Tag Archives: Volume HAF47

The Defense Of God's People

"The conies are but a feeble folk, yet make they their-houses in the rocks" (Prov. 30:26).

The wisdom of the four creatures named in Prov. 30:24-28 provides against future wretchedness, secures protection from enemies, insures harmony of action, and appreciates a good home.

What is emphasized in the conies is the wisdom that makes "their houses in the rocks," since they are incapable of defending themselves from enemies.

Many an animal develops ferocious fighting qualities", when attacked. Even a cornered deer has been known-to slay its assailant. A hare may escape imminent peril' by its speed. A skunk can baffle a dog by the offensive odor it rejects from its glands. And there is a fish that escapes the devourer by emitting a sepia fluid which darkens the water and conceals it from its pursuer. But a coney has no such means of protection as these.

The people of God are like the conies; they have no' inherent powers of defense. Were they left unguarded they could not escape him who goeth about "as a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour." They are dependent upon the Rock of Ages as their abiding place. And their instinct in all ages leads each one to say:"Lead' me to the rock that is higher than I" (Ps. 61:2).

In his epistle James says:"If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally,, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him" (1:5). But when one makes this request, how does God grant it? He calls attention to His Son, for He is "the wisdom of God" (1 Cor. 1:24). It is possible to have Bible knowledge, and even ability to expound it; but, good as that is, more is needed:for if we do not habitually hold the truth in intimacy with Him who is the truth, we become prone to use it in the energy of our fleshly minds and are liable to satanic influence.

How indispensable is Christ as His people's support! "The name of the Lord is a strong tower:the righteous runneth into it, and is safe" (Prov. 18:10). No imagined valor of ours will avail in the kind of warfare we are called to wage. And if, while combating the flesh in others, we allow it in ourselves, we will surely not have the guidance of Him who invites our trust, and will fail to recognize His purpose in the place of trust He accords His people. In this place, if simply accepted, He encompasses us with all that His name signifies. What He is, He is for His own. God has arranged this. "Of God" He is made unto us "wisdom and righteousness, and sanctification and redemption" (1 Cor. 1:30). Of course this is ever true, irrespective of the measure of our apprehension of it. Nevertheless it must be apprehended if it is to affect us in a practical way. This can only be done as we hold it in communion with the One in whom it is set forth.

In every question that arises to perplex and entangle the Lord's people, He presents Himself, saying:I am unto you Wisdom; use Me! As a friend shows himself friendly, so the Friend who "sticketh closer than a brother" is with us in adversity, that we may find in Him succor for the need of the moment. He asks us to use Him.

Thirty-four years ago an acquaintance of the writer paid a visit to England, his native land. When there he called upon C. H. Mackintosh. After conversation, the author of the "Notes" directed attention to a table in the room whereon lay an assortment of books and pamphlets, urging the visitor to take all he desired. As he helped himself to a selection half an inch thick, C. H. M. said:"Love provides, faith appropriates; your faith must be very small!" The visitor felt the force of our venerable brother's remark, and took a larger supply of the wholesome literature lying before him.

Let us apply this to ourselves. Our Lord is available to us in every circumstance. And no stress nor danger can arise which will find Him lacking in the qualities necessary to our guidance and protection. Since He has sent us into the world, even as the Father sent Him into it, since we are called to live on His account, even as He lived on the Father account, it is evident that the purpose of our sojourn here is the promotion of His interests in a hostile world. Engaged in this we shall find Him our safeguard. R. J. Reid

  Author: R. J. R.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Work In The Foreign Field

We are thankful to have received, just in time for this issue, quite recent tidings of the work in Africa. The letters received follow. Let us especially remember our brother Searle and his wife who continue the work at Irumu, and let us not forget to give thanks for the tidings of precious souls saved.

"Nyankunde." Beloved in Christ:- Jan.4,1929.

You will be glad to know that there continues to be blessing on our feeble efforts here, and the Lord in His goodness has caused some to believe on Him unto salvation. It has been a joy to hear some bold confessions of faith in Christ, for, as we all well know, such a confession is contrary to nature. The wife of the evangelist of whom I have often spoken, Mikairi, has also recently been converted, and we are very glad not only for her sake, but also for his. She was very stubborn against the truth, coming of a very proud and haughty tribe, the Bahema, and for these three years and more had shown only opposition and indifference. But at last she is the Lord's, and recently in a meeting for the women she rose and confessed the Lord's name as that of her Saviour and owned her faith in Him. Since then it has been good to see her coming into believers' meetings, and the air with which she comes in and takes a front seat, all smiling and happy, is enough to convince anyone that she has now what she did not have before.

Mikairi has left the work of the four out schools where he has been going so faithfully. I took him with me when I went on safari to look over the territory beyond the Ituri River and to look for a new site, and what he saw there was much laid upon his heart, and he wanted to go and work there. We have helped him in this purpose, and on New Year's day Mr. Searle and I went with him and another young Christian boy, and they are located in the village of a large Walesi chief, Pauwanza, between Nyankunde and the new site at Mambasa. These Walesi are very, very glad to have him, and the interest there is certainly exceptional. As soon as he gets a house up his wife will follow him; the chief of course will help in this. We have applied to the government for one hectare of land, known officially as a "chapel site," and this we have lately learned is the law, and the reason why many are opposed to Protestant work is because we failed in this detail. I must say that I have never received such co-operation from the official in the district there as in this case. The Lord's hand we feel is in all this.

I will start the clearing within a week or so at Mambasa, the new site. I have been delayed by several urgent cases here which I could not leave. I have sent ten men on ahead, having chosen some from those we taught here, sawyers, masons, etc., so the building there will go ahead a little more rapidly, we trust, D.V. I will put up one small room for myself; this will take about one day. Then I will put up a temporary house of poles, thatched on roof and walls with a broad forest leaf. When this is finished I will take my family over. The road does not reach to the site yet, but will within a few months. After that I will then start at once making burned bricks for our house, the Schoolhouse, and the Hospital, which latter will serve a better purpose and be even more needed than here at Nyankunde. Here we are near the Gov't Hospital, but there nothing is done medically, and there is much need for it. The temporary schoolhouse I will put up at the same time as our own house. At the present writing the site is only a flat hill of very heavy tropical forest, but we hope to start work and make a clearing very soon, and ought to have a good start, D.V., by the time you receive this.
The distance from here to Mambasa is about 100 miles. The intervening district we hope to reach, Mikairi being located at an important point. All the native population has been moved out of the forest and placed along the new road, and this makes it very easy to reach them. Mr. Searle will go from here with his motor-bike, and I will be passing back and forth, and by this means we hope to reach these people as well as stop to encourage Mikairi. Mr. Searle will also be able to go out more in other directions now that he has a motor-bike. The work is but begun here at Nyankunde, and there is much more to be done, both in the out-lying districts and the establishment of the assembly here. Yet it seemed wisest to carry on work in two places rather than for two of us to remain here.

By the Lord's mercy we are all well. The result of Miss De Jonge's operation was very satisfactory, and she is now gaining in weight, and is well. For this we thank our God. The rest of us are also well. The children very well and growing fast. They are a great joy to us, John is getting out of his baby stage and is all boy.

R. C. Woodhams, M.D.

Jan. 16, 1929.

I started a gang of men at the work of making a clearing in the forest at the Mambasa site last week. It is a big job to get the trees down, and then to get rid of the waste. The forest is so thick that one has difficulty in locating the sun on a bright day, and if it is cloudy it is actually dark. But I will make a large clearing, though leaving the untouched forest all around us. The great difficulty with this new work will be that of food for the men. The Mangwanas there have plenty of money as they trade in ivory, and many of them make no gardens but buy from others, and so food is scarce and high-priced. We must have very large gardens ourselves on this station, but that will take a little time to get under way. Your brother in Christ,

R. C. Woodhams, M.D.

Nyangkundi, Dec. 5,1928.

You must have heard of my prolonged illness culminating in a surgical operation at Kampala, Uganda. I have been back about three weeks from there, and am thankful to say that the Lord has in His mercy raised me up again so that I can take an active part in the work here. It is of Himself that Miss Wilson too has been restored to us after having had that awful blackwater fever.

This month is again vacation time at the native school, so that I can spend the time in language and translation work. Mrs. Searle and myself have again resumed the work in Kibira translation of John's Gospel. Our dry season is upon us, and my boys are hoeing up new ground for the next gardens, should the Lord leave us here yet a little while. Our gardens have not done so well this year, and at this time there is but little left in the way of vegetables. But our God always provides us with enough to eat. Bananas are very plentiful at this season and we prepare these in various ways.

The boys do the actual work of gardening, but need our supervision. They have no eye for the beauty of flowers and trees. When we tell them not to hoe up the young plants of flowers, they will ask, "Huh! Is it food?" But if perchance a spear of maize grows up in the midst of a bed of flowers, they will not pull this up. This is food!

We were again gladdened to hear that two natives confessed the Lord on Monday evening, when a class was being held for those who have expressed a desire to be baptized. One of these two is my boy, Ngwere, a sober-faced lad of about ten or eleven years of age. He has been with me about two years now, and is a nice little fellow. May they be kept close to the Lord amid much evil.

The Doctor has again gone out for a preaching trip to-day, along the road leading to the Walesi tribe. The Woodhams are eager to get over to their new site among this tribe, which is between eighty and ninety miles from Nyangkundi. We are making it a matter of prayer as to what the Lord would have Miss Wilson and me do- remain here, or go on to help in the work among the Walesi.

The need for workers is great, and with none yet coming out from the homelands to join us, the responsibility of reaching out as far as possible rests upon us who have been privileged to come out. Oh, that Christians at home would awaken to the great need in these heathen lands, and before the Lord say:"Here am I; send me." Surely it is the will of the Lord that those sitting in darkness shall come to the light of salvation in the Lord Jesus Christ (Rom. 10:13-15).

With love in our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, I am,

Your sister in Him,

(Miss) C. DeJonge.

Our brother Amies writes from Baka Mbule on Jan. 2nd:

I have been able to make several visits to the out-schools on the road to Inkongo lately, and it has been encouraging to see interest in different places. I have not been able to get away to the other districts for some time owing to all the work on the station at Baka Mbule and the illness of Mr. Westcott. There was a great deal of repair work to do after Mr. Althorp left for furlough, He had been on quite a few journeys and the station had been neglected. As much of my time has been occupied in repairs, I have been hindered in going about to the schools.

Yours in the blessed hope of His soon return,

Win. G. Amies.

P. S.-My wife just received the beautiful book you so very kindly sent her entitled, "In the Heart of Savage-dom." She had never read it before. She wants me to send you her sincere thanks and appreciation.

Translation of a part of letter of January 29, 1929 from brother Z. Fujimoto, Japan.

In the Lord esteemed, beloved brother and sister Craig:..

Upon all your family I am praying the Lord's abundant grace and peace.
On Sunday, the 27th, after the remembrance of the Lord, I showed your letter to all the brethren and sisters. Everyone was very joyful and together gave thanks to the Lord. We are very thankful that we always receive from the brethren and sisters in the Lord of your country warm greetings of love from the heart. We offer to them our deep thanks that at prayer their hearts are moved to remember this weak assembly. Please always extend to them our loving salutation.

Next I wish to give thanks for the money kindly sent to me by brother….. I desire to use it profitably for the gospel. I ought to send my thanks to brother…., but at present, while I am studying, my English is yet imperfect, I beg to be excused, and ask that you kindly thank him for me.

By the grace of the Lord, all our brethren and sisters in Japan are without change, and as usual kept by the. Lord.

Let me tell you somewhat of some happy matters of .the beginning of this year. Brother and sister Tsukiyama's new building being finished, in that new meeting place on the 2nd of the first month, we had the first meeting.

Specially brother Fukuchi of Kyoto was seen there and praying; he also gave us a happy word. This brother through faith has learned of the Lord's power,- in his isolation. Not being able to have meeting, and there being no friends to study with him; in the midst of this, the Lord having given him much strength and adding grace thereto, it is matter for thankfulness.

Next on the" 3rd day in our house (now I am with brother and sister Hosaka at 690 Iriyamazu, Iriaraimachi, Omori) we had a special thanksgiving meeting. Brother and sister Tsukiyama and twelve brethren and sisters were present, and we studied the Word. In the evening in the neighborhood we had roadside preaching. At this meeting brother Tohei Inoue, weak in the flesh, his body as though it would fall, yet manfully stood up, and hearing his earnest words made people weep. We also could not hear him without tears. (This brother has been much blest of the Lord. He constantly in his prayers asks the Lord that if it be His will, he may recover health to go into the Lord's service). We also sold some Testaments and distributed tracts at this roadside meeting, and returned home.

Next on the 6th day, after the remembrance of the Lord, we had the first monthly conference and tea-meeting, in the new hall. Thirty of the near-by brethren and sisters gathered, and we had a happy and enjoyable meeting.

Brother Nishihara is much blest of the Lord in taking the lead in issuing a circulating paper called "Gleanings," by means of the writing brush, and by this the brethren and sisters are tasting the grace of the Lord.

Finally, I pray that the Lord's protection may be over you all, Zenemon Fujimoto.

Showa, 4th year, 1st month, 29th day.

France, Feb. 13,1929.

Brittany is a mission-field like Africa, and generally speaking the people are religious in the same way as the Arabs. Unfortunately they have the most false notions as to the righteousness of God and as to His mercy, in which the papal church holds them. Pray for them, and do not cease to ask the Lord to lead them to his Gospel. Recently I have been in the large town of Nantes to meet a priest whom I formerly knew. He seems to understand the Word of God, whilst 'continuing in error. May the Lord give him the courage he lacks.

My best wishes to you and other American friends who are interested in the evangelization of Brittany,

E. Le Garrec.

B. Montllau writes from Spain, Feb. 2d, of his hopes to return to this country before the end of March, when his passport expires. With his large family he thinks of going to San Antonio, Texas, where he will be able to relieve brother Dresch, and his older boys can pursue their trades. From there he could make occasional visits to his old field in Costa Rica. Brother Dresch hopes to go into new fields in Mexico. May both have the Lord's guidance in all they do.

