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7
THE PULPIT.
A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY
THE REV. J. H. JOWETT M. A.
g |
Theme: Every Mawn's Perfection in |
Christ. '
+ London, England.—The following
brilliant discourse was delivered byl
the Rev. J. H. Jowett, M. A. Its title
is “Every Man’s Perfection in Christ.” ‘
His text was: *“Christ * * * wlmm‘
we preach, warning every man, and‘
teaching every man in all wisdom;‘
that we may present every man per
fect in Christ Jesus.”—Col. 1:28. |
This is an amazing and inspiring
ideal, and all the more wonderful that
it springs from the lips of an old man.
If it had come from a company of
young crusaders it would have been
perfectly natural gas the war-cry of
Young fellows just buckling on their
armor and setting out to their earliest
conquest. The veteran toiler is often
a disillusioned man, for the early
vision has proved a dissolving view,
the strenuous purpose has bhecome
less tense, the gay apocalypse which
tinged the horizon at dawn has faded
out of the sky, and the earnestness
which aimed at achievements far
ahead has cooled down to more imme
diate and accessible ends. But here
is an old man of quite another order.
He has spent the strength of his days
in cutting fine roads through rugged
and trackiess wastes, and everywhere
has encouniered persecution, resent
ment, and has often been treated as
the offscouring of the earth. His little
churches are infested with puerilities,
and even men for whom he has tra
vailed are turning out to be enemies
of the Cross of Christ. Yet here at
the end of the day, in the imperious
grip of Rome, is the old man, with
the same undaunted purpose, yearn
ing to present every man perfect in
Christ. Here is an old age worth
coveting, an eventide that is light!
“Every man * * * every man * *
* every man.” It is a threefold blow
in the face of a very popular heresy.
The very reiteration of the inclusive
term reveals to us one of the foes the
apostle had to face. There was the
colossian heresy, which sought to
make spiritual privileges the preroga
tive of a highly-favored aristocracy.
There was also the Jewish heresy,
fenced about by the same limitations.
Here again the privileges of grace
were the perquisites of a class, and
mnot the blood-bought rights of a race.
Side by side with that heresy place
the words of our text: *Christ, whom
we preach, warning every man, and
teaching every man in all wisdom;
that we may present every man per
fect in Christ Jesus.” There is the
‘breadth of the apostle’s glorious ideal
in the redemption of men. Mark
also the height of it—“perfect.”
Surely in the first place the term sug
gests the removal of every man’s de
fects and faults. But perfection is
more. That is a negative ministry
and merely preparatory to a positive
ministry.
Perfection is more than the re
moval of excrescences. When your
convért is washed he has stig to be
perfected. The perfection of every
man means the evolution of 21l the
powers in a man’s life that are com
mon in the life of the race. It means
the awakening of a man’s primary
fundamental senses; the great mysti
cal senses of sight and hearing, con
cerning which there are many exhor
tations in the Word of God. “I heard
a voice from Heaven;” “In the year
that King Uzziah died, I saw the
Lord;” “O taste and see that the
Lord is good”—what wonderful
senses are exercised there!
Perfection means not only the
evolving of the common endowment
of men, but the manifestation of
every man’'s own peculiar #nificance
and individual color, which is the
lamp of the great Creator’s hand.
“Every man perfect”—the fascinat
ing wonder of it!
How is this to be attained? By
what means are men to be perfected?
I cannot tell you hcw happy I am
that my funciion is to proclaim a
Gospel and not to fashion one. My
function is that of a herald, to raise
the trumpet to my lips and Hlow no
uncertain sound. My task is made
clear by the apostle who is so de
..tailed in the exposition of this truth.
He tells me the threefold ministry
by means of which this result, per
fecting of men, is to be gained: (1)
by preaching Christ, (2) by educating
the conscience, (3) by the energies
of sacrificial toil. How are we to
awaken the sleeper?
By preaching Christ. Every man’s
perfection is attained through the ex
altation of every man’s Christ. If|
we set about getting the perfection of
men without Christ, we might as well
try to make a garden without the
sun. There is no other who can
reach the sleeper and open his eyes
to see a new world.
The ways of service and the ways
of modern life are littered with the
tear-stained confessions of men who
have tried to secure the perfection
of their fellows without Christ. Leave
out Christ, and what is there left for
us? Culture and noble ideals will
,not do. Sonorous words and Emer
sonian maxims will not wake the
dead. You may as well string your
lighted fairy-lamps across your gar
den, and expect the seeds in the earth
to germinate, as expect to awake dead
souls by reiterating Emersonian max
ims and high ideals.
