Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 6, 1881, Page 17

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; HE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1881_TWENTY PAGES. 17 RELIGI ; Without such com : z plete’ separation there | down hill, not because there is a law behind it— i f His own plan as vg evoted fe 7 a = le eau an + “ g 0 e 5 a ¢ is a law behind it- amodification of I anasto what | devoted follower of Pythagoras. y de ary i ‘ivilese itis ‘ = orth iets GeeReN, fer clther civil erty | luw does Tot enuse the phenainenon, ut the | kind of adeath Christ shontd die as the long | clined eating auvthing Wat had life living | added thet cack tinte meets eed ae ere | img to.back out, whieh the Capt 4. neoa ane worst form of this adulterous. con- Porunides but that ies Sn mis side ot the pense atoll Me is sali im pending exclusively upon fruits and-other produe- | dead at such am altar a ‘plenary: ineulsence ine realest Stlon oo bk lp rte ne = ape? a nie not assumed wi hae = tc en I de 2 J event. The mode o: suffering was pure- | tions of the earth. His Q - isi ntte the sotite ehis gence | in predestination.” “So [ do, but [preter be Sere S. Black’s Rejoinder to Col. |-fermed ketwoen Ghuren way sea unfon is | fuct. Te follows that Newton must have been | 1 contingent and non-essential. God merely | near, AIL Ww itis fame spread far and | is imparted to the souls for whose Lenelit the.| ing little nearer the stern when it taker Stam” It is when | grossly mistaken when be said ‘that the falling | }¥ COUMME Ayn oss of men aud the destens |b: uefedl by hls. beatty-an mass ks appalled.” The Rr. es bbot Inno- | phrce.” 2 weakness e desis cent Wolf, who signs the circular, says. tha : . ys that | Sunday-school teacher read to his class B popular purty ina free goveenmes v3 a 9 Z . x & Tree government under-. | of water und other bodies toward the centre of x ‘ ys - Ingersoll’s Last Es- takes ta nitngle its cuarse interests and its vnie | the earth was cased Uy the law of gravitation. | Of Satan to the carrying out of His own | Owing to the place where he resided dur- | Pope Leo SILL. has bestowed. a” pepti that the Ethiopian eunuch went on his way rejoicing after. Philip had talked with him, ia observ: HAY passions with tho relivious sentiments of | — Mr. Inyersoll su ‘He readjusted Ht i L i ~. Inge: poses that he is imputing an |.great purpose. ‘He ready) is own plan | ing part of this period of life, as well as ssing erprise, complishment of the atone- | some other coincidences, there are not want. Bieeslz on the enterprise say. the people. “That is what pollutes and fulsities . * A Voth. ‘The bistury of tue won an ‘ulsities | absurdity to me when he says, “* Mr. Black prob- | for the e o 8 . 55, . : that of our ow 4 . and especially | ably thinks tho ditferenee in tho weight of roeks | ment in order to overrule the choices | ing, among men of learning, those wha main- | ,/8e Bisnop'of Bangor, England, in the | and then asked, “= Why di s a vain if {his be not the Iegcon it taareeen FE a eee PT ReaUTeuE Se | of lig” acleKeu Christ saw. the | tain that he was the veritable Saul of Tarsus, | COUtse¢ of his triennial charge, recently de- bay ert Se Hteeanse Piilipuwas ie Intimates that th THESE CONVICTIONS NOT ONLY dio. dearned in my infangy (and Lbave “kept-| purposes of the latter, aud calmly submitted. | While in his youth, he last ti sand | Hivered at Bangor, said he could not disguise | a-teachin’ him.” [tis too often that tnere is | He $1} S that e Arch-Here- ottne pees IONS NOT ONLY DISARM ME | js caused by that same law of gravitation Gere ‘The wieked men-who crucified: Christ could: | buried them hi “AS his feelings of shame and indignation at the | great rejoicing when the lesson is tinished. : tig: Issa. Comiion S politica marae ee ee pegerenlls usetlts by | ating ncvoruing to rules wbleb are perfectly wa have changed thelr way of, Uiniking and en | a lisetple of Pyth aworas, he wiaintained ec oeeu Ay iite) ay cecleslaatieal patronage | attending a tecture tately, the peaker was ny East d @ mie uit for | derstood by all tolerably well-informed men. [] braced Chiist, as their © a he | silence for five years. He opposed hot bal as exercised. Most untit and incompetent | long, lea y.. tires ; - the polntsot that kind which te cho weer OP (SUL | ltl co furtherand confess that L tbink ie atnost | penitent thief on the cross. ‘hen what | Wherever he went he Tetormed. religtt men were preferred for livings, awing te Wiga Hershel there was tonal applause, } Scold. ne cana that, Ara aebich be chooses to Ing | beneticent law which prevents the reeks trom | would have become, of Christ’s “prophesies | worship. Ile resolved never to marry. political sympathy or family ties, and when | + Why asked, “this loud applanse?* { Fecting the cen ae uumentt gratia. withou af- | jlyins abuut through the alr and the cloudstrom |. regarding ITis'death 2 Pos Mis probationary term having expired, he | Idueted they alienated churchmen by in- | “Because he stopped there; he mizht bavo | Ne Thought bp Waa eerie ees iw | becomine immovubly tixea in the eurth. Our | God told Jonah to xo and preach in Nine- | traveted in India, visited the Braiinins ” difference and: neglizence. He hoped’ the | gone on longe ef = | at the Almnisht when he chewed eae he eeay | great Crentor oust to be adored ana thanked | yoly, - Yet forty days and Nineveh shall be | Germani, and conversed with the magi in- | Ume would come when the parishioners ak . ea | for mnicing such un arrangement. But this only + Gverthrown.? ‘Chis was explicit prophesy, | habiting Babylon and Susa. it was inindia | Would, at least, have a negative voice in the comin . | Beck on t vatibility | Gonstitution contained a provision whieh con- rons ath ver i uy 1 5 x i nthe Incompatibility | ietea wien asensained 8 provisic "Avolitonists. | Riguesto ME, ingergoll that, ama ellever in| ut Ninevell was not overthrown. God fore: | that he is supposed to-huve acquired those | Sélection of the man to whom their spiritual | soy srixe was aneatior of wees Rood knew that it would not be overthrown, if | magical arts the practice of whielt afterward | Welfare was intrusted. | ‘The advertisements | \Zeotivas n cburchemouse washes Br. HeCah nad ; They had determined aud resolved th: ie f + of Foreknowledge with Human all clreumstances, at all times, and everywhere | 204 funoral.” at sae Forts tl x of Livigers im Geelesesthene 4 : the toleration ot “clavers ne and everswhere MR. INGERSOLL 1s UCM AccusED-oF pra | BEES ‘ience be tri Cod ipade- Jonah be- made him famous. and among his. follow- of sales oF iy ings in ecelesiasticat journals | And he came to confess to the new parish priest, Treeden. wns Acrime. Hy this and be other téitns not GIARISM. Hee that He would este Unt el ty a forty orm gave uvtations of agod. icanidialouss Like a pious and true devotee. nie pe y ely 5] nis noon the materia} world is dts 7 : P H delice eee ances i ea ce » Met on e found, 5 2, ‘ y 1 never entered any human head before, an one : fon rs ae it x p 5 2 ‘arga le oly Communion was celebrated. And, at all? He Argues that the Betrayal of Christ anything else that ahnin:shed the profits of their | think that In all future time it will Gnd no tody- | ‘Co affirm it were blaspliens against. the | predicted ’the plague, and told what was go- | the business meeting after, pleds renewed Have the mouths of the horses never been ly before