Fragment

Luke 8:, 9:, 10:, we see, as our Evangelist tells us, that the Lord " went throughout every city and village." No spot was unvisited by His light and goodness. And this divine Minister of grace is attended by a suitable train. A company who had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities follow Him now to witness of disgrace; as, by and by, when He comes forth in power, He will have behind Him an equally suited train of shining ones to reflect His glory.

The case of the widow of Nain, is one so tenderly affecting the human heart, that it properly lies under the notice of the Spirit in Luke. For in the style of one who was looking at man and his sorrows and affections, our Evangelist tells us, that the young man who had died " was the only son of his mother, and she was a widow;" and again when the Lord raised him to life, that" He delivered him to his mother." Would that we caught more of the same tender spirit, while delighting at the discovery of it in Jesus. J.G.B.

Now And Then.

The wicked man does evil and glories in it. The self-righteous man does good and glories in it. The Christian abhors the evil and follows the good, but glories only in the Lord; for what has cleared him from the evil he has done but the death of his Lord? and what fruit can he yield to God without his Lord?

The wicked man gets all his enjoyment now by the pleasure there is in sin. The self-righteous man all his reward now by the praise he gets from man. In the world which is to come they will both have their part in the outer darkness where there is wailing and gnashing of teeth, for neither of them has "a wedding-garment on," and none can stand in the presence of God without that (Matt. 22:11-13).

The Christian gets no reward now-he gets all his sorrows now. Sorrow is a necessity to him by reason of the discipline he must needs pass through to be an overcomer in a world which is wholly estranged from God and full of allurements and snares, i Pet. i- 3-7 plainly declares this:'' Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God through faith, unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time. Wherein ye greatly rejoice, though now for a season, if need be, ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations, that the trial of your faith, being much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ."

Thus the Christian's reward can only be "at the appearing of Jesus Christ." All desire for any now must inevitably drag him down from the true Christian path, and place him thus on a worldly level. His present joys must be from communion with his Lord in the things which are not seen-that inheritance in heaven-while patiently going through the needful trials, whose end will have such praise and honor and glory as man here below cannot bestow on any of his poor fellow-mortals. "Be patient therefore, brethren, unto the coming of the Lord." P. J. L.

As Men Who Wait For Their Lord.

Night around us, strife within- O forbid that it should be;
Oh the pain, the sting of sin! Draw our foolish hearts to Thee;
Have we in our rife discord Teach us what becometh us,
Ceased to look for Thee, O Lord? In the presence of Thy cross.

Fellow pilgrim mid earth's tumult,
What have we to fear?
Hastening through as those who're traveling
To a brighter sphere;
What to us is earth's reward,
If we're looking for the Lord?

Oh, to look with earnest longing
Toward that glorious goal;
All our ways, our heart, our service,
Under Christ's control-
Harkening for the quickening word,
While we're looking for the Lord.

Keeping all our robes unspotted,
From earth's dust, and soil ;
Ever, like the blessed Master,
From its ways recoil;
Guided by His faithful word,
While we're waiting for the Lord.

Choosing not our heart companions
From its faithless show;
Walking so,-the world beholding
Without doubt might know
And confess, with one accord,
That we're looking for the Lord. ,

And our place beside His table-
E'er a blest retreat,
Where the heart delights recalling
Memories sad and sweet-
Worship to His Name accord,
While we're waiting for the Lord.

Time is passing, and His promise
He must soon fulfil
By His presence; may He find us
Subject to His will.
This will peace and joy afford,
While we're waiting for the Lord.

Would Thy Church might thus be waiting,
-But, alas, she's not;
For the "wolf," the world, and Satan,
Ruin sad have wrought.
Sweet His smile,-her blest reward,
Were she looking for the Lord.

Yet, within her pale how many
'Neath this sorrow cry !
Owning all the shame, yet seeking
Not to justify;
Bowing 'neath Thy righteous word,
Longing for Thy coming, Lord.

Sing, my soul! the night now deepening
Tells of coming day !
When the sorrow and the waiting
Shall have passed away;
And with thee, in perfect grace,
All the journey He'll retrace.

Sing the song of thy releasing ;
Let thy heart not fail
Just before the day is dawning !
It will naught avail
Losing courage; wield the sword,
Whilst thou art waiting for the Lord.

H. McD.

The Need And Power Of Revival.

Micah 51:7-' Oh, thou that art named The house of Jacob, is the Spirit of the Lord straitened ? Are these His doings ? Do not My words do good to him that walketh uprightly ? "

The necessity of constant revival is a lesson that is forced upon us by the history of the Church from the beginning. As we know, in the apostle's days came the first sad declension, from which at large it has never recovered. God has come in, in His grace, and again and again raised up a testimony for Himself, and gathered a remnant as witnesses to it; but the Church as a whole has never been restored, and never will be until the Lord takes it to Himself forever. This is only the echo of all human history. We might have thought indeed that the Church would be an exception to the rest, but it has still been left to prove how "as in water face answereth to face, so the heart of man to man."

The need of revival is just the lesson of man's faithlessness in every trust committed to him, and the greater the trust the more, alas! is the failure evident and the more terrible it is. Babylon the Great is a mystery at which the apostle wonders with great wonder. It is now so familiar to us that we are hardly capable of realizing, perhaps, the solemnity of it; but we are not to speak of that just now. We want to look practically at things for ourselves and to inquire where we are, any of us, at the present moment. What our need of revival may be, every one, of course, has the responsibility of knowing for himself, but the need at large cannot be questioned, and the need of considering it can never fail. The Lord's words by the prophet here, although to His people Israel, and taking shape from this, yet have a voice to us, which is only more earnest and closer in application by the difference between Israel and ourselves now. The Lord appeals to them as the house of Jacob,-his house who in his name speaks of what man is in nature, of the characteristics that belongs to him, but whose relationship to God speaks of the grace which God is ever showing. The God of Jacob is just the God of grace, and it is in this character that now we know Him, as that old house of Jacob did not. He addresses them in the midst of terrible failure and He appeals to them with a question,-a question, alas, that the heart of His own is so capable of raising,-nay, in fact so often raises:"Is the Spirit of the Lord straitened ? "

It might seem so, if we look at things around,- there are so many things, in fact, to grieve and hinder the blessed Spirit of God, but that is not all in the question. There is, alas! a terrible tendency with us when we look at the failure, to impute it in some sense even to the God of ?.ll grace Himself, and to murmur as if we were delivered up to failure, as if He had appointed our portion in it, and therefore there was no hope of escape; but in this sense the Spirit of the Lord is never straitened.

Notice the expression, which is "the Spirit of Jehovah," the covenant God, the One who under that name of Jehovah took up Israel in Egypt to make the glory of that Name known, and who entered into covenant with them by that Name, which speaks of His abiding constancy and power to fulfil what He had undertaken. They could not indeed be straitened in Him. They must be straitened, as the apostle says, if such were the fact, in their own bowels. The Lord's people never fail from inefficiency on His part for them, but always by their own voluntary giving themselves up to failure, and this may be the result, even, of that unbelieving discouragement which is implied in the question here. As Joshua, when Israel had fled at Ai, fell on his face before God to say, "What wilt Thou do for Thy great Name ? " so with us, alas! we are apt to think that we are more jealous for the glory of God's Name than He is Himself; but the Lord replies to him:"Up, why liest thou on thy face ? Israel has sinned." That was the whole matter. It is still the whole matter, and it is never, even thus, a reason for discouragement. God will take care of the glory of His Name, and on the other hand He will never be lacking to the soul, which, in the fullest confession of failure, turns to Him.

Amid whatever circumstances of discouragement in the Church at large, we can always encourage ourselves, as David did, in the Lord our God, and the faith that trusts in Him shall not be ashamed in this respect any more than any other. How good it is to know that He will necessarily be more than sufficient for all we count upon Him for ! Do we believe this ? or are we putting the question still as to whether the Spirit of the Lord is straitened ?

Look at the Lord's own picture. The Spirit of God is in us now, a thing that no Israelite could speak of in his day, and the Lord's word as to it in that familiar speech of His to the woman of Samaria describes it as "living water," as "a spring of living water," not a well, as our translation puts it, but "a spring of water leaping up into everlasting life." Certainly we are intended there to realize the energy that there is in a spring like this. There are conditions, no doubt, as to our realization of it, but the ' failure to do so can only be with ourselves, and with ourselves as individuals, and never with the spring. The Spirit of God is in us now. Alas, how much do we realize of this marvelous truth ? God is in us. Our very bodies are the temples of the Holy Spirit, which we have of God. Can we be wrong in predicating the very largest results from such grace and power as are implied in this? How can the conduct of others affect this as regards ourselves? The unfaithfulness of the whole Church can never deprive the individual soul that turns to God of the display of power which God has for him, which may not indeed manifest itself outwardly in mighty works, but inwardly, assuredly, in the revelation of blessing and of power from One who is faithful to His gifts and never repents.

The Lord's words here reveal the secret of any failure. "Do not My words," He asks "do good to him that walketh uprightly?" That is the whole matter. Does God's word cease to be to us what it once was? Have we lost the blessed savor of it in any wise? Does it fail to yield to us for all our need, for more than all that faith can seek from it? Then there is but one reason for this failure. It is that we walk not uprightly.

And that is a terrible thing to say of any child of God, for it does not mean simply what we call failure. It is failure, but failure of that purpose of heart which God claims and looks for as the very condition of His manifesting Himself with us. The unleavened bread with which we are to keep the
feast is the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth. We can keep God's feast in no other fashion. Everything else is leaven; that is, it is not mere lapse from weakness or incapacity, but it is ferment, it is the spirit of rebellion, in fact, against God Himself. Let us remember that uprightness has to be measured according to the place that God has given us, according to the power of the revelation He has made to us.

What is the place that He has given us? A place in Christ, as Christ. We have Him before God, who has gone up to God charged with all our interests, to maintain us according to the value of His blessed work for us; so that now it is only unbelief if we ever think we have to serve ourselves, to look after our own concerns, as it were, as if He were in some way at least insufficient for us.
We have things, surely, to do down here. We have a life to live, we have duties to perform; but that is a very different thing from that seeking of our own which is never a duty, but a departure from Him. We are here in the world for Him. If He is before God for us, on the one hand, we are as truly for Him upon the other. If we are in Him, He, as the result, is in us, and thus is all fruit found. If now, as the seal upon it all, the Spirit of God has come to take possession of us, this is the plain mark, as the apostle says, that we are not our own, we are bought with a price. He is with us, in us, to secure Christ's interests, to work for His glory.

All that implies, most surely, our highest interests also. We cannot lose our lives for Him without gaining them over and over again, as we may say. We cannot live to Him without finding the wondrous power of such a life, the blessing and enjoyment of it. We cannot seek His things without finding that, in the truest sense, and as far as lies in us, we have secured our own, but the seeking His things must be what is in our hearts. Let the care of all else be upon Him. He is competent for it, and our first duty is to trust Him unfeignedly with it all. Thus we may go unburdened. Thus alone are we witnesses for Him and not witnesses against Him. It is when men can see in us that Christ has possession of us and that our lives are, in the purpose of our hearts, devoted to Him,-it is thus He is commended. The doctrine of Christ makes way for itself in the power of a living witness.

This, then, is what is uprightness. We are to answer to the place that God has put us in. As we have received Christ Jesus the Lord, we are to walk in Him; if we are risen with Christ, we are to have our mind upon things above, where Christ sitteth, at the right hand of God. All that is short of this is not mere failure in reaching what we aim at, it is failure in the aim itself; and there can be nothing but straitness for us if that be our condition. It is vain to think of anything like revival until we are ourselves revived out of a fallen condition.

We need, therefore, to begin with ourselves individually. We are not to end there. If once our hearts are really in the power of that which God has -made our own, the state of His people will press itself upon us in exact proportion, but we shall find that now the Lord can use us in ministry to those He loves, and from whom His love never departs, however much they may have departed from Him. It is indeed a terrible thing for those who are truly His to be encompassed with a multitude of those who if they are indeed believers, "are not, for all that in the energy of faith, in the power of the truth which they acknowledge as such. One can understand that in such a condition one might feel that he could go more easily alone than with those who are out of sympathy with, and irresponsive to, the claims of Christ upon them, but here also we might find that it was our own that we were seeking in another way. God never leaves His people, and we are to be the witnesses of that love of His which never leaves them.

We are to refuse indeed all that would make us responsible in any wise for the evil of others, all that would be complicity on our part, conformity to that which springs out of an unjudged condition; but apart from this, it is ours to be with the people of God, seeking their blessing, as our own blessing, which it truly is. The body of Christ needs all its members. " If one member suffer, all the members suffer with it," and, alas, how crippled is the Church to-day by the mixture of clean and unclean which everywhere prevails. There must be in all that involves one's duty to Him, no compromise; but there must be, on the other hand, the love which has its central characteristic in not seeking its own, therefore in true and unselfish ministry to all the need there is around.
Discouragement is here apt to be our sorest hindrance. Whatever love might desire, if once we get the thought that it is impossible to realize it, all efforts are chilled, all work for that which is hopeless drops of necessity. We still have need to urge upon ourselves the question:"Is the Spirit of the Lord
straitened?"If we plead it with Him in faith, we shall surely find what is His answer to it. The consequences of our own past failure may in measure follow us, and the general condition of things we can never hope to alter; but those who are with God will still find that His word appeals to the hearts of His own, and that there is a power for revival out of whatever ruin may have been wrought. There still remain for us Christ and the Spirit and the precious word of God ready to reveal more and more of that which is in it for the enrichment of us all, the riches which Christ's poverty has secured for us and which still appeal to the hearts of His people. How blessed to know that in every one of these there still abides that Spirit who is the seal in us of the perfection of Christ, and who never, therefore, can give up His care of those who thus stand identified with that perfection! Of revival, every one of us will still find his constant need, and the path itself which God puts before us is never spoken of as an easy one. If we think of it we can never say that we have strength sufficient for it. It is out of weakness still, and ever, that strength is found, and grace alone is all our sufficiency. The more deeply for ourselves we realize this, the more we shall count upon that grace for others and expect to see the fruit of the Spirit in those in whom the Spirit still abides, and who will never give them up. F. W. G.

Some Distinctions.

In the Word of God certain words are used apparently synonymously, or else so nearly alike as to be confounded by many. Certain words connected with evil have thus been misunderstood.

(1) Sins. "The forgiveness sins" (Eph. 1:7). These are the actual offenses of the life, in thought, word, and deed, forgiven through the blood of Christ.

(2) Sin. "Condemned sin in the flesh;" "Sin shall not have dominion over you " (Rom. 8:3; 6:14). In these passages it is the root and the principle of sin. Sin is the principle which has sway, the root that produces the sins. This is never forgiven, but judged, condemned by the cross.

(3) The old man. " Our old man is crucified with Him " (Rom. 6:6). The old man is the man connected with Adam. / as a child of Adam. This man in God's sight is dead, crucified.

(4) The Flesh. "The works of the flesh are manifest" (Gal. 5:19). This is the old nature, which remains unchanged in the believer, and which he must mortify, keep under. The sentence of death is upon it, and no good thing can come from it. "That which is born of the flesh, is flesh " (John 3:6).

Although the flesh is in us, we are not "in the flesh, but in the Spirit;" and, as believers in the Lord Jesus Christ, have a perfect standing before God, and are sealed with the Holy Spirit. We are not therefore debtors to the flesh to live after its lusts, but to walk in the Spirit. The promise then is, "Ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh."