Chas. O. Kautto writes from Redlands, Calif. Feb. 6th:

We leave for San Francisco and Oakland on the 8th and are expecting to stay in Northern Calif, about two weeks, then go on to Oregon, Washington and British Columbia. We have not much time to spend anywhere as we are booked to sail for China on April 5th, on the Japanese S.S. "Siberia Maru." It is not as nice as some other lines but much cheaper. While in Los Angeles we had the privilege of hearing brother Booth a number of times.

Your continuing prayers will be much valued.

Affec'ly yours in Christ, Charles and Esther Kautto.

May the Lord give our dear brother and sister to realize His guiding hand in their return to that great and needy land and open the hearts of many to His love.

D. Lamorue, Alajuela, Costa Rica, writes Jan. 22:

Things are about as usual here. About fifty miles of the Northern E. R., which follows the river from an altitude of 6000 feet down to the lowlands, was destroyed by flood. At Martino, where I labor a good deal, the track was 5 feet under water. It is estimated that it will take until July to rebuild. All freight, etc., from Limon for the interior, has to go via Panama to Puntarenas, so everything is much delayed. I am hoping to take a trip down the line in March when there should not be over thirty miles to walk over the mountains. The E.R. company last week gave me my 7th annual pass, which is a great help in carrying the Gospel to both Spanish and English where others do not go. Will appreciate prayer for the work here and down the line.

With love to you and all,
D. Lamorue.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF47

The Fulness Of All Longing

This is a feverish age. Men and women scurry to and fro like ants disturbed on their hill. They do not know what is the matter, but they must ever be on the quest for new "thrills." They are athirst for a joy unknown- for something, anything, that will bring real satisfaction. They seek it in travel by land and by sea. They seek it in countless forms of pleasure, but even in travel and pleasure they are

"Restless, ill at ease,
Careworn with their pleasures,
Difficult to please."

They seek it in music and art, or in systems of philosophy that brace men to suffer with stoical indifference. They seek it in human attachment in man, woman or child, and are appalled at the insufficiency of the water-spring of even the tenderest human affection to satisfy their longings. They seek it in tobacco, in intoxicants, or in drugs, only to find, like one of old, that "All is vanity and vexation of spirit," and there is no profit under the sun. Over their spirits hang the deepening mists of dissatisfaction for which there seems to be no cause.

What they need above all else is to catch the vision of the futility of even the good things of this earth to satisfy soul-thirst, and to look above the sun to Him in whom all fulness dwells.

Do they crave love? In Him we have love that is boundless. "As the Father hath loved Me, SO have I loved you." We have all sorts of meters nowadays for measuring light, water, gas and other things for which we have to pay, but where is the meter that could measure the depth, or height, or length, or breadth of God's "AS" and "SO?" "His grace came to me in overflowing fulness," "without money and without price."

His is the love of a father, a love of supreme authority. 'He may not explain His reasons for many of His dealings with His children in His desire to draw forth from them an obedience that is absolute. He reserves the right to train each child in ways that He does not adopt with others. It is the love of a bridegroom-the most intimate love conceivable, personal, private, intense, absolutely unselfish and always sweetly fresh, a love that delighted to make the largest possible sacrifice for us, a love that anticipated our every need, and stored heaven and earth, land and sea, with every provision for it, a love that suffers keenly through our lack of responsive-ness, a love that grows ever sweeter, fuller, deeper.

Could we but add together the most fervent love of all the loving hearts in all the world, and to that the deepest love of all the saints in glory, and multiply the sum total by infinity, we might have a faint conception of what the love of God in Christ Jesus really is. When the sweet and rapturous vision of such love rises before us we are lost in the contemplation of its immensity. We seem no longer bound by space or time, but mount as if the body were forgotten by the soul into such "heavenly places." Never a heart athirst for love but He can satisfy to the uttermost.

"Nothing quenches thirst like water," said J. B. Gough, "pure life-giving water which God has provided for His creatures in the green glade and grassy dell where He brews it, and down, low down in the deepest valleys, the fountains murmur and the rills sing. And high up the mountain-top where the storm-cloud broods, and the thunder storms crash, and away, far out on the wide, wild
sea, where the hurricane howls music and the big waves roar the chorus, there He brews it-His life-giving water.

"And everywhere it is a thing of beauty, gleaming in the dewdrop, falling in the Summer rain, glistening in the ice gem till trees seem turned to living jewels, spreading a golden veil over the setting sun, or a white gauze around the midnight moon, sporting in the cataract, sleeping in the glacier, dancing in the hail-shower, folding its bright snow curtains softly about the wintry world-still always it is beautiful-this blessed LIFE WATER."

One alone could say:"If any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink." He alone can satisfy with that which lies dimly reflected in the life-giving water of earth.

Would that the language of a sainted woman of the fourteenth century might echo in the hearts of the men and women of the twentieth:

"I praise Thee for the everlasting tide-
The stream of Love Divine,
That from the heart of Calvary
Flows ever into mine.
How unfading is that pure delight:
How full the joy of that exhaustless tide
Which flows forever in its glorious might,
So still, so wide,
And deep we drink with sweet eternal thirst,
With lips forever eager as at first,
Yet ever satisfied."

Yes, in Him we may find the consummation of all our deepest longings for love, for life, for satisfaction, but that is not all. Who has not had longings for righteousness that knows no variableness? Natural goodness has its "ups" and "downs," but His is the same yesterday, today, and forever, and He longs to lift us out of what we are by nature into what He is, and to impute to us His righteousness.

And then there is the longing to know that we will be acceptable to God. A young officer brought to his father's home, after the war, a foreign bride his inferior in every way. Was she accepted? Such was the father's love for that son who had been reported "missing," and whom he received as it were from the dead, that he would have accepted anyone-"He hath made us accepted in the Beloved."

The longing for joy is seen in the numbers who seek it "under the sun," as we have seen, but what "fulness of joy" there is in "His presence" when,

"In darkness and in silence still and sweet
With blessed awe our spirits feel Him near."

Or when,

"In the silence of the dawn,
God shall speak His words of grace,
Light that round thy waking shone
Is the radiance of His face.
Yearning of His heart to thee
Fills the deep immensity."

Or when the skies are lowering, the winds contrary, when the sea begins to heave and everything seems against us, and we can look up and say,

"Only Heaven is better than to walk with Thee At midnight over a moonless sea."

Oh, for a pen that could pass on to the disappointed, dissatisfied, discouraged products of a twentieth century civilization a more worthy presentation of Him who fills my spirit's vision! May it serve as a background to throw into relief "The Chiefest among Ten Thousand," "The Altogether Lovely," our full, perfect and complete satisfaction.

"O Mystery of Love, whose simplest signs
Are hieroglyphics of another tongue,
I see Thee through a glass but darkly, beams
From the heavenly Orb of Love which shone
Ere the foundations of the heavens were laid,
Self-luminous, self-centered, self-contained,
………….. how shall I speak
Thy fulness, who can scarce conceive Thy least?
How gaze upon the sun, when one bright beam
Dazzles my feeble sight." B. Carr-Harris

  Author: B. C. H.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Work In The Foreign Field

AFRICA

The following letter from Dr. Woodhams gives an interesting account of progress being made on the new site and the intelligent interest shown by the natives in that locality:

Mambasa, Irumu, Congo Beige. April 2, 1929.

I am writing from the new Mambasa site, having been here over a week to personally give the work a boost. Natives succeed in getting very little done when left by themselves. I now have the ridge-pole' of the house up and we will soon be ready to put on the grass, or rather here in the forest we use a large flat leaf about fifteen inches long by eight broad. I have cleared about two acres and will soon increase this. I have had difficulty getting workmen, and therefore the delay from my first estimate of the date we would move. I had expected a hundred men, but have only had about twenty. This is accounted for by the fact that a large number are at work on the new road.

I have made a bargain with the nearby pigmy chief to bring me the leaves for the roof. He is to have his people bring six hundred loads of leaves and forty loads of bark used for tying, and for this I have promised him a large bag of salt-220 pounds. He was very much pleased over the bargain-and so was I. The pigmies are exempt from government taxation and are not called for any road work. In fact the Congo laws recognize them as entirely free, but they are learning to like salt and such things, and so come for work occasionally for a few days only. Of course they are a great asset to the government because of the ivory they bring in.

Our local sub-chief, Asani, is a young man, Mohammedan in profession. At first he showed great indifference to the gospel, taking the attitude that he was above listening to that. Of course he had never before heard a word of the gospel. But one day while reading aloud from that fine little booklet, "God hath spoken" (which we now have in Kingwana) he overheard read the verse, "All have sinned and come short of the glory of God." He was at once interested and showed his interest openly. He asked for a copy of the booklet-he had learned to read at a government school. The following Sunday he came to meeting and we spoke from John, 3rd chapter. Monday morning at 7:30 he was here again bringing his copy of John with him, and said, "Explain that to me again. I cannot remember all that you said yesterday." A week or so later he returned again with two of his friends and seated himself at the front of my house and said:"Here, I have brought these men to hear those words, because they weren't here on Sunday." I was on the verge of sitting down to lunch, but food had to wait that day. Last Sunday he was here again, and brought his three wives with him to the meeting. My prayer is that what the Lord has begun in his heart He will complete fully. And we trust this may be a sample of Mangwana interest to follow. Mohammedanism has given them nothing-while Christ offers them eternal life.

I recently cornered one of the chiefs on the question of "why" he worshipped Mohammed. He could give me no reason, and said if I would ask the head chief at Mambasa that he would be able to answer my question. So I proceeded to tell him why I worship who I worship.

Mikairi continues on at chief Pananza's village – a Walesi. The work is starting slowly there but I am sure that finally there will be fruit. Mikairi has shown a very faithful spirit, though he has not yet had much encouragement. After a good deal of delay a house has been built for him, but the school-house is not ready yet. And there have been the usual stories going around that all the children who attend school will later be sent far away. And it takes time to overcome that sort of opposition. It is a very raw tribe and they have not seen much of the white man yet.

Mr. Searle has been at one of the A. I. M. stations, where a number met together for conference on some matters of Kingwana and some questions to be settled. This will no doubt be of benefit in the end to all who are using this tract language.

Miss Wilson has had her family of orphan children much increased lately. I do net know the exact number at present, but they keep her very busy.

We are all well at Nyankunde, I am glad to say. We are thankful to our God for this mercy of health. We will soon have completed four years. I think that Misses De Jonge and Wilson are feeling the effect of four years more than any of the rest of us, and this because they have both been seriously ill during the past year. It will no doubt be best for them, should they be enabled of our God to do so, to return to America for recuperation next year. This of course is for them to decide and I have not heard them express themselves, but I feel free to mention this need on their behalf. Five years, under favorable conditions, is long enough for a first term in this part of Africa, though a second term can often safely be longer.

For our own part, my wife and I have no thought of furlough yet. We of course would like to see those whom we love in the Lord as well as those near by human ties. Yet we would prefer to see the work at Mambasa well started first. If even a few have found the Lord before we should leave, the light will be spread.

We look to our Lord to provide for His work and interests here in case any of our number should need to go on furlough. What the solution will be we have no idea, but having avoided the organization of a mission because of scriptural principles we know that our Head in Heaven is better able to care for His interests than a human mission head could. Yet in the practical working out of the matter we wish the fellowship of the Lord's saints with us about it.

With greetings in our Lord's Name, Your brother in Christ,

R. C. Woodhams.

We are glad also to quote from a letter written by Mrs. Woodhams:

"In this land we find Satan very real. Especially in this new work, he has tried in so many ways to thwart the work, and the Lord has shown He is stronger. We praise His name. People at the new site, Mambasa, are very eager for God's Word and in every way we feel we are in the Lord's will to go there. Satan's activity only strengthens our exercise. We have never been so accosted by him as just now and for the past six months, in fact ever since we felt the Lord would have us go to Mambasa. The work is progressing there wonderfully. Dr. is there most of the time, coming back here for food, supplies, etc. I went over with him to the forest a couple of weeks ago. He has a small 12×12 shack he lives in. We moved things just a bit closer and we both crowded in. I like the forest very much though. I suppose after we have lived there for a year we will be glad to get into the open country again. The people are very different too, very much higher mentally, and considered wealthy, making their money trading in ivory. They are a diseased race, however, so that we are planning on a large hospital work."

How good to remember the word of the Lord which says, ''When the enemy shall come in like a flood, the Spirit of the Lord shall lift up a standard against him" (Isa. 59:19).

The following extract from Brother Searle is also very interesting:

"There has been increasing interest and attendance at our Christian meetings, besides several have recently confessed the Lord. We are seeking to bring the believers into the full knowledge of the Lord's mind regarding gatherings and ministry, etc., and the relationship of Christ and His Church. May the Lord lead them on and reveal His mind to them and to us."

CHINA

We have received a letter from brother Kautto posted from Honolulu "en route," in which he tells of a pleasant journey so far, and looks forward to his arrival in China. Conditions there, however, are far from settled, as the following letter from a Missionary about 75 to 80 miles north of brother Kautto's station will show:

"Tatzukow:Jan. 29th:-Yesterday I took lunch with the head of the mounted police, who a few days back rode into the city with the ears of eight highwaymen dangling from a string, and with another eleven highwaymen following in his train; the ears represented highwaymen killed in a skirmish. In a few days' time the above-mentioned brigands are all going to be put to death, but one member of the band is singled out for distinction. This man killed a policeman, cut his heart out and ate it, but in turn was himself captured. For mutilating the policeman the robber is to pass through a chaff-cutter, beginning at his feet, and be sliced bit by bit until the death of the policeman is avenged! It is such things as these which remind us, 'The dark places of the earth are full of the habitations of cruelty,' and that it is only the power of God, or in other words, the gospel of Jesus Christ, which can change things. These eleven men will be publicly executed, and practically the whole city will turn out to see the Je-nao (1:e., the fun!). In passing let me say this diabolical performance will be carried through in close proximity to a compound, where reside four foreign women and three foreign children! How thankful you folk at home should be to be born in a land where the moral force, to say nothing of the spiritual force, of the gospel is felt! God still hears the groaning of the prisoner, and graciously makes provision for their (spiritual) release. The above eleven men will hear the gospel, for our Chinese brethren go regularly into the prison, and only yesterday did they notice "strangers," 1:e., newcomers, among their audience. What we need in this Jehol Territory is
some strong young men (overcomers of the 1 John 2:14 type) to go out with the gospel, and we want you to pi-ay that such may be forthcoming, either from the Church at home, or from among the assemblies in this land."