bim he had the suc- | ment in tho mind of any reasonable being. moral character of God. pare therefore | ing on at adistanee, Having been sent for | chielly for mission work and in view of es- Soren a Ma s hs s ey couldo’t eat oats in the stall?” age, he ‘transported him- } tab! shing church services to-support then phesus, and there put an x haper was he has of reaching the atheistic | compelled to admit that God originally de- | by’an urgent mes: new or unsupplied points. A paper was |] “ With respect to yer riv’rence,” said Mike, with t he } termined to_ overthrow the wicked city in | self instantly to © by Judas Was Not Fore- c xainple of Demetrius, the silversmith, | Another w: who raised 1 tremeudous uproar agai the | conclusion. [donot say tbat [ know wh : ordained Gospel ot Christ by stiuply bellowing out: “Great | wants to. bt at i pel a aris 2G aunts e Hus [ean under~ y eh But this settled purpose was | end © phages ren oe ae - is Diana of the ans.” Sine you Snow e ut. But us wel Lean un forty day B ose was | end to the plague. read on “Jlerbert Spencer and the New. agrin, irs, you Know | stind him, he agserts that the universe could | changed in of the repentance and hu- | “Me traveled through Greece, performing | Philosophy.” fotllowed by a discussion oftie ‘ure for that ye may lave me alone: I've scraped till there's niver a sin {eft pehoind— tbat by this craft we have our wealth.” not bave tind a design because we 1 1." sign because we inte eee ei Shere 3 peas, to the | back the designer to his own origi a: 4 erest and pr sof a politic y were | Was not a Apollonius of Tyana—An Ancient | unfair, Diada of tho Ephesians agd Yankes | the, inakene re Abolitionisn may both pave been eat. and | curious that “ REA ETOE EH intl fits inhabitants, Jonah’s predic- racies wher y si the world | Wliliauion of its inhabitants, Jonah’s predic- miracies where he went. At Athens | same among the members: and an elegan ze : ” cannot fell who made | tion was not fulfilled, and Jonah was greatly tout an virit fronia youth, the | IMneheon was served after adjournment at |” ote conselence is elane to tho boue! In tke manner wity nay notthe | demon overturning a statue in token of nis | Mrs. Edwin Walker's residence, on Wabash [ $0 absolved, happy Mike went away for mora tn of a watch Is ays he, “have had i alled had } departure. avenne, to which the reverend clergy had mitt the dus came around to tell all: d E ell alls Philosopher of Great is they were great in the sense of eluz populur, | maker,” but he adds the watchmaker himself’ is, hout Mim repented Apolloni veled all over G vi hs b sens beiny lur, ” @ adds sell is Apollonius traveled all over Greece, visited | been invited. Harvard was _ fi 101 * Renown, ot ual due not prove that tho Gospel of Ged | more wonderfully wade, tban tho witely and the temples and. reformed. their religious | the place at meeting, nest mn bsbruary, rst | AT HE, SeEy Hirst thine ke.contessed, ne had . s sture. e onsti- nee he infers that. be also must have had Wo unto that man by | rites and cercinonies. He then went to Rome. | Monday and ‘Tuesday of the month. ‘the mouth of each horse in the stall! itor in- Ity of a Cr ae tution, which tolerated the ens! ince the nece: ried various miracle: an is betrayed! It had | ‘Phere he per! vement of 33) * said the priest; “when here, but sti- | ** How is thi: sbyterian Manthin Record of the Aboliuon vith the wonder of the creature. He is | 4, fe rf 4 adnce Aboliti ; = Loe een zood for that qnan if hie had ins a person from the dead, ; oe General Notes at Home and Abroad | wth ve ric MS HErS HOTS | HEREIN This Te makes we memonseration as | NOt been born.” If the betrayal by Judas | sited Spain und Africa, and thenee re See GME Sinks ne TEMEIONS | ouneves baa =PersonslcS be judged by one another: eich should be con- | complete as mathematics that man was created { WaS Necessary to the death of Christ, Hs | aly aud Sicily, he diy the: United: ie Re eRe had Hone this. Fas: ersonal—Sunday Salad. idered with proper reference ta ci by “some: pre’xistent and self-conscious bein th having been foreknown and foreor-.| predicted that Rome w: three t it Serie Sere eee widely difterent. liut the oF paw jom to. us unconeeivable. ned. then the betrayad must have been | Finperors, whieh fied! in Gaba, Yitel- Roman Catholics, Iniver bad heard of befo alpabie, | foreordained. How, then, could it have | lius. and Otho. He # ain traveled through never to have been | Greece and v! ypt. infallible cd 10. have pro- | Hut instead of aveepting this, plain, ceeded on just grounds without impugning the | and necessary conseauence of his own logic, be | been better for Jud: Ppbiemauest of the Abolitionists met with no | turns bis back tipon the conclusion, and ‘bezins | porn? Did he by his betrayal of Christ in- lan interview. with au - ne tion?) If the be ‘al Were nec ry to. the s < ieee Opalians, 1,415,000: unclassed, | CALENDAT ¥OR THE 'WEER. Rome. froin Raine i ilote the weiter s é that he |, EPISCOPAL. a Se 1 g S adherents for every full com- [ "x tirst Si GOING NOME. They are omz—on : - E PRACTICED DEMAGOG C. 3 hout an. Jesus called them long ago! ae - rior desizn, and telling how hard it is for him to x sh ete the tricks of his trade, and see tke plan or design in eartayunkes and pesti- | completion of the atonement and was there | Jew! went to Egypt on purpose to 5 " i Alte wintry time thos"re passing, punegyrie of his political tuetion an excuse for | lences: and how the justioe oF Gad ie nat visible | fore foreordained, the irresistible conclusion | visit Apollonius, vb a Paes Nes at their own estimate, which he thinks!s caTuoric. Sottly xs the falling snowy gasting.contemptin the tace of his Maker und | to bin in the history of the world. ‘This silly | is that God holds a man. guilty foram act | _ Having performed various miracles in| yf, Ts a ele the uuclussed imelude'| Noy. ¢—Twenty-second Sunday after Pentes : or insulting the faith and reason of alt who be-. he thinks sutticient torepel the irresistinle | that. was foreordained as necessary to the | E pollonins repaired to Argos, in ret ine last named belaese . Ane Paar Nor Of the Oct f Atl Sai A i named bel ver than | Nov. 7—Of the Octave of All Saints. i When the violets in the spri g-time own purpose. Such at | sponse to a messi from heve in Christ. 