Re-tracings Of Truth:

In View of Questions Which Have Been Lately Raised.

9.Deliverance From the Law.

For deliverance from the practical dominion of sin, we must of necessity be delivered from the law; and therefore the order of truth in the sixth and seventh chapters of the epistle to the Romans. Deliverance from the law and the necessity of this are dwelt upon in the seventh chapter; where the great point is that being under law means self-occupation in a religious way, the attempt to make something of that from which God would turn us away; and in which we find ourselves confronted with an unmanageable evil rooted in our very nature as born of Adam, and from which God "Himself does not, in the way we look for it, come in to deliver us. Alas! pride tends ever to come in by the natural and conscientious endeavor to be right with God carried out by legal ordinances and self-culture, with all forms of asceticism superadded. God's remedy for all is the eye off self and upon Christ, with the apprehension, as given by the Spirit, of our identification with Him, so as to make God's delight in Him the joy in which we dwell, and thus the power by which in self-forgetfulness we live and serve Him. We have therefore only to express our cordial and entire agreement with the teaching we are now examining that the true lesson of the law is that of one's own powerlessness. It is curiously put as a supposition, though it is to be hoped that the writer does not mean that it is no more than that with him:"I suppose it works in this way, that law brings home to a man the truth of his own utter powerlessness. That is the lesson to be learnt; I do not care how it is learnt, in all probability by law, but it has to be learnt." It is evident, one would say, that the apostle expected it to be learnt in that way; and that law is so entirely the human method of religious accomplishment that, apart from the revelation of God in the matter, we have no reason to imagine any excogitation of another. But we need not dwell upon this:so far we are glad to agree with him that the entire "end of the law" is Christ.

When we come, however, to the necessary question as to what is the practical outcome of this for us, we find our agreement soon reaching its end, and a doctrine laid down which we have already sketched, but which is being pressed with continual earnestness, and (one must say) audacity. It is undoubtedly the root of the whole system presented to us. We have, of course, things inconsistent with it presented to us too; if it were given clean cut and with entire consistency, it is hardly to be thought that Christians could go on with it as they manage to do now; but this evasive character belongs naturally to the devious ways of error wherever found, a kind of Jesuitism which may be perhaps unconscious, but which all the more does its work. One may boldly assert that it passes the power of man to reconcile the different statements made. When for instance we have the question directly asked,- a question apt enough if we consider the many depreciatory remarks about it,-" What is the use of Scripture to us f " we are comforted and quieted by the assurance:"It is for doctrine, and is a guard to us, and it is a very important point in regard to it that our minds are thus kept from getting out of bounds." Yet none the less confidently is it declared that if you go to it for doctrine, it only shows you are not yet delivered from the law! Here are the words:-

"This question of law is a very great hindrance to many of us, and I think it takes us a long time to get free of law. I will tell you how it works-people go to the Scriptures to find exhortations and rules; they want chapter and verse, as they say commonly, for their doctrine, and they want precepts for their conduct. That is all legality, it is the letter, and I think people are uncommonly fond of the letter; they go to Scripture in that sense to a large extent."

So, though Scripture is "for doctrine," to go to it for doctrine is legality! and although it is a very important point that by it our minds are kept from getting out of bounds, yet where the bounds are in this case is a mystery which must remain a mystery. When it is suggested that "the unsearchable riches of Christ are accorded to us by the Scriptures," that supposition is promptly repelled with a "No; you cannot get them except by the Spirit"! Who ever thought you could? But are they communicated to us apart from those inspired Scriptures the possession of which has been thought of as furnishing us with all the mind of God for His people here ?But let us go on :-

"The idea of the word of God is, that God puts Himself into direct communication with man. …A preaches effectually only what he has learned God, not from what he has found in Scripture." These things are put in fullest opposition; and yet what a man supposes he has learned from God is to be kept from getting out of bounds by what he has learned, not from God, but from Scripture!"I do not think people learn exactly from Scripture, but from the Spirit of truth, but the more familiar people are with the Scripture the better; because a man's mind is thus continually pulled up in its tendency to go beyond the limit"!To make the contra-diction more complete and absolute, it is the same person who says, "I claim only the light of Scripture."Thus, though of course, he did not find it in Scripture, the light of Scripture is all he has! He was. taught it, perhaps, independently; and then taught that it was all the while in Scripture, although he himself did not find it there, and "effectually" no one could. There is thus a continually fresh revelation being made to souls, not derived from Scripture, and which yet Scripture gives them authority to press on others, although it cannot, of course, teach others what it did not teach them, and people are legal and wrong if they go to Scripture for doctrine at all! Surely, as the wise man says, "The legs of the lame are not equal."

And after all it may be doubted whether any of us know what deliverance from law is, even the one
who is teaching it to others. He has been himself studying Scripture, (only too much, he thinks,) and all his teaching he finds in Scripture, and only thus can press it with authority on others. How can he himself know for how much he is really indebted to this, which has thus been floating in his mind, and which he recommends us all to be familiar with? Really it seems as if the only thing that we could be quite sure he did not learn from Scripture is just this. doctrine of his not learning from it. A good deal more, however, will be found to be involved in this. It is legality also, we are told, to go to Scripture for precepts as much as doctrine. Precepts there surely are, in the New just as well as in the Old Testament:is it meant that we are not to listen to them? Well, at any rate, we are not to go to it for them. Are we to be taught them outside of Scripture? But then we must go to Scripture, to find out if our minds are betraying their natural tendency to get out of bounds! Nay, it would seem that we must be taught even more decisively by Scripture thus, than we have been already taught without it. Yet this primary teaching is supposedly by the Spirit of God, which after all we cannot rightly accept save under the "guard" of Scripture! What a wilderness of perplexity and unreality it is, which nevertheless cannot escape from the control of what the Spirit of God has provided for us all, except as, alas, this loose and careless slighting of the Spirit's instrumentality may enable us to leap the "bound," and follow our own thoughts with little check from aught beyond them.

And this is sure to be the result where (although it is confessedly good to be familiar with it) the study of Scripture is treated lightly:"a Bible student is not much after all. " Aye, but " if thou criest after knowledge, and liftest up thy voice for understanding, if thou seekest her as silver, and searchest for her as for hid treasures, then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord, and find the knowledge of God" (Prov. 2:3-5). Where but in Scripture shall we search, where find, after this fashion ? Let us set then these human thoughts within the so necessary bounds which befit them.

Notice once more, that the precepts of the epistles were never anything else than part of Scripture. They address themselves directly to the heart and conscience of those to whom they were addressed. Precepts as they were, they were not legal; or else the great apostle who gave us the lesson of deliverance from the law made a terrible mistake. We at least will not charge him with it. He knew surely also, that the Spirit must act through the written Word in order that it may be effectual, whether for sinner or saint; yet that did not hinder him from claiming the most absolute obedience to what he wrote; and that obedience is no less due from us than from them. It is not merely that we are in a loose way to have it before us, but to learn from it, and to give heed as to the voice of the Lord Himself:"If any man think himself to be a prophet or spiritual, let him acknowledge that the things that I write unto you are the commandments of the Lord " (i Cor. 14:37). The Spirit of God does not come in between, to make this a degree less direct or decisive, but to give it all its power for the subject soul. F. W. G.

(To be continued.)

A Few Thoughts On I John 2:1:

The opening verses of this second chapter of John's epistle are very beautiful, and it may not be amiss to spend a few moments in meditation thereon. The most wonderful glories of God's ways seem focused on the darkest pages of those of man and where clouds gather blackest we may look for the brightest sunshine. These verses form no exception to this rule. We may say that there is nothing more awful than sin in the believer and that there is nothing more beautiful than the grace which meets it. Where knowledge is greatest, responsibility is deepest.

That this is true needs no proof. It is an axiom, it is self-evident. "If I had not come unto them" said our Lord, "they had not had sin but now they have no cloak for their sin." " He that committeth sin hath not seen Him neither known Him," exclaims he who leaned on Jesus' bosom, while of Capernaum exalted to heaven, because of Christ's presence, it is said that it shall be cast down to hell. Knowledge intensifies guilt. The very laws of human jurisprudence proclaim it and avow it, and it is so true that which is not sin to one is to another. "To him that knoweth to do good and doeth it not to him it is sin."

Let us look then at some of the thoughts connected with sin in Scripture and may they serve as sign posts to warn us off from treacherous and forbidden ground and stand as warrants to condemn us should we venture thereon. Trench tells us that there are about nine words in the Greek of Scripture which are connected with it, or translated into it. While, no doubt, the knowledge of sin existed in all races and had some equivalent in all languages, yet God's revelation has added to its knowledge and accumulated around it a wider vocabulary, giving birth to a more comprehensive conception, and the analysis of that conception should be helpful.

Each of these words which we shall look at has an original and root-meaning, and while that root-meaning is by no means the equivalent of its present sense, yet each little root thought serves to build up our complete idea thereof. " Amartia" is the first of these, and involves the idea of missing a mark, failing of an ideal. He that sins then, misses the mark that has been set by God for him. Shall we say it is a miscalculation? Indeed it is and a most shameful and sorrowful one, a most wretched failure! It has darkened the whole creation by its folly. It is an awful blunder. But it is not merely that-a blunder, a miscalculation, a careless mistake-it is disobedience, parakoe, a "hearing amiss." It is that disobedience which results not so much from defiance as from a careless indifference as to the Master's word, a "Yea, hath God said?" and that sort of thing. How intensely sad to think that the believer's sin has that in it. "Yea and hath Christ said"? " My sheep hear My voice and they follow Me," said the Lord; but alas, he who sins is indifferent to it.

But indifference in anyone, and so much the more if it be in Christ's own, cannot be merely that, it is also parabasis, "transgression." Perhaps especially true where a direct command is violated, yet all sin has this in it. If God's commandment is not trampled on, yet the voice of conscience is. It is breaking down God's landmarks, and entering into the devil's territory. And this transgression has in it the germs of that which leads to throwing off all law and government and becoming "lawlessness," "anomia all "sin is lawlessness." It is a throwing off of the laws of the Creator and the introduction of spiritual anarchy which knows not law. No wonder then that here everything gets out of tune. Sin is plemmeeleia,'' discord." What sad discord! the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain because of it. And oh may we not say as we look at its awful consequences that is agnoema, "ignorance?" Ignorance, folly, self-indulged, self-induced and needlessly reveled in.

"My little children, these things write I unto you that ye sin not. And if any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the Righteous." John wishes to keep sin from his little children but he knows that there is, alas! a possibility of it. Had he not seen it break out on the lips of one of the best of men on the dark night of Christ's betrayal? It is possible for us to sin. It is possible for us to curse and swear, to deny Christ and break the blessed communion which should be ours with Him. It is possible for us to do all these things and "more. Do we know it? Men say that, "Forewarned is forearmed." We are forewarned; Peter was forewarned, but are we forearmed? John gives us the armor in the first chapter, but it needs to be put on. The first chapter may be briefly epitomized as "the glory of Christ as God and Man and His glorious environment." What could be more sanctifying? It is of Him that John says that a man committing sin hath not seen Him neither known Him. What a blessed safeguard!

" In all extremes Lord Thou art still.
The mount whereto my hopes do flee;
O make my soul detest all 99:
Because so much abhorred by Thee."

To become more like Him we need to hate sin more, and to delight in gazing on Him more; and . each mutually helps to bring about the other. Among all the vast multitudes who hold in their hands this awful power, Christ is the only One upon whom we may direct our gaze and be absolutely sure that there we shall find nothing sinful. No wonder John opens his epistle with those beautiful words, "That which was from the beginning, which we have seen with our eyes which we have heard, which we have gazed on and our hands have handled of the Word of life." "These things," this Christ, this God, this Man, this One in whom is light and who dwelleth forever in the light, this Jesus, shall be our Sanctifier and Saviour from sin and all its power.

"He forgives sin and breaks its power; He sets the captive free."

Reader has He done it for you?

As we were saying before, John knows too well how possible it is to sin; and for such he says, "there is an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the Righteous." I would call your attention for a little to the word "advocate" paracletos. It is very interesting to notice that it is found in the New Testament in John's writings only; while its abstract form paraklesis, translated "consolation," "comfort," and occurring many times elsewhere is never once used by this same apostle. If we look at this as a mere chance phenomenon, it is a curious one, whereas if we perceive in it something more, we have a beautiful thought. We have so identified the sun in our every day experience with the light which it so bountifully sheds upon us, that to speak of one is to think of the other; and with John to think of "consolation" is to think of the "Consoler," yea is to forget all about the consolation (paraklesis) in the blessed Person who brings it (the Parakletos). Reader when you think of comfort, do you always think of Christ?

The word "advocate" has been variously rendered by different translators. In John's Gospel the same word is rendered "Comforter;" " I will send you another Comforter . . . even the Spirit of truth." We have then two advocates or comforters. The One tells us about God and the Other speaks to God about us. Here then speaking reverently, we have Divine Arms linking us with the Father and the Father with us; a blessed Voice of mercy which in our estrangement from Christ, whispers in the Father's ear of our blood-bought righteousness, and the earnest pleading of the Spirit-advocate, of the excellences of our Advocate above.

"We have an Advocate with the Father." When? "If any man sin." I believe and am sure that pleading begins as soon as the sinful act is commenced, but that is not just what John says. He says, " If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father." John brings us into the family of God. If any man in the family sin, the family has an Advocate, to whom they can appeal in behalf of the transgressor. The whole family is stirred into supplication for its erring member and many an earnest entreaty arises to the blessed Advocate above who on His part with His whole heart full of willingness, anticipates their plea. The Advocate pleads "guilty" in behalf of His client and puts in plea, a blood bought pardon. This is a righteous plea advanced by a righteous Person, Jesus-Christ the Righteous.

O child of God, disgraced by sin, with your beautiful garments soiled and mud-stained, our righteous Advocate will not belittle your guilt, will not slur over your transgression. You shall be judged in the full light, every flaw shall -be judged and . . . not condemned! F. C. G.

I Will Come To Thee, And I Will Bless Thee,

(Ex. XX. 24).

O that Thou wouldst bless me indeed (1 Chron. 4:10).

'Lie still, my child, thou needest this quiet rest,
Nay, fret not at the hand that laid thee here;
For I have purposed that thou shalt be blest,
To Me thou art dear.
I know thy service, fraught with love, and prayer,
But come with Me apart;
I'll rest thee, strengthen thee, and banish care,
And overflow thy heart.

Just leave these broken threads of toil to Me,
I've marked thy deep desire, and fervent call;
And every burden thou hast borne for Me,
I know it all.
But just this little while I crave thy heart,
In shadowed quietness;
From every earthly heart and voice apart,
That I may richly bless.

I love My "servant," and thy service well,
And long with that "well done," thy work to crown;
And face to face My joy in thee to tell,
My love to own.
This seeming cloud which cross thy path doth run,
'Tis but My loving hand;
To shield thy head, thy feet, from burning sun,
And glaring desert sand.

No cloud can cover thee, but I am there,-
Thy sorrows, trials, griefs, and joys are Mine;
Thy loved ones too, are My unceasing care,
And all that's thine.
This seemingly untimely break will hold-
(Tho' now it seem but pain.)
Some hidden treasure purchased not with gold,
Some deep eternal gain.