Might we not make definite prayer for our brother Kautto and his wife that they may be kept safe from bodily harm and be permitted to go on in the Lord's work without let or hindrance?

WEST INDIES

Brother Hoze writes of continued opportunities for gospel work and meetings with believers. May the Lord continue to bless our brother in this service for Himself.

PORTUGAL

A brother has written drawing attention to the open door for gospel work in Portugal. He says:"As you doubtless already know, Portugal is a land open, in an exceptional manner, to the gospel, with but very few there to carry on the work. In 1910 the Government overthrew the Roman Catholic Church, closing up and confiscating the church property, driving out the priests and nuns, at the same time setting up a Republican form of government with the motto, 'No religion, no God.' Fortunately, however, the country has not stuck to this motto but, in great measure, has opened her arms to the gospel, with comparatively very little opposition. However, Rome, true to her colors, is again seeking entrance, and it is hard to say just how long there will be liberty for the propagation of the Word." "Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest that He will thrust forth laborers into His harvest" (Matt. 9:37).

Some of His laborers the Lord has called away from service here.

A cable from England tells of the sudden home-call on Friday, May 17th, of our brother Hughes Fawcett. For many years Mr. Fawcett showed practical interest in missionary work, and care of the needy, both at home and abroad. He will be greatly missed.

God willing, the usual monthly missionary meeting will be held at the Elizabeth Meeting Room, 357 Morris Ave., on Monday evening, June 3rd. 1929, at 8 o'clock.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF47

Dependence

Lord, be Thou unto me, I pray,
My blest companion day by day.
Be to me as my vital breath,
The One o'er all, in life, in death,
The One to whom my soul shall cling
In joy or sorrow, while I sing.

Sing of Thy love for such as I,
That led Thee to the cross to die;
To cleanse me from all sin and guilt,
By Thy most precious blood, thus spilt.
Oh, be to me my staff and stay,
My guard by night, my guide by day.

And let me not plan any thing
Apart from Thee, but I would bring
All things to Thee continually,
The things that are too hard for me;
From henceforth I'd no burden bear,
But cast on Thee my ev'ry care.

Helen McDowell

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Correction

Have you ever felt the rod
Of correction, child of God?
It is bitter, all will own
Who its chastening have known.

But 'tis God's own holy way
To restore us when we stray,
When we wander thoughtlessly,
He recalls us faithfully;

Leads us back to where we strayed
When His Word we disobeyed.
In His love for us He'll yearn
Till in sorrow we return;

For He wants us to abide
In communion by His side;
But until our fault's confessed
He will never give us rest.

For rest's only to be found
Where His peace and joy abound;
Then do your blessed part,
And satisfy His heart.

H. McD.

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Prayer’s Commanded Accompaniment

"With thanksgiving" (Phil. 4:6). Mr. Henry W. Frost, director for North America of the China Inland Mission, wrote some time ago:"Nothing so pleases God in connection with our prayer as our praise… and nothing so blesses the man who prays as the praise which he offers. I got a great blessing once in China in this connection. I had received bad and sad news from home, and deep shadows had covered my soul. I prayed, but the darkness did not vanish. I summoned myself to endure, but the darkness only deepened. Just then I went to an inland station and saw on the wall of the mission home these words:'Try Thanksgiving,' I did,' and in a moment every shadow was gone, not to return. Yes, the Psalmist was right, 'It is a good thing to give thanks unto the Lord.' "

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF47

Hail To Our Glorious Saviour!

Hail to our glorious Saviour!
Deliverer, Ruler, Lord!
Glorious King, now and forever,
In earth and heaven adored!

Infinite love of the Father
Who spared not His very Best;
But gave Him up as a ransom
That we through Him might be blest.

Jesus, the world's great Creator,
With love for us, so divine,
Became the world's true Redeemer;
What joy now to call Him mine!

Oh, sing, ever sing His praises,
Loud alleluias now raise,
Give Him your heart's full allegiance,
Love Him and serve Him always.

E. W. Carlile

  Author: E. W. C.         Publication: Volume HAF47

An Old Exhortation Emphasized

"Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of the heavenly calling, CONSIDER the Apostle and High Priest of our profession, JESUS."

The Greek word translated "consider" has, according to Liddell and Scott's dictionary, the following meanings:"Remark, observe, perceive, learn, understand, know," and in the intransitive signifies "to be in one's right mind." Now we might substitute any of these dictionary meanings for the one given in the above quotations and find in none of them anything but a very appropriate and appealing exhortation. There is not a single suggestion in them that we should not follow, and for any Christian to fail to do so would be to fail of Christian "right-mindedness." The word .used in the Authorized Version, "consider," however, imparts a touch of new life to the list, for its Latin derivation cum sidere ("with a star"), implies companionship. It is surely bad to be beside one's self, but oh, how good, even in thought, to be with the Bright and Morning Star of our hope, the Lord Jesus Christ. So with the word there thus comes a sense of at-homeness, restfulness, that it is the privilege of all to enjoy who are of the glad company of "His own."

"Close to Thy trusted side
In fellowship divine," 1

writes the poet, and in very truth "to remark, observe, perceive, learn, understand, know, consider" JESUS is to enjoy divine fellowship. Let us not be in a hurry to leave these words, however. Let us rather linger by them, until perceiving, knowing, considering Him become the very guiding compass of our lives. If seeing is believing, seeing is, in that sense, knowing. And the great Apostle's life was consumed with that grand passion for knowing Him that started with the heavenly "vision" on the road to Damascus. "The people without a vision shall perish," says an inspired writer, and perishing indeed was Saul, the persecutor, until the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ illumined him, and he saw and knew Him whom to know was "life eternal."

A great modern writer says:"Hundreds of people can talk for one who can think, but thousands can think for one who can see, and the greatest thing a human soul does in this world is to see something and to tell what it saw in plain language." And so it was that the greatest thing that happened to Paul was the vision of the flashing glory that blinded his eyes to the light of day but opened them forever to Christ. And the greatest thing that he ever did, or that anybody else can do, was in life and plain language to tell forth the glories of an ever-growing vision of Jesus.

"He had perceived the presence and the power of greatness, And deep feeling had impressed upon his mind great things With portraiture and color as distinct as if upon that mind There lay a substance, that almost seemed to haunt his bodily sense."

This exhortation, therefore, "Consider Jesus," gathers immense power from the life of him from whom it comes, for he practiced what he is preaching to us, and that might seem enough for us. Paul, however, mingles it with the warm current of his thought. He links it to all that he had just written. He says "wherefore," and a whole volume is compacted within that word. He then appeals to us by the name that he would stamp upon us, "holy brethren," and reminding us of our high destiny, so wraps us up in the web and woof of entreaty, that every word pleads with us, leaving us no shadow of a pretext for not doing as he says. Let us therefore give the more earnest heed to his exhortation, for we also ourselves remember, out of our past experience, not indeed a theophany, but how,

"When God's shadow, which is light,
Our wakening instincts fell across,
Silent as sunbeams over moss,
In our soul's nest half conscious things
Stirred with a sudden sense of wings,
Lifted them up, and trembled long
With premonitions sweet of song."

"Wherefore."The second and third chapters of the epistle to the Hebrews both open with this word, though the expression in the Greek varies. The literal translation of the first is "on account of this," while the word in the next is "hothen," sometimes rendered "from whence,"a rather archaic expression, suggestive however of a distinct shade of thought. "On account of this" hints at a careful weighing of the reasons for giving heed, while "from whence" implies the spontaneous result of the previously manifested glories. The first "wherefore" transports us back in thought to the dignities and high destinies of Him who had been so tersely and so magnificently disclosed in the first chapter as the Heir of all things, Creator of heaven and earth, the Purger of Sins, THE ABIDING ONE, and impresses upon us the solemnity of not anchoring to Him and the things that we have heard, "lest we float by them." The second "wherefore" gently launches us in the current of divine blessings, which, like a full river, gushes from the divine springs pent up within the life and work of the glorious Son of Man, so truthfully revealed in the second chapter. Wherefore, wherefore? brethren, it is just the most natural thing in this wide world that we should be constantly considering Jesus is it not?

"Holy brethren" Just because we have become very much accustomed to this title, it is sometimes sapped of its strength. We must therefore turn it over and over in our minds, and thus, paradoxically, by becoming more accustomed to it, set it on fire by the friction of a constant rubbing. I remember some years ago reading a legal document, dating back to early New England days. Floating dreamily along in the smooth flow of the language, in a moment I was awakened from my half-dream by the startling words:"In the year of our LORD GOD 1638." Why, right there into those words was compressed a whole sermon on the Son of Man who was also Son of God. He existed from all eternity, He began hi the year "one." I am not preaching a theology, brethren, so I hope that no over-zealous theologian will twist these words into a heresy. It is not a theology but an exhortation, a gleam of lighting, revealing to us another mount of Transfiguration. It is alight with a living truth, and I would like to keep stirring the fire in it till I waked right up and became thoroughly alive to my "profession." It is the truth of the first and second chapters of Hebrews, those beautiful and wonderful chapters that should ever burn and glow within our hearts. It is to the consideration of Him who therein shines forth "in the beauties of holiness, from the womb of the morning," that we are called by the "wherefore." But it is indeed more than that. Just listen.

If we add three words to the expression "holy brethren," and write "holy brethren of Jesus Christ," we may perhaps be a little startled, and perhaps shrink a little. Even though the exact phraseology is not used in Scripture, the truth of it shines out along the trail of another "wherefore" in the same second chapter:"Wherefore, HE is not ashamed to call them brethren, saying, I will declare Thy name unto My brethren, in the midst of the church will I sing praises unto Thee." The grace of such a declaration should take away the shrinking-should it not?-unworthy as we may be. For, brethren, it is all of pure grace. We are sanctified, set apart to Him, "holy," inasmuch as we are called to live in His company, to be bound "up in the bundle of life with (this) Lord God." "Wherefore, wherefore, holy brethren, remark, observe, perceive, learn, understand, know, CONSIDER" the Apostle and High Priest of our profession.

"Partakers of the heavenly calling." How the words in these delightful chapters, some of the loveliest in the Bible, romp around one another, cling to one another, and tie one another up into golden sheaves of blessing for us. The Greek word "metochoi," rendered by the translators, "partakers," is to be indissolubly linked with the verb form "meteschen" in the second chapter, closing the lovely thought, "He likewise TOOK PART of the same," so that verb and adjective unite in a sort of rhapsodic appeal:"You, brethren, partake of that heavenly calling and all its joys, because He took part in your sad earthly calling, captives to fear and sorrow. Therefore, holy brethren, CONSIDER Him."

But another word in the verse before us, "calling," is the noun form of a verb in the second chapter, and the two are married in a sacred union, "He called us brethren, He is calling us on high." And immediately after, the music of the great assembly above rings sweetly in our ears, as if wooing us thither, partakers as we are of this high destiny. But let us not lose the fine force of that word "calling." That devoted Christian and lovely character, Samuel Rutherford, is accredited with the ardent words:"I could swim through seven hells and count it as nothing, could I but lie at His feet." Are the words extravagant? Perhaps they may seem so if we measure them against the sluggish emotions of our own hearts. But Samuel Rutherford was ever "considering" the glories of the Apostle and High Priest of our profession, and so was there ministered unto him an abundant entrance into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, for as he lay dying, suddenly with one of his characteristic outbursts he cried:"Oh, for arms to embrace Him; oh, for a well-tuned harp! I hear Him CALLING, 'Come up hither.' "

"At His side" here in thought; "at His side" there in glory. These two things blend into the exquisite harmony of the subject of this meditation. F. C. Grant

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF47

Abiding

"They came and saw where He dwelt and abode with Him that day" (John 1:39).

We read how the disciples sat
And listened to His word,
Our hearts then burn; we often wish
That we His voice had heard.

Were His abode still on this earth
Our feet would hasten there.
How blest were they who with Him dwelt
And thus His life did share!

For blessings then bestowed by Christ
We need not vainly long,
When richest blessings may be ours,
If faith and trust be strong.

We may abide with our dear Lord
As truly as did they,
Who found that holy dwelling-place,
And there abode that day.

Lord Jesus Christ, give us a place
Close to Thy sacred side:
Thou'rt still unseen but greatly loved;
Do Thou with us abide.

E. W. Carlile

  Author: E. W. C.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Him That Overcometh”

Every true child of God has within his heart a desire to live wholly unto the Lord, but Satan is constantly at work to lure him away from his happy fellowship in Christ and lead him into worldly or fleshly pursuits. In this age, especially, the allurements of the devil are so many and varied, and seemingly so harmless to the young and inexperienced Christian. The path of separation from all doubtful pleasures is the only one a true believer may safely take. He will find that if he wholly separates himself from the world, that a whole new world in Christ will lie open before him. In it he will find joys and privileges and pleasures which far excel his highest expectations. In his heart there will be established such peace, calmness and perfect satisfaction in the Lord, that it will seem to him that the Lord has graciously-vouchsafed to him a foretaste of heaven.

If the child of God feels discouraged at times in his conflict with the world, the flesh and the devil, let him turn to the Word of God for comfort and encouragement. There has been only One who could truly say, "I have overcome the world" (John 16:33). When He was on earth He prayed the Father that He would keep His own from evil (John 17:IS). His infinite grace has provided us with abundant means to overcome if we are only willing to use them, and faithful in availing ourselves of them. A knowledge of His Word is a wonderful protection against Satan's wiles. It is called the Sword of the Spirit in Ephesians 6:17. We all know how our Saviour silenced the devil with God's Word, as it is recorded in Matthew 4:4, 7,10.

Prayer is another necessary means of grace in the overcomer's life. We are exhorted to pray without ceasing (1 Thess. 5:17). If our hearts and minds are filled with His precious Word, prayer will rise spontaneously to our lips and we will be continually worshiping and praising Him. One who is thus occupied will have no time for indulging in fleshly desires or worldly pursuits.

Finally, we have the blessed Holy Spirit of God in our hearts. He is with and in us, and if we yield ourselves wholly to Him our lives will be completely filled with His blessed Presence. A life wholly yielded to the Spirit of God will always be an overcoming life.