4 se vhicl . € = | eat ie The barest thought that the ‘ator Which be himselt ad- | fultillment of 1 who had | their clamor in the newspapers would indi- | Nov. 8—Octave of Al Saints; Tne Four Coro~ ated the azure of the sky, i sludge of ‘all the earth did right tills him with and whieh by all fatr_aud unperverted is uy + are curried out to stoniber piacere Sor pameafier wage nd whieh by all fair and unperverted | cgnelusion isa damnable one. ‘The doings | been declared Eumperor. rrival | cate, weetly where the violets lie. SOS GT PERS ea ea ene Stee baie re reecived as conclusive, J.S. BUACK. The men couvected With the death Gf | ‘Titus embraced him and s One Calieee Nov. $-Deuieniton of St. John Lateran: St Niigtde Es Six heart’ we contingent, from hy ‘The Catholic Revicw scents ~ ii ~ eS Senet ce se They are goine—enty gone — See eee ot aeab— JUDAS ISCATIO ever. were. dite can Italy, amd say: een RONNIE IFT caste ete Ailling, Gs 8S. Baphae, Tare ah panier cpeude deetseds, é Ascullion= Ws (RAYAL, OF CHRIST Nor For y the | betray- |. benefactor, they were under | | There is something bad brewing in Italy, and and Comp, MM. pe beie eld Bande Bola tee rises. I have said thus much about the slavery incompatrT [th in the ip vians, — supposes Amony the letters’ of | hasbeen for some time. The danger. though St. Martin, 8 C.; St. Mennas, M. Sa rarest atteatn newer? Pane, But a fn answer te Mr. Ingersoll, but be LE WITH UUMAN FY that God can do evil that good can cone, and is one troy humediately menacing the Holy See. St. Martin, P.M. 5 OD Je aatarcaoy Eee ved ti eats pull mot bat voit un erstoud, if L an belp ‘The Foreknowledge of God and Cognate | that Clirist was hypocritical in Mis treat. | peror s follow: Tore consegii¢ace to. the actual Gove a i Thes are zoing—ever zoing— of partisan politics Inco the discussion of ures | Themes in Theology and Philosophy” is the | MEME Of Judas and in bis utterances to and | | dn wy own 1 amie of mY | isthe Holy See. COE Letrie tht Keckela.. The METHODIST. BISHOPS. : ‘Thick and fast like falling leaves. Jigicus subject . ; : y Bae rerning him. oars countr ive you tha nd will be mind- D that! Spine At: the NbGes pee F : : ‘hese fnbious outbreaks of mtemperate abuse | Htle of a work of 464 pages, in whieh Is di For Jesus knew from the beginning who | ful of those things philosopher had | of tue Vatienn may cates io ond Uispeeceae ts Adjournment of the Annual Meeting All along the mighty upou God, His laws, and institadons donot di: cussed at great length the incompatibility | they were that believed not and who should | written him, counseling modery Pope for the tine being, as it has pe ndy diss Pane weouve < iliwa the col eHectuat belief or ut all dit between absulute divine foreknowledge and | betray Him.” Goin, vi, Gl) Was their un- | Govermnent:) have indeed taken Jerusa- | possessed him of tho temporar dommion of Se sash inte: Wie H y have taken up their homeward renee which at Christin feels | human freedom, Ibis fromthe pen of tho | Delief, roreordamed? Certainly not, “Their Aaptured me. Rome. He will move and carry the Church with NEBr ie TAs Nate ‘ ‘ pee t a eat iat cet tele for the ‘supreme Oulect Gf his dered ei | human freedom. Ibis from the pen of the-| Mi cher was Wea valitiaie Tis nub s through Greece | kim. The revolution will stay and destroy tne | The Board of Bishops of the Methodist ‘Where the wate e waiting angels ines sult oii 3 raletog a sted, ob the | Rev. L. D. MeCabe, D. D.. who for an entire id that Jesus knew fi inning idence at the Eilean trenaeeny, oe ae is the Vaticun, | Episcopal Church, who have been holding Lead them from the shadows dim cean of thoug! eis nut producing x ripple. | gene: has been one of the professors iv ‘1 ae vould : belie 10) ” | what is Rome, what is all Itaty to. the Church of i . etine st = To'the brurhtness of His presence ite ismerely dotuz the part of a cominon seoid, | Heneratlon has been 0 Fee aoa sere retary ee en eater nila HOE Weligye,, bat God or tu the Supreme Poutlif2 Were the Adc | Heit annual meeting in the Methodist Book Who has called them unto Him. to whom the idle listen for the sport ot the | te Ohio Wesleyan University at Delaware, | 7 wi [a iSRERAHE Hi “the text could’ only? ate to sweep over the Italian peninsula tomur- | Concern building at Broadway and Eleventh controversy over the question exinning sp rv xt col y row und blot it out forever, with all its mixed | street, finished their work ‘and adjourned t takine counsel ot their out- | O. ‘The gr think bin anuisance that ought | discussed iS is, perhaps, not very ensy 10 thing, while othe BLACK’S REJOINDER. tobe abated. 1 ape been between | £0 vack to the ineipiency of the unvelict S Dr. McCabe has been between | fhe minds of His di te Bee do. Awomin. Tor such an ulfense, could by | te two leading theological schools—the | must have a dueked under the rule of the ancientlaw, but | Calvinistie apd the Arminian—represented | speaking of diyor when a commune viratric of the tale gender | in she two powerful sects—ihe Presbyterians | the beginning n He foretold the reign of Nerva. Don memories of ining” | summoned tin to iteme, and. placed hin | sn the Churci.of God Would go on ne ever. The | YesteTday. A the Bishops were present ex- ‘ation, Lun | upon trial, Apollonius, while the trial Catholic Church is universal, ana tied to no plot | cept Bishop Simpson, who is in Europe, stsaid, “From | in progress, suddenly disappe:red, aud on | OF eurth, where he went to attend the great Methodist i not 5¢ the same day presented hin Prof. E. N. Swarniotedt, of Cincinnati, | Ecumenical Conference; Bishop Bowman, a ‘e mournin: SOLI. Zale v3 the peace of a feichborkood in this way . : : canine the besinning of the iage relate | fr ‘ 4 Special Dispatch to The Chicazo Tribune, the remedy-is dificult and doubtt and the Methodists. ‘The former admit the im- {| meaning the beginning of the marriage rela | trends who 0 says the world will come to an end on the | who is fet Hewie en vourntut tion. Christ kuew of the unbelief from the | Puicoli, three days’ jonrue: Teth inst. OF this belief he says: L think why ls ow ail ‘ficial fou anion tigehurelies —that is, when the disciples began } Le returned to Greece, and tr: dtirough | the Bible clearly show: 3 i " eh Sarit Hh syEUCE, i 1e Bible ly shows that this golden age | sey i Share! 1 v3 tloubs, He discovered the ‘treachery | all the elties, teaching the crowds wht flocked | of the world ts to be introduced: by physical penloe Bishop 08 Wes Clarets Whe Wes 8 : ans 3 INC ~ ctr oO see hin. * pow Christ will bring in the millennium, vaste “4 7) i been | : Was not from foreordiuation, but from While Domitian was being assasmated at | Lnd wot the prevent visible Chureh, and Ie | beat was (0 prepare the pian of episcopal Udpuin Prec: Ainong the ereat. metropolitan { Ju Christian countries the universal rate is that | hy cettain because. all ure fore. | Muuediately preceding wubelief. If Christ | Rome by Stephanus, walk | will do. it by. physieal power principally. | ferences of the church, to be held next journals you alone, as turas I know, took any } One mun shall be the husband of one wife and | WC certs reause wae knew all the time trom the time Ife_comny cussing philosophy ina zrove at | First, He appears ih the air and winds Up | (ore R ees Oe ene cate ee te ated, inas Apparent interest in that number of the North | no more; and it is neither the rule nor the prac- ordained, and afe, therefore, foreknown. | signed Judas thatthe latter was going to b Suddenly. he A ihe Gospel aze. ‘Che holy dead and the ae spring. “Che plan, as finally prepared, is ag vine which contained what itstd- | Ueeamywnere else on the fuer of the lube. | “Ypis involved the contradiction of asserting. | tray Itim, why. did He not magianinon cried out: living are then canzhe up in the clouds to | ueet duce and pace Date Rohop. pe rigger care ie moral merit of Christ's Gospel in this | that a choice infallibly foreknown could yet | Tesette a poor erring mortal troi teauntation fs meet Him, and are made immortal, ‘These | Arkansas, Waidron, “Ark. Fev. ig fuck. : if you please, your geaders—should knuw | respect is directly he free aid the :uthor thereof responsible. oes Papert ttt is vor chose ru eo ay aots il Ge ie. Telening elas when He sets up Haltimore, Sal. arch Bie. % oe umber fist out appears with | peop, ae : eccrine The sho'is accepted as 4 3 3 ! ath. y 5 earth. v 2 IY PRUPORTIONED TO THE MAGNITUDE oF THE | Dr. Whedon, who is accepted as the leader related “not only by | mere