We cannot do without the Naza
rene. It is not enough to do Christian
work merely, but in the doing of it
we have to present Christ and allow
Him to work. “I, if I be lifted up,
will draw ail men unto Me.” That is
where the magnetism centres—not in
my work which resembles the Lord’s,
but in the Lord Himself. By our
labor we can warm the surface, but
we cannot warm through or kindle
the flame that shall transfigure the
heart. It is beauntiful to be used in
the service of our fellows; but we are
playing with a mighty problem if we
think this is sufficient. ‘Men are in
need of high ideals, but they are in
greater need of the Saviour. Apart|
from Him, evervthing e]se_ acts like
an opiate, and benumbs the sleeper
into deeper slumber. If the sleeper
is to be aroused, we have got to
ach Christ.
prgrhe gsecond human ministry _to be |
used in the perfecting gs men is the |
education of the conscience, "warn- |
jrz every man and teaching every
man in all wisdom.” This warning
and teaching follow {he awakening.
We need the Christ to awaken the
sleeper, and then we have so to edu
cate him when he is awake that he
will have an ever-increasing sense of
duty and a more exquisite fecling re
garding what s right and wrong.
According to my interpretction of
the teaching of Jesus Christ, the
progress of Christian living is always
in the direction of a keener discern
ment of the trifle. Wegrowbigger man
in Christ when things that haye ngver
been heeded by us comé into view.
When our religion comes down to our
trifles, when all the little things are
just like illumined lamps along the
way—when 'not only the great crises
but the tiny commg@nplaces are beau
tified—then we become big. It is
in the direction of the discernmegnt of
the simple, the inclusion of the trifle,
that Christian growth proceeds. So
when a man is awake we have got to
educate his conscience and his moral
and spiritual perceptions until he can
hear the faintest call of duty even
‘along a commonplace road.
~ The third human means whereby
men will be perfected is the ministry
of sacrificial toil. “Whereunto I
labor, striving according to his work
ing, which worketh in me mightily.”
There is no English word which
brings out the meaning of *labor” as
used here. In John 4, where Jesus
‘meets the woman of Samaria, He
“being wearied with His journey, sat
on the well.” This is the word trans
!mt.ed here, as if the apostle said, “I
|labm' and share the weariness of
Jesus.” It is laboring to the point
of fatigue, to the loss of blood. Men
will be perfected through some labor
ing till they are spent. It is taking
vour thought and giving it to the
thoughtless, taking your strength and
giving it to the strengthless. It is
the morally and spiritually healthy
taking their blood to the morally and
spiritually anaemic. It includes the
provision of decent houses, the ap
portionment of a fair day’s labor,
the removal of every fence and .bar
rier along legitimate roads, the
smashing of every padlock wHhich
holds the soul in unholy bondage.
But te give a man a better house
and render him like service in other
things is no more giving him Christ
than a free library is Mr. Carnegie.
1t may be Christian work, but it is
not Christ. It is chivalrous work, but
it is no substitute for Him. I would
not class such services among things
secular. I would keep them within
the palace, but would not allow them
to have the throne. When you have
given a man a better home and have
placed a garden round his house, you
have only prepared the way of the
Lord—the King has vet to come.
You have got to preach Jesus to
awake the dead, to educate the man’s
conscience when he is awake, to de
vote your energies in sacrificial toil
to the removal of all hindrances to a
man’s moral and spiritual progress.
Let us not forget to see to our
selves. Even the reformer needs the
Saviour; and the crusader needs the
Christ. Even the best worker in
this mission will falter and fail un
less he be sustained. *“Be thou faith
ful unto death, and I will give thee
a crown of life.” The promise applies
now. It is ag if the Lord said to us:
“Look after thy fidelity and I will
look after thy vitality.” It is not
when the warfare is over that I shall
want my crown; the Lord waits to
Crown me now.
Then preach Jesus, educate and re
fine the conscience, give your blood.
“Every man perfect”—make that
your aim. Confront everybody with
that purpose in your mind, and see
in everybody the possibility of per
fection in Christ. Live for this; grow
old for this; die for this.
Soldiers of Christ, arise,
And put your armor on:
Strong in the strength which God supplies
Through His eternal Son. - -
7 Caught.
A member of the Pittshurg Con
ference tells ‘\an interesting little
storv on one of his own boys. The
incident happened when the lad was
quite young, but after he had learned
to pray. He had some trouble one
day with his older brother. They
came to their father with the matter
as he sat at work in his study. The
merits of the case were examined
into by the father, and when he was
through it was clear that the younger
boy was entirely in the fault.
The youngster also keenly realized
that fact. After giving the boy a
kindly admonition, the father turned
lagain to his Dbook. Presently he
‘heard the little fellow over in the
corner of the room praying. Among
the petitions which reached the
father’s ear was this one: ‘O Good
Man, do help me, for I'm caught.”
