the
exact Gospel of God in Christ, the
sooner the churches of Christ, as at
present constituted, are superseded
by a nobler order the better for the
world.
. Primarily the church must de
‘clare and elucidate the deepest spiri
tual truths of the Kingdom of God
without which there can be no found
ed or balanced ethics. She must
stand as the evangel of God speak
ing with authority that truth in
IChrist, under the guidance of the
.’Holy Spirit, which is supremely sufii
icient for the salvation of the souls
'of men. She must deal first with the
souls of men in their relationship
iwith the Father. Spirituality is heri
jkeynote. The revelation and expli
;ca%on of eternal spiritual mysteries
A 8 her chief husiness. '
{ The call of God to the Church of‘
Christ to-day is no different in es-.
sence than it was to the men and
swomen of the church at Philippi to
whom Paul wrote. If it was essen
tial for them to cut close to the pat- |
tern supplied to them of God it is
ino less necessary that we do the‘
jgame, If they were called upon to
stand fast persistently and to a con
elusion so are we. If they had to
use team play to accomplish the work
of the kingdom how can we win suc
cess by lesser methods and poorer
fidelity ? |
But we have stood so fast, liter-
ally, that we have almost stood still.
We have striven together. But the
striving has been of the wrong sort.
We have stood fast in one spirit. But
very largely that spirit has been that
we have refused to inconvenience
ourselves in the interests of the king
dom of God, for the good of His chil
dren and for the glory of the King.
But God commands something dif
ferent. He summons us to another
variety of living.
His call is that we shall be stead
fast in our adherence to and advo
cecy of those spiritual truths that
constitute the reason for and the
richness of His church. Primarily
the church is not an institution that
exists to regulate morals, to supply
a means for social intercourse, to
gather a crowd. That is in «#0 sense
to minimize the importance, the place
and the work of the church as a
mentor and purifier of morals, a min
ister to the social necessities of men,
a gatherer of men for the purpose
of supplying that verve that comes
g,,im_le' Mid so_]e]K because we are a
¢rowd filled with the same desires
and adoring the same Lord. For
‘we must direct conduct and meet the
needs of man as a social animal and
recognize the value and the in
fluence of the crowd.
\ - But the call of Cod first to His
‘church is that she shall be experi
}enced in the knowledge of thoss in
}effable and spiritual truths ot of
‘which spring the impulses that make
for a godly ethics, a consecrated so
‘ciety. a spirit-moved crowd, in such
measure and manner that she shall
!be able to declare, delineate and re
veal to men with compelling power
that wisdom of the saving Father to
know which and whom is life eternal.
~ That is to say that the call of the
church first—and all the time—is to
‘be a spiritual evangel.
Our duty is to be true to this call.
To live to this work. To cleave to
this program. To plan after this pat
tern. To exalt this as our ideal. Let
us stand fast persistently in and for
this, rather than pat upon our past.
Let us strive together for this rather
than among ourselves. Let us have
the spirit of helpfulness rather than
of laziness, and faith in God and in
the power of His truth.
Let us be in nothing scared by our
adversaries. We have been. Sin
makes a brave show. We have taken
to our heels, as it were, often at its
approach. We have had an unreas
oning terror of its power. And we
have chronically overrated its ability
to beat us. But we have no more
reason to be scared by sin than a
child has to be frightened by Jack
in-the-box.
The church can put sin to rout
when it gets into right relationships
with deity and into the proper sort of
fighting clothes, or else God, who van
not lie, prevaricates. He says we can
do it. He promises to enable us. He
demonstrates the method. He pro
vides the stone and the sling, the
helmet, the breastplate, the armor,
the two-edged flaming sword of His
own consuming truth. Elther we can
or we cannot. If we can we ought.
And we can if we will.
For one, I believe that sin, unlike
Achilles, is vulnerable at every
point. - We have but to hit with the
right weapons and hard to subdue
‘it. For sin is a hulking, rotten mon
ster to whom we need be in bondage
'no_longer than we desire—thanks to
the grace and the potency of God.
And this is the call of God that
we shall be true to the spiritual mis
sion for which we are endowed and
that we shall fight sin fearlessly to
a finish. May we be true thereto.
The Stones Bear Witness, -
It is truly marvelous how the truth
of the Word of God is being vindi
cated by modern discovery against
the attacks made upon it by interest
ed critics. Few more exciting stories
have ever been told than that which
was narrated last week at the annual
meeting of the Palestine Jxploration
Fund.