would join this reigning class they mst Pur.apenriaa;, Nov. ‘The following To learn how gratuitous these danilities are~ } possibility of infallible foreknowledse of con- | pewinning letter from Juuge Jere S. Black will appear | PON Re seouds for the more suke of scaling | tingent events, and boldly deny that there is | ty” dowbi in the Philadelphia Press tomorrow: unaided influence af the Uhureb alone this vice | ANY such thing as contingency in the mind York, Pa., Nov. To the Editor of te Phila- | has been extirpated completely and perfectly. | of God; hence in their view all events oT; Mr. Ingerst fed by, ms > neuage of great surprise. Pr peaiyi oye Srna aes ped oe EVI of Arminian thought, concludes that a choice fi after his appointinen stratus, but by the historian Dion Cas- | act quickly. ‘The year 188i will in. all 7 a was not a volunteer, in this business. The irom sblebitt hag faliew a pani eoouee aie to be free—that is. the exercise of human if Guristhiag at first Known Ju is: “AS incredible as this fact |. probability end this age, and. then no man | Florida. Gainesville, Bis i i sous s BS McCabe recedes further from Calvin th 0 ne Manne oat Appotonius | judgments wil then follow, during which | S2tingion, Bowling th 4 : Ci tus | the nations will all he = broken fo shivers.’ | Livure Stoargei Lite june ae dideriae i. df he | Dr. A cgllation of the reports of the La: is Jeft in much uncertainty, Plitost it bas oppe relutation of Ingeroll’s | blasphemou fice wenielt It ie ce i, i trines, which he suid were everywhere pu: ad tube OBE Xt money: w did Arminius, who, while he taught that G ‘show thut Jesus tried to deter J nan ADDED 7 . at] S ’ i " « EU Every OBELG shrist 4 # a a 3 r s per show that Jesus tried to deter Ju even appearing. to doubt whether he died at-} Satan, the great enemy of God and man, wi Litue Itock, Little Ruck, Ari } relitious teachers and Jeadiug people astr Christiuuity uphotas, bis net, thouch Unjust, | fron all eternity would bestow salvation on | the perpetration of lis contemphited erie. | alk SEAL LLG Wend ntoaes Ht and ay ee wil Foutsiana, Erinklin La, : sdeath Ap- | tine, «Antichrist will make his appearance | Mexico, Slission, Mexico City.atexcreu. several centuries. after h did not believe that Mr. Ingersoil’s utterances | Might bave hud an apparent object not alto- eerie tl ae werent all barmful, aud if the faith of tho | Zether preposterous. indeed, monogamy is | those whom he foresaw would persevere to | But if Christ always knew what Judas wi Fob Christian World was in dunger lwas unworthy | @5_ open tu mere “vulgar vituperation as | the end, further insisted that in the death of | #90Ut to do, where was the propriety in His | pofienius was worshiped as a god in many | during this eventful period, and will con- Miss Jun. snd unit to (be tis defender, ‘There sere, in | poeamy, Whelgine ular’ mae take | Jesus Christ an atofement was inade for the Ho Tesee HEN 1 | parts of the world, “Not only did Caracatla | quer the whole earth and reign three and a the Pharisees went out and held | puitd hina temple, but Alexander Severus | halt s. The true Christ then descends to *, my opinion, ten thousand professional theolo-.| itseit tos fimagine what = omay take | J¢ e! u os “who could and would do it better, and | plice it is_a3_exsy to talk about brutality and | sins of all mankind in general and each in- L how they might destroy him, Jesus | held him in such esteem that he had hi the earth and casts the false Christ into the Missfssipol, Aberde Missouri, Ww Hinmpehire, Lawrer ia ure 1a tack doln ie-muyt otecua at ‘that ae aan de esOntGre aie ea ly, | dividual in particuiar, but they only who be ibe qubairey Thnselt mene Unt Atte statue in his private closet. M. Bayle shows | lake of fire.” nfo: Laws 2 Ub edier Bieubeunlcnoueh to dusict thatif 1 | In point of tact the seat. body of unbelievers | lieve in Himcan be partakers of divine bene- | plies that Jesus kne en mg ce He meeting | that he continued to be worshiped ‘as late as = rork, Sing ging, S. ¥. Rear Me dnersoll be could not be | have denounced the Christian mstitution of | fits, In order for this belief to exist it is | before it was actually planned, 2 the fourth PERSONALS. ovr York Eastern, Waterbi Ancicrcd-at all-and would thence be inferred | murrisie with especial bitterness. ‘To Ue one | revossary for the man to be regenerated by abut brisk: i ths most Inex| His-epl hare still extant, ate the out American aka aoe Hares i tbat the Christian system was false. Mo’ min and one woman soeeinee Ae ron white divine grace proceeding from the Lioly ( ily for Judas te tet tray Ch ere best evic ee apeune = ana oud Father Hyacinthe is not coming to this Apr a Andrews. ji) i a profnudity n3.a whilosop! aired country until next February. rit 5 Bowron. i noibing but death ean di L p ing from 2 io, nut ouly unjust and immoral, but a base yue taith cannot proceed trom the for us deprecated his course and announced | vain for any. tra 2s ane brutal tyranny which imposes adezrading | operation of tree will, beeause ian in his | jn various -forms that one of Itis chosen 1 restraint upon the natural rights of men and | natural state of corruption is incapable | friends about to betray him. How could are would naturally infer him to | accepted the rectorship of ‘Trinity Church of its tallacy. and thus make tho two toucther to tove and cobabit with whom. they’ | vither of thinking or doing any good think. | Tle think of rescuing Judas, and yet sero healt froin tie blusrapley EARIIBUN Lig ti . as tit ag 1 could for publication in a decent imag. | Please. This isa prime and prominent part of |. ‘She exercise of free w however admitied | infallibly all the time that lie would be! pave evn, from the biography ‘urnishe 1 by Wilmington, Del. nai fho atheistic theory. Gvery where advocated Py | jn the statement that tho regenerate may | Ir? “hilgstratus. | The truth concerning this |“ s,¢ Moses Coit Tyler has been ordained a | wonderful man may never be recavered front etmedrts Bovran. Warren. Fuste bis importunities and intluenced bya for the wishes. of “certain friends whos Imight not drop,” 1 agreed that 1 would up- pend to Mr. Ingersoll’s article my own opinion ces of that vanity which we | °° ‘ | vet to find ina magical pretender, | ‘The Key. J. S, Reed, of Indianapolis, has Mareb 13 Maria. arch 1 Warren, SInspsun. Mereill. : Asres, S.A. path Kansis, Burlington, Ras, azine. Sarom the Heginning it was distinctly under- | it rexular organs and its greatest disciples, “In | YD ENE SMEEMIENS Me pgenernte 1H Lr ah aaa ete . : Stood that ing defunee was’ to be priuted i the | Fruuce, where thelr sogelies are compact and | iy a a Le froma state of)" ‘The Scriptural words that it-1 heht the rubbish of the past. It iS certain that he [2 Deacon in-the Episcopal Church by the | Yisinia'y: eon er aifying. | was a ian of much learning, and great | Bishop of Michigan. Washington, faieim March 2 Wiley: ith Amer. Miss. fulfilled.” very often ure used ts it acoincidence. Scholars no longer question | ability, and one: who commanded to 2 the freque: e, in an ecbatic sense, of the | markuble degree the affectious and: admi article translated ‘that’: and therefore | tion of his followers. yery often translate. the phrase under * Jitor | powerful. they detine thelr creed substantially erin, , thus: 1. ‘There 1s no God. 2. ftelizion is a fie jn Christianity, and be would not for the world | 3. Property is theft. 