We read these exhortations in the Word:-"That ye put off concerning the former manner of life, the old man, which is corrupt according to deceitful lusts, and be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and that ye put on the new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness" (Eph. 4:22-24). "That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith" (Eph. 3:17). We know that "they that are Christ's have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts" (Gal. 5. 24). "For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption, but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting" (Gal. 6:8). "Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin but alive unto God through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Let not sin reign in your mortal body that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof" (Rom. 6:11,12). "For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ, our Lord" (Rom. 6:23). "Therefore, brethren, we are debtors not to the flesh to live after the flesh, for if ye live after the flesh ye shall die, but if ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live" (Rom. 8:12,13). "For to be carnally minded is death, but to be spiritually minded is life and peace" (Rom. 8:6). "The Lord make you to increase and abound in love one toward another, and toward all … to the end He may establish your hearts unblameable in holiness before God, even our Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all His saints" (1 Thess. 3:12,13).
We, whose hearts are filled with love for the Lord Jesus Christ, desire not to be overcome of evil but to overcome evil with good (Rom. 12:21). We have put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and we would make no provision for the flesh to fulfil the lusts thereof (Rom. 13:14). We want to count all things but loss that we may win Christ (Phil. 3:8). We know that "the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strongholds; casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ" (2 Cor. 10:4, 5). Our Lord has left exceedingly precious promises to encourage and strengthen our hearts in our warfare against sin. As we meditate upon these promises surely our desire to live well-pleasing to our Lord will be strengthened, and we will renew our efforts to make use of His means of grace to the end that we may glorify Him in all things.

In Rev. 2:7 our risen, glorified Lord promises eternal life to all who overcome. An eternity spent with Him! Such a thought is too infinitely blessed for us to entirely comprehend, but we accept it in faith, looking forward to the inexpressible joys that await us there.

In Rev. 2:17 the Lord Jesus Christ promises to give all who have overcome a new name. We will individually have the Lord's approval and receive a new name from Him. The thought of such unmerited favor and love bestowed by the King of kings and Lord of lords upon us, surely cannot help but lead us to a high resolve to live so that we will not be ashamed when we stand in His holy presence. "And now, little children, abide in Him, that when He shall appear, we may have confidence and not be ashamed before Him at His coming" (1 John 2:28).

In Rev. 2:26 He promises to give us power over the nations. We know that we will reign with Him (Rev. 5:10). Even now He may be preparing us for places of responsibility in His kingdom.

In Rev. 3:5 we read that he who overcomes will be clothed in white raiment and that the Lord Jesus will confess his name before the Father. The clean, white linen is the righteousnesses of the saints (Rev. 19:8). We know that this can only be the fruit of the righteousness of God imputed to us. Christ Jesus our Lord is the righteousness of God. We shall be clothed in Him! When He confesses our name before the Father He will be fulfilling His promise in Matt. 10:32:"Whosoever, therefore, shall confess Me before men, him will I confess also before my Father which is in heaven."

Then we have the wonderful promise in Rev. 3:12 that him that overcometh "will I make a pillar in the temple of My God." Who would not desire to live a life so approved by God that He would make him a pillar in His temple! This is a high destiny set before every one of us.

Then, the most glorious word is, "To him that over-» cometh will I grant to sit with Me in My throne, even as I also overcame and am set down with My Father in His throne" (Rev. 3:21).

With such a picture of future glory and blessedness before us we will continue with renewed courage to fight the good fight, finish our course, and keep the faith (2 Tim. 4:7). We will remember the Holy Spirit's words; "Ye are of God, little children, and have overcome them, because greater is He that is in you than he that ,is in the world" (1 John 4:4). "They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony, and they loved not their lives unto the death" (Rev. 12:11). "He that overcometh shall inherit all things, and I will be his God, and he shall be My son" (Rev. 21:7). "Now thanks be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph in Christ, and maketh manifest the savor of His knowledge by us in every place, for we are unto God a sweet savor of Christ" (2 Cor. 2:14, 15).

  Author: E. W. C.         Publication: Volume HAF47

The Threefold Call Of The Gospel

PRAY YE

"Pray ye the Lord of the harvest" (Matt. 9:37). A call to prayer, for all true gospel service begins on our knees. He that has the gospel field most on his heart will be most on his knees about it. Our Lord could put thousands of workers into the field without ow prayers, if He so wished, yet from this text we observe He does not do so! "Pray ye the Lord of the harvest that He will thrust forth laborers into His harvest." What a call this is! You and I have an important part in the sending forth of workers into the work. Brethren, let us respond swiftly to this call!

GIVE YE

"Give ye them to eat" (Matt. 14:16). A call to our liberality, for if our hearts are touched and our lips have supplicated, our hands will not be slow to reach out in the blessed ministry of giving the bread of life to hungry souls around us. And yet again, we notice that He who is Creator and Provider of all men could "do this unaided by us; for what are we, brethren, but half-believing disciples with two small loaves and five fishes. How can we feed the starving multitudes? Never mind. Let us heed the call, and give what we have, and He will multiply it a thousandfold. Help us then, Lord, to do our part in answering the cry of needy souls within our reach.

GO YE

"Go ye and teach all nations" (Matt. 28:19). This call has been termed "The Great Commission." "Go ye therefore into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature." But we say, Can He not do this without us? Is not all power in heaven and earth His? Yes, and may the burning power of this call enter our souls in such fashion as to make us living witnesses for Him in this dark world, for He commands us to both preach and teach the gospel to all nations. Brethren, He will not save souls apart from us. The call is, Go ye.

It may be that some will hear it more deeply than others, and will willingly leave home, kindred, and all that life holds dear, to go forth into the unevangelized parts of the earth with the precious message of God's salvation.

Saints, awake! PRAY YE, persistently! GIVE YE, freely! GO YE, boldly! -r. west.

  Author: R. W.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Signs Of The Dawn

In a recent issue of "The Literary Digest" there appeared an interesting but sorrowful account of the strides that the present apostasy is making in a certain section of the United States. A carefully prepared questionnaire, covering all the great foundation-truths of Christianity, was sent out by the North-western University to some 1500 Protestant ministers and theological students in Chicago and its suburbs. About 700 answers were received, representing 20 denominations. The printed result shows the alarming change that is taking place in the realm of religious thinking. Of the 200 students who replied to the questionnaire, 16 affirmed their belief in "the visible bodily second coming of Jesus," 22 in the actual location of hell, and 18 in the existence of the Devil. The rest confessed uncertainty or positive disbelief. On one point, and only one, were ministers and students 100% unanimous-the existence of God.

If this report were the result of an investigation conducted among young people reared and trained in an avowedly Communistic or atheistic atmosphere, it would not be surprising. But the fact that these are the convictions of students of theology, the coming leaders of religious thought, is full of sinister significance. The spiritual barometer forecasts foul weather. Ominous black clouds are gathering over poor Christless Christendom. The light is fast being displaced by the darkness of rationalism and unbelief. But Bible-believing Christians know that the storm cannot break until,

"Jesus will come in the fulness of glory.
To receive from the world 'His own.'"

Christian brother, do these things discourage you? If so, they should not. On the contrary they should cause us' to scan the skies with renewed expectancy, for these are but signs of the dawn. The "sure Word of Prophecy" clearly foretells "that there shall come in the last days scoffers walking after their own lusts, and saying, Where is the promise of His coming?"

The fact that they deny the Lord's return is a sure indication that it is about to be realized. So although the watchman cries, "The night cometh!" he immediately adds, "And also the morn." Then truly "the night is far spent and the day is at hand." The reveille-call announcing His imminent coming is loudly heard in the numerous signs of the times about us. Soon all will be reality, and our Lord's return will be in the past tense. During the Prince of Wales' last visit to Toronto thousands of curious citizens thronged the crowded streets to catch even a glimpse of His Royal Highness. The broiling sun and congested thoroughfares could not dampen the enthusiasm. No amount of tiresome waiting was considered too much in exchange for a sight of his face.

Soon the Prince of Peace, the Lord of Glory, will descend for His own purchased people, of whom it is written, "And they shall see His face." One look at that face which was "marred more than any man" on Calvary, will be abundant recompense for anything suffered for Him during His absence. So while we see God's Book being carelessly disregarded and the faith is increasingly denied, let us endeavor to give a clear testimony by lip and life to our Lord Jesus Christ, God's supreme Revelation, remembering His word, "Hold fast till I come!" C. E. Tatham.

  Author: C. E. T.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Work In The Foreign Field

JAPAN

Our brother E. B. Craig writes in regard to the work in Japan:

We have received further interesting and encouraging letters from Japan. We are certainly thankful to the Lord for the earnestness of so many of the brethren and sisters there, and that the Lord is blessing them and their testimony. And we are sure that they benefit by your prayers.

Three more have recently confessed the Lord, been baptized and added to the little company in Tokyo. Brother Totsuka who is engaged in the Social Welfare Department of the Government Railways, but who has liberty to preach the gospel to the employees, started in January on a long trip through the southern part of Japan, through Korea and Manchuria. Mrs. Tsukiyama writes that orders for forty of the Japanese edition of Mr. Booth's chart have come as a result of his trip already, and more are expected. He has been using in his preaching a large copy of the chart made by one of the brethren. Other interesting news is in the letters for Japan, but you will see it in my news reports in the magazines.

May God's rich blessing continue with you all.

As to his own work here he writes:

We are very thankful for the remembrance of the brethren in Japan and ourselves at the prayer meeting. We are in frequent communication with our dear friends in the Lord there, and they are very thankful for the prayers of their brethren and sisters in this land.

Beside the Japanese and other work at home, I have been to Pittsburgh and Mosgrove frequently, beside local opportunities for the Word. Soon I expect to have my portable stereopticon and pictures ready for illustrated talks on "Japan and the gospel," and shall start on trips around the assemblies, Lord willing.

CHINA

Brother Kautto and his wife sailed from San Francisco on April 5th. Our brother hopes to resume the work at Taitowyng, North China, which he had to leave hurriedly in the early part of last year on account of the war and unsettled conditions. We need to remember our brother and his wife in prayer at this time, for although they are able to proceed to China, the country is still in a very unsettled condition, and they will have many trials and difficulties to face on their arrival.

Just before leaving brother Kautto wrote as follows:"I went to a logging camp where I used to work some fourteen years ago, and those rough loggers turned out whole-heartedly, some two hundred people filling the meeting room. I spoke to them for an hour and three-quarters. They would have willingly listened twice that length of time only the light went out. They asked me to stay longer, and also asked what good it was to go to China when I could stay here and he a missionary to them. There are many logging camps and many opportunities, but very seldom does any servant of the Lord go out there."

We are thankful for this and the many other opportunities our brother had of preaching the gospel while in this country.

AFRICA

Dr. Woodhams tells of progress being made in the work of clearing the forest at Mambassa where he intends to establish a new station. He also speaks of having come in contact with a tribe of pygmies, and he longs to impart the gospel to them also.

BAHAMAS

We are indeed glad to pass on the following extract from a letter of our brother August Van Ryn, and feel that the news contained should give great cause for rejoicing:

"Perhaps brother Stratton wrote you of the blessing the Lord gave us to see here in the gospel the last few weeks. Twelve or more precious souls confessed the Lord as their Saviour, while about eighteen came into fellowship with the little assembly here. We are continuing for a while in an effort to establish these young believers in the truth of God that they may be able to stand in the midst of the tribulation and persecution they are called upon to endure. I trust this finds you well and happy in the Lord, as it leaves us by His grace."

SPAIN

Our brother Montllau tells of his leaving Spain to settle in this country:

"During the last three months we had the privilege of visiting several important towns, holding meetings in Barcelona, Gracia, Pueblo Seco, Torreserona, Sabadell, Tarrasa, Badalona, etc., and distributing a large amount of literature. During the so-called "holy week" we had many opportunities in halls, private residences, hospitals, etc., praising the Lord for fruit and also for what will be manifested in His presence. I hope to visit the mentioned towns again before leaving for Gijon or Coruna with the family, where we shall wait for steamer. We made arrangements with the only Company taking passengers in Spanish ports for Galveston, and we are thankful to say that they kindly give us good accommodation and big reduction. The steamer sails from Gijon, May 31st, but we shall be there a few days ahead, hoping to hold meetings while waiting arrival of steamer."

In connection with the above we have been asked to correct a statement made in March Help and Food, and quote brother Dresch's letter:

Dear Brethren:-

In a letter from brother B. Montllau, which appeared in March Help and Food, the following statement perhaps should be corrected for the sake of accuracy, viz.:'Brother Dresch hopes to go into new fields in Mexico.

The present Mexican laws prohibit a foreigner teaching or preaching the gospel, so we have no hope of going there, or to any other place for that matter, because the Lord has given us so much to do here in this great city and near-by towns.

The large Sunday School here and the assembly need our services most all the time, for our Mexican brother, Antonio C. Riojas, who is quite capable in the gospel, is not able to devote much time to the Lord's work here in the city because he has to work on the farms to support himself and family, yet he gets many opportunities to preach out on the farms where people gather.

We feel that a change of ministry for the people here as well as a change of location for us would be well, but can only wait upon the Lord for all this. There is room for a hundred missionaries here along the Mexican frontier of 2500 miles and in the south-western States, yet there is a testimony going out in many places by the other churches. More needy fields in Honduras and Central America appeal to us. It has been our rule to da what our hands find to do with what the Lord gives us to work with.

Brother Carl Armerding has just been here ten days, and his preaching has been a blessing in our midst. Pray for us.

COLOMBIA, SOUTH AMERICA

Mrs. Poehner informs us that her husband has made arrangements for them to leave Colombia and settle in Gainesville, Florida, where he intends resuming manual work. Before leaving Colombia they found it almost impossible to carry on gospel work owing to the opposition of the Government and local authorities. She says:

Should a liberalist be chosen next year at the Presidential election there would again be liberty in the fanatical part of the country where we were, and (the Lord willing) we would be glad to return.

May the Lord guide our brother in this matter.

MISSIONARY MEETING

God willing, the usual monthly missionary prayer-meeting will be held at Elizabeth, N. J., on Monday, May 6th. It might be interesting to the saints generally to know that these meetings have been both helpful and encouraging.

SERVE WHERE YOU ARE

Stand in your place, and work around you; in your own home, in your own neighborhood, in your own town or country; and if God gives you the power and opportunity, "break forth upon the right hand and upon the left," but don't wait for a large field; cultivate the spot you have, and help your neighbors. A sound gospel tract given to a family may be to them a draught of the water of life; an evangelical book may be like furnishing them with a water-pot of two or three firkins, or even a reservoir; but to supply them with the Bible is to open a fountain of living waters by the very hearthstone.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF47

Some Christian Blessings

(1 John 1 to 3.)