At_the very time when the earlier
pasts of the Old Testament were be
ing dismissed with contempt as ‘“un
historic,” the spades of excavators
were busy disinterring long buried
Canaanitish cities, with the resul”
that “high places’’ of idoltary have
been brought to light containing re
mains of human sacrifices offered to
heathen deities. Thus the abomina
tions of the Ammonites are actually
exposed to our %aze. L
Even more interesting is the dis
covery of the form of the ancient
Philistine temples. Men who have
made sport of the story of Samson
' pulling down the pillars of the tem
ple upon the heads of his enemies,
bhecome, in turn, the objects of de
rision, as it is now clearly shown
what the ‘pillars’’ were, and how
easily a strong man could have dis
placed them to the undoing both of
himself and of his foes. In the light
of these expert discoveries, believers
have mo need to apologize for their
Bible; rather, they ought to expect
an apology from those who have re
lied upon imagination rather than
gound fact.—London Christian,
Gospel Truth the Instrument of Re
vival.
The great historian Lecky has, in
2 noteworthy passage in his famous
“History of England in the Eight
eenth Century,” declared that the
secret of success of Methodism was
merely that it satisfied some of the
strongest and most enduring wants
of our nature, which found no grati
fication in the popular theology; that
it revived a large class of religious
doctrines which had long been al
most wholly neglected. The utter de
pravity of human nature, the lost
condition of every man who is born
into the world, the vicarious atone
ment of Christ, the necessity to sal
vation of a new birth, of faith, of the
constant and sustaining action of the
Divine Spirit upon the believer's
soul, are doctrines which in the eyes
of the modern evangelist constitute
the most vital and the most influ
ential portions of Christianity, but
they are doctrines which during the
greater part of the eighteenth cen
tury were seldom heard from a
Church of England pulpit.
Every student of the period knows
that the wide and simple preaching
of these doctrines of vital personal
religion developed that nobler life
which saved England from decay.—
London Christian,
Best Armor, Worst Cloak.
Religion is the best armor in the
world, but the worzt cloak.-—John
Newton.
Towels as Parting Gifts, |
Barring the bath and perhaps the
beds, Japanese hotels are delightful.
All during your stay in their spot
less precincts you are made to feel
that you are an honored guest. Jap:
anese etiguette is lavished upon you,
and when you depart you are always
given a token to remember your visit
usuelly a white, coarse cotton towel
Wwith blue pictures printed on it,
You must thank the little maid for
this with an elaborate bow when yon
gO, and the chorus of “Sayo Nara”
from all the hotel force gathered in
the doorway will seem to have in i,
mnot only the regret of good-by, as we
interpret the words, but the deeper
feeling which they really mean: “If
e; must be that we must part.’—
Travel Magazine.
WIFELY DEVOTION.
“Mrs. Rogers is a perfect slave
te her husband.”
“What does she do?” i
“Would you believe it? Every
year, on hig birthday, she gets up in
time to eat breakfast with him.”—
FITS, St. Vitus'Dance:Nervoas Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld. 931 Archßt., Phila,, Pa.
The best way to get money, as well
as the slowest, is to work for it. 1
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days. ‘
Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
caseof Itehing, mmfi ,fileeding or Protruding
- Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c.
‘ TIME, 3 A. M.
| Husband; “A storm prevented my
coming home sooner.”
Wife: . “A storm. What Kkind—
rain, haifl, wind, barn, or hraln.,”-—
} Tudge. : 5o
t HOW THE QUARREL BEGAN.
Young Wife (at home)—Hello,
dearest! :
Young Husband (at the office)—
Hello! Who is it —Puck.
i,. i THE TIME TEST. .44
That Is What Proves True Merit.
Doan’s Kidney Pills bring the
quickest of relief from backache and
= kidney troubles. Is
AUBOSES, that relief lasting?
P Vel Let Mrs. James M.
& t 8& Long, of 113 N. Au
’&’l‘-?i;;_’ W% gusta St., Staunton,
gho=74 Va, tell you. On
= January 31st, 1903,
\.5"74 Mrs. Long wrote:
2 oG, ‘‘Doan’s Kidney Pills
PTG have cured me” (of
e pain in the back,
urinary troubles, bearing down sen
sations, etc.) On June 20th, 1907,
four and one-half years later, she
said: “I haven’t had kidney trouble
since. I repeat my testimony.”
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
The man who makes the best use of
his time generally has a good time.
Itch cured in 30 minutes Ly Woolford’s
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails, At druggists,
The exclusiveness of some families
is a fortunate thing for the neighbors.
It removes the cause,
cu R Es eoothes the nerves lll‘
relieves the aches and
Feverishe.
COLDS AND GRIPPE »e:' "1t
cures all
headaches and Neuralgia alsc. No bad
eoffects. 10¢, 25¢ and 500 bottles. (Liquip )
(At.7'oß)
A Square-Deal Answer to
Collier’s Patent Medicine Attack
oilier’s Patent Medicine Attack,
We have no quarrel with Mr, Collier or Norman Hapgood, in so
far as they propose to warn the public against the danger to men,
women and children in indiscriminate use of vicious concoctions of
dangerous drugs and cheap whiskey, disguised as medicines, and in
appalling quantities poured down the throats of the American peo
ple by unserupalous charlatans.