If on thy willing hands, I've laid Mine own,
A little while, to rest, and keep them still-
To teach thee better than thou'st ever known,
To do My will-
Then rest, with Me, it will not be for long,
And in eternity
Thou'lt sing a deeper, sweeter, fuller song,
Of praise, than else could be.

H. McD.

Plainfield, Feb. 12th 1901.

The Church In Its Progress Towards Rome.

Some leaves from an inspired history.

(The following extract from the notes on Acts in the Numerical Bible is republished here for various reasons. First, to draw attention to the deeper meanings which constantly underlie the scripture histories, and distinguish them from any other histories that can be found :one of the manifest signs of their inspiration as well as an encouragement to us to look more deeply into every detail. Secondly, for its own sad but necessary warning as to man's failure everywhere in keeping the choicest blessings committed to him, a " Cease ye from man," which brings us to confidence alone in "God, and the word of His grace." Once let our hold be lost upon this anchorage, all other confidences, whatever, are but false and ensnaring. The Church's decline began in the souls of individuals:we may here learn how many lessons of the dangers that beset us, -put how many a question to our hearts!)

With the apostle's voyage to Rome the book of the Acts ends. The strangeness of such an ending has been often commented upon, and naturally; especially for those who imagine a history of progress on to final triumph for the Church on earth. We expect some correspondence between the history at large and this its specimen page; and to end with a shipwreck and the apostle of the Gentiles in a Roman prison gives an impression of an unfinished fragment instead of the perfect workmanship of the divine hand. But this proceeds from a wrong conception of what the Church's course was in fact to be, which all the sorrow and disaster of near nineteen centuries has for many been incompetent to remove. Allow the Scripture-statements their full weight, and the want of correspondence will be no longer felt :for the history is really that of a shipwreck and a prison; and instead of wondering any longer at the apparent contrast, we shall perhaps suspect that the similarity may be closer than it seems, and begin asking ourselves if the one is not indeed an allegory of the other.

The very name of Rome to us at the close of so many long years as have passed is predictive of disaster. Rome has through all its existence as a dominant world-power antagonized the gospel. Submit to it never really did. It took the name of Christian, but as a symbol of material conquest and political dominion; and thereby dragged in the dust what it professedly exalted. As already said, it was Judaized rather than Christianized, and with the Jewish spirit of legality drank in its bitter animosity to the gospel. The spirit of Rome was indeed always legal; but this legality now became ecclesiastical, sacerdotal, hierarchical, and necessarily persecuting. Begin Paul's captivity it did not, for it never knew him but as a prisoner. But keep him prisoner it did, until the time of God's release came. The picture does not go as far as this ; probably for the reason that after all this never has been,-never will be-complete; while what has taken place in this way is the mere mercy of God, and for us the instruction is in the causes leading to the disaster:causes which are still at work, and in which we may have part, if we do not avert it by self-judgment.

I. There are two parts in this account, the first of which consists of the voyage and shipwreck, ending
with the reaching land at Melita, or Malta. Here also there are two parts :the first, that in the ship of Adramyttium to Myra; the second, that in the ship of Alexandria, wrecked at Malta. The conflict of man's will with God's rule appears all through, though most conspicuously in the second part. The detail given all through should surely show us the interest that it should have for us, and that there is more in it by far than appears upon the surface.

All through, Paul is a prisoner; and yet with the clear vindication of the judge from any charge which should make him rightly this. Finally, he is shown to be the one to whom God has given the lives of all that sail with him. If we see in him the representative of the truth for which he stands, there can be in this no perversion of fact; and the sorrowful fact is that the truth of the gospel for which he stood has been, almost from the beginning of the Church's history until we reach the full development of the system which has Rome for its head, as it were, shut up, without formal accusation perhaps, yet fettered, and scarce permitted speech; professing Christians being its courteous guard, like Julius here, with a certain honor for Paul, but not freedom. Indeed, Julius himself has not his choice in this:he is under authority, a centurion of the Augustan cohort, an instrument of the world-power simply, and to whom in those interests with which he is identified, Paul is simply a stranger.

The meaning of his name may be variously given; that which would have significance of the kind that we are looking for, would be derived from "julus," a wheat sheaf, and might thus be "belonging to the wheat sheaf;" an enigma, no doubt, as we might expect:all here is necessarily enigmatical; but it is not impossible to penetrate the disguise.

Christ in resurrection is the significance of the one sheaf of wheat which stands out prominently in connection with the types. The sheaf of first fruits, presented to God between Passover and Pentecost, occupies a remarkable place in that series of feasts which we easily see to be specially related to Christian truths. Christ in resurrection was also, as we know, the basis of the gospel; and in a pre-eminent way, of Paul's gospel. It is Paul's gospel that specially identifies all believers with that wheat sheaf presented to God, that is, with Christ gone up to Him. If Julius in such an allegorized history, as we are taking this to be, represents in fact, as has already been suggested, those who, even while they might be true believers in Christ, yet were ignorant of those priceless truths with which the apostle of the Gentiles was identified, and who could thus hold the truth shut up, as it were in captivity, then the implications of the name he bore would be indeed significant. They who themselves had that Christian place of identification with the risen Christ which Paul's doctrine made so conspicuous, were yet in ignorance of the place and what belonged to it; that is, of Paul in the truth he carried; and however courteous to himself they might be, were but the instruments (yea, the imperial band) of the enemies of the truth he lived and died for. Look at the imperial band of the church fathers:do they not treat the apostle after this manner ? Are they not so many courteous Juliuses in this way ?

They are bound for Italy, all these, though it may well be not by a straight road. The first ship we find here is not going to Italy, but to the coast of Asia, and is a ship of Adramyttium – a name of which there is doubt as to the meaning, but it seems as if it might mean that "one must not haste," while Asia speaks of a "miry" shore. Spiritually at least, these things go well together. A lack of earnest diligence in the way is apt enough to have a slough for its terminus. Corinth had got so mired with the world at a very early date, though they knew little of it:they were reigning as kings, following their wills, as such a course implies, and not the guidance of the Spirit. The "best Ruler," as Aristarchus means, was with them all the way through, but we hear of him no more :he is a passenger and only that. Yet, as the Macedonian may remind us, He is the Spirit of worship, which putting God in His place is seen as of Thessalonica too, the means of "victory over that which brings into commotion." But so the start is made.

The next day they are at Zidon, still in what is properly Israelitish territory, though in fact in other hands. It means "taking the prey," and in Joshua's time we find it coming into Asher's portion (See notes on Josh. 19:28), and there in reference to victory over evil, which is indeed the portion of Asher, the "happy" saint. But in fact, as we know, in the common failure of Israel, Asher never did even conquer Zidon, which had many and great kings of its own, some of whom were in alliance with Israel afterwards. The "taking of prey'," so connected, would come to have a different meaning, and imply such a career of conquest as that upon which, when become conscious of her power, the Church soon started. The victory over the world which faith in the Son of God gives became exchanged for victory by which the things of the world became the possession of the victors. Thus the parable of the mustard-seed began to be fulfilled, and the Church to take rank among the powers of the world. Friends of Paul were still to be found, for whom victory over the world retained the old and contrasted principle of separation from it, crucified to it by the Cross. With these the apostle would still find communion, and hearts drawn to him.

But the ship of Adramyttium is bound for Asia ; and starting again, the winds are contrary, and she is forced under the lee of Cyprus. Cyprus means blossom, especially of the olive and the vine, and became identified in the Grecian mind with what is fair and lovely in nature, with Venus and her worship, the soft influences which woo and win man's heart. And here indeed is how the heart, realizing that after all the winds for the Christian voyager are contrary, would shelter itself under what in nature it can plead, and with truth also, God has made for man's enjoyment. So He has; and yet how easy to make enticement of it, the ship using it as her shelter to reach the "miry" shores of Asia beyond ! How all this fits together in the picture here ! Was not this in fact the history of declension in the Church of God ? a history so often repeated in individual experience that we cannot but know it all too well !

Not difficult is it to understand that beyond this there are dangers which Cilicia, Pamphylia, Lycia, all in different ways express. Cilicia is said to mean "which rolls, or overturns," and to play the Cilician is to be cruel and treacherous like these. Pamphylia would mean a union of various tribes; and their history seem to corresponds with this. Lycia is from lycus, a wolf, which whether referring to beast or man has no encouraging significance. In two of these names the dangers following the thirst for pleasure may be fitly indicated; the relaxation which it implies exposing to such dangers as the apostle speaks of to the Ephesians as the entering of grievous wolves, not sparing the flock; while the union of various tribes was truly what practically the church soon came to be as mingling with the world's various interests affected and molded it, making the diversity as apparent as the uniting tie. How soon did the Body of Christ cease to have visible expression; and the church united with the world become divided within itself !

Striking it is that here presently the end is reached of the first voyage at Myra, where the ship of Adramyttium is exchanged for another. If Pamphylia has the import which we see in it, the breaches of unity which it pictures would have need of the "ointment" of which Myra speaks. How many salves have been sought for this broken condition ! And the change of ship for a ship of Alexandria is still more plainly significant. Alexandria speaks of help given to men, or better, of the warding off from them impending danger. The new ship of the church is a human means adapted to that end, while openly pointing now towards Italy.
Notice how well all of this agrees together:the perils have been shown us, following self-indulgence and love of pleasure. The new vessel from Egypt, which stands all through Scripture for that independence of God, alas, how natural, and from Alexandria,-a human device for warding off danger,-and now with her course directly Rome-ward, towards which, in fact, indirectly, they have been going all the time,-all this speaks to us not uncertainly in what we have upon other grounds concluded to be an allegory of the Church. Most undeniably, for all who take their view from Scripture, the vessel of God's testimony has changed much since it came from His hands at the first; and there has been human shaping, taking its justification from expediency largely,-the warding off of dangers, real or imaginary. The simple eldership of the apostles' days has grown into an episcopate, more and more monarchical; and this into archiepiscopates and patriarchates, and from ministry to priesthood, and all the ranks of hierarchy conspicuously absent from the New Testament original. The "best Ruler "is little seen, and a mere passenger:there would be danger indeed in letting the blessed Spirit have that governing place which, at the beginning, was His. We have taken a fresh start clearly, and our vessel is Egyptian-Alexandrian; and we are manifestly on our way to Rome.

But still the wind is contrary; heaven does not vouchsafe its favors for some reason:and it is with difficulty, and after many days of sailing, that the vessel is got abreast of Cnidus. Cnidus means "chafing, nettling," and may be a bad augury for the new regime; and here they leave the coast of Asia for Crete.

The wind, still contrary, forces them to take refuge under the lee of Crete abreast of Salmone, a name which, like that of Salamis in Cyprus, seems to be derived from the breaking of the wave upon it. That of Crete seems to be derived from the Cherethim of the Old Testament, who, in the judgment of many, were its inhabitants. The meaning in that case would not be doubtful. The cherethim were the "cutters down, or cutters off," sometimes given as "executioners. " But the word was also very commonly applied to the making or "cutting "of a covenant, for which as a whole sometimes the one word stood. That the covenant of the Lord should connect itself with the cutting off of evil can be no mystery to us; and significant it is that it is in turning from the "miry" shores of Asia that Crete presents itself to us. Self-judgment would have been indeed the resource for the Church bemired with the world, and it is no wonder that it should present " Fair Havens" to the buffeted ship, or that the apostle's advice should be to winter there. Final rest indeed it could not be, but yet quite helpful against winter storm; but the ship of Alexandria, under the guidance of those belonging to it, will not stay there; and Julius of the imperial band, while courteous enough to the apostle, yet approves their choice. Alexandria seems a name peculiarly significant here, and the history of the church shows here indeed how the notion of "Crete" that came from Alexandria would be in grave enough contrast with the apostle's. "Cutting off" in the shape of asceticism, and even in covenant form, had indeed its home there. Monasticism in its pseudo-Christian form arose there:a direct descent from heathen principles and practice. " Fair Havens," with its city of the Rock (as Lasaea seems to mean) near by, did not suit with the ideal of the Alexandrians as Phenice did. Phenice means"palm," the constant figure of the righteous. Righteousness is not after all found in cutting off, and the city of the Rock intimates the corrective truth, distasteful naturally to the true ascetic. Its ideal is in this way
unattainable; and when, mocked by the softness of a favorable south wind, the vessel leaves the harbor that would have saved it, the storm blast Euroclydon descends upon it, and it is blown out irrevocably from all land.
The wind that now assails the ship is called in most manuscripts Euroclydon, but in the oldest Euraquilo. The one term means " the eastern wave " referring to the effect upon the waters. The latter, the "northeaster;" which has the sanction of most of the editors. The east, as we have seen elsewhere, is the quarter that speaks simply of adversity; the north is that which speaks of darkness, mystery, and spiritual evil. Taking Euraquilo as the best attested reading, we find it also to be the most significant. It speaks not merely of adversity, but of Satanic influence:in the case of the Church, besides persecution, of evil doctrine; and such were, in fact, the influences which assailed the early Christian. In the epistle to Smyrna, which stands second in that apocalyptic series in which many have learned to trace the successive stages of the Church's history, we have on the one hand the ten days of tribulation, (the persecution under the Roman emperors), and on the other, the blasphemy of the synagogue of Satan, who say they are Jews, and are not, but do lie. Doubtless, these work together, as the shout of the hunters, which drives the deer into the trap prepared. Judaism, as we know, favored that fusion with the world as well as those defensive methods which promised best protection from outside attack; while it was itself the most complete attack upon the vitals of Christianity. And the same two influences are, no doubt, to be seen here in the storm that hunts the Alexandrian vessel to its wreck. We must distinguish, of course, carefully, between that worldly prosperity into which, through all the assaults upon it the church was steadily rising, and the spiritual wreck to which in this very way it was going on; until under, Constantine its pilgrim and heavenly character was exchanged for an opposite one; and the gospel of grace, except perhaps with a few hidden and hunted men, was well nigh gone from the earth. We have the creed of these orthodox Nicene days, and the faith of their most eminent men in various expressions, and we know with exactness what they held and taught; their doctrine as to Christ, in general orthodox enough,-as to the gospel, what the extremest ritualism may permit of it:baptism to wash away past sins, and make children of God; penance and priestly absolution, to take away sins afterward ; helped, and needing to be helped, by the virtues of the saints, and even their dead bones ! That was for the people of ordinary lives; but the religious life, which alone made saints, was to be found in following out what Scripture calls "the doctrines of demons, . . . forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which God created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth " (i Tim. 4:1-3). This life too was to be spent in deserts, or between monastery or convent walls, and then might attain merit which would help to save other people,-the merit of doing more than it is one's duty to do.