The basis of all our blessings as Christians is found in the glorious person and work of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God. There is the only sure

FOUNDATION

on which we may build for soul salvation and blessing. "Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ" (1 Cor. 3:11). He is the God-given Saviour of sinners. God knew the depth of our guilt and ruin and He gave His Son, His only Son, in His great love, and we hear Him, Himself, saying, "Behold I lay in Zion for a foundation a stone, a tried stone, a precious corner stone, a sure foundation. He that believeth shall not make haste" (Isa. 28:16). That God-laid foundation is a secure refuge. None who believe upon Christ will need to "make haste" for fear of the overwhelming judgment, soon to be outpoured. "He that believeth on Him shall not be confounded."

Thus it is in 1 John 1:7 we find the comforting and assuring words, "The blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanseth us from all sin."

We are now in the light of the full revelation of all that God is. It is in that light we walk. It is in that light we Christians have fellowship one with another. But how can we be there in peace? How can we bear the light of the full glory of God to rest upon us? How can we be happy in the presence of God? It is because we know the cleansing value, the abiding cleansing value, of the blood of Jesus Christ His Son. It cleanses us from all sin." Its very nature and character is that. It removes, and removes for ever, every sin.

We are now in the light of the full revelation of all that God is. It is in that light we walk. It is in that light we Christians have fellowship one with another. But how can we be there in peace? How can we bear the light of the full glory of god to rest upon us? How can we be happy in the presence of God? It is because we know the cleansing value, the abiding cleansing value, of the blood of Jesus Christ His Son. It cleanses us from all sin. Its very nature and character is that. It removes, and removers for ever, every sin.

"Ah! Geordie," said a young Christian to a fellow-believer; "the more the light of God shines upon me the more it shows how perfect is the work of Christ."

And so it was with the well-known Dr. Doddridge, the author of "The Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul." He used to tell of a dream he had. He thought that he entered heaven as a sinner cleansed from sin through Christ's precious blood. As he passed through the gate there were praises to God, from a white-robed throng, that another redeemed one could be received and welcomed there. Then going on where the light grew brighter the praises were louder, until at last when he drew near to the very inmost and brightest glory of all, there in the fullest blaze of light the acclamations were loudest of all. God was glorified in saving a sinner such as he.

We have "boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus." In the brightest spot of that glory, of which we had come short, and which we dreaded, we see Jesus the Son of God our Saviour, and we see Him seated there as the One who by Himself purged our sins. The work of Calvary is a finished work, and He who completed it took His seat "on the right hand of the majesty on high." He has entered and seated Himself there in the power of His own blood. And in virtue of that once-for-all-shed blood we may enter too-in spirit now, and soon actually-and then in the very likeness of Him, our Saviour, conformed to His image, "that He may be the firstborn among many brethren."

The word of God in the gospel message assures us that the sins of the believer are remembered "no more;" and the Holy Spirit who Himself indites the assuring words, dwells in our hearts and witnesses with our spirits that we are now the children of God.

Happy is he who "takes the guilty sinner's place and claims the guilty sinner's Saviour" as his own. The work of Christ for him, for his salvation, and the word of the Holy Spirit to him, give confidence and "boldness in the day of judgment."

To him the epistle of John is addressed, as to one of the believers, for the assurance of his heart before God. The apostle speaking of his letter says:"These things 'have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God that ye may know that ye have eternal life." Blessed testimony indeed for every one who has

FAITH

in the Lord Jesus! Eternal life is his, and is his now. The full enjoyment of that blessing will be his when he is with and like his Lord, in the Father's house, the home of eternal life. But now his portion is, in the power of the Holy Spirit, to enjoy the nearness and dear-ness of which the wondrous blessing, "eternal life," speaks.

Giving up all hope in himself the repentant sinner receives with meekness the word of the glad tidings, and receiving it receives present and everlasting good. He can say:

Forsaking
All
I
Trust
Him

He looks away from his sins and sinful self and his eyes rest upon a seated Saviour at God's right hand. A satisfied conscience is the result. Then being at "peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ" he is free to enjoy the feast of fat things provided for him in the great grace of God. Faith

Fully
Accepts
In
The
Heart
all that the word of God unfolds, and finds its enjoyment in God Himself, the Spring and Source of all his blessing. He can join with others and say, "We joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have now received the reconciliation." The God of holiness whom we feared and from whom we would fain have fled is found to be our best Friend, and "if God be for us who can be against us?" He justifies from every sin. Who then' shall lay anything to our charge?

Faith builds upon the foundation which a Saviour-God provided, and builds upon it alone, and sings;

"How firm a foundation, ye saints of the Lord,
Is laid for your faith in His excellent Word;
What more can He say than to you He hath said,
To you who for refuge to Jesus have fled?"

Inglis Fleming

(To be continued, D. V.)

  Author: I. F.         Publication: Volume HAF47

The “Gorgeous Robe” And The “scarlet Cloak”

(Lk. 23:8-11; Matt. 27:26-38.)

A close study of the Gospels reveals that the "gorgeous-robe" and the "scarlet cloak" (New Trans.), are two garments, instead of-as is generally thought-one that is spoken of in two ways. The "gorgeous robe" (rendered "splendid," J. N. D., and "brilliant," Num. Bible), was placed upon our Lord by Herod and his men of war. It seems to have been the answer they gave to this silent Man whose real dignity was manifest. They "set Him at nought, and mocked Him."

It has been suggested that this "gorgeous robe" was to array Him as a Candidate for honors. To Herod He was a mystery man, and he had been desirous of seeing Him. He was the Lamb to be brought to the slaughter, and here, is like a sheep dumb before His cruel shearers, the chief priests and scribes, who stood and vehemently accused Him.

He goes from Herod, a Candidate for honors. How blessedly true! Greater honors awaited this calm, dignified Lamb of God. He is sold for the price of a slave (Oh, what an estimate!); His disciple began to swear that he knew Him not; He is passed through a mock trial, and He hears His own people in a clamor for His death and the release of a murderer. Furthermore He is scourged (O patient, spotless One!), and then the soldiers of Pilate have Him in their hands.

We are now introduced to the "scarlet cloak." This, perhaps an old military cloak, was put on Christ. But He is a King! A crown must be found! Thorns are plentiful, so they are plaited to encircle His head. A king should have a scepter. A reed is placed hi His hand. He is mocked, spit upon, and smitten upon the head with a reed. Was there ever such a complete picture of abject misery and shame and weakness? So it must seem in the eyes of unbelief. He is crucified in weakness; He cannot save Himself. Blessed, blessed truth for all who believe! He could not save Himself and us. "He gave Himself for me" has been the sweet confession of faith in all generations.

But I must still call attention to the "scarlet cloak"–called by others "the red sagum"-which was used to ridicule His supposed pretensions to the dignity of a King. How grand it would look upon Him! The great men of this world must have their gorgeous attire with medals and adornment; their powerful retinue to command and inspire respect. But He could stand alone! He needed nothing; everyone and everything had need of Him. Just think of His greatness before a powerful King and his soldiers! 'Meek, gentle, alone, accused of evil by the religious world, and set at nought! His was the true greatness, for it was intrinsic.

Let us contemplate this mocked One. He made that "scarlet cloak" beautiful; the crown of thorns-bedewed, as it undoubtedly was, with drops of His precious blood -more precious than the richest crown. The reed intended to set forth the weakness in which He was crucified, this was His mighty power.

"By weakness and defeat,
He won the meed and crown."

Men took this reed and smote Him on the head. Those whose deep need had called Him to that weakness, taunted Him with it. 0 Christ of God, what is man that Thou art so mindful of him? Why not let him meet the doom he so richly merits? Sweet answer of love!

"His love needs worms like us
To cherish and to bless."

Beloved reader, consider Him in these two attitudes. A Candidate for honors in the "gorgeous robe;" the accepted Candidate in the "scarlet cloak"-both given to Him by those He came to save. He is now at the right hand of God, crowned with glory and honor. But He is coming to be admired in those He will beautify with His likeness. They have cast in their lot with Him; He shall be manifested in them; they shall reflect His beauty.

What power there is with all that is of Him! His death has poured contempt upon all the glory of the world. Man has betrayed himself as corrupt to the core, by mocking at the expense of the Creator's infinite sorrow. But the greatest act of man's sin has but served as the occasion for the greatest display of infinite love and compassion.

Now through grace, there are those who confess their contemptible existence of sinnership; who prostrate themselves before Him in reverence and adoration, owning Him as Lord. His redemption glory is thereby manifested, for the greatest crown He has is the one He won in the conquest that was theirs.

"Triumphant saints no honor claim,
His conquest was their own."

The "gorgeous robe" and the "scarlet cloak" would suggest the double glory which is His in connection with the Assembly and Israel with the nations in the world to come. E. Chas. Taylor

  Author: E. C. T.         Publication: Volume HAF47

With Thee

I cannot go alone, Lord;
Hold Thou my hand!
Without Thine arm of strength, Lord,
I could not stand:
Thou art my all, I cannot fall.

No loneliness for me, Lord.
Thou'rt ever near,
Thou'st satisfied my heart, Lord,
And cast out fear:
Thou art to me reality.

Soon I will be at home, Lord,
Thee to adore.
Thy heart and mine at one, Lord,
For evermore:
For I am Thine, and Thou art mine.

Helen McDowell

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Lectures On The Levitical Offerings

(continued from p. 132)

Lecture IV. THE SIN OFFERING

Read Leviticus, chaps. 4; 5:1-13; 6:24-30; Psalm 22; 2 Cor. 5:21.

We have already noticed that the bloody offerings are divided into two classes, sweet savor offerings and offerings for sin. The burnt offering and the peace offering are in the first class, the sin offering and the trespass offering in the second. The burnt offering was not brought because things had been going wrong; it was the expression of the offerer's worship. He brought it to God as an evidence of the gratitude of his heart because of what God was to him and had done for him, and all went up to Jehovah as a sweet savor. As we have seen, it represented the Lord Jesus Christ offering Himself without spot unto God as a sacrifice of a sweet smelling savor on our behalf. When we come into the presence of God as worshipers with our hearts occupied with Christ, we come bringing the burnt offering. Our souls are taken up with Him, the worthy One, who gave Himself for us who were so unworthy. We think of Him not merely as the One who died for our sins, but as having glorified God in this scene where we had so dishonored Him, and we adore Him because of what He is, as well as for what He has done. A child loves its mother not merely because of what she does for it but because of what she is. It is her tender loving heart that draws the child to her. And so the Israelite expressed the worship of his soul in the burnt offering. It was the recognition of God's goodness, and because He saw in it that which spoke of His Son all went up as a sweet savor to Him. As He beheld the smoke of the burnt offering ascend to heaven, He was looking on to Calvary; He could see beforehand all that blessed work of the Lord Jesus, and who can tell how much it meant to Him ? In Genesis 8:20, 21 we read how Noah offered a burnt offering upon the renewed earth, and we are told the Lord smelled a sweet savor, or, as the margin puts it, "a savor of rest." It was something in which His heart found delight, not because of any intrinsic value of its own but because it was a type of Christ and His work.

Then in the peace offering we have another suggestion. In it the pious Israelite expressed his communion with God and with others who shared with him in partaking of it. A portion was burned upon the altar. It was called the food of the offering, and it spoke of God's delight in the inward perfections of His Son. Then the wave-shoulder was given to Aaron and his house that they might feed upon it. The shoulder is the place of strength. The priestly house had its portion in that which spoke of the mighty power and unfailing strength of the Lord Jesus Christ. The officiating priest had the wave-breast. The breast speaks, of course, of affection, of love, and so the priest was to feed upon that which set forth the tender love of the coming Saviour. Then the offerer himself invited his family and friends, and they all sat down together and consumed the rest of the peace offering. Every part of it spoke of Christ. Thus we see God, Aaron, and his house, the officiating priest, the offerer and his friends, all in happy communion, feasting together upon that which spoke of Christ! And so to-day all who have been saved by His death upon the cross are called to enjoy Christ together in hallowed fellowship with Himself, the One who made peace by the blood of His cross. But now we come to another view of things. Until the soul has seen in Him the One who took the sinner's place and bore his judgment, Christ can never be enjoyed as the One who has made peace; so we have the sin offering. It is somewhat difficult to distinguish between the two aspects of the sin offering and the trespass offering; but the first one seems rather to have in view sin as the expression of the unclean, defiling condition of the very nature of the sinner; whereas the trespass offering rather emphasizes the fact that sin is to be regarded as a debt which man can never pay, a debt that must be paid by another if ever paid at all. I am not saying that the sin offering only has in view our evil nature, for that would be a mistake. It is plain, I should think, that actual transgressions are in view in chaps. 4 and 5-but what I do say is that these transgressions are the manifestation of the corrupt nature of the one who commits them. I am not a sinner because I sin; I sin because I am a sinner. I, myself, am an unclean thing in the sight of God; I am utterly unfit for His presence; my evil deeds only make this manifest; therefore the need of a sin offering. That this offering like the others speaks of Christ, we may be assured, for we are told very definitely in 2 Corinthians 5:21:"That God hath made Him to be sin for us, who knew no sin, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him." The words for "sin" and "sin offering" are the same in the original in both Testaments, so we might render it, "God hath made Him to be a sin offering for us." And in the Epistle to the Hebrews, chaps. 9,10, the Holy Ghost clearly shows how the offering for sin of old typifies His one offering on Calvary's cross. In fact, in the quotation from Psalm 40 as found in Hebrews 10:5, 6, all of the offerings are indicated, and all are shown to have their fulfilment in Christ's work. "Sacrifice" is the peace offering; "offering" is the meal offering; "burnt offering" speaks for itself, and the term "sin offering" takes in both sin and trespass offerings. "The offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all" in verse 10, and the "one sacrifice for sin" in verse 12, show that Christ fulfilled all these types.