But we do not propose to silently submit while a greater wreng
is being perpetrated, which would be the case if indiscriminate crit
feism should so destroy confidence as to lead thousands with slender
means to deprive themselves of that which has given other thou
sands upon thousands relief from pain and sorrow, and emabled
them to continue in the struggle for daily bread,
We propose to carry our case direct to the people, down the
Great White Way of Publicity, cenfident that we shall be sustained
by that vast throng who, knowing by personal experience that an
outward application of Minard’s Linimeént relieves pain and brings
peace of mind and body, also know that its use invelves no dangers
guch as are charged against medicines to be taken internally.
And we propose, further, to carry the ecase direct to those who
have never used Minard’s Liniment, by inviting them to send us a
postal today and receive by return malil, free, a special botile, am
ple to prove that it will do all that is eclaimed for it.
When you realize that Minard’s Lintment had its birth in the
prescription of the late Doctor Levi Minard, who used it and rec
ommended it in his private practice, 6b years ago, and that by per
sonal recommendation it has since come into universal use, and that
each year an increasing number of people use it, you begin to appre.
ciate that our confidence in its merit is but reflecting the faith ex
pressed by those who depend upon it, who know by experience that
it is best for them, that it stands alone as. the most cffectlve, econ
omical and clean-to-use external application for rheumatism, neural
gia, pleurisy, stii?, iwisted joints, sore, strained, or lame musci.s,
tired, aching feet or any pain or ache,
Why This § ?
y This Staiement :
Because we propose from time to time to tell you of the merits
and to let others testify to the personal benefit derived from Mi
nard’s Liniment, so pure and antiseplic, so powerful, penetrating
and soothing 2s to have justly earmed its title, King of Pain. We
know you beflge in the doctrime of the Square Deal. We ask you to
tell others of the good Minard’s Liniment has done you. Yours
respectfully, Minard’s Liniment Mfg. Co., So. Framingham, Masgs.
SEND THE POSTAL.
Oolor more goods brighter and faster colors than any o 6. One 10c. pnoku‘ e colors fibers. They dye in cold water boiter than any other dye, You
can dye mg lttm:l:t without ripping apart. Write wfiz booklet—-How to Lye, Hleae?nnu%ellx cmzn.’ MONHUE DRUG CO., Quiney, Livinols,
The
General Demand
of the Well-Informed of tho World has
always been for a simple, pleasant and
efficient liquid laxative remedy of known
value; a laxative which physicians could
sanetion for family use because its com
ponent parts are known to them to be
wholesome and truly beneficial in effect,
acceptable to the system and gentle, yet
prompt, in action.
In supplying that demand with its ex
cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and
Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup
Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies
on tha merits of the laxative for its remark
able success.
~ That is one of many rcasons why
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given
the preference by the Well-Informed.
To get its bencficial effects always buy
the genuine—manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale
by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents
per bottle. :
Write at once and learn why we secure best
positions, and best salaries for our graduates, §
KuGEN®E ANDERSON, Pres.
" ; SUCCESSORS TO
" AVERY & McMILLAN,
51-88 South Forsyth St, Atlanta, Ga,
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sy o - N\ Q) ¥/ SR\ {’ BN
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Big profits from cotton, tobacco, and % such Tuden crops as LN
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) /48
Pertilizers /83
That Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers are far supsrior to any other fertilizers 1s
b proved brgithe experience of Mr. D, mGritth D.D. S, gs Plant City, Fla.,
who sa¥s: *I was trucking on a small scale, and decided I would try a few % j
sacks of your fertilizer, as it was cheap and said to be good. 1 put it un- AR
der some tomatoes by the side of some other high grase fertilizer which 5 3
cost me sls a ton more, and in the same proportion acre. [donit &
\ think I exaggerate in the least in saying that the {lglec{ where I used A B
Virginia-Carolina_Fertilizers' was #4re¢ times that of where I used i
the other brand of so-called high-&rade fertilizer,” & & d
f Many valuable pointers on_ truck farming written by government 83 .',,
and private authorities, will be found in our new Farmers’ Year %
n Book or Almanac. Get a copy at your fertilizer dealers’, or ¢ N i\ ¢
b\ ‘l write to our nearest sales office, llt'is Free. A, RN 4
i{: ;“-. '4'1..:.; .".i"',, .}‘ ig?
; Virginia-Carolina Chemi jfcal Co. /2% |9 /7’
b 2, Rlchmond, Va, Durham, N.C. A LAy, ¥ PR o
"""w, \ Norfolk, Va. Charleston, S. C, 50l s \Q‘, A o .
