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z ; : ; THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE:” MONDAY, JANUARY 12;°1880 oe Bet ad : é merce; that nn explorer, having once written | principal and the long-ncerued Interest. Tm | ing for, Alluding to hia mnagnanimity, tha | ylatory fa portainiiig to himao ahndwritton | Episcopal reattenco, ho went chootfully into the : RELIGIOUS. | Bisnmnethore Inthe while nstes of his cunp= [iting back Gaittensin compelling him to recall | apeaker sald Misting SIayen wasn inarie for tha | totho Church at Corinth atthe conclusion of hie | South ta mnio it his home, ne n timo. Whon RON ffbo ve Lsunn yar own i paca FOU etch thy 9 E erwin, at’ 9 18 Tne Lee! marked alt vi he ly udjourned i ut 4 a i "| hed Cd el a mn v! "e ol venue ta ah < " ; fi tint fenthors diet, With ail des cluima Hoe | human thought aud heaped up, trouble forthe | though with pls faello pen. ha’ could wive | one tort semis Chelate. it romune 14 be nttosted | Consnioranrets eo oe Tee cee orittratiog: | Wiabonyy tatnte tho honors pald to that staat ; Prof. Swing’s Sermon on the | tmion'he oppoaitit har git ren eriennles subject to nt tenet one violet. eruption each Alleged Failure of Prot- ett ae Ho mica artor the seventecuth i etiatiybod " hole pa earn mueh Wisturbed by a long quarrel over trace, | estantism. nnd efleactona grace, and aifictent grice, that { { ; Uy " how Aut | q my future. Reckoning human welfare ns covering | shot” for shot, Pasaing to his char | what ronulno words those werg, And verlly in| and notoriety inthe Bouthora pros, he ao: | how far eens aid wrath sagoken ae lata, oniysdeewicor i single eenerationand the | ucler as, aw. ishop, tio anit it, wns | this eruiolal hor than fano sien of wenkness, | Journed among thoi,eonsing nit his Inbors, | neo a Busey aund wont. spolan 1 3 wate folles of Rome would seem at least less objece | Rupposed he world he oreatie, and many depris | for in tho series of tustrative tures ho uses, | Ii tho press characterizing fn ft Janguawe the | whore you caunot her thom. Whe tn pe fonuble; but looking at tumanity ag a river | cnted his olevation, yot hia admintatration had postraying his condition, ho taxes overy known | crimes: that wero perpetrated about him, and | plindncas of fatulty to wolcoma tho oh et Howing along for hundreds and thousands of | never heen censured, He grew so in fave | formof victory to deolary his triumph. Like n | among tho Conforonces of the South, white and | that are xo viaiblochoheath any, even the wt Yettrs, of whit avatl wos the onforced ponco of | North and South, with Criond aswell ns foo, and, | giudiwtor overmntehed ho hid sustained his | colored, carrying bla life in his hand: and, after ostontatlous, prgount of mere Oxtornal m i Guillen?” OF what avall was all that arrnignings | if Godt had spared hia [fe ton or Afteen yenes | prowess, by constant courage nnd without wav. | threo yenrs’ exporience in the Sauth, he sald: pratse?) Where ont Ths side of Tophet a yukon and finprixoning. and torturing of men? Wo | langer, he would have beeomn hotter known crng in overy event that would try: the: Wiahost “Tanvofton surprised when Thear a rifte or piss | manity appear more desplenbla thi Inge have all seen pletures of men suspended by tho Mi throweh the Gaited Seu and no one would | quutlty of courage, Fikes rennve in the O W y= | tol ahot that Pheard it." When, in tho course of | trig 7 —ivhern, uxeept In tha tne wrists, to whoto feet inquisitors were fastening | huive inora tilly reecived tha veneration nf | pin “eamos, anid “a cloud, of witnesses | Kpixoopat atecosstony it beeate’ Kis duty'e hy tho Tenn’ snaniverg whieh mitntes teats orb iron welghts, until tho heart tn angulsh should Atri holr meni e American eltizens, Tn conclusion, Or. Dandy | ho had given proof of his endurance, | appointmont of his colleagues, to vinit Atrio: tha nneey And sent out word that he wold tle there dt | either confess conformity ar bo deawa outof | referred. to: hie aicknese and sere aMliction. he | faltering never, pressing ow toward tho mark | though ho lid x presentimont tine ie would | Wigaguethotr erandaur - . than Unity by Her Postpon- Rindred before he would tho body, Rut in all this long and uwtul | laving no Juss than soven digetees, any oud of | for the prize of ble bh walling of God tu Chrlat | prove fatal he wont without a murmur, saying: | that money could. Huy" case from path, eee he . ~ the Jesuits, The Prince of Conde Intereaded, | vhapter “in Bistoralid Roma put tarest ove | which was Hable to prove fatal, Ha dying Jesus. Like n steward to whom ai trust bad | “God hing Intd the Afrlean upon my heart; now | without fevbleness, luxury which never eater ing Policy. Dit Cardinal Wiechellew replied that out he was | single question that threntancd to disturb the | words weru: “There ts no river hero; it fs nl heen committed, ho was rendy to yield thom up, | If Io wishes to complote tha snoriiico by: Inying | supposo that tho honors of external Tank et ore dungerous than six armios, At this erials, | petco of Christian falth? Not a single ono. | beautiful” Whedeath bad sent a pang thigh | with no fone lest it should be found that ho had dawns ors ‘on African soil, Hls will bo done.” | Just, and wholo-hearted, and ablding, were the Romanist Paseal begin publishing hs let- | Galileo's views all returned. His tears, and pain, | tho wholo Church. His onamles euuld notre: | administe: Hi upon them. Asn sacrilice, he fo hosald; | Whatever opportunity of work | more, sippose n parndiso of happinoss, Ly {i Servi in M f the sera sibicet tn nm ery fine wid a tho end sorrow were ull mous ernpyts Bail Orato 8 4 Avivo ser sali most of nll, would the freed= | had nen var on tho altar=-time. tlcnta; ba pple 1 hava Luavo tt ta ins eeeat wonlation far: thie of what bn pons to nman where thore mee lesults, and such was the popitar enthushisin iN sequent yours, el tho mussicre o| hese tiiss thelr ess, affection, ally and now that he torch ol peuple, may be wel for mo to return io | need of te every Interesting Services in Memory 0 and fecling over the matter: tiut_sonr copies ae | Ht ney in which 70,000. non-confarmlsts r Ealwands t ope On, bent dk ates pWHGEO CVCry’ Rong nf tho decenaed asanadite | death hid been applied, ho was ready for ita | thom with usury.” Ils premonttions wore all | « beds of Late Bishop Haven, of the M. E. the tlrst letter wore sold, of another totter 10,00, | were shain, ring any unity? Tho unity ofa few | or, He was never self-conscious, though nmost | inne. THe wasa voyager hence. ‘Tho time of | too true. He thory tmbibed tho patson tnt Louk | Te eee, eees ok mth and 4 whieh, fy that fareoff period, fndleated a condl- | yenrs, ih quite number of privata, and minke. writers, Were put Inte prison, and all France was 4 Jos a a Ista, and Doe Rome's Inability to Achieve Chris: | suisisina? -Avbaae Geen kay ir Jall Gaur ven, ont to the views of oly," et ‘eaves a lotos-enter’a dream. Stull Ut ty nd thon back caine all their tdoag in res | dolighttul egotist. As a convorsntionglist ho | hie departure was at band, and, Uko Ellink | his ifos and when at homo, eontinulag Nis | bo a Joyloss paradise, a dream which thea Church. tlon of things quite the opposit of what gener- | doubled power, In France, where these sconos | was most brilliant. Whethor tn tho pulpit, on | crossing the Jordan toward tho place of his as- | work with strong will and herole purpose, benr- unless too drowsy to know Sts danger, w i ally chanicterizran brothorhood, Of compelling nesent have heen moat numerous | tho platforms, ina took, in argumontor in tho | ceuaton, hy waa reid to step Ito the chariot of | ing up under bin malady, bo censeu nat, night or | ginko of as the stupafnetion of wane et! No sooner had this disturbance in tho middle | and appalling, thore came inititelity in the do Ivo the beat of his lifoand the grent fatal } Vy i newspnper, he bid hut one style of expression. | God for bia Journey hones. Tako up these she of tho century subsiled, thin up rpning A tew | est wave with which it his ever flowed over tho | He wns nn omniverous reader, planting hls | clfientions, if vou plouse, In application to hia day, rate. * biti of is earning for tho udvancement of tho Ne ‘True Happiness Consists in Rejoicing | tornado in tho lst quarter of that cnergetic | homes of main. Inatend of finding pence for | honos-beo probosais into No doubt many Christians long for dni Poor people whom God had put upon hia heart. | heaven of good luck, ‘The yauitios regu very blossom from | dife and snoriioe. y t vory ey A Heh the hundeed years, and Bossuct, and Fenelon, and | nina inind or soul, Romanism has forever post- | tho roeg to thistte, and biving “every valuable Men in tho Inter yoars of the Church of Christ erily, 1 bellevo that St, Paul himaelf, if put inta 0 tT ° OF G in the Lord—Sormon by the thor parties omturked int qquuerel which 0 roned, and if our