Turn then to Lev. 4:2. We read, "If a soul shall sin through ignorance against any of the commandments of the Lord concerning things which ought not to be done, and shall do against any of them"-then follow instructions as to how the sin is to be dealt with. Observe, there was no sin offering for wilful, deliberate sin under the law. It was only for sins of ignorance. But since the cross, God in infinite grace counts only one sin as wilful, and that is the final rejection of His beloved Son. All other sins are looked upon as sins of ignorance; they are the outcome of that evil heart of unbelief which is in all of us. Men sin because of the ignorance that is in them. You remember Peter's words to guilty Israel as bringing home to them their dreadful sin in crucifying the Lord of Glory. He says, "I wot, brethren, that it was through ignorance ye did it." And the apostle Paul, in speaking of Christ's crucifixion and death, says, "Which none of the princes of this world knew; for had they known it, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory." What wondrous grace is here displayed ! The very worst sin that has ever been committed in the history of the world is classed by God as a sin of ignorance! And so the sin offering is available for any man who desires to be saved. Whatever your record may have been God looks down upon you in infinite pity and compassion, and opens a door of mercy to you as one who has ignorantly sinned. But if you still refuse the mercy He has provided in grace, then you can no longer plead ignorance, for you crucify to yourself the Son of God afresh and put Him to an open shame. This is the wilful sin so solemnly portrayed in the Epistle to the Hebrews, the sin for which there is no forgiveness. It is not a question there of a Christian who has failed; but it is the enlightened man, the one who knows the gospel, who is intellectually assured of its truth, and yet turns his back deliberately upon that truth, and finally refuses to acknowledge the Son of God as his Saviour. There is nothing for that man "but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries." But every poor sinner who wishes to be saved may avail himself of the Great Sin Offering, and may know that all his guilt is forever put away.

In Lev. 4:3 we read, "If the priest that is anointed do sin;" then in ver. 13 it is, "If the whole congregation of Israel sin through ignorance, and the thing be hid from the eyes of the assembly, and they have done somewhat against any of the commandments of the Lord concerning things which should not be done, and are guilty;" then in ver. 22 we read, "When a ruler hath sinned, and done somewhat through ignorance against any of the commandments of the Lord his God concerning things which should not be done, and is guilty;" whereas in ver. 27 it is, "And if any one of the common people sin through ignorance, while he doeth somewhat against any of the commandments of the Lord concerning things which ought not to be done, and be guilty." When you read the instructions that follow you will observe that there are different grades of sin offerings. If the anointed priest sinned he had to bring a young bullock, and this was also the offering for the whole congregation; but if a ruler sinned he was to bring a kid of the goats, a lamb without blemish. On the other hand if it was one of the common people, he could bring a kid of the goats or a lamb of the flock, females. But in chap. 5:11-13 we find that even lesser offerings were acceptable if the sinner was exceedingly poor. All this suggests the thought that responsibility increases with privilege. The anointed priest was as guilty as the entire congregation; he should have known better because he was so much nearer to God in outward privilege. Then a ruler, while not so responsible as the priest, was more so than one of the common people. There is a principle here that is well for us all to remember:The more light we have on the truth of God and the greater the privileges which we enjoy in this scene, the more responsible God holds us; we shall be called to account in accordance with the truth He has made known to us. Alas, my brethren, is it not a lamentable fact that should bow us in shame before God that many of us who pride ourselves upon a wonderful unfolding of truth are ofttimes most careless in our behavior, and become stumbling-blocks to those who have less light than we? How we need to have recourse to the great Sin Offering, to remember as we bow in confession of our failures before God that all our sins were dealt with on the Cross of Christ! It is hardly necessary to go into all the details of each of the offerings, but we may look particularly at that for the priest as it embraces practically everything that is mentioned in the lesser ones. First observe, the priest was to bring a young bullock without blemish unto the Lord for a sin offering. He who knew no sin made sin for us!-it is of this that the unblemished bullock speaks. It was to be brought to the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, before the Lord. The sinner was to identify himself with his offering by laying his hand upon its head and killing it himself. Then the officiating priest was to take of the blood of the bullock, and entering the sanctuary sprinkle it seven times before the Lord before the veil. He was to put some of the blood upon the horns of the altar of sweet incense before the Lord; the rest of it was to be poured out at the bottom of the altar of burnt offering. What solemn lessons are these! It was here on this earth our blessed Saviour died as the great Sin Offering; here His blood was poured out at the foot of His cross. This earth has drunk the blood of Him who was its Creator. That shed blood tells of life given up. In Lev. 17:11 God says, "The life of the flesh is in the blood:and I have given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls:for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul." His life, holy, spotless, pure and undefiled, has been given up in death for us who are sinners by nature and by practice, and now as trusting Him we may well sing,

"Upon a life I did not live,
Upon a death I did not die,
Another's life, Another's death,
I hang my whole eternity."

But that blood shed here on earth, has really pierced the heavens. It has, so to speak, been carried into the sanctuary, the sevenfold sprinkling has been done within the veil which in the old economy was still unrent. It was the testimony to God of the work completed here on earth. Then the blood upon the horns of the golden altar linked the altar in the sanctuary with the great altar out in the court, for the bronze altar spoke of Christ's work in this world; the golden altar spoke of His work in heaven; the blood linked the two together. His intercession in heaven is based upon the work of the cross.

In verse 8 we learn that the priest was to take off from the bullock all the fat and certain inward parts that could only be reached by death, and he was to burn them upon the altar of the burnt offering. They were not said to be a sweet savor, for they spoke of Christ being made sin for us. This is further emphasized when we read that the skin of the bullock and all the rest of the carcase, even the whole bullock, was to be carried outside the camp where the ashes were poured out and there burned upon the wood with fire. This expresses the awful truth that Christ was made a curse for us. We read in Hebrews 13:11:"For the bodies of those beasts, whose blood is brought into the holy place by the high priest as a sin offering, are burned outside the camp. Wherefore Jesus also, that He might sanctify the people by His own blood, suffered outside the gate." He went into the place of darkness and distance in order that we might be brought into the place of light and nearness to God for all eternity. In Lev. 13 the leper was put outside the camp. It was the place of the unclean, and so our blessed Lord, when He became the great Sin Offering, was dealt with as taking the place of the unclean ones, though Himself the infinitely Holy One. The place itself, however, is called "a clean place." No actual defilement attached to it.

It is important to learn that it was not merely the physical suffering of Jesus that made atonement for sin; it was not the scourging in Pilate's judgment hall, the suffering from the ribald soldiery in Herod's court, the crowning with thorns and the flagellation-these were not in themselves what expiated our guilt. But we read in Isa. 53, "When Thou shalt make His soul an offering for sin." It was what our Lord suffered in the depths of His inward being that met the claims of divine justice and settled the sin question. You have doubtless noticed that our blessed Saviour hung upon that cruel cross for six long hours, and these six hours are divided into two parts. From the third to the sixth hour, that is, from nine o'clock in the morning to high noon, the sun was shining down on the scene, and in spite of all His intense physical suffering our Lord enjoyed unbroken communion with the Father. But from the sixth to the ninth hour, that is, to three o'clock in the afternoon, darkness was over all the land. What took place in those awful hours only God and His beloved Son will ever know. It was then the soul of Jesus was made an offering for sin. It was as the darkness was passing away that He cried in anguish, "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" You and I may well see in our sins and our innate sinfulness the answer to that cry. He was forsaken that we might have access as redeemed sinners to the Father's face. And it is of this that the burning of the sacrifice outside the camp speaks. Observe, it was to be carried into a clean place. We have said that the outside place was the place of the unclean in the case of the leper, and this is true, but un-cleanness was never in any sense attached to Jesus; even as the sin offering He was most holy. He had no sin in Him though our sins were laid on Him.

A careful study of the directions for the people's offering will bring to light some little details that have not perhaps been touched upon, but I need not dwell on them here for all will be clear in the light of what we have already looked at.
We have in chapter 5 some things that may well claim our attention. In the first four verses we get various degrees of uncleanness because of sin. "And if a soul sin, and hear the voice of swearing, and is a witness, whether he hath seen or known of it; if he do not utter it, then he shall bear his iniquity. Or if a soul touch any unclean thing, whether it be of a carcase of an unclean beast, or a carcase of unclean cattle, or the carcase of unclean creeping things, and if it be hidden from him; he also shall be unclean, and guilty. Or if he touch the uncleanness of man, whatsoever uncleanness it be that a man shall be denied withal, and it be hid from him; when he knoweth of it, then he shall be guilty. Of if a soul swear, pronouncing with his lips to do evil, or to do good, whatsoever it be that a man shall pronounce with an oath, and it be hid from him; when he knoweth of it, then he shall be guilty in one of these." These suggest what I have already dwelt upon, that the sin offering has particularly in view sin as evidencing the corruption of our nature. Any of these things would be manifesting the hidden uncleanness. Then in verse 5 we read, "And it shall be, when he shall be guilty in one of these things, that he shall confess that he hath sinned in that thing." Notice the definiteness of the confession. A mere general acknowledgment of failure would not do. The culprit must face his actual transgression and confess it in the presence of God, and so we read, "If we confess our sins He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness" (1 John 1:9). It is not merely if he asks for forgiveness, or in a general way acknowledges that we all fail-that "we have left undone those things that we ought to have done, and we have done those things we ought not to have done," but there must be a definite confession in order to have a definite forgiveness.

Then in vers. 6-13 notice the grace of God in the provision made for even the poorest of His people. No matter how feeble our apprehension of Christ may be, if we come to God in His name He will forgive. The offerer under ordinary circumstances was to bring a female from the flock, a lamb or a kid of the goats for a sin offering. But God took poverty into account, and in ver. 7 we read, "If he be not able to bring a lamb, then he shall bring for his guilt according to all he hath committed, two turtle-doves or two young pigeons unto the Lord, one for a sin offering and the other for a burnt offering."But there might be some in Israel who could not even procure an offering like this, and so in ver. 11 we are told, "If he be not able to bring two turtle-doves or two young pigeons, then he that hath sinned shall bring for his offering a tenth part of a ephah of fine flour for a sin offering; he shall put no oil upon it, neither shall he put any frankincense thereon; for it is a sin offering." Then the priest was to take a memorial of it and burn it upon the altar, and even of this we read in ver. 13, "The priest shall make an atonement for him as touching his sin that he hath sinned in one of these, and it shall be forgiven him; and the remnant shall be the priest's, as a meal offering." There was nothing in this offering that spoke of the shedding of the blood, but it did picture Christ Himself, and it was Christ taking the sinner's place. Hence the omission of the oil and frankincense. And God would accept this when the offerer could bring no more. It tells us that the feeblest apprehension of Christ as the Saviour of sinners brings forgiveness. One might not understand the atonement, nor what was involved in the redemptive work of our Saviour, but if he trusts in Christ, however feebly, God thinks so much of the Person and work of His Son that He will have everyone in heaven who will give Him the least possible excuse for getting him there. What matchless grace!

In chap. 6:24-30 we have the law of the sin offering, and the priest is instructed as to his own behavior, and how to treat the vessels that were used in connection with it. Twice we read concerning the sin offering, "It is most holy." God would not have our thoughts lowered in regard to the holiness of His Son because He stooped in grace to be made sin on our behalf. He was ever undefiled and undefilable.

There was a portion of the sin offering which the priests were to eat. We may think of this as suggesting our meditation upon what it meant for Christ to take the sinner's place.

"Help me to understand it,
That I may take it in,
What it meant to Thee, the Holy One,
To put away my sin."

Observe carefully, the priests were not to eat the sin-they were to eat the sin offering. It does not do for us to dwell upon the sin, either our own or that of others. To do so would be most defiling. But we are all called upon to eat the sin offering in the holy place. In ver. 30 we learn, however, that no sin offering, "whereof any of the blood is brought into the tabernacle of the congregation to reconcile withal in the holy place, shall be eaten; it shall be burned in the fire." The priests could only partake of certain parts of such sacrifices as were not burned outside the camp, nor the blood sprinkled before the veil. We cannot enter into all the fulness of the death of Christ. Our apprehension of what He suffered for sin must always be feeble, and perhaps the full realization of it would be too much for our poor hearts and minds. It broke His heart (Ps. 69:20) ; it would crush us completely; but, thank God, there is a sense in which we can indeed eat the sin offering in the holy place as we meditate upon what Scripture has clearly revealed in regard to the expiatory work upon that cross of shame. If we read carefully Ps. 22, which might be called the psalm of the sin offering, we may enter in, in some measure, to what His holy soul went through when He took our place in judgment. To do this with reverence and awe is to eat the sin offering in a manner acceptable to God.

In closing, let me say that God in thus giving His Son to take the sinner's place, has told out to the full His infinite love to lost man. What then can be the guilt of that man who refuses such grace and tramples upon such love? What can there be for him but a "certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries?"

"Grace like this despised, brings judgment,
Measured by the wrath He bore."

God grant that no one to whom this message conies may trample on such loving-kindness and so merit such dire judgment.

We are told in John 3:18:"He that believeth on Him is not condemned. He that believeth not is condemned already, because He hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God." And in John 16:9 the sin of which the Holy Spirit has come to convince men is thus described, "Of sin, because they believe not on Me." This is wilful sin, and for this sin, if unrepented of, there is no forgiveness. Even the redemptive work of Christ will not avail to save the sinner who spurns the One who there died to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself. To turn from the message of the gospel-to deliberately and finally reject the One who upon the accursed tree became the Great Sin Offering-is to do despite to the Spirit of God, to trample under foot the love of Christ, to count His precious atoning blood an unholy, a common, thing, and to crucify to oneself the Son of God afresh, thus putting Him to an open shame. Yea, more, it is to throw back into the outraged face of the Father the slain body of His beloved Son, thus calling down the righteous wrath of God upon the guilty rejecter of His grace! H. A. Ironside

(concluded in next number.)

  Author: Henry Alan Ironside         Publication: Volume HAF47

Today And Tomorrow

Today the sun is shining,
So lovely, bright and clear,
But what about to-morrow,
With all its dread and fear?

Tomorrow is elusive,
For when your hand would stay
The morrow, as it dawneth,
Behold, it is to-day.

My friend, there's no to-morrow,
Today is all your own;
Enjoy it, don't destroy it,
With tear and sigh and groan.

For now's the blessed moment
The Master's work to do;
Today is yours, tomorrow
May be too late for you.