If Scripture in hand we place ourselves in the midst of that flourishing church of the Nicene period, which the hand of Constantine has just liberated from the dungeon to put it upon the throne,-and
look at it with the eyes of him who said to the Corinthians, "Now ye are full, now ye are rich, ye have reigned as kings without us" (i Cor. 4:8), we shall no doubt see that, spite of all the seeming prosperity, there has been in fact a change and a loss, such as would imply no less than a shipwreck;, while the "honey"of nature's sweetness enjoyed might make a Melita for the released sufferers. Into the details of the fourteen days of storm and drift it is harder to enter by way of exposition. The lack of food we can understand, while yet the wheat was in the ship; the fact of the safety of the voyagers depending upon that Paul whom yet they knew so little; his voice being heard once more as the storm works on to imminent disaster:surely ears must have been opened to hear it! The shore was won, though the ship had gone to pieces; there was a pause in the progress towards Rome, and a new ship must be found to get there, though of the same Egyptian, Alexandrian build; and then by easier stages, and with fairer weather the end will soon be reached.
2. The incidents of Paul's stay at Malta have all one character. They show us how the favor of the islanders was won by the display of divine power acting through him in the setting aside of what was in fact the power of the enemy, but in their minds divine, and in the relief of human suffering. The chief man receives and entertains all Paul's company. The bearing of all this upon the allegorical meaning is as plain as need be. If we have indeed arrived at that period in the Church's history when Christianity became the religion of the empire, and the emperor its official head,-when in the thoughts of men it had reached the land of milk and honey, which by the application to themselves of Jewish prophecies they could believe also to be their land of promise, then there is little difficulty in what is before us now. The very acceptance of this new head changed everything, however much the old forms might be maintained, and declared to all who had heart to understand the wreck of all true church principle. It was decisive enough that the first who took this place of ecclesiastical head was a man unconverted, and (what was still more decisive according to the doctrines of the day) unbaptized ; baptized at last by a denier of the deity of Christ; the slayer also of his son and of his wife. They had afterwards to invent the fiction of the bath of Constantine to cover what was ecclesiastically the sorest disgrace. Yes, the ship was a wreck, but they had reached nevertheless the land of honey, their Melita. By and by a new ship also would be found to carry them to their destination.

Yet had not in fact the serpent's power been overcome when the Pontifex Maximus, the head of heathen power, the head that had so recently and fiercely bit at Christianity, and not in vain, was now itself Christian, and putting down heathenism? According to many since, it was the fulfilment of the Apocalyptic story of the Dragon and the Woman, and the Dragon's being cast out of heaven. Was it not indeed a good that in the seat of widest earthly power the malignant forces of evil should be dispossessed by the healing and life-giving influences of heaven's sweetest grace? That is what captivates the people of Melita, who see the viper harmless and cast into the fire, and presently experience the mercy of God in the undeniable signs of divine working. Who can deny the blessings thus coming in through that wonderful change which we have been contemplating? So Paul is in the house of Publius, and the new ship is laden with things which are the thankful acknowledgment of benefits received. Yet is Paul after all a prisoner still, and the vessel's head, at much less distance than before, is pointing towards Rome!

So again we have a ship of Alexandria, and the fresh start is but a continuation of the former voyage. The vessel went under the sign of the Dioscuri, the "sons of Jupiter," Castor and Pollux, the patron divinities of sailors. Perhaps we may interpret this as showing what is certainly true, that while Jupiter himself may have passed away, the ideas born of heathenism remain to preside over the course of the state-church. The very title of Pontifex Maximus to which reference has been made, was retained by the Christian emperors for some time, and when dropped by them was revived, and at the present time is borne by the pope! It carried with it the claim of chief authority in matters of religion, and it is intended to announce this claim today.

At Syracuse they land and tarry for three days. Syracuse means "dragging unwillingly," and speaks sufficiently of the exercise of arbitrary power; which Rhegium, a "forcing the way through," intensifies. It is singular at least, that here the Dioscuri, who presided over the vessel's course, were again the patron-divinities. Puteoli ends the voyage, and takes its name from the thirty-three mineral "wells " that were there, or else from their ill-odor. Puteoli was the chief harbor of Rome, although some distance from the city. Here they found brethren, with whom at their solicitation Paul was able to stay seven days'; "and so we came to Rome." The market place and the taverns complete the journey -morally, as in fact; though here also we have the meeting of the apostle with the Roman brethren.

In all this the tracing of historical fulfilment may be little detailed, but the general character of the period between the state-church and the church-state is sufficiently shown. Violence, breach of faith, pretentious assumption, characterize it; the mal-odorous wells (of error introduced) bring us nearly to Rome itself, though the traffic of the market and the dissipation of the tavern are needed touches to the picture. Even here Paul's heart is cheered as he looks upon the brethren; and prisoner as he is, he thanks God and takes courage. This is always the style of God's precious book:His "I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee," rings throughout it. The head hung down means only unbelief, and it is not in this way that Paul enters the miscalled "eternal city." All things that are seen are temporal; "things which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, God hath revealed unto us by His Spirit."
F. W. G.

Two Things.

Two things ought ever to characterize us:a people given to much earnest prayer continually, and with this a keen relish for the word of God. Here is where God begins to work, with ourselves, and creates deeper longings after what is real and divine. Then the heart expands and goes out in those desires for others, and we become a hearty evangelistic people. "My presence shall go with you, and I will give you rest." These were His words to Moses for Israel of old, and He is the same to-day. He brings His people out of Egypt, then through the wilderness; then into the land; and this God is our God.

How much we owe Him until we see Him face to face ! From us there ought to be a double line of service and ministry, as in Col. i 23-25. Ministry first in the gospel, flowing out without stint to needy sinners around us. And then ministry continually flowing out to those who are saved and gathered by the gospel into the Church, the body of Christ. This double stream of ministry flowing through us, is the fruit of communion, and of the truth held with us in even balance. A. E. B.

The Silence Of Jesus.

If at times the voice of Jesus was raised in stirring appeal or majestic command-and we may read sweet lessons from its rousing tones-so also was His silence vocal with unheard music, and the "rests " in the full flood of harmony with which His voice was pregnant are also most beautiful. They read us lessons of the love of God, they witness silently to the majesty of the blessed Christ, they speak of depths unfathomed by the poor plummet of earthly affection and understanding and they rise to the eternal home of the divine Father, and gives us assurance of our entrance there. With this prospectus before us let us seek to follow them out; but oh, brethren, it is no use for you to read, or for me to write, unless through grace His Spirit teach us. "Though I speak with the tongue of men and of angels," says the apostle, "if I have not love, I am as sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal." Who shall describe Christ ? Who can speak of Him aright? and if one of the holiest of men on earth was not worthy to stoop and loose the latchet of His shoe, what are we ?

There are a number of instances in which Jesus kept silence, of which the Gospels speak or at which they hint, and there are circumstances connected with them which are well worthy of meditation. – Of course, they are familiar to most of us, but perhaps it has not yet been the privilege of some to consider them as a whole, and to such the subject should be of interest. There are two aspects of them which we will consider; the one tells us a connected story of what His love accomplishes and when it works; and the other, of Himself personally.

It was near the end of His earthly journey. His disciples had left Him, and His enemies were rejoicing in His downfall. The rulers were taking counsel together, and one of them who for a long time had been desirous to see, because he hoped to have his idle curiosity sated by some work of wonder wrought at Christ's command, now questions Him in many words. He receives no answer. Those lips unsealed so often at the cry of necessity and the voice of anguish to pour out a bounteous blessing are fast locked against the words for empty curiosity, even though a king with his armed band stand to command their undoing,' 'He answered him nothing." How vexatious for proud Herod! Here was a treasure to which no king could command the key, and which self-proud words could not unlock. And this should have its voice for us and for men of all time. It is a divine principle. It is only the heart in earnest whose cry is ever heard. And God is not a respecter of persons. These are principles which meet us upon the threshold of all dealings with God. We may apply them when in prayer we seek His face, when we come to Him for salvation, whenever it be. Be in earnest and humble, or no answer will come.

But if God hear not idle curiosity, do not imagine that you are going to be heard because of any mere earnestness. You cannot storm heaven in that way. You must come in your true relationship.

There are two silences of Jesus which bear witness to this, one of them carrying with it a further lesson which is indeed very blessed.

There was a poor woman who came to Him in great distress about her daughter whom she had left at her home on the sea-coast grievously vexed with a devil. There was no mistake about her being in earnest. Oh, that we all were ever as earnest as she! She was a foreigner, and she cried to Him, "Have mercy on me, O Lord, Thou; Son of David." "But He answered her not a word." This evidently went on for quite a time, until at last the disciples grew wearied, and besought Him, saying," Send her away, for she crieth after us." One can well imagine what a trial it was to our dear Lord thus to put her off, but when it was necessary to teach a lesson He never spared Himself. How quickly are the channels of mercy thrown open when she drops the "Son of David," and takes her true position towards Him. The silence is broken then, and from the Lord's lips break those blessed words of joyous delight:"O woman, great is thy faith; be it unto thee even as thou wilt."

If we have learned now from His silence, and that it had to be broken, that nothing in ourselves but only our outcast condition could give us place at His table, another question arises,'' Will He care for me and shelter me on my journey through this world, spite of all my erring ways ? and a third most beautiful silence of Jesus gives its divine and comforting answer, " He will."

It is night in Judea; a night of sorrow and distress; a night of blasted hopes and scattered friends, and we see our blessed Saviour surrounded by His enemies in the palace of the high-priest. They are asking Him many questions; and also one of His followers, who had sneaked into the palace, and is warming himself by a fire, is saying something. Let us listen a moment. He is cursing and swearing and saying, " I know not the man;" "I know not the man." Is this Peter, the valiant Peter? And who is it he does not know ? "The Christ, the Son of the living God." "I know not the man." "The high-driest then asked Jesus of His disciples and of His doctrine," and from John's Gospel we see that Jesus omits all mention of His disciples. He might have answered " There is one at the fire there, cursing and swearing that he does not know Me." Oh, how terribly sad must have been those curses to the ears of our dear Lord. How much alone He must have felt at such an hour ! Ah! never was sorrow so bitter as His, and yet it did not absorb Him. He thinks of Peter. He does not speak to him, for that would betray him. Peter deserved it a hundredfold, but Jesus loved, and that love, forgetful of its injury, will acquiesce in Peter's wish not to be known as Christ's. In perfect silence Jesus turned, and just looked. We are not told what there was in that silent look, but just as the railing of the thief on the cross was suddenly checked, and turned to entreaty, so curses change to tears. Peter went out weeping bitterly.

And will it be bold and illogical in us to argue that, if thus Christ cared for Peter in his disobedience, forgetting His own deep sorrow and thoughtfully shielding his wayward one, He will likewise shield and care for us ? I think not.

His silence, then, assures us of care through this scene, and if we ask, "What about the hereafter?" we hear a voice saying, " In My Father's house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would have told you." There was no need to speak on such a subject. Fancy one like Christ having to tell His own He had a home for them. Silence was guarantee from Him that there was. Reader, I will not dwell on the last blessed silence of Christ. "Thinkest thou I could not pray to the Father and He would presently give Me more than twelve legions of angels " ? We know what this abstinence meant both to Him and to us. But let us return often to meditate on such themes. They are worthy of it. F. C. G.

Transformation.

Rom. 12:2; 8:29; John 8:32; Rom. 6:2; 8:3; Heb. 9:26; Gal. 2:20; 2 Cor. 3:18.

I Asked the Father, once, to mold
Me to the image of His Son;
But, brooding o'er the matrix cold,
Shrank back before He had begun.

I pleaded that subservient
To His, alone, my will might be;
And here, alas, willed to relent
Ere He His will made known to me.

Resistless marble, next, I sought
To be, and He, the Sculptor rare;
Still, ere creation could be wrought,
Repented was the creature's prayer.

As silver, then, I would be tried,
With Christ in the Refiner's seat;
Yet scarce the test had been applied,
Than quailed I at the glowing heat.

At length, I prayed, "O, Father, show
Why thus, in bondage, I should be."
The answer came, " My child should know
My pledge,' The truth shall make you free.' "

Then to the blessed Book I turned,
Deliverance found from sin's fell sway;
"Sin in the flesh," there fully learned,
The cross "condemned," and "put away;"

And Scripture proved me "dead to sin"-
Thus, by "the truth," was I "made free"-
And should no longer "live therein,"
But live the life of "Christ in me."

So, now, the Word abides in me,
And God the Spirit wields His sword,
That Father's heart and eye may see
The growing image of my Lord.

No need for matrix do I feel,
No thought of crucible recall,
Nor yearns the marble for the steel-
Christ Jesus is my ALL IN ALL.

G. K.

King Saul:

THE MAN AFTER THE FLESH.

Chapter 2:THE CAPTIVITY IN THE PHILISTINES' LAND. (Continued from page 6.)

So far as the people were concerned, they had lost the very badge of their relationship with God. "The Ark of the Covenant" had passed from their unfaithful hands-the very throne of God was no longer in Israel. "He forsook the tabernacle of Shiloh, the tent which He placed among men; and delivered His strength into captivity, and His glory into the enemy's hand" (Ps. 78:60, 61).

What an abiding witness that God will never act contrary to His nature, even though the stability of His earthly throne seem for a time to be threatened. How it shows that all divine power is holy, and that there is no authority save that which is consistent with God's holiness. God does not need to preserve the outward continuity of His government, as is the common thought of men. What a mass of ecclesiastical rubbish is swept aside when this is seen. No need to delve into the annals of the past-doctrinal errors of the early "Fathers," grossest abuses of Rome, with her rival popes and councils, all tainted with that unholiness which forever disqualifies them from a claim to God's recognition. No need to search here for a succession from the apostles. Ichabod is upon it all. God forsook all that, as He did Shiloh of old.

But what a relief is this-to see that God can never be held responsible for the errors of His professed people. Were this seen, how quickly would earnest souls turn from Rome or any other establishment which bases its claims of authority upon an unholy past. God can never act contrary to His character, and when that character has been distinctly and persistently ignored, we have a Shiloh-no matter what precious associations may be linked with it -bereft of its glory. Faith can follow God. Even as at an earlier day, when the golden calf usurped God's place in Israel, Moses pitched the tent of meeting outside the camp, and thither resorted all who desired to meet Jehovah, rather than the place where once He manifested Himself.

Thus faith ever reasons:"Let us go forth unto Him without the camp." Has He been compelled to withdraw ? We can no longer recognize that which He has left. Shiloh with the ark away is like a body when the spirit has departed. It can only be buried out of our sight.

We have here a principle of wide-reaching application. Not only is a simple path for faith laid down, where there is no need to attempt to justify what is . not of God; but there is a basis here for recovery to Him, and thus for true unity amongst His people. Who would not desire that ? But it can only be in this way.

The great mistake with nearly all efforts after outward unity among God's people, is in having the eye upon them rather than upon Him. The question, the only question to be asked is, Where is God with reference to the matters upon which His people are divided. Has He been compelled to withdraw His " approval ? does His word condemn that which characterizes His people ? To uphold their position does that need to be maintained which violates, in a radical way, His character ? Then surely all effort at uniting His people, and at the same time ignoring that which has dishonored God, will never meet with His approval, not even if it outwardly brought together all those now separated. God, His will, His character, ignored-all else is absolutely worthless.

But have not all here a most simple basis of true unity ? We side with God-we take up, patiently and prayerfully, if painfully, that which has occasioned the breach. Is it a matter about which God's word expresses His mind ? Then the only thing to be done is to own that mind-to bow to Him. On the other hand, is it a matter practically immaterial, where patience and forbearance would accomplish what suspicion and force could not do ? Then the path is equally clear. May there ever be grace among His own to seek to be with God according to His word, and they will ever be with one another also. Mere ebullition of love to saints, no matter how real, can never take the place of a clear, thorough examination of the difficulties in the light of God's word. To ignore difficult questions, is but to invite fresh and more hopeless complications. But we must return to our narrative.