century tv uvertiowing with all | suggestion tor futtira use. Ile wrote constant. | my have inude Frain of godliness, butt was not | those tines, would mot havo: better Uitvtented:- | fe'epumeayyy tls world, they expont fo wot bic Rev. Dr. Holland. two modern sects over have equaled fn geal or forme oF distur ting Inquiries, it ts largely the | ly and had an wntailing momory. Tt wis searco- | so in Paul's tine, nor In any other time when | the spirit of sacrifice than did this stngic- buy » Dre . * net ltternesa, The Pope was involved; Lowls XLV was involved. Fenelon was dis: i at tho Old Church drove all | ly‘oxngweration to suy that ho [lved witha pen Might views of Chirletinalty, roviuil, Whatlossat | mindu a alaiop. Thnt ho fought n good fight a pA ae ee it riers ‘ f ty pray m the | questions away from itself, as though sho had | or penoll fn his hand, He wrote at home, | social standing, of worldly ndvantage, he auf- | attested munly blows. he struck a spitoof themselves there, Here thoy eq Court for. obstiiite Heresy, and. passed some | ald, "We teil! bave peaeos If you want ahents | in the curs, on tho ateatmor, -and fered by sundering tho relations to which he was | tha hayod thoy wrotight. He wna an ngi- | without such trifies ag robes, and prradny ty By 1 Res! tion of tho Rove Je Abe | yewrs under this cloud, Mime, Guyon, being a | Ing you must wait.for the ninoteonth contory.” | ntthe hotol, Ho wrote almost the frat thing in | eduonted you know full well. What toll, and | tator, No alert chicftaln was swifter to tho rank, but there thoy will strut on BOL aid ee ! -Formal Reslgnatio: ade Woman and less powerful, was sentto Jal, What | And here we are to-day [nau ace into which the | the morning, and literally tho lest eh nny ab ite contime)y, and gaeriiico ha encountered In es- | scene of moral contifet thin be, bo it ta Church | robes af whito satin and be crown, pelnes vd y noblencas was thus sont tolangulsh five years tn | Old Church drove all Ha sciertitio men and allite | While the author of. it four books, pousing tho cause of tho dcespisod Gallien is not | ur State. None were more ndruit in the use of |. " y “ mee’: Chery bott Frenell, of tho Fourth | prison, may be inferred from some of hechymns, Indepondent thinkers, its ghosts of Milto, and | represented but a amall percentage of his writ: | hard to ostimate, What dally exposure to bixot- | weapons, He used frequently to make clippings Beis re roe rere eatcnas and Keeps nn fap ey Presbyterian. which Christians seldot find surpassed |i pathus | Gatien, and Pesci and Fonclon, say tig to thom, ings. He wrote sermons and nddresses, tens of | ry from his brethren and persecution froin | from all gorts of papers in abuse of his spocches |'awny on earth, row except -the woul, - Soul ith. and benuty. you cu perhaps tind nbearing in tho future, bue | thousands of letters, hundreds of columns for | heathontamn tsa matter of history. Ho was a | or writing, and, showing thom to his friends, ho one; ts q ve . BR oe re Pe Oy , Zion's Herata, and ‘contributions for ull sorts | perpetual aucrifiee, and how well ho contended, | would sai" Fenthors: feuthors; Itmust ave | Heewk augy eden bat ey tebe waul f Piney happy are the ne baal 5 twas tho mistuke of Romantant, and {a that | of magazines‘and pnpers. He wrotons hu talked, | {1 the council at Jerusalem, for tho enlarged | been A good shot.” In his interest -In -great,-| For tho soul Ja Intellect Im quoat of truth, ret ‘A Mormon Elder Explains the Faith of Feaenecy af APN mney of funig part of Tentestantiqn, to supposo that | Cwasunewarabla to nn bookish ennons. Is | world-gospeling view uf Chrisilaulty; how he | moral questions outside tho distinctive work of | cous will, proving lsatecngt over tomas the Genuine Li D Tid from the warld avd all its eyes, aditicult question enn be settled by allencing 9 Bipla rule was, so nceampllah fh thing wecom- | confounded the mob at Jorusalom, and | theChurch of Christ In defending and speaking | by victories over fresh and moro ‘and ne ce 6 Genuine Latter-Day Aithin tho heart the blussiug test ian, A question onco suggested sna longer tho | plish it. It you have sumothing to sity, aay it | fn tha Hebrew tongue asserted tho | tho Gospel, tho temparanco reform, the rights pladana nur mithy with all othor souls 1s ident Sainte, Tho consclunee feuls tt there. property of Amat, but honceforth of allmen, | 03 though it ‘were your Inst chance,” The | foundation of his alth; how with | of womnn, the titerests of his country, “ho | cal with | ole in losire and possiblo. attatnines, ig “Py mo thero {8 no place or tlmo "; tylves no wifety to ki a man after. he has | spenker would not say It was a imistake tomake | wenpons of tact, he won bis way in Macedonia, | waa ns bravo and outspoken ns within the dirclo | aspiratl } | me thero | nl 1 aap ion to beooma like God by growth | fam nt Haine in any climax {healt the: only. securely Woah ie found in dina Biawoys, Hes: a rite yiike i en ioe. reat futon the Arai arya. tn Aghons: In presetice of OF ne Giirony sarin Xe AGH urine 1h pollen everything that fs godlike, puro nergy that cant be eainy and free from enre py one who it wits feared mnight think. jor | and si wil! js elcol 1 io 0 Aplendor of he ek elvilization, encouns | affairs as now, linperils the ita of wine hig ve T i PROTESTANTISM, {nang ind, tor God ts diero? Darwin or fluxloy bne-once expressed. tho, iden Epiecopnay “rolvted ° not" eo" much to tered phtlosophy tp Her hone and Keats How in | vole wouldnot fail tobe lenrd in charnoveriz | PCvCh {lls or Haga, but rests on tho Wing like 18 XT A FAILURE 7—SRONON BY THOP. SWING. | And what noblovess was condemned undexiled | that man comes frowu the monkey triba, isto | vindiedtion of “Imperriled Tight "or, the | itnmesu priamner it bonds Dofore Ciesar, aa bo- | lag tho iniquity of politionl partismithin that | then anata seknttee weckeent att roe " , a J . Swing prenched ton large congregation | in Archbishop Fenelon we may infer. not from | late to armign them, for tho thought once | forwanting an tmpending reform, asitrespéoted | fore Agrippa, he shunned not to declire the | would stoop to erime to aecomplish ita ends. | whorl Caen eee aenee da Conteal Charen Hlo-| is lieraty paaes aa. Tall oF cone wo wis; Uae | brulted I pices immiistely: teen dha wale | thoopen seven aan pRAIDL NelGnc Ana the: tae | SOSIe Rene oL ae Cerca ae, Heat een tue | Heid stogh, to rims to aecimplisl Ite, ents Ande. fuNmed Dy nertatter ot Paste oat k for his th “Ts Protestantism a Fail- | seo from his sentiments towards Protestants, | yiduul over to the hun racos and should you | domement of a man who dared always touttor | record will Jpeg fils moral couric; nor ure | tothe Saints, His views of inspiration. were of | point and vox its that ita nover-foldiog pintor took for his themo rotes! and from tho following lofty utteranve: * Libs | have burned nt tho stake those two leaders, | his utmost convietlons on all occasions, Ho | we Ignorantof his physical cotrige, who know | tho soverest typo. Evory word was dacred to | bent imputionth ngainst tho bara of any cugo of ‘ure?’ Following Is the sermon in full: erty ($1 fortress that ean never be torn down: | etch age following and all mon following would | constantly wrote what he bellevad. He wis an | his pestis of robbers, ils perils of travel, hia | hl. The New Tostament In Groeck waa the ea \ “-,And-thora shall bo ona fold and ono sbopherd— | Violence ent never convinee—it only makese| Have Fepented the question, “Did mun como | Ineamprruble editor, but hls wad uot personal | porily aumiong fiiso brothrope and who ave rend | munual of Mis devations, and wasps fruniiae to | cheNaee ,canitlons, | owover | gorReous ay ohn, Bn 18, hypocrites." Add hese’ Hlustrations of | fromem to bumbler form of life?” To her effort | journulism. He spoko Fourieaaly withoutcount> | how ina voyage of tnexihpled horrors his stat- | him as tho English. varslou. . "There was .no ‘That sort of paradiso man hid and. lett | +> No one charge is made more continually or | Roman Catholio ‘unrest, taken from in | to seew Christian unity, Romo has most per- | ine the cost, Now England had given birth to | wart soul alone sustafned n desponding ship's | fundamental doctrine of tho Church that he did ogo, Tho. myths are truc, whethor henthonot bemore exulngly oxninst the Protestants than | single perlxl tho supordasion of tho whois | featly falled, for sho hus only postponed | mminy advanced lowers, but he was thonoblest | eumpiuy.