4. Love must be free. publish Ingersoll’s poisonous stuff without put- [4. Marriage is stuvery. 6. Chitdren belong. to g ting tre antidote riht beside it—todo so would | the State and not tounybody iu particular. system of theology or of moral Bot only intlfet his conserenee but greatly injure iets tae the eve pel eee A gow say that | philosophy bi upon that doctrine: but owas tuitilled,?? or “ thu the character ot his Keview. a Christian doctrine’on | Lat the whole Christian s: be cote $ It is frequently used no ¢ | expressive of design, even when it refe ion compaetly stated i: nowledge is in mington. Middletown, Del Wroining, Carbondale, Ba. Rime number with tho accusation. ‘Vhe ‘ug (or At least pretended to be) a tirm be! re]. ‘The Rev. J. We Greenwood, of Uastings, Neb., has been called to the recto: =, . Eniscond at Ne rag No change in the appointment ofany mem- ‘ plscoput ebnrch aeNebh CMs ber ofan annual conference can be made GENERAL NOTES. Another Anglican rector is to be pro: without the consent of the Bishop havi listic practives. It is the Rev. | jurisdiction over that body. ‘The Bishops ‘ «above to-preside over the conference ft 5 : st he practies, th ; AT THE TIME OF THE PUBLICATION the subjects of marriage, paternity. and_prov- ent, defensible, and satisfaetor ritna ui I Ingrecd that if Mr. Ingersoll had any faultto | erty, not. beenuse he is bound. by. the Divine al of it, and that all the doc! and | the most explicit of the prophecies. Matthew . Bh. an aaa ~ | RR stow, for many years Organizing | nam over 7 jing with, the ‘result. it might seem cowardly to { corbiaadinent, tue, beeause he feels like it. | prophesies of Seripture are plaluly reeoncila- sgosail fhe dottue chikt tite. i ae Gs bel of St. Luke has been trans: | secretary of the Church Union. sessions have exelusive juris:lletion over, tha ated into Patagonian. Southern Churchman adyoeates the | Vations bodies during the entire year: The Teports received xt the meeting showed a ypt, that it might b ied, “Out of she docs the “solden met- | bie with such denial, pt ‘The English Baptists are about to send six ave wun equal right to take One of the most striking chapters in the refuse nim another chance on the same-terms. | Others, rejectiny ion of Virginia into two dioceses, and rob Mawel eallud. tny Son le general condition of prosperity in the Churel lwas a afraid of fhe ard Se be might | wand of the law, " make if be was not afraid of my deten: their own feelings as the measure of ri yolume is the consideration of. the case of ‘ BW as uOeLEreNE i hiv ant oul ‘ ‘three months afterward tifty. pages of the | ness. Soone set of atheists marriuse fas iseariot dinavhiclt MeCabe: argues | Uf picid b. Athnely bat no reference to | more missionaries to the Congo Kiver. a s ie layaeny te juore in the niaiter, if fhronghout this and other countries. : foulvstand talsest libel that ever was written | and auother. blackzunrds posseamy. and they | that the betrayal and ireachery of Judas | CASG, Hosea said.“ When Israel was A-) see jubilee fund of the English Congrega- | ey de not wish the Bishop Killed by over- )" pichop Harris, who recently returned from ‘Seninet a suena wre Unt EG THs 1 grag Cue [are Buty right if there be no God above all and 1 essential to the great. atone- eund then loved him and ealled my son out tional Church now amounts to $320,000. work. an official trip to the Pacitie Coast.tis to leave : irely we to treat it as Thad: treated the,] over all. tes of Exypt,” i 5 asst 000. ‘The Rev. F Ry: i i f at t t foreknowledge until Ch Gtr: Dae . = ‘| The Rev. Father Ryan, the poet priest of | next ‘Thursday to inspect the work of the ral pages of the chapter at this point | To-keep the erowd in order at the Harri- | Mobile, has retired from parochial duties to | Chureh in South Amerien. He will, make rl thought itde- 2 do not intend this ns.a_substitute for the an- of a Methodist Episcoval other; that is, give it thea ‘ i 1 eerved and let both so together. But it came | swer-which-I would bave made if the presiding d its ineipieney in the volitions of | are give: to neritical di ti eetae: . . nary s act d when Litas disabled by aw injury tromichich f | genius of the feview “had been propitious. - My I—a mental operation on the part | teli¢and ecbatte use oF the Wek uartiele son revivals in San Franciseo, the servicesof | Biloxi, on the Gulf Coast, where he will | the first vis ¢ could not nope to get well for some weeks. and | principal object isto show that ms “circulur which might be termed *inind- 2in, whieh’ sere: uch of the tnree or four policemen are required. finish a work he is now engaged in writing | Bishop to the western coast of Seutls 1sv notitied the editor. ‘To my surprise Iwas | abuse” amounts to absolutely nothing. A rey- —and that to Judas there is no ref} splitting’? of the old. gramm: ‘The faculty’ of the Chieazo ‘Theotogieal | the Church. America, beginning with a session of | the 2 wae oe ‘The death is announce‘ of the Rev. Chri: mission In Santiago, Chili. After visiting the eastern coast, Bishop Harris will sail for the western coast of Africa, to supervise thé Chureh work there. ‘Thence he aA ears * M : i te x the missions of continental tament Company have | Congreyational. Quarterly. ied among 0 s f S urope, returning home in about one year. utwsfitst session. ‘Thesee | ‘Tue Rev. R. it Hoes: has been obliged to ba gpisd aide leslie ised su vas C2 a a is connection as pastor of the Presby- hureh in. New Rochelle, Coun, be- © DROWNED. ic’ was ae intormed that no contradiction, correction, or { ular, reply would prove that in every fine of his | erence in the prophesies of the Old ‘es! Fo Ae it ee eee ee ee eee rank: PLANE ig aa one Hther faleltied Mletury’ OF AB: MeN, eee ee Bele ne ot ee slusely followed to the | Seminary has resolved to use the revised | toner Cush, 1D. for many years Seer allowed to uccompany this new effusion of filth. | plied to ftan erroncous interpretation. But es A e argue Cl ved, wana cin. w “oti etines i Sen 2 Spader Faia . “ Ht was to be printed lmupediately-and would uc: | anrtempted uot to quit without giving» sample | Et Beat MS Seeds Cline uit Judas Is- iby Matthew from Zach- | Ye'sion xt all devotional meetings in theSen | tary of the Congresational Union, and eupy 0 much space that pone could be spared | of his efforts at scientitle reasoniny; riot Inte the Gospel ministry. He chose him about the thirty pieces of | aty- one time the editor and - pruprietor of the for the other side. 1 proposed that if its bulk Si eerie because his: then promised a career ase of the potter's ‘The English Old ‘Y : could not be reduced so asto admit of anan--| IF HE DOES No? 1) OF | of usefulness. le was a persusuf superior nd : | finished their swer in the same number it should be postponed 4 2 simplicity and unworldliness, ‘To state that ent distinguished 1 ond revision o! until wreply could be mude realy for, publica; | his occupation is ono. ‘The object, therefore, | Christ did wot see in thu a inoral eharacter | jreerities are quoted to. breve that the Sud res This and | of bis bighest ambinon ever since he tuok the | that would be likely to render him a succe: ence of Zachariah is not in the least tra : ition of the beer t tion in the next succeeding number. divers other offers were rejected fur the express | stump ngainst Christinnity bas been and ts to | fu) herald of Lis new kingdom, is to charge Street mobs in