Ilt’s the old story of the ‘‘child
being father to the man.” There is
a supposition current that there are
some praying folks in the world who
really don't work much at the busi
ness ' except when they get about
where the preacher's boy was. His
case had this merit in it, that he
frankly confessed his unpleasant posi
tion; acknowledged that he was
‘‘caught.”” The full-grown man who
pleads for help on the same ground
usually shuns a confession of his mo
tive as long as possible.—Pittsburg
Christian Advocate.
A Life That Defeats Itself.
Self-centred life is everywhere the
great disturber of human hapiness.
1t defeats itself and keeps its vie
tims forever upon the rack.
It collides with others’ interests,
and God is in its way.
It destroys the peace of the home.
It leads husbands to be indifferent
or unkind to their wives, and wives
to regard their busbands only as the
chief of their own conveniences.
1t underlies suits for divorce.
It leads children to demand that
the whole of the family arrangement
shall be managed with reference to
their personal pgasm‘e.
. It breeds sotial jealousies and
neighborhood quarrels; it breaks up
church choirs, scrambles for the chief
seats in the synagogues, and sets
church members to praying, “Lord,
grant that we may sit on Thy right
hand and on Thy left in Thy King
dom.”
It leads Di,otrephcs to love the pre
eminence.
It is to the credit of the religion of
Christ that selfishness cannot live in
peace with it.—Rev., D. W. Hunting
ion, D. D.
Of course men are not vain, but
just tell a man of 50 that he doesn’t
look a day over 30 and watch the ef
fect.
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It is up to the dental student to take
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ECZEMA FOR FIFTY-FIVE YEARS.
Suffered Torments from Birth—ln.
Frightful Condition—Got No Help
Until Cuticura Cured Him. .
“I had an itching, tormenting eczema |
ever since 1 cante into the world, and 1 am |
now a man fifty-five years old. 1 tried all |
kinds of medicines I heard of, but found no ;
relief, 1 was truly in a frightful condition. |
At last I broke out all over with red and |
white boils, which kept growing until they 1
were as big as walnuts, causing great pain |
and misery, but 1 kept from scratching as |
well as I could. I was so run down that |
I could hardly do my work. I used Cuti
cura Soap, Ointment, Resolvent, and Pills
for about eight months, and I can truth
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ton, la., Aug. 17, 1007.”
“T cheerfully cndorse the above testi
monial. It is the truth. I know Mr. Bord
well and know the condition he was in.
Nelson R. Burnett, Tipton, la.” A
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How a man fools himself when he
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Ttch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s
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Lots of people live all their lives
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Many Old Pcople Suffer From
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Some bachelors hurry through life
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You will be surprised to find how
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T e SSOSI e S RPN RO UA e 7
v PG I AAT N RRgo)Sl ee g 84
A law recently passed forbids auto
mobilists in Havana the use of big
bicarbide reflectors and restricts them
to oil lamps,
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The back is the mainspring of |
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LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S 1
VEGETABLE COMPOUND ‘
Mrs. Will Young, of 6 Columbia
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‘I was troubled for along time with
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I doctored until 1 was discouraged and
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decided to try it; after taking three
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Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Earl,
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*“I had very severe backaches, and
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and had no appetite. Lydia E. Pink
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and made me feel like a new woman.”
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o ege
Plain Talks on Fertilizers
.
A Talk to Fruit-Growers
You use a fertilizer wa Bd The yicld will be
of course, but do you F.‘:m Jaw nccor! ing to the
use enough? '@\‘m’ amount of plant food
i J ¥ .| you give your trees or
The yield per acre, ? § plants — you can de
andtheprofit therefrom [4OB. 4 pend onif, The better
increases in far greater {CSNRIEN they are fed the greater
proportionthanthecost ¥ *’V"fl and more valuable will
of additional fertilizer. fi ""‘o'7‘\‘«‘ be your crop. Fertil-
What is an increase in GBI ize sparingly and you
cost of $2.00 to SIO.OO WY cap sparingly.
per acre for fertilizer e
when the returns therefrom
show an increase of $50.00 to
$250.00 per acre?
The big Magnolia Fruit
Farmsat Durant, Miss,, tested
the well-known Virginia-Car
olina Fertilizer
o) in different
quantitiecs on
their straw
sibier el berry crop.
fi"‘h"i‘ '& §1 Result: when
e pied 1,000 Ibs. per
m(fis‘é acre were used
-;%;@’1; ;hc profit was
R @ s7s.oomorepey
3 ’f‘%‘f&‘s acre than when
500 lbs. per
acre were used.