—and, to his exulting shout,” Chava | rot vallautiy muintnin, his was not a pro- | Christian, tHut. put it in tho weRtaa etsy hat by tholr granting full Uberty to thought | eeult Order by Pope Clement XIV. for her own ious yand to-morrow | ho orale ur we eee he obsittat te acentantor progross dont the fat we. anal sag, thant tho Inck of | feasional iuntter ‘with him, for, on his denth= | career, It was tho epoch of his chi fdhook when hor encournge all inanner of opinion and Mil Wn lied, and its restoration by Pope Pius VIL. in hors she should have performed In her mu of On he Thevery reepes iclity‘ovor taint Is reco! ne io be not n | bed, when asked by some inquiring frionds how Heed, turn aver wf the pages of this entay. Tt fa a comforting thought for | epoko with mowing faith in Jestis, Ho wasn | persistingly truc man wo would hye hound | i fired with iim, he tuswored: "Thave nota | 2oled wnatural lite, witht none but nstinctire 2 the qarld' with discont, Ittaat the samo thine | Chubehs history, antl i wants, which were cnsily qitieted. Bu fon ou WHT find that na sice ants, when we behold tho turmoil hty man—brond, advanced, wide open to } some noty of desypondonco from him, ere fortho | cloud over my mind; it 1y all. biessed: Inow + thee. ered that Homanismn fs unchanging in ideas | nomination has piss throwigh more tnternal | acound us, how met nro inquiring whetbor there ry suggestion that would forward his worl jist time he lfts up hls voice fn triamph. Tut | whom 1 haye belisvod. I balleye tho Gospel, all Dloysganton Of A world acpmied tos conn + ane practices, and {3 therefora tho harbor of nsiongs than have fallen to the lotof this so- | wits 1 Christ; whethor there {3 an Inspired book; } be was loynl and trae to tho Muster, Ho never | never once amld unexampled labors ditt ho lose | {18 precious truth, all through. _Iiised in New man's natural tlfo a nakedness to bo nshamnelot, . i Ubaven of spiritual rest. [thus greatuge, | whothor mun. eame from 2 special act of eren- | Wrote or omitted 4 lino because of his persanal | his fith In Gud, so that we write him down with | England among tho atmosphere of Unitarinntam, clad resuee cor tho mind and soul, When fn tho sov- MUL NOE AeTeAE ngeot repose, “Vesuvius | tion, or byw tom descents whethor there fanny | relations “tan, Issue, Ilo” neyor aquos- | hie awn list of ilobrow wortlies,, Nover ones | reniling Emerson aad burgers and nomic trent | Gu ee, be elie with, Knmvledge, And Ott, Set enteenth contiry Bossuet, the most cloquent | fy an old mountain, but not peaceful, Dnais of right nnd wrong, that those questions | toned any man’s right to think, and was | did he doubt bla call to tho’ ministry, or tho | literary gettlua,—tho destructive criticism and away from puradiso, driven whon he would pot 4 perhaps of all Romanista on record, published Huying seen thit tho oneness of which tho | tnust huvecomo sooner or Inter; that thoy aro | no moro” offended by honest oritician of | power of Christ’s salvation, aud that ho had fin- | unbeltot of tho legion naver. took root in hls gO hvilling Tint the ‘furthor | ho ha work on “Tho History of tho Variations of | Muster spoke fs not un finmedinte onen ut titers unavoldable; and, this being truc, wo | himself than ho was with tho physician who first | ished a courso of most uttoxamplod completes | mind, and, once fn chuego, ot Alona Herald, to | tho greater ho tas and tho greater ho le thels + Churches," it was dec id ‘b only the blessed, Hal destiny of Christianity, and. me bo thinkful that thay have come tous | told him be was out of honlth. He could not | ness is ourobearvation unhelped by his own | pourcd into the ranks of infldetity such brond- abitiey hig he to pause; for bis preatness is fn {the Protestant Churehes,” it was dectired by | that jromuntam his found uw more of that peace | rathor thun only to our remote children. We do | abldou trickster, Ho fully belioved that all of | Victorfous existence, a course running from | alles. of argument, ridicule, and exposure his thought, which typos what. things ought - somo, and feared by others, that ho hnd dealt al- has beet reached by tho Protestunta, let us | Not desire to postpone these eniginag, Tt might | God's workers must be fenrloss, Tho entire | manhood's vigor to tho period of age, Mino two | na to arrest attention and awaken ‘alarm and be, but ure not, aud which ho is:over trylng to most a denth-blow to the new religion, for nd ottr awit religion from the charge that Its | be that the next generation will come with | Nation had losta grand mun. Hila intluonca | continents in peedanes of Hobrow, Greek, and | strengthen falth, ‘Thoy regarded him no ord | realize by on transformntion of thom ined the new faith was still young and the Roman | Hberty of opinion encourages Iniidelity. Tho | more learuing and skill, and can. solve | would live for generations, Ho would not fall | Roman civilization, Tho only element of com- | miry opponent, and the diys wero iaugurated Ilkencar, ‘no that, instend of the natural man, d vered with the naso- | Homuantsts d re Unit our method upens up nil | better thin we ean its own diMeult prob- | outof mind. Now that ho was dead, bo would | plete My name and greatness were covered ¥ ie usso- | He of skepticivn und atholsm, and Hoods | lems; dt our love. for our country | begin to bo frankly measured and honestly needed 1a that he should seal with { that paved the way for the vigorons. assaults z ‘ . a A arty tho ‘great complotoness of | upon'tho unboltet of Now England that Josep | Nidure dae teeta cet ees eres nore elationsof antiquity, France under Louls XIV. | gictery with the debrisof temples, and ultars, and | and our friends and our chitiren awakens nade | loved, oven by thoso whom he so thoroughly | his life. ‘was immensely rich, and demonstrative, and bes | shrines, A prominent priest renurked re i ‘3. deat Tho death sentenco has yono forth, | Cook his beon making from Tremont ‘Templo o4 tiv: | Moltude that will not permit us to be silent intho | shocked; ho would begin to got fustice from all | Ho Journoya with tho guard of soldiers out | and intly from tho Old South. It witales of for eaveniat winds: cade: tigntttns eae gulling. The greatest group of Papal orators | “ You Protestanta have noaneborage, you run otf | hope that they will spenk, or toscek our penco | exeopt n few Southorn Muthodists. A Prince | upon the Ostlan wor ta the Tri-Fountain, | Church government, Gilbert Haven was 1 con- | cyelopean fares ho trains aa hie Upprenticess + S re into nil possilo dircetions, you glveusspinituale | in the hope that thoy will be brave for war, Tho | hud fallen, but God was good us woll as grent. pist the tomb of Calus Cestius, and tho site | servative of tho most outspoken type, belleving q Ya that hi t 4 appeared then and thore. V you yt D he works In hia quarry that ho may bulld tte ag yet appeared Appent A * | ssn and skeptielam and athoism’; and in suylug | true soul must always aly, Let the perplexin Tho Inst spenkor was Mr. 0. H. Horton, who | whero ln ifter yeaa shall apring up splondid | in tho Church ag it 1g, 28 It hus come from the | matorial {nto a palace of art after t 0 plan of Marabnl Turenne, ono of tho most illustrious | those words he repeated a form Of consohition | gitestions come how and’ hero; we sunil say and | spoke of Bishop Haven asan Amorican ollizon. { busillen tn his honor, He reaches tho Rpot of | futhers,—Itinernney, ¢ cluss-mecting, Presiding | his awn aplrit. Protestants of that period, a grandson of that | which all good Catholles apply to thelr benrts, | do what we can, and hand downward to our chil- | Itwas every man's duty, ho said, frst to boa | exceution, bires his neck to the broad sword, | Eldershtp, and all.’ Yo finished tilscourse, Ho In this notivity of self-renlizntion thore (34 William, Prince of Orange, whose love of free | The words are partly true and partly fulse in | dren our estate, having mpon it the least possl- | Christian citizen, claiming this outside of ro- | and enters the glorious company of the He » | lonzed to live that ho might Itbor where hosnw | gtratn of joy, but unless gelf-renl(zation be the cing! it founded tho Nethorlands, ytelded to | form: they nro wholly wrong ag to Mil results, | ble of Incumbriincs. We would postpone not! igion, and froma pollticn standpulyt, If one | The soldiers return alone to the Eternal City, | so much to bo done. Few llves wore buster than conselous aim of the netlvity, tts Joy will be principles foun i! 3 It fw truv that tho perfect freedom of thought | fiw. If possible, we would fyht tho whole eon. | recelved and enjoyed tho bonellta of eltizcnship, | while, heraldall by: angels, ho ontera the City of | hls, Genial spirit that he was ho could wive | Felsotto and soldom prolongod Yueine relates ‘the central eloquence of France and renounced | and ot apevch which Protestantisin encournzes, | Het al through, und not with any sword or | he could not ‘avold the responsible duty of | his Qod,in tho.falth of whom he wrought his | much time to his friends, and whon {t was time ends, its auccesses will be relative, and henes tho reformed religion and espoused that vencra- | jead ton mental aetivity which will evolve a | ftgot, but with the whole armory of reason and | being the best eltizen he could be, There | glorious curcer. In the midat of such a bereave- | for