the larger cities of England - reason that Ingersoll would not consent.” | annihilate the evidence which shows that the | don [i ovil that # FC) ble to. the | Messiah, and ~ that’ the Ke it somfortable for the “Salvation L imentbers ‘of the cun- Yor The Chicayo Tribune. pon im the doing of evil that good ini, st ? t . the inake it so uncomfortable for the “Sab Mn a 4 oy * a so-called “fulfillment imply the accord 7 as to call for denunciation from the won vielied ea Shas by ti een Gen ee 1 a Mori Gove ~~ Thi P, '. + + rand a Moral Goveraor- This | cone, Po follow this view would be justi Finding the Review controlled by him to suit | world h: ment occurrence and ‘The winter course of Sunday ‘evening | He kissed the sweet bloom from your fuir, girl+ i himself, 1 did not think 1 was bound to go | being bis great central point on whieh all other i be fa + tek’ mance: brody De pe bas, Ob fern ie rae Ne in ioe, for piacine Gallet qeeonly He ns Matthew. | Severn Lond te f lectures by the Rev. Brooke Herford has at ish Face, very. best for bMS Bee MERE Ue, Peep i aisphel= | other passage: aceat ‘A writer in a London paper states, with re- oture y the Rev. Brooke Heri st r 5 Seti ao ‘e oeharel: seandais, that one | late vears been a feature at the Church of the | And tlung you aside to the shore. dl ‘True, I was offered the chance of replyit a future number, but that was not the privilege | has nenieved. Yhad bargained tor, nor the duty I agreedto per- | [thought I was giving 2 tru form, Lesid vyhen 1 what confidence could Ihave that they would | garded the univers hot suppressit? A promise of theirs. express or | imo bemg of its own accord”; th implied. is noc, in ay estimation, warth a straw | its awit laws xt tho start, and afterward im- if they have an interest in breaking it. ‘Their. self considerably by spontaneous evo- object was not what they professcd—to get the Burt he denies thut this isnt ous, but shoeking to all ioral perceptions cited, notably Psalns | spect to th nd, repugnant to our sense of justice, wis- |S which ‘are quoted and -paraphrased by | of these par D 1 dom, and fair dealing. ' Peter in Actsi., 16. “Let bis habitation be | live comfortably at_a fashionable watering in frat h, no need of the be- | desolate... and his bis let an- | place on his £1,009 a year, yet the bell-ringers ¢ yall of CU y Judas. It was not neces: | uther take? but there isno evidence that | atits chureh havestruck because their wages | on the hicher forey ry for the completeness of the-atonement. | they had_ the slightest. forekuowledxe as to | are not forthcoming. foliows: Nov. 6, 2 2 é = After, th a UE a dain the death of Christ | jad: ‘The words of. the Psalmist were ap- The Pope. kas j Dean Stanley and the Bron Chur When pussion had givens seashell Hiesh truth vindleated—bur to miuke a sensation, und | postion ot no denne then gully Wor was foreurdained to cume to pass The Old | ptieabie to Judas, just as a quotation from | Roman fishy et puter co nS | Nov. 20, John Brent; Nov. 27, Willian | | Zo sous face and sour Ups vere Teh sayy New THE HARE, OF THEIR VALE than he did before. Now he says that the uni- | jt, and these are frequently referred to in the sual ened tee Ue upblienhle to any event | Church to take any part in political matte 5 = Obthe nlgbey. when the modnifmd Sell chit gspeciaaly blamable, for allowing myself | Vere did not couie tuto being at all: always | Ney ment but nowhere was the be: | "the snyplications of Christin the garden | Upe document makes a broad distined 'o be taken in by them on i - was; vor did it make its own laws, for it has ne F of Christ by Judas foretoll- by any of | can ante BP estialnwlot the hypothesis that which it should seem tas been necessary, “ e - i ra at | tween the word “liberaliswn.”.as understood | wha occupies jah of interest beyond the limit of the £ ish ‘Phe lectures. for. the present winter He eavelesly tousties the delicate white son begin tomorrow. evening witha course | put four COE a erIur ‘supphire ight, cee Carlie LN ae ‘And bave no attraction for bm. wis Carlyle 7; Nov. incumbent to | Me: eunbles its if 1 would write an answer, |. account of his ned brief to ihe 1 TH45, bee | ‘The Rev. Mr. Jubb of London, England, | He clunz to your garments, and kissed theif the pulpit of Union Park hems; Prd He reached to you lover-like arms the same tucachérous concern hud busely ve- | fives trayed me once before. - After tricking me out | "Figg material universe existed, just as it ts | We pruphels 2 the inode of His death as originally arranged | -py 4 the word liberatasinean- | Chureh this evening, will speak on the Lrish i ; sdsaae was the type of Christ, so was ren interfere » wicked men 7 by the church, and the word liberal as mean fon fr Sandal lose : ised you thousands of pearly gems, Si had been interfered h by wicked men and | ing a political partyin the State, and especially | question from the standpoint of 2 close ob- He prowl yor oe as Oe ly B . server on the ground, who is thoroughly con- : ‘the habits, inner domestic fe, | ang, weary: of life that had promised so much, and predominating characters of “the | Ant vary a new lovers taee, people of the Emerald Isle. Like all English | Warmed by his pussion, charmed by his touch, Congregationalists he is. an ardent Gladstone You yiclued to one fond ctubrace. man. Since his arrival in Chicago he has on f copper. | Uoveral oceasions spoken toa number ot our | Your form, lying there for tho dim moon to kiss - {ver and | people on this subject, and his manner as { | Pleads well for our pity toulzht: a: well as his matter makes a profound: impres- But, Seal shel nreak ord aoe many: ‘will miss sion and leaves with the auditor a clear idea 2: gat? and hunting ine down to get_ap article from me | yo) on the Great Fraud of 1676, a subject then of muuch Sener Intervet Au Lr tie? public | done any works If its harmony is preserved und Hen G UE Christ ptoneimene cation, as the proprictor him: ‘old une, Dol if 9 s nction maintained without | guilt hed without. the necessary ha a SRS 4 any paris i fest than S1GQ. hey handed mie and 1a (Tena eee ay ea eoceribed bea superior | conperation of wicked men? ¥ | make an atonement for the world. He knew | |, dn many varishes. tn living and dead, over to. be covered with inrete- | J08er, then twerd is and has been wo necd of a iy. nor the atonement 1 that He wis xoing to die; He felt itz He Tatentbot the-listitl vant’ standers on a bargain that L should | Saver; God is, thorefore , so Useless a beinz Hor Pie atvhemenk needed The | could! nok pray’ for the siisiest variation | the people instead of the lst not be permitted to refute them in their pages. | that fe must be tucorctically blotted out of ex- ted did ih seo f the | from anything that was essential to the pro- | conseauence, the amount, of The pamphlet to which Twas driven could not } irene. crucifixion did not illustrate. but they did} gram of God, because all provhesies | tions has fallen off, a good deal reach buf the readers of the Kecicw, and the ‘or the proposition that the universe always obscure, the fathomless wickedness of sin. | tnust be falsified should he fail to | money having taken the place of s other half probably believe to this day that L | ye qvithout # creator) and will be forever (with- } Had Christ suffered 4 prot ted ment; N- | die for the race. -Jests could pray | gold, A Liverpool cler ermon upon the subject to hr from all unbegun eternity, there is, to be | 7s , nOL Much chance for a creature te have br. am the type of God. Gould not the en up. Itis impossible that Ile prayed to | ay romards the Province of Quebec. anatoneibent fur hunrn dor rescued from going ‘on to versint with the and certain other men. some of thent the best | Gut x preserver) be offers only one prouf, to- fh, until convulsions seized the expiating | oleariy . thy e ‘ h 3 ouly one, . 