Helen McDowell

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Fragment

A Word of Encouragement for Tract Distributors

This extract is from a letter of a widow whose husband suffered for months, before going home to be with the Lord. For nearly a year I was not able to see him, as he was too sick and in too much pain. I could only call at the home and leave our printed ministry. The widow writes:

"I want to thank you for your many visits to him, and your little books, which we used to read together, and then latterly I would read to him-words that many times sustained us, when the road was so long and hard."

I did not know what was being done with the tracts and books I left there, and now find that God has used them in a way I never realized.

Keep sowing the seed. God will use and bless it. F. L. French

  Author: F. L. F.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Young Believers’ Department

Calendar:Oct. 16th to Nov.15th.

DAILY BIBLE READING ………. Oct. 16th, Mal. 2; Oct. 31st, Matt. 13; Nov. 15, Matt. 28.

SUPPLEMENTARY READING … Oct. 16th, 1 Cor. 15; Oct. 31st, Gal. 2; Nov. 15th, Col. 1.

Having completed the reading of the Old Testament, we pass on into the New, and during the present period we will have the Gospel of Matthew. You will notice also that our Supplementary Reading is in the Epistles, so that both the regular and supplementary work are in the New Testament. It seems better to continue thus until we complete the supplementary reading, as our regular reading will be in the historical portion, and we can never, if reverent worship mark us, be too familiar with these wondrous pages.

Matthew fittingly begins the gospel story. It is, as we know, the royal history, setting forth our blessed Lord as Son of David, the King of Israel, and yet with a wider title, Son of Abraham, in whose seed all the nations of the earth are to be blessed. So we find the wise men from a distance coming to worship the Holy Babe, while the unreadiness of His own people is troubled at the thought of the coming of the King. So there is a current of rejection manifest from the start. But He presents His kingdom, both in its principles of righteousness, and its work of mercy, thus manifesting what man is in his rejection of such a King. Well does the Lord foresee all this, and predicts His being cast out. But His kingdom is established in a mystery form and goes out to the world, taking in, for the present, a mass of profession, and exposed to Satan's corrupting influences (ch. 13).Then too, as His rejection becomes more manifest, we have the truth of His Person confessed by Peter, and the promise of His church to be built upon Himself the Rock, the only foundation (ch. 16). This is followed by a glimpse of the glory of His kingdom, in the transfiguration (ch. 17).But the path to that glory is by the way of the cross, which He definitely and repeatedly predicts. So we follow Him on to the close, when instead of a throne, He gets the cross, and the grave. The closing teachings at Jerusalem unfold all this (chaps. 21-23), and the great prophetic discourse on the Mount of Olives sets His coming in power in its true light (chaps. 24,25).The next two chapters (26,27) are holy ground-the upper room, Gethsemane, the Judgment Hall, and Calvary, with the tomb and the watch of soldiers, who cannot-oh, the folly of man's enmity- hold the victorious King in the grave. Chap. 28 tells of His triumph, and of the risen Lord sending forth His ambassadors to the ends of the earth, to gather in His subjects. It is not yet the Millennium, but the carrying of His truth to the world, and presenting it for man's acceptance. All power is His in heaven and earth, and His presence is pledged with His messengers to the end of the age. "Lo, I am with you always."

So we have a wonderful book in these 28 chapters. Those of you who have made the outline-several years back-will find it helpful to refresh your memories. The following is a brief outline of the prominent features.

1. The King is promised, chs. 1,2.

2. The Announcement of the Kingdom and the King, chs. 3-7.
3. The Manifestation of the King, and His rejection, chs. 8-12.

4. The Kingdom in the hands of men, chs. 13 – 20:28.

5. The Governmental Presentation, and the end as to Israel, chs. 20:29-23.

6. The Putting down of evil at the Consummation of the age, chs. 24, 25.

7. The completed purchase, chs. 26-28.

For these and fuller subdivisions, see Numerical Bible.

Let me again suggest your having a little note book, and writing out the striking features in each chapter as you read it. It will only take a few minutes longer than your regular, careful reading. Now will be a good time to begin these note books, and to continue them through the whole New Testament.

The following is another report of one of the Young People's Meetings:

97th Meeting, Y. B. D. Present:about 35.

Meeting opened with singing of hymns and prayer.

Question on Acts 1:12; explain "Sabbath's Day journey," its length and why so called.

Exod. 16:29; Matt. 24 speaks of, "Pray. ..your flight be not on the sabbath day." Much shorter journey than on the average day. The distance around the tabernacle is supposed to be the distance. Some reckoned it a thousand paces, others 2000 cubits.

What is it to be "more than conquerors?" (Rom. 8:37).

We are conquerors without fighting, for all was won through the Lord Jesus Christ. Christ won the victory through being trodden down, the opposite way from the earthly conqueror. In Josh. 6:20 the walls of the city fell without effort on the part of the people, and yet connected with the Lord-they shared in the victory (1 Cor. 15:57). One used illustration that there are two ways in which a vessel might weather a storm-by coming in port hardly recognizable, and by coming in with flags flying.

Christ won a complete victory (1 John 2:14,15).

One spoke of the Assyrians fighting against Israel, and God caused an angel to slay thousands while they were asleep, and Israel, as God's people, shared in the victory. Many interesting thoughts advanced.

Is it right to ask that inbred sin be removed, that we be made pure?

Ps. 51, "born in sin and shapen in iniquity," Hos. 14:2, Acts 8:22, etc; 1 John 1:7; 1 John 5:16,17. It brought up "holiness" question, as shown in talk. If inbred sin were removed we would be pure and holy immediately, with no more possibility of sinning while in this scene. We know that is impossible, for while here there is "the world, the flesh and the devil." It would take away the sense of our own helplessness, our dependence on God, and exercise as to our ways. It is not God's order to take the root away while in this scene, though, through His grace, we can obtain victory as we go along.

While on 1 John 5:16 it was shown that the "sin unto death," for which one should not pray, is, for instance, in case of those in 1 Cor. 11 who "fell asleep" because of their walk; also in case of one who commits a murder- we should not ask for the sparing of their natural life.

New Questions for next time and old Questions left over:

1.-Are demons the angels cast out with Satan? (M. R.)

2.-As to whether there is One Person with three names in Trinity, or whether three names apply to three distinct Persons. (E. and W.)

3.-In Ezek. 47:11 the curse is removed from all except from "salt marshes." What has this reference to, and why?,asked by M. D. Given to G. S., H. P., V and R.

4.-Explain length of life in Millennium period, and on what basis it is cut short, or lengthened. Asked by C. S. Given to R. L., R. G., Mr. & Mrs. S.

5.-Explain Jas. 5:14. Asked by E. Given to G. B. & N.

SILVER BAY VACATION CONFERENCE. This is the second year we have met at Silver Bay. The Conference began August 16th and continued until the 27th. During the 11 days there was an attendance of about 200, some remaining only part of the time. A large number were young people spending their vacation in these beautiful and congenial surroundings, with the added privilege of enjoying the ministry of the Word during the first half of each day. We began each day with a prayer-meeting, from 9 to 9:30. At 9:45 there was the "open discussion" for the young people. Various topics of practical importance were taken up-"The believer's personal relation to the Lord, whose I am, and whom I serve;" "Bible Reading and study;" "Sunday School Work." These were opened by a brief address and followed by a number of shorter talks, as time permitted. Of course prayer was an important feature. The Conference on Sunday School work brought out a number of interesting accounts of how this most important branch of service has been conducted. About 10:45 each day we had a Bible Reading till past noon. The Epistle to Titus occupied the time, and many most important matters came before us. In the evenings we had addresses by different brethren, both gospel and addresses for saints. G. MacKenzie, Jas. R. Elliot, E. B. Craig, S. Ridout, Thos. W. Carroll and Fred Elliott, the latter two from the Pacific Coast, and brother Ralph West, engaged in the work among seamen in the harbor of New York, were present. The afternoons were left free for trips and recreation on beautiful Lake George and its vicinity. Some of the brothers visited the training camp at Plattsburg, where large numbers of soldiers were gathered, and many tracts were given out. Many tracts were also given out along the way coming and going.

May the Lord bless these gatherings, and make them happy occasions of much blessing, enjoyed with Him and His dear ones. -S. RIDOUT.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF47

Prayer’s Effectualness

J. HUDSON TAYLOR

A young man had been called to the foreign field. He had not been in the habit of preaching, but he knew one thing, how to prevail with God; and going one day to a friend he said:"I don't see how God can use me on the field. I have no special talent. His friend said:"My brother, God wants men on the field who can pray. There are too many preachers now and too few prayers." He went. In his own room in the early dawn a voice was heard weeping and pleading for souls. All through the day, the shut door and the hush that prevailed made you feel like walking softly, for a soul was wrestling with God.

To this home hungry souls would flock, drawn by some irresistible power. In the morning hours some would call and say:"I have gone by your home so many times and have longed to come in. Will you tell me how I can be saved?" Or from some distant place another would call saying:"I heard you would tell us here how we might find heart-rest."

Ah, the mystery was unlocked. In the secret chamber lost souls were pleaded for and claimed. The Holy Ghost knew just where they were and sent them. Mark this:If all who read these lines would thus lay hold on God, with the holy violence and unconquerable persistence of faith-filled prayer, a good many things would give way, against which we have been beating with our puny human wisdom and power in vain. If we want to see mighty wonders of divine grace and power wrought in the place of weakness, failure and disappointment, let us answer God's standing challenge:"Call unto Me, and I will answer thee, and show thee great and mighty things, which thou knowest not" (Jer. 33:3).

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF47

The Spirit Of Christ

It would form an interesting study to take up the various titles of the Spirit of God as found in the New Testament and consider their significance. This brief article is concerned with the title which heads it.

The title, The Eternal Spirit (Heb. 9:14), might be considered as setting forth His Godhead and His relation to the eternal purpose of God displayed in the sacrifice of Christ; The Holy Spirit (John 14:26), as setting forth His essential nature; The Spirit of Truth (John 16:13), as witnessing to the exact and absolute relation of all things toward God as brought to light in Christ; The Spirit of His Son (Gal. 4:6), as the One who makes good the blessedness of sonship in our souls.

But, as stated above, this article is concerned with the title, "The Spirit of Christ," found in Rom. 8:9 and in 1 Pet. 1:11.

Rom. 8:9 reads:"If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of His." Question has been raised as to the force of "none of His" in this passage, as to whether it betokened a condition of immaturity in a child of God or whether it marked those spoken of as not belonging to Him. This question is based on the expression "none of His" being more correctly rendered by "not of Him." That "not of Him" is the more literal rendering is not in dispute.

But in 2 Tim. 2:19 we have the same expression translated, "that are His." The passage is:"Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are His." Can any just question be raised as to the meaning of the expression here? What comfort and yet what rebuke is found, amidst the abounding looseness and confusion of the last days, in these words:"The Lord knoweth them that are His," that is, "that are of Him." Surely it is the Spirit in person that is spoken of in Rom. 8:9 as the Spirit of Christ.* *"Here I suppose He is designated Christ's, not as if it were another Spirit than God's, but as having displayed Himself there above all in the perfection of a life consecrated to God from first to last."-William Kelly, "Notes on Romans," page 130.*

We turn to the second occurrence of this title, the "Spirit of Christ," as found in 1 Pet. 1:10-12, which reads:

"Of which salvation the prophets have enquired and searched diligently, who prophesied of the grace that should come unto you:searching what, or what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was in them did signify, when it testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow. Unto whom it was revealed, that not unto themselves, but unto us they did minister the things, which are now reported unto you by them that have preached the gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven; which things the angels desire to look into."

The Spirit of Christ is here seen as He who, in the Old Testament prophets, testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow. When those prophets enquired into the meaning of their own utterances, it was revealed to them that what they uttered applied to a future generation and not to themselves. In Peter's second epistle (chap. 1:16-21) the "glory that should follow" the sufferings of Christ is set before us. In the vision on the holy mount, to which Peter alludes as witnessing the majesty of our Lord Jesus in the power and coming of His kingdom, "we have the prophetic word made surer" (2 Pet. 1:19, J.N.D.). This prophetic word which concerns the glory that should follow the sufferings of Christ was uttered by holy men of God as they were moved by the Holy Spirit (ver. 21).

In view of this passage (2 Pet. 1:16-21), dealing as it does with the glory that should follow the sufferings of Christ (1 Pet. 1:11), and especially in view of the explicit statement of verse 21 that the Holy Spirit was the Author of the prophecy concerning that glory, ought it to be questioned that the title, the Spirit of Christ, as used in 1 Pet. 1:11, speaks of the Spirit of God and not of Christ personally? How fitting that the Eternal Spirit, through whom Christ offered Himself without spot to God, should be called, in prophetic relation to Christ's sufferings and glory, the "Spirit of Christ."

Furthermore:"For Christ indeed has once suffered for sins, the Just for the unjust, that He might bring us to God; being put to death in flesh, but made alive in the Spirit, in which also going He preached to the spirits which are in prison, heretofore disobedient, when the longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was preparing, into which few, that is, eight souls, were saved through water" (1 Pet. 3:18-20, J. N. D.).

We are here taught that the Spirit, in the power of whom Christ was made alive in the flesh (after He had suffered for sins), was the One by whom He had gone and preached to the men of Noah's time while the ark was preparing, whilst the longsuffering of God waited on them, and because they were disobedient to that preaching they are now in prison.

Gen. 6:3 reads:"And the Lord said, My Spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is flesh; yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years." "My Spirit" here is surely the Spirit of God who, through Noah, a preacher of righteousness (2 Pet. 2:5), strove with the disobedient men of Noah's day. Is not thus the Spirit in which Christ went and preached to the disobedient antediluvians shown to have be

  Author: George MacKenzie         Publication: Volume HAF47

Answers To Questions

(The reader should always turn to the Bible and read the passages referred to.)

Ques.

What does Scripture teach in regard to Hypnotism?

ANS.-The Word of God is a Book of principles rather than of detailed commands and prohibitions. Of course these latter are not lacking-often a "Thus saith the Lord" pointing unmistakably to what is according to His will or the reverse.

We are living in these closing days of the age in the midst of a vast number of "divers and strange doctrines." Many of these, as "Spiritism," are' but false and Satanic cults under a different name. Others are not so manifestly evil, but, under specious names, profess to bring something new to our attention. These are frequently connected with some form of oriental teaching from India- we might say almost invariably some form of Pantheism, which is a practical denial of men's accountability to God, and therefore in no need of the atoning work of our blessed Lord Jesus Christ.