them to rest would yo to hia rnom to rend or acnreely successes before thoy appear tnllures, blo old worship of such assumed pence and | vast amount of folly ug well as of wisdoin. The | love ineet all noble foes, and, It possible, cons | might be priority, but there were no degrees tn | ment it well nigh scoma that the cause for | write, 1a.the mine woro on, nnd, suitching © | One end will be thy meuns of another cnd, and ue 5 netivity of an ive implies anutctlyity of nonsense | ater them to such n degree that our children, | duty. As every min muy boa better and more | which ho stood was wrecked; but the fuct that | little sloop, would bo up botiines for work. He eric: unity, Under tho {niluenes of this group of | ieivell as of sense Lint the snine objection | coming wong on tho borders o tho next went: | co.spetent private Uy being un enrnest Christinn, | numerous heurts hewall isn fa proof thae ie its | nd done imuene Dat Ie Uehute or the estore | (Hse chd muain a means, and soon In a sere yeuchers, who combined Papacy and literature, | Nite to the philosophy of Industeys avd wae | Urs MAUL hear tio Messed Wonls: “ATL have | Itwaa his duty to bo the utter, While thers | provided Ine hie toil ter tive ope enterprises, Snventions, that is mitinunnce of bis } population of the South, thelr schools, thelr at | 4 ye vor’ \sho preached sermons and wrote ‘Celamachus | ‘gouthorn Stites used to rupronch the North with | become one in the unity of righteousness aud | Were some excdltent citizens who wore not | bneryy: and ble words, both his living nnd ls | tuorches he shw much to be done whichhe | forever lengthons and | yut never Ww. tc an end that {a consciously. final. “Al nl Universal History, and who also aweetencd | the habitof Hoodlug the world with lithe Inven- | plety.* Christians, bo didu’t feel that they would not be | dying, tro potent agencies forever, which pos- | Church did not seem to see, Thoy regarded him vy we hay Tree © thology with a little of charity. many who tn alle dorivedy Fee notions.” "ha — better eltizens if thoy woro Christians, In this | tery wil pot wiltingly let los and (ewere unt ws tholr Bishop, and he wus truo to tholr alte. LUDWIG HERE RE GAS ree an eee = y deed, Inrnished no suct un , > 3 spel "el vi 5 v1 jo wel tit Oo spiritian ned au In store fora shat hole trust, fy red, weary, with " Ly : ence marched under the fing of Luthor de- | Oe ong Dit this vittue wie mt tho. iii BISHOP HAVEN, over relation he stood, or wheraver’ ho was, ho | for scl v tollor should longer be withheld from | his" cures “and. his lnbors, and’ was’ honed Ge Poe eR ae ap seed rings, = ing has slipped over a knuckle before Fashion ‘thoso ranks to ntarch under the Ming of i view of the Sout! - | MEMORIAL SERVICES AT TRINITY METHODIET | waa the sine gonlul, loyal, devoted, Chriatinn | bin, Heneeforth thore I Inid up for him «| to aay, “When tho Master lota mo into | jiitry PR ak the Pope, Apponring at such niime, the book | Hite 42, wee, of the South, for it res ‘cuunen. tun and citizen, Me'was not wenkoned or ener- | erin of righteousness whieh the Lord, tho | tho™ heavenly lly” i will, lay” my, hunt | ntermosces Not wo Heap renee ee dn tho” Variations of Protestantism” wielded n | Jent ta move In any dircetion, elther small Services In memory of tho Inte Bishop Gilbert } Vated In the performunco of duty by any sonti- | righteous Judge, will give him at thatday. Who | in omy. wife's inp and, reat for | traingand more frequent changes of style, aid in er and formed a Uttle cra of Papatde- | orereat. Tho absence of * Yunikee notions" | Haven were held (ntho'Trinity Mothouist Epleco- | mentality. To was loyal. His wis not that kind | would withdraw him fora moment from thoso | thousand yours.” And in God's good time Ho stitches multipted by tlonneo nnd. embroidery rye pow a iP from the ald Stave Stutes way not n proof of a I Churoh, Indians avenue, near ‘Twenty- of loyulty whieh required Investigation to nscer- | sattsfretions, tho vision of which wisto hima | gave His beloved rest. He wont to hla mothor's until Nounces and ombrohterics, ure a3 common Ught and ascendency. local superiority; but of a focal repose and | 2 y tin’ ite existence. His loyitlty macnt | utmtter of daily contemplation? And tho work, | home In Mulden to die, with hls mother and his ng spots of enlico, and loge tholr charm of ori ‘Thera was sume value in the argument that | torpor, whlch would not spond tha or thought | fourth street, yesterday morning, and wero at- | notton ns well us words, It was said that ho waa | tho wurk prosont to bim at bis Intest moment; | children to minister to him in donth. Swoot gut ment except on textures which none .but my the reformed religions were euch a discord that | over anything, if such an expenditure could be | tended by a fulr congregation numorleally, not- | tho first yolunteor Chaplain commissioned in | by his litest exhortation, would go on. God | Isfaction to this Itnernnt Bishop, that was do- richest. Tabs can buy. No, otnulng fingers, thoy offered litde unity in private or,publie nf- | avoided. It ts now evident that the wetlvity of | withstanding the storm of wind end rain, Tho | tholute War. Tile political iniluenco was not | would ralso up men. ‘Timothy would take up | nied the salntly Thomson, who wus atruick down | Sou neo eaught in your own tripe Sour aber Ny Patna roca rong eel! foraut, | the North, whieh produced so many things tobe | only ornumentution was within the ult a | Only thatof an carnost, loyal citizen, bat waa | hls mantle, remembering alway tho words of | at a Cunferonce wession, and the childilice Kings- | hunpes, init news fenton oe : falra, but this argument, nover very well found- | quid for a few pennicaon the Birect-corners, wae ry OEIC TT EEO Wi 4 9 itor, and | inrgely owing to ls sterling integrity haa man, | him who boro it. But watel thou in all things. | ley, who renched Beirut, on his way. homeward, ‘Andall that mun does oreando in tho finite od in fact, bas more aud more lost its virtne as | qisy producing. things not smull, whose vulue | ttt contined to one object, tho baptismal font, | —a min of culture, and education, and thought, | Do the work of anevangellst. Mako full proof | and dicd, and was buried tn the little Prussiit world by his industry and Inventivencss {sa sort the generations have pussed away, Two tnex- | the binnan raco will never fully estinate. The | the base of which was decorated with smitax, | and idens, of broadest convictions, of extensive, | of thy. ministry, I repent this record us the | cemotery out on the Damasens rond. ut | of fingor-work making clothes for his thought, pected revelations have attended tho ndvancing | finmense raitwnys, the telegrighs, tho largo | while n beautiful Norul cross rested on the top. research, and observation, of keon, quick per- | busis of revoutiting (o tho memory of a grateful | Bishop Haven, at home, among weeping friends, Protestantism, tho one thut Timtted variations | ‘ties of the Atlantic Cont, cd thia most wells | “Tho excrelses buqun with tho singing of tho | Gnlon, and, of oluicst uncrring shmncity und | Church the Aposiolte record of our ‘beloved | mat jeuth as be on hls way to Ils coronation. wiley Uo. thoy ina na. they may.—clottis of tom, or opinion, or sclence,—ga Out of fash ; 4 : Judginent. ‘The possossion uf thoso qualities it | Mishop, whose careor with us has so re- | Sald one to hin: ut find Christ preatous | fot ‘ ofopinfon de not Increase tho’quantity of Bin feptul elty wes, ge tho “aeraip onus, witlen hynin commencing: Was une entsed Ininy men of eminence to seck cunt closed. Wo mike no arent | inthla trying hour?" “Yes. i lo Who T have Oe nt ey ERS thee hen araiee Ore prof unrest.and that yarlations of thought di- | whteh can compete with tho old skill of Envgtan desus, while our honrta nro bloading: Ws counsel and ndyica, |= What ho belloved tobe | boast of Apostolto succession, in reference | preached nnd soryed so long will not desert ina d tho reth tol th rit t tho vulgarity miniah as time permits the mnillions to think | and Friuce, tho remarkable Iterature of the ya raat events tte Mut Hs eutte right ho advocated with tho nrdor of his In- | toour Bishops and ordained ministry. Aposto- | how. He lsu whole anda full Savior. Glory to | thut which ‘Tollows.. " Progeoss;" ‘Fashion cals, more culmly ani geeply. Both tho premises of | North, froin tho daily puper up to tho highest ‘Cally sup, "Thy will be denwee tonsa pare. Mica ro no hnlf-wa, support to | Heity, tn tho conception of the Methodist Epis- | God fora fall salvation!” ‘Lo anothor he sitd: F “wonderful progress!” and. auch # busy.clyills Mossuet’s work, that discords wero fat) and | forms of history, and ronunce, and sulence, and Prayer wus thon offered by the Rev. Dr. Dandy, auything, Tu congilering his genertl relations as | copil’Church, consfats more in the pussesalon of Good-night, Doctor, When, we meet again It fon would