9 UNE oa ne explauing | clearly enough for deliverance | St a zs anid, SprIBLORY ty the lant weve iullty OF ihe we to hix iden. ‘This he con- 1, ground his muscles, crushed. his | from subjection to the power of adversaries, | tion, taking for his text the words, of the subject. ‘qvbdéaih of thé tana: On deatn'on theadm 4 DRHOMAn. Te wus Wenk in ime DE WO prosueate: nerves, and deranged hls bodily funetions, | gid from dhe tortures of crueilisiony and | ander, the coppersiith, did me much oases F mab dlatls ba the laid en. dente os until his heart actually broke, then how | trom all that was uot necessary to the com-} At the session of the. Synod of Southern SUNDAY SMILES. wWhut does it matter to you or tame, r i Be our winding-sheot humble or grand? those livelers in a court of justive: sull weaker , we ‘lhinve n mueh darker would the nature of sin have | pletion of the atonement. What was the Presbyterians of Missouri, at St. Loui: To condone the ollunse und put myself 1 the | cysmmon sense of inankind, alt the deductions of intelli é ae simils pate Pers. ‘ sr Sit seu Go untaller niellizence i iv Saal diine: ea ai e ; iE pia Rae Heras enero Reasons cl nlueyen a a ral Sie TOly: Ae ainen Erie y ie eta eer bean the and ad noe Ee a Lig, Pgnement, te ret days ago, i Cine ail sep i SIXtY- 1 Denominational: The little danehter of @ | yor the world will move on in Its path as of yor 3, fsa, it wus u yu ing inust be swept aside, So tat is idea may bave | MUG! ay le aay floes not say. abe sugges! re OU Of Me TL Cott nth ethere |, Denom ack or talc ‘ i look for better behavior from adventurers con- | Treg eoutse to run abd be glorified. But this | Of God in offering up His Son! thas ““Ifis induction into. the -ofliee of the | evCprcusterian preach,” One speaker | Clerayman, hearing her father talking of | The sun shine us clenr and na warty : John the Baptist, inquired what a Baptist | Urytn'the sea-bird chat dies in the stormn? thought that the people and preachers should ti ue inform themselves more thoroughly about | inight- be, and then, “Are you a Baptist, 3 _ AVIS Gray. a athe admira- | their surroundings, Many of them, he said, 2 “No, 1 ain a Congregationalist.” Hurnicaxe Hatt, Nov. 1, 188). allobedient and devout minds. From | can tell about the! mnissions in China, among am12? “You area Congregational: siaedanddoasade®, ‘The death of Christ was solemnly preor- | everlasting priesthood would doubtless b dained and fixed, but the ‘instruments ‘by been iarked by stich sublime wanitests finally put to death: ereby as would have. forever elicited th as del | tion of ducting a mazazine without avowed convictions | xscription of supreme authority to an ide, or principles and without capacity to contribute | tierely because tt buppens to be his idea, will an original thing of their own, except rags and | jardiy be concurred in. The assertion of it, in- | whom He uM ton deed, proves nothing except that his bump of | no means preordained. — Christ fampblack, ald be pleasant to believe th: eclteeatee ae . o> aaedingeae dl sesiounl ‘theologian of other be self-estesm 15 ; ered to die for the world, not by wicked | aiteins Ie was snateled away, being basely | The Indians, aint dn Greece, but they don't | ° Sou an Conjaring—Superstition of Some of tha truth may be permitted to addres rs e A lee a or a SOASEL soi ; Back ort ine clio: soceappolumnicnt and ignominiously erucifieds by wicked men | gnow where Miller County is. ist, tov.” The child paused a that Raitharin Necross: penzit ystion. But 1 expect uv starts auother idea, which has t ; but, ‘ary i De u a lf re arnestness asked: “Well, 5 ; Near Pein regrets nore f I merit of being Bis own namely wicked men shamefully and wicked- | 2024 Roman cre During the recent session of the Synod of | then with Eat earnest W. H.C. writing from Saris, Miss. says some : i the Waldensian Ghuref at Torre Pellice, a | What is God? of the nezroes Im that vicinity are very super stitious people. They have 4 sign for every- * Tr seems probable that the Nurth american Re- } spe secre Po prostituted entirely to the service of | the material universe 1S not governed by Inws. | ly nailed Hit.to 2 Roman cross, waa be view will be D ly ‘The planets move at the rateand iuorbits which j Jf God had determined beforehand that | APOLLONIUS OF TYANA. lively di ion kook place on the report ‘of | ‘The Boston Post relates that a member of | $titous people, They Hake aie Pouyin eae SOPHER OF WHOM AS- | the commission intrusted with the revision | te New Lainpshire Lexislature denounced | Comet wus sent to strike the very wicked and atheism. i :, can be caleulated with absolute eertunty: the ise particular persons should marder His THIS IS NO PERSONAL W curth revolves on its axis with sueh perfect these particular persons sho er His u r Ct i A - a # : Son, how great, the mcousistency of Christ, N ARE TOLD. of the Liturgy, The conservative element of ane, er discussion as “treach- | kill them; others that were only moderately with Mr. Inge regularity that the very second of ume at | Cy ciiming in His dying breath: “Father, 7 ites in Record for Norember. Svas in pood force for the tetention of the old | # bill that was unde Domne of Civsar by Judas | wicked It would only wive themusevere togcing s | erous as was the stabbing of Cesar by 13 | with the tall. Not many weeks since the report aut they do”? This remarkable man was born at‘Lyana | Liturgy intact, but the labors of te revise were not.thus to be set aside and the comur ‘Ss befure the Chris- Te wene te .tian Era, so that he was a contemporary of | ine next y1 which the sun will ris¢ ata particular place { i 1 can be predicted a thousand years b and: | forgive them: thes: know not wh chemical substances combine always in exec They were in that case only doing what they | in Cappadocia, two y tive proportions; fn the anfmal | w Paul (ets, xvi in the Roman Capitol 2 let ye oe otha | wayeteulated amon, them thar a eertuin Kind : 5 dithat bythis | it by saying that he us jas” aS & | OF locust was coming to sting ur bite tne “sinner, Saree ote will bo perfected to | sort of oath, just as he would say “by | nigwers* and kill them all ont. ure great if tin itt sive about me. self confronted, not by a prote: t but by a layman who appiied the judi set todo. Si bis assertions. was natural and expressed with | te same rel iRromprtionss ny eho unial | aut ( tolerable“ moderation. On the other id. and vegetable worlds like produces like; in al ake (i 31) teach that the cri bs a a, % 0 wi Sgt New maze’ wanteal ke - pois pact te dy tried, and J think | tried successfully, to couting | orranized bemgs certain causes aré kuown to | jot ete ohieeranined by the Father. Christ. Nis biography was written by Phi- | the general satisfaction of the majority of | George” or “by tucket.” He ne well believers in ~ tricks"; they think myself rigidly to the square issue between Us. | produce certal effects favorable or unfavorable | “Yt may be urged that Christ tlimself made | lostratus, in Greek, in