R A Columbla, 8. C. Baltimore, Md, e P .8 BR £ s
LS Atlante, Ga. Columbus, Ga, e i AEEEN N ;
. A Savannah, Ga., Y & Pl \ 7
7_: ;{i A Montgomery, Ala, 4~§"" 25 ' P ?é,‘n:»‘::?z\ \.\
"'.;5,\ A% - Memphis, Tenn, ‘-,.':‘i‘.:n, ."-.x"‘:f ‘ . % D 3
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y Afed B NN SRS S £ kA 3 e
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i ® o, G 5 A 5 265
’ e e, . SERieu” | B oy 5 K
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T T I N W v ; R . .
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. ERE APE) < SRB We willbe glad to have your orders for cabbage and garden
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B ‘A e R Q\ A express office Moggett, 8. (. We guarantes eount, make good all bona-fide
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S o e s & ‘k’ Rg" g 'y‘n.v"x‘dtl. 85 % + f‘f‘ o
AT B 4..\“‘\] ? it i > ‘/_:’3'.»\'» A
Oel L A AL = W) '.fi,&» b 2 ':{“Wxiv YFR
S (Lg‘fi.) agh “\.\’h A 5 (' QA' ¥ )“,fi "1,4&‘ \\\ Afl‘fi, ,%‘;‘“{f;v /
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Nt P ; 1 iy o q..'%’“ I ‘-.‘2'“'49’,-”'_ 2 AN ¥ e s’
RAN sst OBy =S B AE opn_ ee
Ear'y Jersey Charleston Large Henderson’s Earl, Early
Wn{ufleld Type #’skefleli Buccession Winnlug g tatdt Bummer
I am located on one of the Sea Islands of South Carolina, our elimate is mild,
just sufficient cold to harden and cause plants to stand scvere freezing after
setting out in the colder pections. [/ guarantee satistaction oy mone n{undcd. Express rates to aoll
ponts very low, @™ Prices: 1,000 to 5,000 at $1.50; 5,000 to 9,bodyn 1.25; m.oodpma over at $1 00,
Special prices on large lots. Send your orders to
. W, TOW IL:IZS, Ploneer Plant Crewer
Telograph Office, Young's Island, §. C. M-rtlAn'q!olnt. S. C. Long Distance Phee, Martin's Pelst, 8, ©,
/4'*.::.
‘/bi"t P : ’
x"w
We are prepared to flll orders now with any of the following varieties of Cabba
Plants, these being the best known reliable varieties to exporfimced planters: Ear?;
Jersey Wakefleld, Charleston Large &8 word Handargoo Qugaoost
Prices $1.25 per 1,08 ,
per 1,000, and i ‘
Address all Orders to , - ,
RotLaloy. Charlesion
S i ’\'l» LARGE TYPE | B WOE) Eartiot
ft e " f e ots ) rlies
LAY e\ WAKEFIELD| ST =2 ARCSIE) e
g P | SOEYTI) The Earliost ‘&@Jm Head
; ’;%“k"fnn.; Qo Second Earliest B~ Cabbage Grown] ™=t Varioty
: N W
%> CABBAGE PLANTS For Sal
5 oroaic
[ AM ON MY ANNUAL TOUR around the world with any of the best-known varieties of
Open-Air Grown Cabbage Plants at the following prices, viz: 1,000 to 4,000, at $1.50 per
i thousand ; 5,000 to 9,000, at §1.25; 10,000 or more, at 90c., I, 0. B Meggett, S, C. All orders
promptly filled and satisfaction guaranteed. Ask for prices on 50,000 or 100,000, Cash accotm
panying all orders
ADDRESS B. L.. COX, ETHEL, S.C., BOox 8
$150.00 BUYS
The most complete Saw Mill
built in the Southern States,
Gainesville lron Works,
Gainesville, (a.
and on;er drug habits are positively cured by
HABITINA. ¥or hypodermicori{nternal F
use. Bample sont to any drug habitue £ FE€E
by mail, in plain wrapper. Regular price §2.00.
DELYA CHEMICAL COMPANY
1144 Hoiland Bullding St, Louls, Mo,
20 reum
Team
All dealsrs. Sample, Booklet and Parlor Card
10 cmm.e P-cmg a‘out Horax Ce,, Newm
o Gives
o Qujok
g Removes all swelling in Btqg
days; cifects a permanient %
A \ - in 30to 6o days, Trialtreatm
/LA @ Liey ziven free. Nothingcan be faizes
& - BB Write Dr. K, H, Green’s Songg
TN GiiSpeclatisis, Box B Mlanu.ZA
» d Mand
WD e e
. P re . g
BAG O, llo.i.i'-ry ‘c..me:g:na?