Chapter 3:GOD'S CARE FOR HIS OWN HONOR. (1 Sam. 5:, 6:)

Having vindicated the holiness of His character by permitting the ark to be removed from Shiloh, and taken captive by the Philistines, God will now show to its very captors that His power and majesty is unchanged. We need never be afraid that God will fail to vindicate either His holiness or His power. Our only fear should be lest we be not in that state in which we can be vessels of testimony for Him.

Notice how all interest is transferred from Israel to the Philistines' land. Wherever God's presence is must be the true center of interest. Nor does this mean that God has permanently forsaken Israel or ceased to love them. Nay, all that is now transpiring in the distant land is but the twofold preparation for the maintenance of His holiness and His grace toward a repentant people.

The Philistines have looked upon this capture of the ark not only as their victory over Israel, but over God as well. They ascribe both to their own god, Dagon, and in acknowledgment of his triumph over Israel's God, they put the ark in Dagon's temple.

It is now no longer a question between God and Israel, or even between God and the Philistines, but between the true God and man's false one-part fish, part man, as the perverted and corrupt ingenuity of fallen man delights to depict the god of his own fashioning. This false god is at once immeasurably inferior to man,-like to the fish in the main, with head and hands of human intelligence and power,-and yet the object of his dread and worship. Such is the idol ever, in all its forms, really beneath those who form it.

At first, doubtless to impress more fully the lesson, God simply casts the image prostrate before Him. Poor hardened man sets it up again. But the second time, the blindness of the people failing to understand, Dagon falls and is broken. He loses all that had given him a semblance of intelligence or power, and the headless trunk witnesses of the vanity of idols, and of the majesty and power of that God whom they in their madness had despised.

Had there been the least desire after truth, what an effectual witness would this have been to the Philistines of the vanity of Dagon and the reality of the living God ! Alas, their hardened hearts see but little in it, and give added honor to Dagon by not treading upon the threshold, where his head and hands had lain. Doubtless the priests put head and hands back again, and most was soon forgotten. How utterly hopeless is all witness to those who do not desire to know the truth. But God is vindicated, and His desire as well to deliver men from their errors.

In how many ways does Rome answer to all this persistent and shameless idolatry. Dagon, the fish-god, suggests that worship of increase, for which the fish is remarkable, and which forms one of Rome's claims to "Catholic." Does she not number her adherents by millions?

Nor can we fail to recognize in all our hearts that Philistine tendency to worship numbers. Is it not the test of a work ? How many simply follow a multitude, and measure all spiritual results by the number of those who are identified with a movement. Again and again does God break to pieces this false god, permitting the loss of hands and feet-both intelligence and power to that which a carnal religion would still deify. We need to have this thing hunted out of our souls. Mere numbers are no token of God's presence or approval, whether it be in evangelistic work or any testimony for God. His truth must ever be the test-His word, as applied by His Spirit. Without that it is but Dagon.

(To be continued.)
"HOW IS IT THAT YE HAVE NO FAITH?"

Evil Speaking.

We need to watch ourselves as to evil speaking. A good test of our utterances is the consideration, Would I think it right if said of me ? And even if true, was it necessary to say it ? It may be necessary to utter some things in judgment of another, for the Lord's sake and for the sake of the wrong doer, but we will allow that we need to be very careful not to transgress.

A word of caution may be added here. We are liable to say things about another in the presence of children, who ought not to hear it. Even if right to speak of a matter, it may be a serious wrong to the one criticized to refer to it before children, or before a mixed company, who are not called upon to enter into the case.

May grace and love keep the door of our lips,- and the fear of God.

The one way of escape from every sin is to have the heart possessed with the joy of the Lord. Then naturally the mouth "is opened with wisdom" and in the tongue "is the law of kindness" (Prov. 31:26).

FRAGMENT The secret of human happiness is to live for others, but the secret of divine happiness is hid in these words:"To me to live is Christ."

This does not necessarily imply the doing of great things for Him, but His being Himself enthroned in my heart as its all-satisfying portion. E. S. L.

Brief Bible Studies For Young Christians.

There are some great truths revealed in the New Testament upon which it is most important the believer should be clear, both for assurance of the soul's salvation and also for settled peace of heart.

ATONEMENT.

Except in Heb. 2:17 where "reconciliation" should be "atonement" this word is an entirely Old Testament word (Rom. 5:n should read "reconciliation "), yet the truth it conveys is seen all through the New Testament. Of course by this is meant the expiatory death of the Lord Jesus on the cross at Calvary, and its application Godward and manward. Thus it is said of Him, "He offered Himself without spot to God" (Heb. 9:14), and also, "who His own self bare our sins in His own body on the tree " (i Pet. 2:24).

Leviticus 16:brings out in illustrative type, what Jesus did actually in His death on the cross. On the great day of atonement Aaron was to take two goats and present them before the Lord. The first, for the people ; the second for the Lord, decision as to which was to be by lot. Then the one "upon which the Lord's lot fell," to be the sin-offering, was killed, the blood sprinkled once upon and seven times before the mercy-seat, and Aaron returning to the altar lay his hands on the live goat's head, confessing the iniquities of the people, and the goat would bear upon him all iniquities so transferred. Read carefully Lev. 16:5-22, noting particularly verses 4, 7-10, 14, 15, 21. The sprinkling of the blood was the basis of the whole service. Once upon the mercy-seat, satisfying the holy righteousness of God ; seven times before it, giving righteous standing to the high-priest. Compare this with Heb. 9:7-12, 22-26; 1-10.

In Leviticus there are more truths connected with the typical or illustrative teaching than these, but the above will help us to see the matter we desire to present. The theory of "atonement," 1:e. that Christ by His death reconciled God and man, is un-scriptural; and not only so, but casts a slight upon the fact revealed in John 3:16 that God "loved the world," even "while we were yet sinners"(Rom. 5:8).No, it is man who needs to be reconciled to God; the carnal mind being "enmity against God" (Rom. 8:7), and so God was in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself" (2 Cor. 5:19).

SUBSTITUTION.

This means literally one being in the place of an-other; and so it is written to the Thessalonian believers, of Christ, "Who died for us " (i Thess. 5:10). It is never said in the New Testament that Christ bore the sins of the world; in the gospel according to John (chap. 1:19) He is called "the Lamb of God which taketh [beareth] away the sin of the world," that is sufficient for all.

Dying for our sins (i Cor. 15:3) and bearing our sins (1 Peter 2:24) are believers' truths. If Christ bore the sins of the whole world, of necessity the whole world must be saved, or His atoning work would not be a complete one. Such would be the monstrous falsehood of universalism. But while His atoning work is sufficient to save the whole world, and is offered to all, yet it is only available for those who believe on Him. Compare i John 2:2 ; for "propitiation " read "mercy seat," and omit the words, "the sins of," which are not in the original. See also Rom. 3:22, and notice it is "unto all" but only "upon all them that believe." John 3:16; 5:24; 3:36; Acts 13:38, 39, etc.
Substitution, then, is the actual bearing of the sins of believers-sins, guilt, judgment:so then each believer may say, upon the authority of God's word, " He bore my sins in His own body on the cross at Calvary." And the promise is, they will never again be laid to their charge (Heb. 10:17). And this transferring is an act of God. No one can lay his sins on Jesus as is sometimes heard taught. See Is. 53:6, "All we, like sheep, have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all." Thus it is an act of God setting to the believer, on. faith, the full value of Christ's death on the cross, which was sin-bearing and atoning.

RECONCILIATION.

Is the result of the death of Christ as applied, both to persons and things, by bringing them back to God. Believers are reconciled from the very moment they make by faith a personal application of the death of Christ (Rom. 5:10, n; 2 Cor. 5:18);-notice," Hath reconciled us to Himself." All things will be reconciled; see Col. 1:20.

The expression, "My God is reconciled," has no scriptural foundation whatever. The thought that God had to be reconciled to us is foreign to the teaching of the word of God. And this work of " reconciling the world unto Himself" is the gracious ministry He is still doing by the gospel (2 Cor. 5:im. 1:16; i Cor. 1:18).

BORN AGAIN.

This is and means just what it says-"born," it to be something entirely different from what existed before-having no connection with the il birth whatever. It is therefore the entire setting aside of the old-nature-life, and the communication of an entirely new life with all that it.

Notice the expression " born again," not born over again, which would be but a repetition of sinful nature with its acts of willfulness, disobedience and .born "from above" as may be seen in the marginal reference in our English bibles. It is the of a new nature, and that a divine nature; See 2 Peter:1:4, "partakers of the divine nature," and is as true and real in the believer as in Christ Himself, see 1 John 2:8, "which thing is true in Him and in you. "As to the mode of new birth, John 3:5 says it is "of water and of the Spirit."

There is nothing here to imply baptism, no matter in what form administered, but i Pet. 1:23 shows it means "by the word of God " administered by the power of the Holy Spirit to the heart and conscience of the sinner. Water, all through Scripture, is a figure of the Word. Eph. 5:25-27; John 15:3, etc. are illustrations of this.

Thus with the reception by faith, 1:e., trustingly believing the word of God as brought to one's con-science and heart by the Holy Spirit, one has given to him an actual, real, and divine nature which ever exists in the believer together with the old Adamic nature, which are never reconciled but continually at variance; see Gal. 5:19-25. At the same time God sets to the believer the full value of all Christ is, and all He has done for him, of which the Holy Ghost then given is the seal, and earnest of the glory to come (Eph. 1:13, 14; 4:30). The Spirit also being the energizer of the new life, enabling the believer to keep in subjection the old nature still in him, and which he is responsible to ever reckon as dead and keep under (Rom. 6:ii ; Col. 3:5-12, etc.).
ADVOCACY.

This is the work of the risen, exalted Christ in the presence of the Father for all believers, 1:e., for their individual failures; "if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous" (i John 2:i). Thus all the believer's failures are met by the righteous person of Christ, the perfect Man in the presence of the Father, restoring communion when interrupted, and renewing peace of heart when lost.

This is the present work of Christ, and is for the believer as a child, while His High-priesthood has reference to him as a saint. The relation of child can never be broken because it is the result of Christ's work through faith, but the believer's communion may be sadly interrupted by sin or any act of disobedience, and for this latter this work of the risen Christ avails for restoration, upon self-judgment. See Gal. 3:26; John 10:28-30; Eccl. 3:14. For illustration of restoration see Luke 22:31, 32, 54-62; 24:34; John 21:15-17. Thus i Cor. 11:31, 32; i John 1:9.

JUSTIFICATION.

This is being made right, or clean, or perfectly guiltless before God, and is the present and permanent position of every believer. The ground of this, is "the blood of Christ" (Rom. 5:9), while the measure of it is Christ risen and glorified (Rom. 4:25; 2 Cor. 5:21), obtained by faith (Rom. 5:i), and is all of grace (Rom. 3:24). On account of the shedding of His precious blood on the cross, Christ has met fully all the claims of God's holiness, and justice for sin, and also the deepest needs of poor sinful man, so that God in all His holiness can and does righteously pronounce "clean every whit" as a permanent justification before Him each one who appropriates that truth to himself as a lost sinner. From that very moment, no matter how weak the faith, if there be a sense of one's lost, helpless, sinful state, an everlasting justification is conferred by God to one believing Christ's death and resurrection were for him, and were all that were necessary. Such an one stands before God as if he had never committed any act of disobedience against Him. Blessed be His name, such is love, such is grace, such is the value of the blood. B. W. J.

FRAGMENT

The Two Sides Op Truth.

There are two sides to the Christian life, and it is of all importance to hold the due proportion in each. An even balance is greatly needed in Christian truth, in Christian life and practice as well. Many passages give us these things, of which we will note a few.

" Shall go in and out and find pasture "(Jno. 10:9.). From this beautiful passage spoken by the Lord we learn of these two sides, an "in" and an "out." These two places belong to all who have entered the door and are numbered among the saved. To interpret this in harmony with our place now as believers, the "in" is the place where the heart finds communion. It is the inner side of the Christian life. In this inside place the voice of prayer is often heard, and of praise and worship. Often the heart is fully occupied when the lips are silent. In this inside place the true occupation of the heart is with the Father and the Son, for we are called to the fellowship of both. Here we read and meditate; here we learn. This side comes first.

But there is also the other side, "and out," and this place is not at all inconsistent with the first. What God hath joined together, let us not put asunder. The "outside" is the testimony, the life of the believer before the world. A proper life and testimony only will be borne in this outside place when the inside is used aright. When the heart which is at home in the inside place, grows familiar with the interests of Christ, whose glory fills the Holy of Holies, a keen sense of what concerns Him will govern the life, as the face is again turned towards the world, and the need of men is seen. Then testimony and service are the result. A look within and we think of Jesus and His glory; a look without and we are made sensible of the fact that we are not in heaven yet. The world and Church lie before us and the interests of Christ in both meet us.

As to our acceptance we are in Christ, risen and seated in heavenly places. As to our bodies and our lives we are yet here and among men. ,When we think of eternity and the value of souls in view of that day, service follows. Thus these two places are so joined together that we cannot separate them, although we can distinguish them, and one is dependent upon the other-the "in" and the "out."

The same principle appears again in the epistle to the Hebrews:" Having therefore brethren boldness to enter into the holiest" (Heb. 10:19). Here again Scripture introduces us into an inner place. And if in John 10:we saw the Shepherd and the sheep, here we see the High-priest and a whole family of priests. They are the same persons in each case. The Shepherd of John 10:is the High-priest of Heb. 10:, and the sheep of the one are the family of priests as happy worshipers in the other.

But when this inside place is discovered in Heb. 10:the same lesson as we gleaned in John 10:appears also. There is an outside place also, "Let us go forth, therefore, unto Him without the camp" (Heb. 13:13). Here again we are reminded of the other side of the Christian life. As we turn out we view the great mass of religious profession, and which may even bear Christian names. Yet if there are the same elements of Judaism that we see in this epistle, the heart true to Christ goes "forth unto Him without the camp." The responsible side of the believer's life now comes out. Discernment for this path of separation from evil, and strength and courage can only be received by those who know their place inside the veil. The world they discern readily, the camp also, and the place where Christ is, amid all the profession, is discerned also-"outside the camp."
A glance at Exodus will give us these two sides again, and help us understand Heb. 10:19 and 13:13. In Ex. 24:Moses goes up to the top of Mount Sinai, and there spends forty days with the Lord shut in; and there he enjoys communion. This is his within. But in chap. 32:he must return to the base of that Mount, where the people were, and there he is compelled to view the people in their departure from the Lord. Those forty days gave him a right idea of God's holiness, and hence he could form a right idea of things when he returned and found them contrary to God. He pitched the tabernacle outside the camp, and God vindicates this act of His faithful servant by descending in the cloud, and standing by his side (chap. 33:) At one moment we see Moses upon the top of the mount with God; at another we see him at the base, in the valley, and God there with him. At one time he is up where God was; next, God is at the bottom where His servant was. Now these two positions occupied by Moses give us in picture our double place, within and outside, as we have seen in Hebrews. Hence, a heavenly, a sanctuary-taught believer, as Moses was, learns ever the need of separating from God's people when their walk and association is not right; a needed lesson for us to-day (Ps. 77:13).

These same lessons are further taught in Ephesians literally, and not by parable nor type. In the first three chapters we get the heavenly position and relationship of each believer:"Seated in heavenly places in Christ."This is grace, all grace; but in the last three chapters, the believer is again brought back to the world and taught how he ought to walk. The first three chapters show our position through His sovereign grace; the next three, our responsibility, as associated with His name on earth. We wonder that souls can grasp the first to the neglect of the other.