the year 216. _ It wag | this congregation and consistories. enough it was Hannibal who stabbed Cresar. | ones of their race cin trick" any perso Some Sunday-school ciildren were taken | ly fn the trickster powers for instunter, f U- | King John of Abyssinia said that he was A just oneven an intellient criticism could not | ty light and health. - Mr. Iugersotl's idea is that Be ped! that Chris if made: u ne 3 fermeae eituout some reference to his mental these @not the results of law or any sore | Certain propheeles, bears ne rat composed at the request of the be peculiaities which, with babits of shallow] Or intelligent preatrangement; but they are | Stances of Ifis death; b se du not at alt-| tigat and gifted Julian Domna, wife | anxious to have artisans cometo his country "thinking and rash talising, made een ee phenomena which happen, and the world i oy conillet Ae eee i a Poaeacara nate of the Emperor Septimus Severus. | to introduce the advantages of European ‘ me Fs ct he pretended (1 petd vented from falling into | edge cs ce able be- 2 a ” | civilizati 2 wantes ssi ies P ici ie z Incompetent judge of the subject he pretended | mere uceident prevented | from. TAIN Wee | Gags. Of what Crist meant by these Impres: | ‘This work has attracted much _at- | civilization, but he, wanted’ nd Missiomns init unanies>? "rhe tiae | tree across the path of the person. io be vette Yourrue. But 1 tound the pi chaos. In his wis 5 15 he a rot py y 4 ; eeseye | Of any kind. In the first place, because fae we io aa fzed, or wrap various colored threuds uround 3 the four corners of bis own paper. There. also, of fact” that there is novrule back of the phe: » declarations the Apostles had no idea. | tention and has been trans lated into various | prorestants and Catholics are opposed to each | naniles, child! Wh: Filo Sou sean Wirtoe ricedia Aug mive Jt to the propound vital Tiearned that be was withour any ueknoetdge) | Romenon Nien or coabes: a merely happens, Puke expresey as. they, understood Him | Tanguages. In the Library of Congress it] other elsewhere and would eause division in | (1 ny sou know ee the, sea Son | 2 look ar Tand The, york, 1s Veomplete, "Tua lard of rigbt or wrong. legit J 3 3 pens ey feared to ask Him. Christ wa he a6 the orizinal; also a transla- | Abyssinia. . Besides, his people were Chri “tne th es that Ae trickster baving full power over then, to. ~ - Notice that, becuuse it accounted satisfactorily | purit happens so uniformly that it creates the veply affected by His utterances, asi imay be scen in the orizinal; a transla- | Aby: ja. ree mandiuent says, ‘the sea and | 1 “ 4 st deeply atfected by iis anes, as if to | ion of it by the Rev. Edward Berwick, Vicar | iaus already- know the cony 35, use them in any way desired. When the tims picnic to the seaside. One of the teach- | the ~ trickster” wants to put unotber person Io asked her scholars how they liked the } nis or her power, all that is necessury Is to pluce + “Very much, miss,” replied.a child; | certain” kind of switch from any convenient eS), 1. y should missionaries u cen f Pay Whe stout paries | the tinnamies.”” ‘This was the.way the | Comes the” poor deluded creatuces imaging for his other utterance: idea of law in our minds, whieh is however, a | T/T) Sis they were new, aud unexpected, and r his othe rane . 4 tah v new, N a b ta bs 2 . y convert tne Ah es ties thare aay quesion of pantienmers Bere cetera ner philocopntne: reat and alarming developments. i 7 of Leixslip, Ireland, 0 We in the year 1809. Savpians and the turk eee they: come | child had“ been repeating “the sea and all they have such things fn their stomacns ng that the material universe is under the reign of | er, Satan seems to have watches anxiously tents of the work of Philostratus: were quite good enough. ‘King John decid- “Do you believe in predestination 2 ine pees through & Kind of cereus, passes hi, Mississippi steamboat Captain of 2 | hands over the eyes of the victim, ‘rubs thent wil, But whether they are well or ill founded, t they have no manner of just connection with | jaw, itis rare good fortune for us in’ these latter r te subject-matter of Mr. Ingersoli’s diatribe | gays to have fouud a superior personaze who, | arel of Hebrew history, Me had ‘an inter- 1 be fore the birth of Apolionius, Protens, | edly prefers the arts of war to those of peace. | quired f ‘ a i : Geneyman who happened to be traveling | with *heulin’ ‘fatiment” (of bis own inanufuel against Christinnity and bave often merely turning the Drummond light of bis | view with Christ in the wilderness and tried | 20 Egyptian god, appeared to his mother, A Roman_ Catholic chureh is being built at cere SOF course 1 do,” was the reply.-| ure}, leaves & few doses of some of his medicl b expressed the belief, that relipion and politics | jnretlect on the subject, ut once exposes the | to induce Ilim to perpetrate some act of sin. | She asked the god whom she should bring | Atchison, Kas. with money rai ised by anovel |¥ : rhe ‘Rater St te Getaken at certain tees, a seet i. Gabber be migehad taretber without endanger- | }iyndersof the izuorant Uving and “thobar | Senay fain in this, his next re: | forth. "To which he replied, “Thou shalt | method, “Phe soul of every person who con Then you believe tay Mhaterer | $510) De) eee eet in the marae and ap sntes minnie ing both, The most perfect system of bunny | parian dend - course to plot. the death of Jesus | bring. fort ine.” Apollonius was born | tributes $10) is to receive the benetit ot a | will bex™ “CSTE | mid coins to pass | before 7 next evening, andso on, untit cured. 1 Bovernment that ever was invented by the wit | LET NO MAN MISUNDEESTAND Satan had great inflaence over the priests, | i110 ineadow, amid. prodigies of nature, au- | mass every day until the year 1905. “Serupu- | it a wy eid in just, fifteen’ consecutive | could mention inans Other cquaily absurd prac~ afman and the bolle:t religion thut God Baste |. ssicseprosent sit. Ingersoll. Itisnotin irony | seribes, rulers, and Gentiles: and from | spicious of his destiny, ‘The people eilled | lous care is riven,” says, the etreular of the | tint boat ahead in, Just teen corres | Pees ta omue aropex tng. it Dave wage tel | the best interests of the human race. Such a | operation of nutural Wits OPOT or aetunily | COUld easily tere When thereceit | there he enjoyed the. conv of thie Mass.in the churelt itself, and usually | The boilers arg not going to burst they won't, | such follies. and by their influence It ts nupet Bion ence te Carist und fis Apostles | in serious earnest, and if be does not Betas | templated azainst lim. When therefore it | where he enjoyed the conversation of the | on the privileged altar. It mas Not be Unit’ | Hove ali” Upon this the divine began to | in time the others will be reformed in this rex 0 fi Sof this itepublic | believe what be says bis stimulus ity’ | is said that Christ must be delivered wp to-| disciples of Plato, of Chrysippus and aAris- | to lay stress on this fatter circumstance. To . prec dly = : e tr fo shape here fundutpentg as a8 Mo make tt 2 ample me Waters he say swans takes | Crucifixion it means that God would perm it | totle. He wasan’ enthusiastic admirer and | abetter. appreciation of this very extraor- | puton his hat, and looked as if he was go- | spec! nial law 5 - : . any remarkable person who appeared on the wee em.

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