frit bellove ft, but 1¢ 13 A progress Would increuse In number, have doveloped tholr | poetry, aro suine. of tho grander. results Haltizen, tho spenk zation would fit ft, progr noticed some of HBishoy npostolle spirit then in the laying on of Episco- | will be good-morning.” Tho day of his depart- . “ that has no final vim or repose of movement, and ‘ Julseness, for it haa come to pars that variations | of that awakened industry which in somo | Tho wsual lessons followed, tho first being the | Hayon'a churavteriaties’ ns n preacher, saying {¢ | pul hands and ability to trace through oman | uro waa filled. with exclamntions of * Glot q aya 2 jt} i re Of thought buve been useful and that tho tons | hours docs produce some amall iiacan prev] twenty-sedond Psalm, and tho second the ninth | wnans inch thodnty of a uialster to litraphis | lources the douvefel ling oF Wistar backs te | iors rertaeet Wage exclamation ota eat SEER a kere ie te ye a dongy to excesstye diiference or ton theologteal |, thing for a ebtld or x delusion for an unthinking | of Hebrews, Volco in bis pulpit and uso his influence agalust | apostolic ordination. Tuckless is that Bishop or | asleep, nnd at tho. closa ho awoke, opened his | jitusions “all {s ‘vanity -and voxation. of f chios: is not so visible us fs tho tendeney to v |‘ndult. Siintlar is the action of Protestant + 'Thoro {sn tnnd of puro dolight, : vice and corruption on what might be termed | minister whose eredentinis inve na better gin | eyes, and, looking: ne sald; “Thero is no river | gnirit," but the yalnest and most vexatious of + Christian unity.- Itis becoming moro and moro | spiritual freedom, It ennot provent the human Whore saints linmoreat ruin politica! politien! questions ng tn any othor, Tho | unty than this, Our Blehop wis of the apostolte | heres itis ull benutiful,” “And this he pnsased Al L ¥ 8 18 soul itself, which has not evident that’ Protestantism dues not tend to | Intellect from following after chimeras or from | was next sung by the vongregation, ronchor should atand out boldly and fuurlessly | order in point of piety, gncritice, zeal, courage, | away, The words of dying mou—such men—on- any vanities wil not Dullevs that truo Joy if apy unsettling of human filth, and that | mistaking the amall for tho grent, but these tine = in tho fear of God, and donouneo ain wherover ft | and fktellty, who, perchance in tho spirit of | force attention like harmony. “Let me dio the ver to bi On Tes tending, toward un esscuttal unity. | ponsmnt phenomennaite only elite tare tee | Tho Rov. Mr. Popo thon spuko brioily. He ap- | be, whothor. In the, snelul or politienl worlds in. | devout uutrglllise WoulT Hoe for lingele wee tho. | tena e a om Ake harmuny. |" ot mo dle the novorta ke Wad jaching wich re to uo et But, before we look more carefully at thoao | rises upon Ita rapid and decp river; thoy form | Prehended that ull present folt that tho most | high places or low, ‘Thix was one of hia grestest | trlumphant life sumumury of the gront Apostle, | liku his." On Tuesday Inst thoy Iald all that wos | tantoms of ambitlon, which are to be ‘caught, facta, lot us mark the probable import’ of Chriat’s | no pure Inreality of the mujestie flood, “Thore | appropriate way in which thoy could spund tho | Clemuntsof strength; upon every moral ques- | but for whom a:loving Church, amid their grief | murtalof Gilbert Muven to rest In tho village | ond us anon ns thoy tro caught dissolve, Joy ® Words, that "thore shall be one fold and one | can be ue form of energy that shill not have tts | hour of worship wis to havo before thotr minds | Hon he knew not fear, and tho only preteher | to-day, would any that ho foucht ax fight, | cemotery of Muldon, and many an aehitiz | tho exultation of frecdom I thought too atsos Shepherd.” They aro n Bropheoy ofanultimate | hours of triling and witste. A rich soll muy, ch thoughts as: were ‘natural | stl who dared to enter his pulpit {n Deceinber, 1859, | finished hla course, kept the falth, and hus yond | hourt went thither in thought and joined lute to serve aught but Itself, Joy ts tho range destiny, and do not reveul tho lmmedinte condi- | indeed, grow more weeds than can springy up | beh thougl ro natural in connoction | and preneh a eulogiatie sermon on that “deluded | to his certain roward? ‘Th verdict Ig refter-| mournfully in that and procession.” But | Wet thn that fuelosos the will with x complete tion or possibility of religion, in one pluce | from n desert, Lut, nevertheless, wo should gfj | With tho memoriul sorvice. There were nu more | criminal, John rown,” He wasbold and fearless, | ated by all who knew him, The press of the | thoy did uot bu Glibert Haven. 38 | horizon beheld wherever tho will. jooks,—the Christ priyed that all Ins diuciplea might be ono, | prefera farm'ur a’ gurden In tho Vulley of tha | Jnstructive lessons than thoso that camo from | Hotonlytn the pulpit, butelsewhere. Althoush it | land resccho ft, noth single member of which |} spirit, and words, and herola carcer continua the | packground of every othorobject. ‘Tile freedoms 28 Ho andthe Father were one, in all wisdom, Viidsetor tho Missouri to ono in the middle of | noble yes. God's grent wa: of touching us wus radical among radicals, he faltered not. Tui ntl | will fall to record his death and give gome remi- | bright possesston of tho great Church that ho thought his only when engnged with its ows And thought, and design. But Christ denlt only | tho Sahurn. Tho rictness and freedom of | by the work of the Moly Spirit in tho tives of | tO so-called reforms of tho diy ho was in the | nisconco of his life, in whieh his grout aud ve loved nan child and served as a lover; and | absolute forms of Truth and Beauty; this range in the perfect ideal, and not in what must, or | Protestant “thought may encourngo munya | those who lelded to His control. His blessed | YR. Upon somo qttestions he entertained views | satiic activity boro somehow on. tholr deport whethor we think of himas a Speatnien, of puro, | of nim tho willobtains only when rucoxnizing,ber would, or oven could sct fn on that dy or in the | weed of 1 uppeurance and it perfume, but | Word, witohwus tobe tho guido of man white | Mwlvancy of others, ta him was developed tho | mont of life And netlon,—and from tho lite ut a | transparent manwood—as a husband, dovoted yond ench speelal tusk or delight, ite own pere Dour morrow. In ll, Hia, utterances that man | give us such a rich valley ‘rathor ‘than | (Ime endured, but which wa should understund | Hest typo of Chrlatian man, tenchor, eltizon, | press that reviled him ts extorted testimony to | over to hla ono wife, who proceded him by fif- | ection na tho aky-Hio whore {ts whole lite tmeets must be perfect as the Fathor in Heaven was | one where tho weeds aro discouraged by a | in ite fullness only after timo should hive passed and Bishop. All those Wore necessiry to con- ia worth. The heritage of the Ife, churneter, | teu Sans a fathor, who mude compantor and blends with tho wil-perfect God. ‘Then, ine perfect, and that man must love his nelghbor ta | thinness or coldness of soll, Tho rich valloy | away, wad largely mude up of the biugrupliies of | stitute the tdoul lender, Rach ono was nccossi- | ond toil of auch n mun fg a blcased beritago to | of bla ehlidren,—as.u writer, whoso chuste pen | Geed, man's world fa situate within himsele, It Imself, that he muat do to othora what hu woulil | may caally becotne tho home of a large und pale it Triele fauilta wore toe Uxtennated, | FY tocomplote tho dovelopment of tho othors. muy Chureh, and his loss trreparable. I doubt | hea rondered us undor obligation forever,—t8 A | fa escarpod from chanco. It offers no spolls ta that others de to him, Ho wns ideal, pleturly happy populntion, but tho cold and thin soll will | thelr weaknesses wore not ‘coverc The Nation ns well u4 the Chureh bad suffered (In | not hls appearince was fiuniliir to many of you, | reformer, who from tho mountalu-tops saw trenchery, Nor tood, nor tire, nor plague, nor + Ye final gonl to be reached by the tndividual | be “passed by by the waye of {immigration | over. Their hutman honrts, now silent | the loss of tho beloved Hishop, Ho died as ho | —a man of medium stature, stout and heny: clear In adyanco of othor mon—ns 0 preacher, | tainine, nor all the hosta of ‘douth combined, and by the human race; and ao iu this text, | and young ambition. It will stand as one rene | In tha dust, ‘once beat our | Hadiived, His inst words wore those of cheer | with magalye hend crowned with abundance of | who shunned not todecliro the whole counsel cin batter. down or scala ita walls. when He declares that ull shall boof one fold | son why tho Protestant era grows so miny re- | hearts wero beating. 