This line of thought pursued gives us really the difference between the wilderness and Canaan in their typical lessons. They each have their lessons, and are but the two sides of the Christian life. As we stand on the line between the wilderness and Canaan at Kadesh-barnea, we can look in and out, and as we do so, learn the lessons each place is meant to convey. The whole land lies before Israel, and for us now. But it requires faith to enter into the enjoyment of our spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ. This is one side of truth, and of the believer's life. Oh, that we all knew this important side. Enemies there are, as the book of Joshua shows and the epistle of Ephesians (chap. 6:); but the land flows yet with milk and honey, and we are exhorted to "arise and walk through the land, the length and breadth of it." But, as before said, this is only one side of things'" and again we must turn our faces toward the world and the reality of things on earth. We each have our experience, a fact made too little of by some and exaggerated by others. But to have an experience proper and Christlike, we need to know what the Canaan life is, and this enables the believer to return and take up his vocation in the earthly life and fill it to the glory of God.

A word more about this wilderness. A mistake that some right-meaning Christians have made is in supposing that there should be no wilderness for one entering into his heavenly portion. They have supposed the wilderness means failure, fighting, and lust. But this is not necessarily so, and was not so for Joshua and Caleb. True, if the people fail- and they did-it is brought out in the wilderness. But as they journey, even their failures prove the faithfulness of their God and His fulness and sufficiency for every need. And this is the other side of truth, needed in its place. After forty years, as they look back, and remember all the way, would they be without the benefit of any part of the lesson learnt ? Surely not. If they thought of themselves, after they have done all, they could only say, "We are unprofitable servants." But as they think of His love, proved again and again, and His power also, they could say, " What hath God wrought."
Forty years they journeyed, with Edom by their side (the flesh in us), and were commanded not to fight nor meddle with Edom, just as we are now exhorted not to fight nor meddle with "sin in the flesh," but turn away from it. "Reckon yourselves to be dead indeed to sin" (Rom. 6:). Hence, neither for them nor for us did the wilderness mean a battle ground, but a blank desert, where they were made to feel all was not right. They were not yet home nor at rest in the land. Who, with a rightful balance and spiritual mind, cannot but feel this as we journey across our desert path ? Christ is not here. Sin-Edom-is, and there may be conflict, at times, if the eye and heart are not kept right. Amalek may appear; and he represents, as the grandson of Edom, (Gen. 36:12) the fleshly lusts. Edom (the flesh), Amalek (lust of the flesh); these two are to be found in the desert yet, but if we follow the word of our God, we will turn away from the one and not fulfil the desires of the other. Hence there is need neither of battle nor war. This is the important lesson Rom. 6:If we wish to enter the proper battle-field, we must pass onto Eph. 6:, our spiritual Canaan, and there we discover spiritual enemies and Satan the great master leader among that host, seeking to hinder our entering in to enjoy that good land, Here we need the whole armor of God, and faith, and energy, and courage to go in to possess the land. The Lord goes ahead as the Captain of our salvation. May we know this side, this inner side, better, and then we will better take up our responsibilities out-side before men. Let come what may, as we face the wilderness, the cloud of His presence will over-shadow and accompany us till the end. Then comes rest, perfect rest, and we will be home; no wilder-ness, because no sin, no thorn; every enemy driven out and overcome. God all in all. Christ and His glory supreme, and we following Him as happy subjects and worshipers forever. May we hold the truth well balanced, and be sanctified by both sides of it. A. E. B.

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The Lord give us to have these poor wretched hearts of ours broken, swept out, and all that is in them replaced by what is in Himself.

I am but a broken vessel, no creature glory whatever; but, if I am this poor thing, all the sweeter are God and Christ up there for me.-G.V.W.

On Bible Study.

" This Book, this holy Book, on every line Marked with the seal of high Divinity, On every leaf bedewed with drops of love; This Lamp, from off the everlasting throne, Mercy took down, and in the night of Time Stood, casting in the dark her gracious bow:And evermore beseeching men, with tears And earnest sighs to read, believe, and live."

It is sincere pleasure to write a few lines to fellow-students upon such a fruitful theme as "Bible study," for I am convinced that nothing in the world is so important and nothing is so much needed. I find as I journey on in life that Christians may be divided pretty generally into two classes, one of which does not study the Bible, and in consequence makes no definite progress in the spiritual life from year to year, while the other class feeds daily upon the Word and grows in stature in the knowledge and wisdom of God.

I do not wish to assert that many of the members of the first class do not "read the Bible" every day,
but that there is no seeking, heart-searching, appropriating study, and hence no assimilation, no growth, and no power for the Master's service. These Christians are often sweet and amiable and lovable in character, it is true. But they really know little or nothing of the wonders of the realms of grace. They cannot speak with certainty, from a definite personal experience of the work of the Holy Ghost, and as for a daily walk in the Spirit, they have not so much as heard of it. They often spend much time in philanthropy and in "trying to do good to others," yet when questioned by an unbeliever they are scarcely able to give substantial reasons for the hope that is in them.

I cannot do more in this brief letter to college men than state my personal and earnest convictions as to the necessity of Bible study without argument. I therefore declare again with absolute assurance that without a real, devout, persistent Bible study there can be no real growth in the Christian life. I make this assertion after a wearisome, fruitless experience in my own life without it, as well as after hearing the experiences of many fellow-Christians and listening to many sermons.

The second categorical statement to which I beg the attention of the students whom I am addressing, is that there is nothing in the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation, which needs any apology of any sort from any man. Since I have found out this vital fact, and have gone to my Bible day by day with prayer for guidance and simple faith in studying it, whole books which used to appear obscure have become luminously clear, and I am now able to take my portion day by day, led by Him whom Christ has sent to be His viceregent on earth until His own personal return.

If the Bible is in very truth the word of God and His appointed means for advance in the Christian life, the next important question is, what is the best way to study it ? I would! study my Bible prayerfully, looking to God alone to open up its meaning by His Holy Spirit, fully persuaded that these things cannot be understood by the natural man. He cannot receive them, for they are foolishness to him, for they are spiritually discerned; the gift of the Spirit is the supreme gift to His people in this age from God through Christ.

I would search the Scriptures regularly, taking my spiritual food with the same precision I apply to supplying the needs of the body. I find as the practical outcome of this honoring of the Spirit that I actually develop a positive spiritual appetite and even long for the time to come when I can be alone with my Bible and receive from my Father the heavenly food He sees good to give me for my day's needs. I find, too, that regular feeding develops a spiritual strength unknown before, and with it a fitness for His service not possessed by the fasting man.

I would study my Bible intently, eagerly, seeking under the guidance of the Spirit to realize fully the precious import of every word. If man's words are held to mean what they say in contracts and legal documents, how infinitely more valuable are the words of God in this inspired and blessed writing.

I would study the Bible with faith, and so happily wander through its great treasure stores made mine by the grace of God, gathering here and there the precious gems of truth richly strewn through its pages. I have yet to find that I can make a too minute analysis of the Bible. It is like some marvelous divine instrument which combines ten thousand beautiful instruments in one. You strike one note in one part and it awakens harmonies and sweet reverberations which run down through the ages; again close by you strike another note, and lo a different set of tones resounds, and so it keeps on day by day yielding its sweet, ever fresh, soul-satisfying melodies to those who care to stir them. It is like a cloth of gold with thousands of cords mutually independent yet all interwoven in one glorious whole; if you pull a cord in Genesis you can trace it consistently on to Revelation. A man's book is wonderful if the author carries out in it a few lines of thought consistently; in this Book there is one theme, Redemption through Christ, displayed with a variety which is infinite, as is the Author Himself.

We live in a day of multitudes of helps in Bible study, and it is often a great temptation to try to take the digested food of a help, and so more quickly to appropriate its truths; but I would here assert I with earnest conviction that the great expositor of the Bible is the Bible itself, and the one great commentator who enables us to understand the Bible is the Holy Spirit. This is His peculiar work; the Book is His, and the application of the word to the individual life is His, and no human agent, formula, or catechism dare supplant the divine Guide under penalty of utter failure of being able to exercise quickening faith and of understanding the message aright. It seems to me that the class of simply devotional books are even worse than useless, as they never turn out anything better than weak, lackadaisical Christians. The best books are those which continually send the student right back to the Bible to test the truth of their statements.

In conclusion, if I have gained the attention of any young Christians, let me again beg them to be Bible-loving, Bible-reading Christians. If they are weak, the Bible will make them strong; if they are ignorant, the Bible will build them up in the truth ; if they are assailed by doubts and criticisms, the Bible will dispel them as the mists of the morning melt away before the sun in his splendor. Do they desire to know more about Christ, in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge? the Bible is the one place to seek for such wisdom. Are they among those who know not if there be any Holy Spirit ? they will never say so if they read their Bibles. Are the lusts of the flesh strong within them? here they learn how the flesh has been buried and they find their Christian privileges in a resurrection life. Is our earthly pilgrimage one of sore trials? here we find that we are seated in Christ in the heavenlies, and heaven has begun on earth for all who love the will of God above all else.

"O earth, earth, earth, hear the word of the Lord." "Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God."H. A. K.

A Separated People Who “Had Not Separated Themselves”

"Now when these things were done the princes came to me, saying, The people of Israel, . . . have not separated themselves from the people of the lands, . . . for they have taken of their daughters for themselves, and for their sons . . . and when I heard this thing, I rent my garment, . . . Then were assembled unto me every one that trembled at the words of God of Israel and I sat down astonied until the evening sacrifice.

"And at the evening sacrifice I arose up from my heaviness, and having rent my garment and my mantle I fell upon my knees, and spread out my hands unto the Lord my God, and said, O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to Thee, . . . Since the days of our fathers have we been in a great trespass . . . and now for a little space grace hath been showed from the Lord our God. . . . And now, O our God, what shall we say after this? for we have forsaken the commandments, which Thou hast commanded, saying . . . give not your daughters unto their sons, neither take their daughters for your sons. … O Lord God of Israel . . . behold, we are before Thee in our trespasses. Now when Ezra had prayed, and when he had confessed, weeping and casting himself down before the house of God, there assembled unto him out of Israel a very great congregation of men and women and children:for the people wept very sore" (Ezra. 9:1-10:1).

Nothing is more plain in Scripture than that God forbids His people to form any alliance with the world. Israel was a type of us, as we know-and we have besides the teaching and the commandments of the New Testament; the unequal yoke forbidden of old, is forbidden, of course, to the Church-and if Israel's responsibility was great, how much greater is ours. If Ezra and those with him wept, and chastened their souls-what becomes us when souls turn aside to the world and despise the commandments of God?-now, with so much greater light.

We need to be aroused to the encroachment of the world. We must be awakened from self-indulgence to allow exercise to be produced that will lead to confession and crying to God. We must deplore any lack of united exercise; we should indeed pray for it, that deliverance and blessing may not be hindered; for it is never God's will that we should be delivered to do the will of the flesh, but that we should glorify Him; and therefore, that we should be delivered from every snare of Satan that would dishonor Him, and hinder the blessing of His people. We can count upon His help, but we are to diligently seek it, confessing our real condition. Note the deliverances to His people of old when they felt their condition, and cried to Him with sincere hearts and broken spirits. We have a notable case before us in Ezra; and there are many as we know, and very touching they are, as in the book of Judges, and in the books of Kings and the Chronicles.

Never did the Lord turn away from His people when they cried to Him. In Gideon's time (Judges 6:), "Israel was greatly impoverished because of the Midianites," (the encroachments of the world) "and the children of Israel cried unto the Lord, and it came to pass that when the children of Israel cried unto the Lord because of the Midianites that the Lord sent a prophet unto the children of Israel." The prophet rebuked them. God would not answer Saul at all even by ?. prophet, but He answered Israel's cry; better to be rebuked than to be left to ourselves. And then, after the rebuke, the Lord raised up Gideon, the "cutter down," as a deliverer; self-judgment was produced; idols were overthrown and the enemy was overcome.
Admonitions must be given, of course, and at times a rebuke; and parents are to govern their children; and when the assembly is, in the main, walking with God this will be done with effect and with blessing from God; but when the assembly has become enfeebled and the enemy has gained a foothold, confession and prayer is called for, unitedly, that deliverance may be wrought. We are all interested in one another, and in every family connected with the assembly, that all may be able to "keep rank."

When alliances with the world occur among us in marriage, in business, in joining benefit societies; when souls are turned by Satan in any way, Ezra's example tells us how we should be exercised that the Lord may deliver us from our peril and our shame.

But what can keep us from turning back to the world but having our hearts satisfied with Christ, finding joy in Him, as at first? "Seek those things which are above " and "mortify our members which are upon the earth."

This is our Gilgal to which we need ever to return. "If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God. Set your mind on things above, not on things on the earth; for ye are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God; when Christ who is our life shall appear then shall ye also appear with Him in glory. Mortify, therefore, your members which are upon the earth." The cross closed our life in the flesh; and we are risen with Christ, and are soon to appear with Him in glory. How deep and high and precious is the ground of this exhortation. In the power and blessing of this word, we can deny the lusts of the flesh. Can we think of Christ as our life and of our being dead with Him, and risen with Him and about to appear with Him in glory, and then indulge the lusts of the flesh, and turn aside to the world? The joy of this precious truth in the soul is victory over all temptations, as Israel went forth from Gilgal, where they were circumcised, to victory after they had crossed the Jordan.

May we turn again to the Lord with true hearts and present our bodies a living sacrifice to Him and be not conformed to the world. The world can only delude. God will fill the soul with joy and make Christ to be so precious to us that the heart will be preserved by its secret joy from all unrest, and from every snare of Satan.

Are we finding joy in the Lord ? If we are, we can contribute a portion towards the worship and happy service of the assembly. . If not, we are like a city with walls broken down and open to the enemy on every side. If not devoted Christians, we wrong one another, we hang like a dead weight on those who are faithful, and the marks of decay are seen in many ways. Ministry that is faithful, and with the comfort of the Spirit is lacking; gifts are not developed, meetings forsaken, and children seek satisfaction elsewhere, when they might have been led on in the way of deepening peace and joy by the knowledge of Christ.

May the Lord confirm what is true and faithful in the lives of any among us, and as to what we lack, may His grace work in us suitable exercises. If we do not judge ourselves, we must be judged. May restoring grace work blessing far and wide. The Lord make us so happy in the expectation of glory with Christ that we shall pass on undefiled by the world.

Are we willing to be exercised in soul before God as to our condition and the condition of the assembly? We are not called to self-indulgence, but to deny ourselves and to take up our cross and to follow Christ. We are soldiers of Christ, called to conflict, and His discipline and rebuke and chastening is to purify and lead to great blessing and usefulness. If we know the afflictions of Christ, we will know the consolations of Christ. May we love the Lord, and His people, and count upon His delight to bless them. E. S. L.

King Saul:

THE MAN AFTER THE FLESH.

Chapter 1. THE STATE OF THE PEOPLE. Continued from December number.