This is modern intensive cul
ture, the method that is doub
ling and trebling the crops of
all kinds of fruit in
either good or in poor
and worn-out land all
over the country—and
in good soil, too.
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than any ofher manufactuver ln tho ) sl )
Beli™ world, bßeczuso they hold their ™SO ST\ "’/ DY pase
shape, Fit botter, weosp fongaor, and AN ks Lo
B are of ’gmmler value then any othar.n@m I NG 78 fi"““'
shoes In the worid (o-day. ORI 1 :‘% %
W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Pricq ; .
BAO, o Dot e B NWG
d b o 6 deale Y TC, B B( ) ¢ 0 v o
trated Catalog o 6 1o and addgess. | o DRoes MANGE GHO UG LAY, Brockton, Mase
N ———— ” T 4 & samme s SRI l L
ARy y SUCCESSION
@24 %oy, Charieston | cosq. Earlylerseyl 2~
oY ok S)\ LARGE TYPE f'-:;’;r-hgg,»k WAKEFIELD Moo _The
Bgoß AN g ) ‘¢ .‘{(t; ’d“‘hf T, ' Earliest
B T e| (o 5
R ey B e e |2k s L 7 H
A) T iA e e
&3> CABBAGE PLANTS For Sale
]’ AM ON MY ANNUAL TOUR around the world with any of the best-known varleties of
Open-Air Grown Cabbage Plants at the following prices, viz: 1,000 to 4,000, at $1.50 per
thousand ; 5,000 to 9,000, at $1.25; 10,000 or more, at 90c., F. O. B Meggett, S. C. All orders
promptly filled and satisfaction guaranteed. Ask for prices on 50,000 or 100,000, Cash accom-~
panying all orders
ADDRESS B. L. COX, ETHEL, S.C., BoxX 8
The fact that over a million
tons of Virginia-Carolina
Fertilizer were sold last year
proves them to be witKout
equal. Every fruit farmer,
no matter what method he
now uses, should get the Vir
ginia - Carolina
Company’s e
new Year Book 9.1..?‘)4 i
or Almanac. BUSEEEME
It is free to all [ERGETREES
who are inter- .:‘,*x_’
ested enough [ BEHANN
to write for it. ‘3‘l" ‘:“
Address us to g 4 YJ’(L\”'—’ ;
thencarest city RN
below. P lf‘ti:i“‘w
VIRGINIA-CAROLINA
CHEMICAL CO.,
Richmond, Va. Durham, N. C.
Norfolk, Va. Charleston, S. C.
Columbia, S. C. Baltimore, Md.
PR LR N R
i LAy R I R
LA izbrs SN
g viinia-Canling
g o haL
M If 50, you nodoubt received free, one of these buttons from
i the 8. C. exhibit, given you by the N. H. Blitch Co,, the
o largest Vegetable and Plant farm combined in the worid.
gl We will be glad £o have yourorders for cabbage and garden
4 plantsof all kinds, raised in the open air. Special express
B rates, Prices as follows:=-1,000 to 5,000 at $1.50 per 1,000; 5,000 b
R to 10,000 at $1.25 per 1,000; over 10 000 at SI.OO per 1,000,1. 0. b,
M oxpress office Mepgott, 8, ¢, We guarantee count, make good all bona-fide X
@ shortage, and give promptshipments, All seads purchased from the most )
relinble Heedsmen, gunrantoed true to type. We have exira early or large
A typo Wakefield, the Henderson succassion and flat Dutch varioties of cabs Y
R boge plants, Eend nll orders o N, H, BLITCH CO., Meggett, S.C. @ }
Be e 8 e|7 PR g A Mi)
A SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT FOR
Whiskey, Drugs, Cigarstte and Tobacco Habits.
Also NEURASTHENIA or nerve exhaustion. Administered b{
Specialists for thirtiy( years. Correspondence confidential,
The Only Keeley Institute in Georgia.
229 Woodward Ave., ATLANTA, GA.
FEWEHIIZ?
i ’r g 3
A New Parlor Game For ine-
Long Winter Evenings
Go to your dealer and buy a pound
package of 20 Mule Team’” BORAX.
Cut off the top panel from package
and mail to Pacific Coast Borax Co.,
New York, with 4c. in stamps and the
WHIZ game will bepromptly sent you
Prepaid.
WHIZ, the New Parlor Card game,
18 composed of 44 handsomely printed
cards inclosed in a flap case with full
and complete rules for playing. Ene
tertaining, instructive or educational,
and can be played by all the family.
Similar games cost 50c. in the
shops. You can get it FREKE.
(At 9-08
Atlanta, Ga.
Columbus, Ga.
Savannah, Ga.
Montgomery, Ala.
Memphis, Tenn, -
Shreveport, La. |
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