'Thotr humun souls in tho | @ad triumph. With hia inst breath ho anid to tho | nuburn hair, with a broad fico, a merry, almost | of God,—ns « Bishop, loyal, holy, and true,—wo Ajalist [ts divine Impregnability the universe and of ono Shepherd, Ho ta not Imposing mime | igious fantasies, thut all Incrensed intellectual | great contilet in witeh thoy wera engaged In friends ground bin, “There ts no rlyer hero; all | mixchievous,, twinkle In bis eyo: iv digni- | cannotdo, othor thin, amid our flowing tears, mh { Gnul conv’ ight be dashed into pieces, without cuusing mediate duty which « Honan or any local church | uction develops Into much foolishness a6 well as 4 r §s bonutiful.’ fed, yot fumiliar carriage,—bo was knows | thank God tor his life, and the inspiration of his ek or jar, cf t remove, time cane boulud nt congo fulllt, but Ho is anounetng 1 | tnto much wisdom, Just ng the Intense feel ty of Pee a ee Tne oie peeputereat Aupauae After brief prayer hy Mr, Pano, the doxolo- | to ‘his friends ond adinirers ns Gilbert | death; nor can we full to rend tn his loving 8o- | not. det, ts fiance, Which {a now ‘and. here, ing oF deus and atinel grouping | the frat huif of Itty will surpass old ue tn | ours were to-dny, ‘Cako tho lives of Abrahum, | BY We su uni then tho Lenodiotlon was pro- | Huver and fow over heard hin excopt to bu~ | lettude tho dytrur euhest Of tho great Apostle: | always and everywhere, a heave nevertholess, of humanity under one Guide. Bue: in | quarrels and blunders, but will surpass tt algoin | Isane, Jacob, Joseph, and tho imijestia career of | HOUNeed by Dr, Dandy, » como his adinirera—siye, porhaps, when he | *Wateh thaw in ull things; do the work of ovan- | and full of Joy, thottgh in the midst of hell, all the intermediate years and centuries mon | physicu! and intellectual splendor, Moses from the buoks of the liw, and wo hid crossed thelr pith in defense of some yrent ine Finke full proof of thy ininistry.” He- ‘And this innor heaven, this fullness of Joy, Bt’ ware uridont . to, fol Naw the saat law of Protestuntisin admits o stil another usttit- scurcely anything of those books lett.—anything TIE DEAD BISIIOP. pepe a ae ae He chursh be sorrel tovetl 1 vent eaten) ea? aye you lost | Paul assures us Is for ull—a privilege ao ncees+ 88, D1 in vnye lends through va- | cation, In tolerating all forms of religiuus ay vourd. ft = co 9 ita niargely known throt jo medium 19 serious temper 0 sti us Bot te qos ble, &o #tiro, 86 permanent, nnd so necessary to Hoty, Paul stated piainly thialuw of iidivigunl | errors and ubsurditics (erendem those whe hatd | vouetteone Ug bistese ee ee ee ee eG, He sible, Bo tro, BO T ! necessary tf re - | SERMON IN MEMORY OF THR LATE GrLnEnt | of hia yenlal pun, that was never idle, writing, | pol sin-cursed world? Stand In this hour at oar view of rates tg relae diiterence in tls chapter On meut und herbs and | thon leas pwsitive and lest bitor, If, forthe | wel, David, Soluions PRT Cre ee MAVEN. With alngulurawiftnoss, tho goldun sonteness | tho bedside of tho dying itishop, and, heaping | 2cleke Mew Of our myatertous life and i crud days of fastings unt wishin, und | sake of argument, we should adinit that Rom i h AtG: al that scomed to flow from hin on whitever topic | ull your frivolity und galn Into one seule, mous Gong te Gist Liat 0 6S: an inaro tan f + ont rH Cray : vol, 3" "i 3 ° 2 ye sitio, d priyltexes ov" NEY WhitGh cateooaade med ail up ii tho formiuin that the kiedore | taneurowsttemen ances ae deg ata, onan [iiteetonn ot Carsab, andl whet ee: Ce recat ta | Gen armen, ction ct murals yoaterlay minty he trented, So full and rendy was ho, and ho | uro thom ugninst tho satisfactions uf such a} turejolug ih the Lord aivayaecniways: and. In of God did not te In ments anddrinks, but in | all ite surrounding variations of thought | New estumont wo were more forolbly reminded it * ry of tho lata | gpoke as he wrote, thoughts fitly clothed crowdl- | death. Do you understand thom, ao welghing ? tho Lord beenuse Joy neconing to its degreo {s od ad Joy in the Moly Spiritand ina lity of | more dockted and revenyelail by us une | that it wus through nobly lives that Gud taught | Bishop Gilbert Haven, ‘Tho weuthor was unpro- | ing on his speech with iustrations the aptest, | ‘Then T bid you como buck to tha tusks thut Fu | the rilaneo oF chitrcter like fis, brightening integrity, It was not tho derign of Christ and | just opposition and cructtics, What ekep- | and lifted up humanity, ‘Phe forcinost previcus | Pitious, but, notwithstanding, tho congregation | Mlunitnuting his discourse, and put quotations | inulns take thom tp with fresh vigor, and thank | ha’ {hut Meneses inereuses, and allowing no de dis Apostles that tho Church should set forth ind | ticlsm and goneral intidelity has sprung | dooumunts that tha’ world possessed wero | was quite Inrgo, The sermon was prenched by | Mnsought, rushing to garnish alls nnd bls potnes | God or the startling, roviving heritige of euch | Gronse without sonsy OF Fin, continue in any very marked unity of thought | up under tho shaduw a Rome hh : ! v Y, 1 werosd Incisive, elenr, and forelblo thatevory | a Ufe and auch u deuth, VI Lord" : Tt and fecilng, Unt that, following tho hws of fue | been a bloody form of sentiment, Heteg under | op TE ga tgailets, | hat a We neo jie | the Pastor, tho Hey, It. D. Sheppard, and tt was | spacen orurticle dint flowed from hls Hips or ped Waal, then, was the Lori's charactor? Ce at, P . tainly ot a Happy one tn lta surroundings. “His mun nature, It would at some remote period on | tho perpetual mennee. of violence, ail fre “4 en, fn 7 Pe es in memory of Bishop Haven, Intely decensed, | was liken stright arrow well feuthored and nt srauile ‘ Adly* eurth ori heaven reach tho harmony and | thought in eueh plagues hu hid to ny fis pease, | ARoueRs pecans men, and spotless even weford | yi took tho following, Words te lis texts discharged with dendly ‘provision, “Ie seamed . TLAPPINESS, Fee eee a eT Bik ean fae women: Roauty of f Brent Unithertouy, qa Protestinttann af yiulousa, ine rattonnlly oblige to buston of tho records the Hives of men whom God bad butraeh thou tn at Utne, oudura ‘unltetions, do 0 ua ln Shae ery bel nirieatra Bie powers wale ze ery Uae ey bara ansraate te ment. His munhood fell helr to. ho dynnaty ale we vn en ‘ould BOUN Keerive, f r] — ¥ Pet he work of Wn ovanzellut, Muko Tull proof or ihy min= of ¥. 4 > ~The As n jor 0 endy vi 1 doea viot cotny Into eonillot with the pruyer of Ita | announeing, the doctrine. ut perscoution: the Hho iifolot the beloved diverge whe eee Iseege hur Cine ninwrundy cp Ue oierod. ant ie tine | Ing, will, and Gxperioues of ght und. Ct Sion storday. morula “urge | tuor-dia” nis. inunly-yenrs ripen to, oid i J Churoh hed yestorday morning toa large | nor did his manly years ripon to. old age ‘A c " “| ct " y Cree " . Me of mydopartire ts at hand. 1 tuve fought d y hurch, preact yestorday moruing 3 1 1 + oA iu ven teted up from paddy WET Wy Oy Be Fe . L services of him who by don an the Pactile Slope, so bright, and cheery, | Hojutce in the Lard ulways,—PAUly ded hood methim with tho curso of his awn pooplo Christ's words and spirit und with tho words and | called au tnfldel hus come upon some unchurch= | labor tu rest, from conillet to vlelory aud ree | ‘Tho reverend gontleman spoko ng follows: and sparkling that the most souls obscevor | Ail men seck, and ought to seek, Joy. Itistho | on its bend, and under that euro his years wero gpleit of His Apusticy ire tho vurlutions of tha | Ike views of diving tatters ns reeurdei, he Is | wi ‘Thoro was no sct of nen in all Protestant | 1 doubt If any pnasnye of God's Word has Hd hot fora momunt inmuging that u martgt E (1 few, and homeless, and lonely, and tragic with § rotestant Churches than tho unity of the Ro- | permitted to deliver Ivotures or print vooks und | ywho hud Ko wide mi disvesy Was upon hi, and that ho knew that qe {| te alm of life, Tho lifo that falls to npprocha | few, and homulega, aud tonulys gt an Chureh, because tho unity of tho aman | ho innghs and altsinites bitin tho thoury aid in | Gro mnatts gang ad wy wide un influence and eee et erated ait atirriug mon to horole | vary boat hu lid only'a your oF two to tivo, ut | tls tnafog, ‘Tho lito that despulrs of fading it | CrUetIxlN whose, halls ward delven trough +body is not real nor great, and Turthermure se | the praetles of Romania such in orator would | ary cleeied by tho duifrages of thelr brethren of | dying Apostle. ‘Theoitgh all those seara oe | evel that proved too high an estimate, and he | isstranded, Man's reuson for whutever he does | trangements, duninis. betriyals, seoltsy-ench & , , darias tt existe it is an enforced tunity, But ] need feat to miso an ariny or a mob, and maken | tho ministry ad of the laity to be tho supurine Chriiiarttivinng it has younded fram he ae nt wont to his; mothar’s hung in Mutien to dio tn | must He within hingelf,—tn othor words, must | fuummerestroke that tore some’ nerve of spirit “Rhrist Mimscte forbade all euforeed unity, bloody buttly-tlotd of whit with tia ‘ts in renin | tendents ofthe Methodist Episcopal Chureh, In- | around the world, ae dying sninte hive piven sti Prevoneo ut his wrod mothor, und hls two chll- | yg hig rensom—and hence ho cun bave no higher | And fastened tho whole quivering life tight and gid thieot all times and on all nevaslous. When | of debate, Out of tho tujustice of old relizious | deed, thore Was only one in the Cuthollo | thot luburioua truseand Gonl ke tele Ceeedae | dron, and gorrowiny friends Who wero prewont 4 , eet | tiptiter tolts cross, Nor wis thore any elution Htrs oad, uceessor ig clulined to be one | violence sprang up nimest all tho wars which | Chute, tho Ponti, who’ bid tho worlds | and itis rogiuem OurcKood. Hishorctame 1 |e, feo (ow i yreat soul uphold | motive thin his owa complete sutisfactton, | GFanccem ale fils protmietel martyrdom, 52 4 -throned at Nome, wiahed to enforce wanity | made Europe a fletd of blood for a thousand | wid ny 0) ontige adit oD en by tho consolations of religion can div. | When ho sake why be should do thus and sy, he yes of Hosh could thon ny of ly power that wna now lodged in | up tho other diy, #8 ho wont to his reward, Jeav= fur 2g eyes of on sous its nypny Christ conmauded hiin ta put up higawords and | yours, | ‘The confused wiekeduoss of tho | thom. "Thay ware ‘mot tho. Tisnups of | fiw meurufid Uhurch and theme cia | wave * have lowe bims ho fs fONG; | means, * What ts this course of conduct to mo? | elfortwasu failure, ‘The little gang of ra Re eer e or ciara aman Clslat tout cer. | Muluinmedans i uttampeliug Uy nae tha vs | a adlodese, Ea of tho Kreat Church—the tnrgest | to howall bis unthuioly tnkiug-nit. Bo feisoften | Bnd Wye, Mu8 ple ay hu moved,and in what latte | Wins to mois virtua more than vice, rellylon Tullawerg, wathiored hy Hie life ited from Bilt ut die ioe | tree church in the whole world. There t a c G ‘ we .) vith, From tit to nat Jans Budidens ond that bu wished tho periuission to | lonco team Christinns, wud. thon followed ‘tho twontyening in tho ulstory-of tho Muthadtat | suencewmnttal toker Meares ee eee a ee | _Womuy rin over his carcorin ttasaliont potuta, | ‘iin virtue’ And the only qnéwor which by | (eutn, Ero tae te tua Shaso prunes mingied a rel uke Such informal procauaingy, Christ Crusades, which covered two hundred years with | Chivch, and nots word of ruprouch bad been | removed trom cure, and respoustbillty, und tel, | asured that the course und churugterfetig of | will entertain as, persuasive or portinont ts ono | thoirdew with Ils swent of Uldod, “Yet ths i wickly ordered that thoy be ict alone, for if | thole wars, and turmoll, and fearful wiste of breathed upon any ono of thom, Thoro waa 1d the Church avons to aulfor paralysta, ‘What | stich a man area worthy tople fur our Sunday | which tries to prove that virtue and religion aro | the man in wham we nro to rejolee,—the man joy Oureed with Hinself in Just the one thing | ite, And what the Muliummedans lind dene ta | rongon fur very rout xrutitude inthis, Nongot | must that parilyais have been in tho varly | moditation. He cume from a home whero Qoil | nsconding stages of sutisfaction over viee, Tell | Who loft Joy ag His poowsttar legitey to aur ries. PE CMEINE aut ovis, they ware Hot fur | enforcy a unity the Hapa powur continned, and | fio itshopa wasliving who was elouted butora | Church wher the vpodtio hull wis ronneeedears | waa lionored, ‘is futher wisn mun ‘of inane, | Mccnding stuxcs of eutlsfuction ovor vivo, Te ie} Ang Ub wna. in tho vers bour whan ono of Hy vg ‘and thebty ant MWe curate pov Taare er autre OF ANGRY Iie thon the Goren Cohturanes of IMS. Aftor alluding can naotne manner determine by the extent of | consplevons in his mutive town, pudbllu spirited Li y trusted diselples hud quit the table where thoy Mand; thero was to be no enforced unity, nod | disededy indeed, tho final bloody: seco, =the | to tho tuintarcemunt te ieee wea ee 85 - and “without reproteby an oillee-beurer and | {8 supremo and he will rejuln: “ If to obey God's | were supping toxethor, in order to betray Hn; " rh y f Othe fuintercement. it dare, when. Ih SMR eh ee ce aa riaamtuce Of thelr luss | tive in Church ‘and lai, Whun sitthodiie | will valve absolute fos, and palny and: denth, | Whee ee ametor da order to betray it plainly. thorefore, ull these Popes who: bave ate | Relgn of Terror,” came from the loyleal infers | Tuyen wis choson. Ha wus then geeintugly tn yi ¢ Wupted by sword and dungeon, and by tho Jue | ence that tnt ee in ae Poe law tho Dent uf fenlth, with avery pempeat ofn Jon 8 roudily didcavercd from his numerous epli tdous to-day, Thore Gilbert Haven wis 3 when tla onemioa | werd fuss dogmn hove been very poor suceessura not | doubtedly to expec * AIL tole euiard and ie Chien Now it pte i f thore be any taw of moral obliqution (a dead "1 h h 4 - | ment, ut 7 Mustrated by tho life of consistent parents, y, kits Mi capture, and the night wind brought to Hie eur guy of Christ, but even uf tholr cari , Krom thig vico of onforolng religious unity | Javed man. ‘Though thore were many sites to | ho i anne thoy tie De a Thonce he went to the Methodist Au ieiny ut | souls, or in living souls that requires thom ta | thu rusting of leaves ‘from, tho altvo tres Of sthat Protostantisin, in ita frecdom of opiulons | Caiming out of Romnniam, it retained imuny of | the Christian Mrerutare of the lund, and ‘tru + " 4 A a to | endow: . The wide re eminont ininistors of our Church, whore relig- ness that Flo sald, *Phoso things have I gpokea. nnd i its varioty 0! Hors My harmony | {ta enrly dens und errors. and Calvin and. many | tho Nation i ; WW. fran hls rene nufesionagy tomrat hee he | fan und educition wo hand inhund. tucowe ge | Cod £9 My reason aud fnith, tholy truest truth, | Hoes Mat one es inlghe, revaaln in you, and S 2 reat a figure Bt. Paul was in the carly Church now England dld not command tho respect | why by obedience should I consent to tho do- as foruwell ,Of tours that Hila death at cl v 4 iy ya 2. Ci rn an quisition te wake a European hucm Tellge | which hund od | tles thut crowd the voluino of Gur Now Vestas | tught tobelloyyin the vorities of rellyion, us | Sruetlon of very faoulty that obeys? Can | Pome tenay thelr torches and stuves for Ills Peter, It muy thorofore be surely ufiirmed | Protestantism haa not been wholly oxompe. | tila chiretor, he Was true to theChurch, truato | similar Inspirit. it is true, but ber eth hit ‘in | Wilbraham, that hys beon tho nursery of nigny | die? No, God tg only God to my willug Ho is } Gethsemane, It was in that howe of utter darke aculs, In it with Jesus Christ than Romania his been In know from ty « sh Kw | of tho reformers hold to the desirabtds | Dr. Dandy followed in an nddress regard! ¥ " H tho cusvomury revivils at Wilbratar, Gilbert | tele Joy." - that your Joy might be full. cuforved unity, That emblon vf unlty—Chrivt | wos8 aud moral abliqation of extorinimit | the deccuved wi a Christiad R-IStCe, ante, | ete Ge eee ean ae ec Te eerie eertadt ant tao eeunaims (GUE | tho crror, thon, of tho othics which makos vine nit nouitie ne Ite mount? Gan fuere ba Guy tanner of eteeas net by eect kecured by | ing heretics. Catholic garments and Prat. | Bishop. He suld those in: the Western Chureh | grewt centres ‘of intolloctial und commorcia | Wks. turned from seoular pursuits, hn whieh | tuo tho pursuit of huppliess, as woll as tho error | genuine Joy in boggary, in disyrace, In grit, [0 RR Br acigte even | Hed ee i tet oa foe ite | ier, Aopren a tad | ARM ta OHM UR | AP ER ae A Hea | eho nna who ouwngs Ital art wih | fab fil a enltac y boucs, when Homanisin attempted to eoinpel | honor of Protestanttain led tn tte having rupidly | known of representative mone isbop iavon | shurchas Cut he tatiotrlectod hon ceed | Tninaseuse where he Clemtad fine tye Ly Out concerning themvolyes about tho virtue of | Yoon at & inlaimlentogd fain, stripes, a Of belief, It browne “Ine re Se aO EAS frOHL At cut toe VN IY A of rep ve mon, Hishop avon churchos, but he lndoctrinntod thom, supervised minuscuy, where tie learnud what tho Lord atin wounds, and a felon’s denth? And {fs such the. wort, Me wore’ wort Ala, aveap | aamuticen tal tony parson anton | aaa ig he suelo lees ao | SeIaReRane egeuey entra | MEN ICS at yay AIIM al | foe Noun hay ace tappnnony tt at toy | doy mck rea ae le wih aad ok 4 wus thorenfter to bo’ diverted — from | sook n hu sa which Is not sutisfuctor os - 7 Ou ten: Y f el eI vt yi v" ya ot Unity of oplnlon by wloleniog, ‘Tha disaord wnt | plon of Intoltectunh liberty, tn ian ciaes up to | sity dovution, Ho qnvo a briet akereh of Hishop | lo sougtt to presunt tha Gontiionte God eek | ho frat served. tho Cuitch ‘ua h teucor oe | Be found. ‘They look outward and among fortus | tudeof aplrit, Gnd phystual torture fru to f (a i Joubt the Very existunue of u God, tha Protests | Huveu's curcer, saying that ho Innuritod tha es | Christ” Howat van be a unclunt lngunyes, whero be