When once God lays hold of an instrument, working upon the heart as well as the mind, He will doubtless continue to make use of it. So Samuel not only received the first message, of judgment upon Eli's house, but was made the channel of God's resumed relationship with the people. '' The Lord appeared again in Shiloh:for the Lord revealed Himself to Samuel in Shiloh, by the word of the Lord." What an honor-to be vised of God, after ruin had come into the very household of the priest. And is it not true that at this day, God passes by all pretentious officialism which has departed from Him, to reveal to babes the things hidden from the wise and prudent? The childlike, obedient spirit, which can say, "Speak Lord, for Thy servant heareth," will have a message.

Nor will the humble instrument fail of recognition, though the careless and thoughtless may mock. The Lord let none of his words fall to the ground; what he said came to pass, and his message commanded a respect which could not be withheld. The words spoken to Jeremiah are also appropriate to him:"Say not, I am a child:for thou shalt go to all that I send thee, and whatsoever I command thee thou shalt speak. Be not afraid of their faces; for I am with thee to deliver thee, saith the Lord. Behold I have put My words in thy mouth" (Jer. 1:7-9). No need to fear the face of man when one has seen the face of God. The weakest is as the mighty when he has the words of God on his lips. Let us remember this in these days, and faint not because of our feebleness. The Lord will let none of His words fall to the ground, though spoken by faltering lips.

We have seen now the state of the people. The mass, weak, prone to wander, and, without the strong hand of restraint, lapsing into carelessness and idolatry; the priestly family degenerated into senile feebleness and youthful profligacy; but, in the midst of all this, a feeble, prayerful remnant who still count upon God, and obtain His recognition. This remnant finds expression, in God's mercy, through the gift of prophecy, raised up by Him as a witness against the abounding apostasy, and the channel of His dealings with the people. Sad and dark days they were, but just the time for faith to shine out brightly and to do valiantly for the Lord.

Chapter 2. THE CAPTIVITY IN THE PHILISTINES' LAND. (1 Sam. 4:)

As has been frequently noticed, the enemy who could successfully attack the people of God, represent in a spiritual way their state, or the natural consequence of their state. Throughout Judges we find various enemies, assailing different parts of the nation and at different times. At one time it is the Moabites on the East; at another, Jabin king of Hazor on the North. The first suggests carnal profession, and the second rationalism. The last enemy spoken of in Judges was the Philistines. Samson, last, strongest and feeblest of the judges fought against them during his life-when he was not having associations with them. He did much, in an indefinite way, to keep them from completely bringing the people into bondage, but never wrought a thorough deliverance. He died in captivity, and though he slew at his death more than he had in his life, he left them still practically unconquered.

These are the enemies that confront Israel during the priesthood of Hophni and Phinehas, and all through the reign of Saul. So we must see afresh what they represent in a spiritual way. Living in the territory which rightly belonged to Israel-their own land-they stand for that which is closest to the people of God without being really such. They drifted into the land – exemplifying their name, "wanderers,"-along the shore of the Mediterranean sea, the short way from Egypt. For them there was need neither of the sheltering passover, the opened Red Sea or Jordan's flow arrested. They stand thus for the natural man intruding into the things of God.

That this has been done in its full measure by Rome, none can question. She has taken possession of the heritage of God's people, and settled there as though it belonged by right to her, giving her name to the entire Church, or claiming to be "the Church," just as Palestine, the whole land, got its name from these Philistines. Rome with its profession, its ritualism remains the great enemy which menaces the inheritance of the saints. It is to be feared that Protestantism, like Samson, has but feebly dealt with this adversary, and too often adopted its principles to be a true and victorious deliverer from it. They still remain in probably greater vigor than ever, ready to make fresh inroads and to lay waste more of the land of God's people.

But Rome as a system appeals to man's carnal nature. It may be said that all mere carnal, formal religion is Rome in principle. At any rate, doubtless, the Philistines stand for all that is of nature in the things of God. Any carnal trafficking in unfelt, unrealized truth is but the intrusion of the flesh-mere Philistinism. This explains the constant tendency toward ritualism, and so toward Rome. Nor will this cease till the "mother of harlots" gathers back her children, representing apostate Christendom, after the removal of the Church to heaven. Rome will again be supreme.

A state of the people like that which we have been tracing, with its carnal and corrupt priesthood and no power to act for God, would be just suited for the degradation now imminent. Indeed in Hophni and Phinehas we see but Philistines under another name. God will show His people outwardly where they are inwardly. How often in the individual soul, and in the Church at large, are the outward sins but the expression of a state of heart which has long existed.

We are not told the occasion of the conflict here, whether there was some fresh inroad of the enemy, some additional imposition of tyranny, or whether in fancied strength the people arrayed themselves against them. This last would almost seem likeliest from the language, "Israel went out against the Philistines to battle." "Pride goeth before destruction," and self-sufficiency is ever the sign of an absence of self-judgment. Many times do God's people go out to do battle against a spiritual foe in a state of soul which would make victory impossible, which it would really compromise God's honor were He to give it. This is why it is absolutely imperative that there should be the judgment of self, before there can be a true warfare against outward foes.

But one defeat is not enough to teach the people their need, and the folly of their course. Four thousand fall before the enemy, and surely this should have brought them on their faces in confession and prayer to know the reason of this defeat. Had they waited upon God, they would soon have learned the reason, and doubtless have been spared the further loss of the next battle. But evidently they think nothing of their own condition, and the only remedy they can think of is truly a Philistine one. They will have something outward and visible brought along which will quicken the failing courage of the people, and strike terror into the hearts of their enemy. It does both, for when the ark is brought into the camp, a great shout is raised by Israel, and the Philistines are smitten with fear.

The ark had led them to victory before. It had gone before them in the wilderness, "to search out a resting-place"; it had stopped Jordan for them to pass over, and had led them about Jericho till its walls fell. Naturally they think of it as the very throne of God, and substitute it, in their minds, for God Himself.

But God is holy, and can never be made to link His name with unholiness. The ark was His resting-place in Israel, but He cannot be forced to countenance sin. So His ark can no more overthrow the enemy than Israel could previously. The hosts of Israel are overthrown, Hophni and Phinehas are slain, the ark is taken captive, and carried in triumph and placed in the house of Dagon, thus giving the glory of the victory to the idol.

What food for solemn thought is here. No outward privilege, no past experiences of God's presence, no correctness of position or doctrine can take the place of reality of soul before God. None can ever say they have a claim upon God because of any thing except Christ Himself laid hold of, and presented in true self-distrust and brokenness, with real, true judgment of all in the life that would dishonor the Lord.

This is the meaning of "Ichabod," the glory has departed. It refers to the ark, the glory of God's manifest presence; but this can only abide among a broken, self-judged people. In a real sense, we have the Spirit of God always abiding with us, but if that is allowed in the heart or life which grieves Him, all outward and manifest approval of God ceases. He will permit the badge of His presence to be removed. Persons will lose the joy of the Lord individually, and the candlestick of collective testimony be removed, if God's warnings fail to bring His people into their true place. Let us ponder this lesson, remembering that none have a claim for permanent recognition, but only as God's holy presence is not dishonored.

Poor Eli ! he had died long before, so far as service for God was concerned. His lesson is written large and clear. May we have grace to learn it. The way to "Ichabod "is careless weakness when God's honor is involved. He bears patiently, but there is a limit to His forbearance, and when there is "no remedy," He must allow the due results of His people's weakness, folly and unfaithfulness.

(To be continued.)

Answers To Correspondents

QUES. 1.-I have been puzzled about the word "hate "or "hateth" as it occurs in different passages in the Bible, and I have been unable to reconcile Luke 14:26 with 1 Jno. 3:15; also ninth and eleventh verses of the second chapter.

In Rom. 9:13, the word occurs again, and I have difficulty in thinking that the Lord used the word "hate" in the sense that we use it now.

ANS.-Undoubtedly the Lord used the strong expression "hate," not absolutely but in the way of comparison. One must be prepared for His sake to renounce father, mother, sister, brother. "He that loveth" any of these more than Him, is not worthy of Him. We are in this way to hate our own lives also. The meaning is evident. The strength of the expression is to arrest the attention. The Lord's claim is absolute.

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The fisherman does not spend the whole of his time in fishing, though about fishing; he uses many hours in mending his nets. And those who fish for souls need prepare for their work by reading and prayer. H. F. W.

Faith And Faith's Testimony To Christ.

Gen. 13:14-18; 14:1-24; 15:1.

What a peaceful scene closes the thirteenth chapter of Genesis-a scene which is marked by faith, as the early part of the chapter is marked by the absence of it. Lot chooses, and there is no faith in his choice. In fact, where is there ever to be found faith in this world-bordering child of God? for child of God he must be, according to 2 Pet. 2:7.But he is never said to walk with God, and God, on other hand, never links His name with Lot. The nearest we get to anything like faith as connected with him is that he accompanied Abraham, and this is not faith at all. Faith never has a creature for its object, be that creature a saint; but only God. But is not just now the intention to do more than simply allude to the fact that Lot chose, while Abraham let God chose for him, and to call attention to the contrast.

Let us pass on, then, to Abraham. God calls him to lift up his eyes and to look northward, southward, eastward and westward; and He calls upon him also to rise and walk through the land in its length and breadth, saying that all this land is his and his seed's. How much more he gets than Lot-how much better is God's choice for His people than their choice ! And to this gracious promise Abraham, as it were, bows his head in faith and worship; faith, because we read immediately of his tent, the witness that he is a pilgrim for the present and that the promise of the inheritance of the land is received in faith for the future; worship, for he builds an altar to Jehovah. Notice, moreover, that he dwells in Mamre, "the place of fatness." I repeat, then, how peaceful is this picture. God chooses; Abraham accepts the choice in faith and worship. But as we have in this chapter the strong contrast between Abraham and Lot, so we have in the next chapter a vivid contrast to this scene presented to us-the strife of kings- the strife of kings for mastery. We are brought, as it were, from the sanctuary in the thirteenth chapter out into the world of strife and turmoil in the fourteenth chapter. The four kings vanquish the five kings, and they take the spoils with "Lot, Abram's brother's son, and his goods." In other words, it is, as we may say, the same story of victory on the one hand and defeat on the other, that makes up the history of the world, one in the ascendency now, only to be put down, and another to take that place a little later; without stability and permanence anywhere, it is, and will continue to be, until He comes whose right it is to reign, nothing but overturn, overturn, overturn.

But how strikingly Abraham now brings into this scene in his own person, the hopes of the former chapter; he is the man of faith, whether in receiving God's promise, or in pursuing and conquering kings. He overtakes and overcomes the kings and recovers both Lot and Lot's goods and also the spoils. In the victory that has just before been recorded, do we not see, as it were, the potsherds striving with the potsherds-the world claiming the world from the world. In Abraham's victory, as I take it, we have faith laying hold of all for God, or, to speak more correctly, for Christ, as we shall see presently.

This brings us to Melchisedek, the central figure here; and how can anything be more perfect than the introduction of Melchisedek, type of Christ, just at this point ? For if Abraham lays hold of and recovers for God all that the world has claimed for itself, to whom shall it be given,-at whose feet shall it be laid ? Christ's surely. And so to Melchisedek Abraham gives tithes of all. Tithes which, while they witness that Abraham is owning Melchisedek's superiority and taking himself an inferior place, are surely also the pledge and earnest of the world being put into the hand of Christ; and that it is a question of the turning over of all things and all peoples to the Lord Jesus, the Melchisedek King-Priest, seems clear, for in the first place, God's millennial name, "most high God," possessor of heaven and earth, is four times used here :Melchisedek is "priest of the most high God" and blesses Abraham as of the "most high God;" and again he says:"Blessed be the most high God." Again Abraham lifts up his hand to Jehovah the "most high God," possessor of heaven and earth, that he will not be enriched from a thread to a shoe latchet by the king of Sodom. (Now the millennium is the time of Christ's universal dominion). And again, if we look at the 110th psalm, the Melchisedek King-Priest psalm, we see the same thing-His people are made willing in the day of His power; His enemies are put beneath His feet-His dominion is universal. How perfect, then, that this One whom God has appointed heir of all things should be brought before us just after Abraham has, as it were, taken possession of all things, not for himself, but for Another, and that he should bring them, in spirit, as we may say, and lay them at the feet of the Lord Jesus Christ.

What a blessed thing to know, too, that God's King is God's Priest. The two offices are joined in one Person ; the One that holds the scepter over men is the One that was Priest for men's sins, and throughout the ages of the Lord's dominion this blessed fact abides for the joy and worship of all His own in heaven and earth. And, again, as it seems to me, the most awful of all bitter remembrances among the lost will be that the Name to which they bow is the name which means "Saviour;" the One whom they own as King and Lord is the One who died that they might have been delivered from the flames of an eternal hell. Notice how similar lines of thought with reference to Christ are brought before us in meditating on the fifth of Revelation. The Lion of the tribe of Judah, the One who is rising up and going forth with resistless strength, is immediately described as "a Lamb as it had been slain." In other words, God's King is the Man who was down here amongst men, perfected as a Priest, by acquaintance with infirmity, need and sorrow (Heb. 4:14, 15, 5:7-10).

The remark was made just now that Abraham did not claim the world for himself; he really only claims it in faith for Christ, and now that he has, in spirit, presented it to Him, he declines to have anything further to do with it – he turns it all over to Sodom's king for the present. He has been enriched by God, by God's promise, and he will not be enriched at the hands of the world ; he will rather wait in faith to inherit those promises. Refusing anything from the king of Sodom seems to be as beautiful an expression of faith, in its way, as is the act of giving tithes of all to Melchisedek, which we have just been looking at. And now, passing on to the opening of the 15th chapter, we have God's beautiful answer to Abraham's faith. Has he just now refused to be enriched by the world? Then God will enrich him Himself, yea, enrich him by Himself:" I am thy shield and thy exceeding great reward." In the 13th chapter God gave him a goodly portion – the land of Canaan – but here He gives him something quite beyond this – God Himself is his portion :How blessed!

So that we see Abraham as a man of faith, whether a pilgrim and a worshiper, as we first looked at him, or whether as the same pilgrim (for we read that they went and told "Abraham the Hebrew" – the passenger-the pilgrim), laying hold of the spoils for God and bringing those spoils to God's king-priest; or again, refusing aught of those spoils for himself from the king of Sodom. And when the Lord Jesus affirms that "Abraham rejoiced to see my day and he saw it and was glad" does it not seem that this would apply to the occasions we have been looking at as well as, surely, to others also? Is it not indeed faith, and faith's testimony to Christ? F. G. P.

A Prophecy Of Spring.

Song of Songs 2:8-13.

The voice of my Beloved !
His shout of joy I hear !
Behold, behold, He cometh !
Behold, He draweth near !

He leaps upon the mountains !
He skips upon the hills !
He swiftly draweth nearer !
My bosom throbs and thrills !

A roe is my Beloved !
A young hart, bounding, free !
And see! behold, He standeth
Behind our wall-'tis He !

He standeth and He gazeth
In through the windows there,
And through the lattice showeth
Himself-O vision fair !

Thus came my own Beloved-
His shadow did I see;
And as He stood revealed,
Thus spake He unto me:-

'' Rise up, -My love ! take wing, my dove !
My fair one, come away !
The winter's blast-lo, it is past,
The rain is o'er and gone at last,
And spring holds quickening sway !

"On earth, once drear, glad flowers appear,
While nature trills her lay;
The singing bird to song is stirred-
The turtle in our land is heard,
Soft cooing through the day !