lald tho foundy- | Wate conditions for the fount of youth that flows | SURE for thal awa sakes, and us Bouuttful Te onatio. “ar nt the inusle bf fats and pars got Churoh of England ndmita hitn even into ita } celloncies at nly parcnta,—wis a unin of Drill: | work iu one atthe grout fig ew of AHIR tons of hia eruufitisn In the olnssies tn tern: | witht. ‘Thoy have not lenrned that mun's mis+ plays far avovethou aid at ths auino time overs ih le ung to deat cw enn sub | of dey Chin ho ie amadyaaon insur fhe | anieetne habe Renee tho nh ACR | Went atl ag Ar, gpa ad bay ty | Wu Neer a tt lg: Shore | ry Js bl depends upon wuingy and tut | [owe el ura, wontborttanod ke te Te Poe Facts (Oe AH departures frow | State, becausd Protextantivn ty founded, not | Church acidom furnished: auelt a chiracter, | great evidences that God is love teat wate | Hil eulled ils to the higuest once in the wiee | eo, things ure uunborless and wll depondent | Incrensiug tridcdcence and mualo of {te fall, g tho rollgtun of Jewus’ tho peraucution of none | upun'a religious dew alone, vue tpon tie duraiee | Sree aelton 1 ole a chumeter, | great evidences that God da above tall, uslug called ity 187 a tal ontice in the gitt | on each other, he cannyt, unicas omulpotont, | .Morouver, but for auch tribulations there coul! ig characteristics wero wnsellishness, | consecrated trumentaliies | q of the Church, he commended himacif’ by 3 it To praueuly Ma! worse vusintion of decteinu dine rid grentuess of huranity. Wa conclude this | courage, — and pug unatty Is person and dying,—vital nstenmuntatiiios, ieee Cane Iibora most eminent and moat ubundant, ¥ rane the HR VOREOH alae eine “antes AN hattal dod oy rat wa Nature eoeontiataction aad reatatin itself, for it ia uiinost certain thatthe | (oa eo ue Ey CO ier cabed by ite polley | und purse belonyed fo Gnd. Tt hud ween ehuryed | grusps tho ungeon—Wwho can cuter Into tha | Teame now to apeuk of ‘im in thosptrtt of | each of triplo brs, cara will croop through | does not fool tntil Nature rebuits him the essen. ther in Heuvon, would tuthor huve Hivexiie | theaghtciy cP ae re yet Sehismiatio ) that he waa n rudical and disposed to leave the | Divine purpose for tho saving of men, and count | that Pauline analysis by whtoh we exuininud the | thelr kuyholes and slip under tho oyelids of | tial discrapanve batwoen tt and hiinself, which pice denied thun have tho humblese man pall to Teas Latte the aitton ete nude that | runks and, ocoupyiuy un udvinoed and exposed | ull things foy tut pertain to co-uperution with | lif of thy wront Apostle, of wliluh the lite of our sleep, and cur! lke a cunkerworm In the brain, | turns bie louk inward to rest ou the aullldencies an Guth in Hie haiug, Admitting the Homantuits. | siserige dasnety, the GH pra & penmicatas Position, to ubtruct ty him tho shufts of bid ad- | God und that bear upon tho ctornal fortunes of | departed Ulshup fa no feuble reininder, flo bad |. ‘Though heown a million acres made an Eden of | of bisown spire itis tho drouyht which dries very aout oF Curt Manity by ite mothad of reach- } thoy ey fy tan ft fae er fis to bo contradictory, those who fiew him ‘intl: | of tholy manhood with unthustustio an = | lstun to tho volcuof duty, entering onthe Meth | divtant warebes, or, furtbor still, from | mounts down to Iifo'y dvop perenulat waters. And t Us assumE How that 4 sinylereligiousbroth- | aulo assumption fete Cle tee aecae Favor: | imately duld he wad eminently conservative, To | denying luburs; enter, upun ayo with enlarged | odist itingraney In prefuroncy. ta learned aud | Wo. tire-toinpests ‘of tho sun. 4 come | hence, though thoy noltivor sone rer ehuin (ribue erhood is the destiny of thoCnrlattan religion? | Meare Thay Hae ited ee for the Church of Re Dendy his character wus harmonious, he bos | vision of thy power of God und tho needs pts) lucrative fields of employinent, thon hud Uilvere | fortal a, ihe comforts will anfucblo fation, the holré of Curist'a Joy glory init when) » then We may state that ‘Romanian erredeand | humnie bellot ease i at tho vartutions of | lieving that Bishop Haven sought the truth fur | mon; are kupt fresh and vigoriuy by the uvulie | Haveu tho spirit of wucritee espachilly ug be e that, white loss exposed, he tg all tho more | fe oonies, knowing that tribuldtion worketh pa? ; . ou anne iit ite wit ta onfares tho. menuit, andl | ther oumnee nto eo x gel go ninoroud in truth’s ake, Whatever inigat hive been the | dunce of toll that confronts them, wid pause, at | toumed himself not gifted tn Speech. Hut tho | sensipive to exposure, If lyxurious, bla luxu- | then ind paticuoe expayfonce, and uxporivice b Protostuntisin 1s rig tn weblog the ae ya eran ew us ay buve been tn the com. | brillianey of bis fntellct, or however fervid bis | length, to div, ulmose reluctantly, becuuse so | call of dut was plain and was willingly heeded, | rica “will fover appotite instuud of allay | “hopes aud * hopo makapty at wsbured, becnse Ties to Bring lou boucofully euch a, rind af nie 7 | ao tating Eo ct fugk tty fancy, ait PtH MET tT a toe qaneh gee Ke te aun, a a uw are alee pe seri es ae Aftec ward deoiarud ath Bi atts tay Cate at tho summa clay Sou tas its reila} me favor dod! i ubed arond in thel Roars “ y tin + 1 1° ye! wl + dy! oY 18 reat reforms involv! ry who js #0 rs aaho crut afi. love, Whos er ote gaeated that Nouiuntan ta weung | when Jeera enon gaswdenlnyg tho mind and | wire wud to wxcertiin whut the truth waa, and |W vervieu to tose that ure Dehitd of tho most | und the weltare of souleny. Ho apoke ute nis | pulito bus yrewes Uy Andutwoues Mall te meuta | ladceoeee ee Sach Me UE all ovo whlee * Wie ven that It has fullod tosucurdthasuughts | byrlivisevectshsinng: te ira ju be destroy weeds | when he found it he plated himself there with | eminent cburacter, sutting thelr sul in douth ts | convictions at tho rlak of poptilarity, Ho wasin | oun geutify tho want that always remuiia,—o | reotemcuning With Joy—love which tg always * forronult, Laas Sunday n row yruat examples | shawn tat wine few echising Womnauien bua des | Wer lie tid what be eonee ee ce eae ee | ee aggauoe wo whlch thoy bye dovoted their toll | the van of ont-wluvory ubltitors, ueing trom ‘mg at ba al gaan nora: had jpg ie ly ee te yt Mleeeat tina ' ert py q a 7 a rou 0. PIs 0 hurdeat | ‘object; 1 v whic Rea gl ie it | see arcana ot ou nR| BRAGS eu” eet | adr pea gn cstseeat app in | Ha Mi arate Bt aiid | peu tneving te Ra lap ao wi | oy a Wl nla kbar ‘ vt \- “tm = ‘ 2 ul UJ ys Wi vl 4 ut a ja ol Ton ant ie Hleciarge amen ake Wee, flere: | dietment, nerhupe mora slynifeant than all the | tha curdival doctrines of Metuutism, Having | tho period uf deaths Hie is waiting to -Higcun?, | Fetke woutt hot have roomates eee Ree eS | CTS PICU ON so got tn tho posscssion of | Tella say orfeat and etornal, And this obs, : <. fumes which toll us when this voleung bas cited pore phere peo i ors ‘ fuit tholr full power, he never preached asermon | his beloved gon in the Gospel, un eplatle of ten- | stopped to count tho vost, only thinking that ho things; nelthor. cu (t be hold or won as a prize ? that,hola both the objuct and tho lito of its setive $0 disvord in ite curcer. Encb ono of and aa Ko ree te church of harmony | thut he did not convince the audience that, us to | der sulleitude und personal’ instruction In the | wus Un tho sido Of right and the couse of un ops }of precedence, or power, or pralso. Kings aro | affegtlou,—both ity auth and Hesriars ala out apes ionfhatvons, | ati Uae moron watnned the | ai cama data "Cad | HARM ot kale bata pu | Rowe pln at howe Glan py | fo an aay debe Rta; | uur ersagae tat analyst cl c] “i T 4 “di . rt bnee uf deat ug ude omiucnt tn Gh Ww pW i oe ar obnatee seieaetnad igrs. Lord Ba | hor with putting ull sorruwa olf upon went to muke the lighest style of mun, Ho Jong to live, ‘corsuinly, for tho Tieshon of oruel’ Thauupiig odltoratlp of | tt st eoligs | re oe is ae wi int spalways sare ins: | nek pecans oe ee to inet , s in 5 for a yours inn of splundid ylfta and clture to | will bidy achea and melancholies blowa from tl boro through mud and gravul of vain nebleres ‘ pitty a9 ‘ome range | the morrow, Without at all” iutouding churyed full of God's ylory, und had His Joy in | conspiracy ate olusiugabout bin to rou ‘bin of | lous te Te Pha cate Lee nner ea teed: | Estee eat: Raw rails la alwaye eaytous, Boe, are Plarurcs OF dregs for, rome © SRE RS RUSS eect |e ttf tha” panda | Rec stain, cn cagmeeh ea |e AU caeineecanas cer ashy | Selgin aad aur | iors id arya pve and obay | Erne Daa gry Ty vA , vay! :) 4 i 4 ¥ — y rt ‘» i er earth's surface, and that overit no wind ever | tute, and thou leaving the children to meet tha tend for ft, und wbuw that 1t was worth contends | cause be loves dearer than fv, and words of Goutrines, "Yviien pesigued 10 “Auta as his Thoot, “and bow. ‘Gown "potore “wes ih and fame rounae iano ea ae the Wwotta we Sarg whut