"The sap flows free in the fig-tree-
She putteth forth green figs;
The tendrils twine on budding vine-
The air is filled with fragrance fine
From blooming boughs and twigs !
"Arise, my love ! take wing, my dove !

O fair one, fly away !
The winter's blast-lo, it is past,
The rain is o'er and gone at last:
Come, fair one, haste away ! "

F. A.

Answers To Correspondents

QUES. 24.-What is the New Testament teaching as to the Lord's day ? I have been much exercised as well as grieved to see the carelessness of many as to that day, who might be expected to know better. Some have quoted Rom. 14:5:"One man esteemeth one day above another ; another esteemeth every day alike." They have said this provides for entire liberty on the Lord's day. Is this correct ?

ANS.-Our brother's question, not the only one on the same subject received of late, touches upon a most dangerous error, and a very common failure among the people of God. In the first place, the scripture adduced from Romans has nothing to do with the subject, but refers to the observance of Jewish days and ordinances, and is similar to the passage in Col. 2:16, 17. "I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day " (Rev. 1:10), shows that the day is one of spiritual and not carnal observance. But does the fact that we are not under law but under grace give us license to live in carelessness? Supposing even that it were not contrary to the New Testament, have we not a responsibility to give no occasion of stumbling to the world ? What does the world think of a Christian who engages in unnecessary labor on the Lord's day? What is the effect upon a man's own family ? Further, what can be said of the spiritual state of one who, with all the week for secular work, takes the precious hours of the Lord's day for his own use ? Surely there is more than enough to fill and occupy the few hours of that day of privilege. We meet to remember and to worship our Lord, and again to preach His precious gospel, and to teach the young. There are sick or needy ones to be visited, and a few precious hours to be devoted to reading and meditation. Oh, the folly of wasting such a day with temporal labor. Let the beloved people of God turn from the thought with abhorrence. We are persuaded that it is one of the signs of the latter day apostasy. God is despised, His word neglected, aud the day of our Lord's resurrection made a time of carnal enjoyment or worldly business ! May we be aroused as to this, and make conscience before God of our conduct on this day.

QUES. 25.-Please explain Isaiah 28:23-29.

ANS.-The connection shows that the prophet is pronouncing God's judgment upon both Ephraim and Judah. He foretells the conflicts of the last days-the coming of the overflowing scourge, the Assyrian, or king of the north ; the alliance with the Beast, or head of the western empire, in order to ward off the attack ; and the end in overthrow and death for those who thus make lies their refuge. Then God tells of His provision in the "tried corner stone," Christ, and of the security of those who believe in Him. It will thus be seen that the scene is laid in the last days, and the purposes of God will be fulfilled in His "strange work " of judgment. In this connection he asks, Is it always plowing time? After the land is plowed, is not the seed sown-each in its appointed way and place? Then later comes the threshing-time. So with His people :God is longsuffering, but He will not always be preparing the soil. Nay, He has plowed His people and cast in the seed of His truth. Then conies the harvest aud threshing time when He will beat out and thresh-the time of judgment. All will be done in divine wisdom and suitability. But judgment will surely come.

This principle can also doubtless be applied in other connections. Everything is to be done in due proportion. In preaching the gospel, we are to plow the ground and then cast in the seed. Souls are to be convicted of sin and then the precious gospel has a place in which to take root. Then comes too the time of discrimination when souls are set free from the chaff of unreality and manifested as precious grain. But this is only a secondary application of the figure.

QUES. 26.-Referring to the article in the October number on Verbal Inspiration, where it is shown that if all the periods of captivity during the time of the Judges were added together, it would be found that exactly this number of years was to be deducted from the entire period from the deliverance out of Egypt till the building of the temple. The lesson was that God cannot use lost time, spent in captivity to evil. But there is another captivity of eighteen years which was omitted, and which seems to overthrow the teaching. Judges x, 6-9 was not included. What is the reason for this ?

ANS.-This has been noticed before, and the answer given, which seems probable, that this captivity was not a complete one. They were oppressed by many enemies, but we are told they were "sore distressed." For instance, the Ammonites only threatened, had not completely taken possession. We see that Jephthah prevented them from going further. Thus the lesson remains, and we see God's desire to count as much as He can. It might be well to mention that another explanation is that these periods of oppression were not necessarily at different times, but some of them may have occurred at the same time in different parts of the nation. Of one thing we may be certain. God's chronology, as all else, will be found to be absolutely correct, and apparent contradictions are not really that.

QUES. 27.-What are the four fasts referred to in Zechariah 8:19?

ANS.-They could not be regular set times such as the day of Atonement, for these were never abrogated. The whole connection would show that they were special commemorative fasts connected with the captivity. We find these dates given in Jeremiah-

The fourth month, Jerusalem was taken (Jer. 52:6).

The fifth month, the temple was burned (Jer. 52:12, 13).

The seventh month, Gedaliah was slain by Ishmael, and the remnant scattered to Egypt (Jer xli, 1, etc.)

The tenth month, the siege of Jerusalem began (Jer. 52:4).

These would seem clearly to be the events commemorated by the fasts referred to, and therefore in the restoration they would be changed to feasts.

The Household.

If it was of sovereign grace that Abraham was called out of his heathen state and made to know the living and true God; it was no less of that grace to be one born in his house, for Abraham was one of whom God could say:"I know him, that he will command his children and his household after him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord, to do justice and judgment."

To know God was no small matter now to Abraham ; he appreciated it, he found his delight in it, and to communicate it to his house would be a moral necessity in his soul, and thus subject it to that God to whom to be subject is the height of man's blessing and honor.

To be born, therefore, in such a man's house is but a part of the sovereign grace that called and separated him from his heathen state and position.

What a high and blessed, as also responsible position, therefore, is that of a Christian at the head of his household – God's means of perpetuating the knowledge of Himself in a world where everything tends to destroy it. Alas, for the Christian who fails to realize this, and who allows his house to drift at will. Woe also to the child who fails to recognize the grace of God in having been born in a Christian household, where God's character was manifested, the truth daily taught and practiced, and everything ordered to maintain what God loves and delights in.

As Abraham's children got more and more remote from him, they lost more and more the knowledge of God, until finally God Himself-the God whom Abraham had so readily recognized, and adoringly entertained, when He passed by his tent door-visiting them in the Person of His Son Jesus Christ, was unrecognized, hated, and cast out by them. Their punishment is not small, but how much greater must become the punishment of those who sin against greater light and blessing.

Oh, that every Christian man, in the energy of the Spirit of God, would shake off all this guilty indifference, this unholy pursuit after earthly goods, this dreadful idleness of soul, which cannot trouble itself with the pains of household government; this self-will, which forbids the government of self; and, looking at himself and all his house in the light of the glory where our Lord is now, which is soon to be manifested and we taken into it, take up his task in faith, and give honor to the God who has shown us such marvelous grace and love.

Much failure in detail will even such a man of God have to confess as he goes; but as Abraham will yet behold the glorious ending of his faith in his house when Israel is in her glory, so will every man who has treasured up in his heart the promises of God, and, in faith, turned them into practice.
P. J. L.

Brief Bible Studies For Young Christians.

VIII. THE BELIEVER’S POSITION AND CONDITION.

It is important to a correct understanding of Scripture as well as to peace and rest of soul to the child of God, to see clearly the distinction between his position, or righteous standing before God, and his earthly walk. The former is unalterable, unchanging, while the second may be, and alas is, variable.

1. Position, before God, is alone by the finished atoning work of Christ, and from the moment He is appropriated by faith, is permanent and eternal. Faith alone is the means of obtaining this priceless boon of God's grace, and no works of the sinner, or deeds of the believer, can add or aid in any way to obtaining it, or keeping it when once obtained. The title to it is Christ, and it is the free gift of God's grace as fully to the youngest, weakest, most ignorant babe in Christ, as to the oldest, strongest, most learned saint on earth. It is a position of new relationship.

"As many as received Him, to them gave He the power (right, privilege) to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name " (John 1:12).

"For ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus" (Gal. 3:26; see also i John 3:2; 5:i). Joint heirship with Christ.

"And if children, then heirs; heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ" (Rom. 8:17). Royalty and nearness.

"Unto Him that loved (loveth) us, and washed us from our sins in His own blood, and hath made us kings and priests unto God and His Father " (Rev. 1. 5, 6). Complete forgiveness, justification, and peace.

"Be it known unto you therefore, men and brethren, that through this Man is preached unto you forgiveness of sins; and by Him all that believe are justified from all things, from which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses" (Acts 13:38, 39).

" Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God, through our Lord Jesus Christ "(Rom. 5:i).

These and many more blessings as to position before God are the unvarying portion of the believer and are dependent upon Christ alone.

See also i John 5:i; i Pet. 1:4, 5; Eph. 1:ii; 2:13; 1:13; 5:30; 1:3; Heb. 10:19; i Cor. 6:19; John 6:47.

2.This position is unchangeable and forever.

Every one of these gracious blessings is the portion of every child of God, the moment such by faith receives, or believes on the Lord Jesus Christ, and is entirely apart from religiousness, character, ordinance, or prayer of the recipient either before or after such faith displayed.
Being then dependent upon Christ's work, they must be the permanent possession of all to whom conferred, for "whatsoever God doeth it shall be forever; nothing can be put to it, nor anything taken from it:and God doeth it, that men should fear before Him" (Eccl. 3:14).

Hear the words of the Lord Jesus:

" I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any pluck them out of My
hand. My Father, which gave them Me, is greater than all; and no man is able to pluck them out of My Father's hand " (John 10:28, 29).

" And ye are complete in Him " (Col. 2:10).

"Wherefore He is able also to save them to the uttermost (forevermore, margin) that come unto God by Him, seeing He ever liveth to make intercession for them" (Heb. 7:25).

"For by one offering He hath perfected forever them that are sanctified" (Heb. 10:14).

"Clean every whit" (John 13:10), "no condemnation" (Rom. 8:i; John 3:18, 36). "Sealed unto the day of redemption" (Eph. 4:30). Thus backsliding Peter could say, " Kept by the power of God" (i Pet. 1:5:see also Jude 24; Eph. 5:25-27 etc.).

3. A believer's condition may be far below his exalted position and yet not affect it.

This is, alas, only too true. The church at Corinth were "sanctified in Christ and called saints" (i Cor. 1:2), and yet it is only necessary to read through the epistle to discover the truth of this.

The apostle writes of them,

"But ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified in the flame of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God" (i Cor. 6:ii), and yet he speaks of them as "carnal" (3:1-3), "puffed up" (4:18), and resorting to law (6:7). A striking evidence of this is seen in the apostle Peter; compare carefully Matt. 16:17 with ver. 23. And of the same Corinthians even while in the above state it is written, that their body was "the temple of the Holy Ghost" and they were not their own but God's; see i Cor. 6:19 20.

4. The effect of this should be a holy obedient walk.

It should not for a moment be thought that because all this is by the free undeserved favor of God, that a believer has no responsibility consequent upon it, or may walk loosely, or in self-will; far from it, God in grace having placed one in such a position requires he should walk as becometh the dignity of the same.

To the same Corinthians the apostle writes,

"The love of Christ constraineth us" … because "He died for all, that they which live, should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto Him which died for them, and rose again" (2 Cor. 5:14, 15).

"Be ye therefore followers (imitators) of God, as dear children," "walk in love," "fornication, and all uncleanness, or covetousness, let it not be once named among you, as becometh saints. Neither filthiness, nor foolish talking, nor jesting, which are not convenient; but rather giving of thanks. . . . For ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord:walk as children of light" (Eph. 5:1-8).

" As obedient children, not fashioning yourselves according to the former lusts in your ignorance, but as He which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation" (i Pet. 1:14, 15).

" For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revelings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries" (i Pet. 4:3).

"Dearly beloved, I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul" (i Pet. 2:ii).

"Wherefore, if ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world, why, as though living in the world, are ye subject to ordinances" Col. 2:20).

" If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God." "Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth" (Col. 3:i, 5; see also Eph. 4:17-32; 6:1-9; Phil. 2:3, 12-16; 4:5-9; Col. 3:i; 4:6; i Thess. 5:12-22).

"And the very God of peace, sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit, and soul, and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ" (i Thess. 5:23). B. W. J.

Hymn.

The bands of death Thou brokest,
Almighty Saviour Thou,
And to Thy rest hast brought us;
No more at distance now.

Thou hast Thy work completed
Which was for us performed;
Thy sufferings are ended,
And our heart's fear disarmed.

In Thee to us is given
Salvation ever sure;
Thyself our precious portion,
Our life that shall endure.

And by the Spirit guided
Thy yoke is light to bear;
Thou hast the way made ready,
Dost go before us there.

Who can Thy mercy fathom,
Who what Thy love has wrought!
To Thee, while on our journey,
Let constant thanks be brought.

(From the German.)

The Observance Of Christmas.

With many the associations of Christmas are suggestive of childhood's joys and of tender reminiscence of scenes of delight in the home circle. In this spirit it is perhaps still observed socially in the family, for the children's sake, by some who are aware that the day itself, in its religious claim and character, has no foundation in Scripture. " The question that presents itself therefore is:Can the day be observed innocently in this social way, apart from its false religious character ?

It is said that the day celebrated as Christmas, was once the day of a wicked heathen feast called Saturnalia; and the season suggests the winter solstice as the occasion of the feast-the period of daylight being about to increase. The day being handed down as a Christian festival, and its name, "Christ – Mass," tells the rest. A corrupt church, a corrupt ritualistic sentiment, introducing a novelty among many other novelties, to please-not God, but men."?:This consideration, of course, is a very serious one, and calls to mind a fertile source of shame and sorrow to the Church:self-will at work-human choice in place of obedience; as among the Galatians, giving occasion for the rebuke, "Ye observe days and months and times and years. I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain."

Let us consider the serious nature of this departure from simplicity. It is that setting aside God's word which, as an evil principle at work, has wrought confusion and corruption far and wide in the Church's history, as of old it wrought the ruin of Israel.

This, then, is the meaning of the day-the establishment of a religious custom, of a sacred day without any command from God. If we do this, where shall we stop ? There is no stopping place; and the evil result we have referred to in the previous paragraph.

What, then, is the obligation of the faithful Christian ? Should he not consider the observance of the day as a dishonor to the Lord, being disobedience, and therefore opening the door to further departures and dangers, as we have seen ? "And as to observing it socially with the children in the home circle, ignoring its origin and ecclesiastical claims, can this be done if we have at heart the things that are Christ's ? Can we do it without giving up our character as warriors-leaving to others more faithful than ourselves to fight the Lord's battles and defend the truth ? Would it not be a compromise as to the truth, a provision for self indulgence, and a dangerous allowance of the enemy within our borders ?The very notice that may be taken of a refusal to observe the day becomes a testimony to the truth, both to people without and to the children at home. And the absence of such testimony tends to perpetuate indifference to an evil which the day represents.

The day is enjoyed with zest by the world in common with the Church, and this is a sufficient warning to us. It is one of the wiles of the devil, against which we need to take to ourselves the "whole armor of God." It is a victory of Satan if he can get our hearts attached to a thing that is unscriptural and worldly in its origin and character. Such an attachment must enfeeble us in the conflict for the enjoyment of our Canaan possessions, and mar the clearness of testimony in the family that should direct the children in the way of reverence for God's word and uncompromising obedience.

" The blessing of the Lord it maketh rich, and He addeth no sorrow with it" (Prov. 10:22). E. S. L.