In general all such systems of error can be detected by the question, "What think ye of Christ?" It will almost invariably be found that there is a denial, in some form or other, of His Godhead or His perfect Humanity, or of His atoning sacrifice. Salvation, instead of being by grace through faith, is due to some form of self-culture, character-building, or the like.

Our Lord has said, "My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me" (John 10:27). We may be sure that His voice is not in all these modern doctrines.

It may be objected that it is not fair to class Hypnotism with these doctrines. It is claimed that it is based upon well-known physiological laws, and that it is of value as a healing agency. We can only reply that it is largely based upon the influence of the will of another upon a weaker or more susceptible subject. There is but one will which has the right to control man, the will of One who is light and love, and who will not abuse the confidence reposed in Him. To surrender every power to Him is highest wisdom, but He alone has the right to enter into the inner chambers of the heart, and to control it, "as the rivers of water are turned." Indeed He does not, even with His almighty power, violate man's individuality, or enter unbidden into the soul. The despairing helpless sinner turns to Him in answer to His question, "What wilt thou that I shall do unto thee?" with the cry,

"Lord, I would Thy mercy see;
Lord, reveal Thy love to me;
Let it penetrate my soul,
All my heart and life control."

Shall we say anything like that, in part or whole, to any one but the Lord Jesus?

Hypnotism may be defined as the control of the will of another over our thoughts, feelings, etc., so that the person under the spell is an automaton acting under the will of another. The word "control" is familiar in spiritism, and the "trance" into which the medium falls is much like the helplessness of the subject under hypnotic influence.

How different is the work of the Spirit of God. His vehicle of communication with man is the Word of God, addressed to the mind, the conscience, of one who is awakened to hear the message of God. That there is the accompanying power of His sovereign grace is blessedly true, but it does not set aside the individuality.

Therefore let the child of God turn from anything which savors of the "spell" or "charm" of an agency which is not of God. S. Ridout

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF47

The Last Words Of James

"Brethren, if any of you do err from the truth, and one convert him, let him know that he which converteth the sinner from the error of his way, shall save a soul from death, and shall hide a multitude of sins" (James 5:19,20).

It has often been pointed out that the "sinner" here spoken of is not one of the class we usually call the "unsaved," but rather, as James says, "One of you." Whatever the person named "the sinner" may be at heart, he is of the company of Christian disciples; but one who has "erred from the truth." James does not say what the error is, whether what we call doctrinal or moral:in either case, it would be going astray from the path of truth. In such a case, what is to be done? Can he be restored?

Most of us know what defection from the truth is, in heart at least. And if in heart, a mere outward adherence to the truth is little else than hypocrisy, if that state of heart-estrangement be persisted in. Thank God, we can also with the Psalmist say, "He restoreth my soul:He leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for His Name's sake." The two disciples on their way to Emmaus illustrate the condition of all the little company at that time. They were in need of restoration. How beautiful then to see the "great Shepherd of the sheep," brought back from among the dead, going after the erring and discouraged ones, and leading them, not only to Jerusalem, but in heart, to God and to the truth. It was unbelief of the Word of God in the prophets of the Old Testament which had caused them to wander and to lose heart:but He whose love had brought Him into death for them, now seeks the wandering ones to cause them to realize that the Christ must suffer first ere He could bring them into glory.

There is the same privilege here held out to the Lord's people. We are all apt to go astray, and we surely will if our eyes lose sight of the Shepherd. What then? It is not here a question whether the Shepherd will seek the erring one-there can be no doubt of that-but the word is put before us, "Brethren, if any of you do err from the truth," what then? What is our responsibility, or rather our privilege? We might say with Cain, "Am I my brother's keeper?" but if we do, we betray in measure, at least, a sympathy with Cain. Neither should we go to the other extreme, and seek to drive the erring one back to the right path. That legal method has often been tried, and as often failed. The erring one needs to be "converted," or turned from his error back to the truth, but how is this to be done? James does not apparently here speak of this, but in the familiar incident in the Gospels we have a beautiful illustration from the Shepherd Himself as to His way.

Peter was one of those who had a true and devoted love for Christ. He had left all, as he said, to follow the One who was "despised and rejected of men." Now a time came when it was to be seen if he could continue to "follow" his Master. The Cross was looming up in view, and Peter, when the question was put, declared that "though all men should forsake Thee, I will in no wise forsake Thee." But the Lord knew His disciple better than he knew himself, and foretold that Peter should deny Him with a complete denial. Referring to this, the Lord said, "Simon, Simon, Satan hath demanded to have you (all) that he may sift you as wheat, but I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not:and when thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren."

Do we not here have the first step toward restoring an erring one? Jesus says to this one who had already begun to slide, "I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not." Brethren, if we see a tendency in one to slide in his steps, do we go behind his back to speak of it to others, or do we go to God about it, and tell it into the ears of the Good Shepherd who died for the erring one? Ah, it takes spirituality for this, and love alone can prompt us to do such a thing.

John Newton tells in one of his beautiful hymns how the Lord's "look of love and sorrow" melted his heart and brought him to repentance. And just as an out-and-out sinner, as John Newton had been, was won by that look of tender love and compassion, so Peter, at the time of his denial, was broken down when "the Lord turned and looked upon Peter," and that disciple went out and "wept bitterly." If genuine sorrow is in our hearts over an erring one, will it not be manifest in our eyes? If they are moistened with grief, will that not have a powerful influence in the right direction over the wandering one? But if he sees a hard, cold stare, or the face turned away, can we hope to "convert him from the error of his way?"

When, after three days, which must have seemed like years to Peter, the Lord rose again, He early sent a message to His disciples by the women who were first at the tomb:"Go, tell (My) disciples and Peter." Why single out Peter? Because he had strayed from the truth, and needed to be converted, and the Shepherd used this means to help restore His sheep. It let that denier of his Lord know that though he had completely disowned the One he professed to love, and though he might well consider himself numbered with. the ungodly and profane, there was One who had not lost sight of him in his desperate need. A special message for him! Was not this a most wonderful instance of heaping coals of fire on the head of the erring one? Yes, but there was no other way to win him back, and love took the only way possible. In this, as in much else, our blessed Master is saying to us today as of old, "Learn of Me."

But this is not all. Peter and his fellows are hungry after being out all night on a fruitless search for food. The nation care nothing for these hapless men, who went after a teacher who, they said, led them astray from Moses and the Rabbis. Their Master lay (so the nation thought) in a criminal's grave, and let them learn not to be so easily fooled. But in their extremity, there was Someone with omniscient love who had already been doing for them what they so much needed, procuring and preparing breakfast for them. But first He stands on the shore of the lake and calls to them, advising as to where to cast the net so they might take up fish. They follow his directions and bring to land a large "catch," and then discover that this kind Stranger was well-known to them, and that He had made such preparation for their hunger and cold as only those who have been in like plight can appreciate. There on the shore is a "fire of coals, and fish laid thereon, and bread," and with this welcome sight comes the word of welcome from their Host, to "Come, and dine."

To one:of those men that sight of the fire of coals meant much more than to the rest. It took his mind back to the recent past where he had stood at another fire to which he had gone to "warm himself," and at how great a cost! But this was not the "enemy's fire," as that was. He who had kindled it and had made this provision for Peter and his fellows was the very One he had so cruelly denied in the palace of the high-priest. What kind of treatment was this which was being given him? We may be sure that this fire warmed not only his flesh, but burned into his very soul. It was divine love's answer to the great wrong which Peter had done to Him, and it had its desired effect. It brought Peter down, ready to face the whole matter of the denial, ready to face the heart-searching questions which were about to be put-"Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me?" But before the Lord put these questions to His disciple, He was very careful to leave no doubt whatever in Peter's heart as to His deep and powerful love for His wandering sheep. And if the Shepherd has so great love for His sheep, what is the response from the one so much loved?

In all this do we not have given us much instruction as to the way in which a fellow-believer who has "erred from the truth" may be "converted" from "the error of his way?" Or has all this been written in vain for us? Do we think our modern methods of spreading abroad our brother's sin is a more effectual means of restoring him than this which James teaches? "Let him know that he which converteth the sinner from the error of his way shall save a soul from death, and shall HIDE a multitude of sins." Brethren, if "love found a way" to restore the erring, and in so doing "covered up" a multitude of sins, has it lost its original power, and left us only the means, which we have used, of publishing those sins? And if this is all we have left, is it any wonder that we fail to "convert" the sinner from his error? Do we not need to be taught over again the "more excellent way?"

It may be asked, Does it not say, "If he will not hear .. .tell it to the Church?" Yes, but it is a last resort, and is a confession of our own poverty in spiritual power. And if we have lost the way of love, and of the Good Shepherd who went after the lost sheep until He found it, is it not a witness that we too need to be "converted from the error" of our way? Let our confession be that of the one of old, who said, "/ have gone astray like a lost sheep; seek Thy servant, for I do not forget Thy commandments" (Ps. 119:176). Wm. Huss

  Author: W. H.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Is Christ Thy King?

To me the voice of Jesus said,
"O heart, am I thy King?'
' I scarcely listened to the voice,
It seemed so small a thing.

"O precious soul, am I thy King?"
Again the voice did say;
Somewhat I felt, but yet I sought
My mind to turn away.

Plain and more plain the voice still said,
"O heart, am I thy King?"
The voice did cease, yet still the sound
Clear in my heart did ring.

A "yes" were false, a "no" were shame,
So answer none I gave;
Then conscience stirred and firmly said,
"An answer, soul, I'll have.

"'Tell me in truth and tell me now
Is Christ indeed thy King?
Or still reigns self within thy breast?
Or some dear earthly thing?"

"Christ is our Lord, that know I well,
And try to keep His laws;
My duty is to follow Him,
And to maintain His cause."

"But, soul, thou hast not told me yet,
Is Christ thy King today?
The King who o'er thy will doth reign,
Who o'er thy heart has sway?

"Tell me at last, and tell me true,
Choose Him indeed dost thou,
O'er every lord in thee to reign,
Thy will to His to bow?"

"Then self must fall, the Christ must rise,
The rebel quit the throne,
Then Jesus is thy King indeed,
Then God regains His own."
J. M. Denniston

  Author: J. M. D.         Publication: Volume HAF47

“Your Time Is Always Ready”

(John 7:6)

In several passages of Scripture men are exhorted to be ready in view of the coming again of the Lord Jesus, and happy indeed are those who are ready even now to go in with Him to the marriage. Happy those who are going forth to meet the Bridegroom, and who will be on the inside of that shut door. Nor are we left in doubt as to the preparation necessary to enter with Him to that wedding-feast. Reader, if still unsaved, you need the oil, the divine life which the Spirit of God imparts and maintains, and which can be procured on the same old terms of Isa. 55:1-"without money and without price."You may have salvation freely, and you may have it now. To-morrow is too late!

And when thus ready to meet the Lord when He comes, how good, too, for the believer to be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh him a reason of the hope that is in him, with meekness and fear.

But in the verse before us, this being ready always is evidently uttered in tones of rebuke by Him whose ways are ever perfect, and who knew when not to be ready, as well as when to be ready.

The Jews' feast of tabernacles was at hand, the last of the seven yearly feasts celebrated by them. This feast, which followed the harvest and the vintage, is the only one which had an eighth day attached to it. The feast speaks of the happy and glorious time yet in store for poor, wandering Israel, and for this sad sin-stricken world and groaning earth. It looks on to the time when He, the Lord of the harvest, shall manifest Himself to His earthly people and the world, when the harvest is past and the vintage -the judgment -is ended, and He shall reign in mighty splendor. With its eighth day this feast tells of eternal blessing, nevermore to be forfeited.

It is doubtful whether His brethren understood anything of this, yet how striking it is that they urge Him to show Himself to the world, which is just what the present feast looks on to. But they did not believe in Him (ver. 5). They could appreciate one who would seek his own glory (chap. 8:50), and to this end their time was always ready. How intensely solemn this is! How true it is still! Men of this world are always ready to show themselves, to seek their own honor. And alas, how often God's people, too, are ready to show themselves.

How different all this in our wonderful Lord! Oh, to be more like Him, to drink in of His spirit! Glory belongs to Him! He alone has any right to show Himself. But He says:"My time is not yet come." I am content to wait. The cross must precede the crown. He will bear the ignominy and shame, the sorrow and the curse; He is willing to be ignored and unknown, to suffer wrong, and to be defrauded. The fast must come before the feast, the awful woe of Calvary before the splendor of the Millennial throne. "I go not up yet unto this feast, for My time is not yet full come." Brethren, are we not willing to be misunderstood for a little by our fellow-believers, to suffer with Him for a little season, to bear His cross, and thus seek the crown? Are those words:"Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus," to be written only on the pages of our Bibles, and not also in indelible letters on the tablets of our hearts?

"Oh, teach me more of Thy blest ways,
Thou holy Lamb of God."

He does go up to the feast after a few days, not openly, but as it were in secret. And they sought Him!

Did they realize there was something lacking in their feast? Had they learned that the feast of Jehovah had degenerated into the Jews' feast of tabernacles? Certain it is that this poor world, as well as Israel of old, is seeking happiness and satisfaction apart from Him, and we know that they are on a vain errand. Dear fellow-saints, the world needs Him. Let us go up unto their feast, not to show ourselves, not to take part in their empty pleasures or sinful lusts, but to bring Christ to them. We have Him to present who alone can satisfy the longing soul. And if He is not all in all to us, if the spirit of worldliness has crept in, let us judge ourselves unsparingly in His presence.

In the last day of the feast Jesus stood and cried, "If any man thirst, let him come unto Me, and drink." In chapter 6, where the Jews' passover, the first of the seven feasts, is before us, our blessed Lord presents Himself as the Bread of Life, as the Flesh which man must eat to live for ever. There He is the Food for a needy, hungry soul. In our chapter, at the feast of tabernacles, the last of the feasts, He offers Himself as the One who meets the need of the thirsty ones. Both these feasts left men as they were; in themselves they were mere out– ward forms, bereft of all power. Thanks be to God, in Him to whom they pointed, in our Lord, there is meat and drink, life and joy, now and forever.

While we await the glory we are to suffer here. The way of the cross leads home. And while we wait let us remember we are in a world that needs Him! Let us walk apart from its feasts and follies, though among them. When men have sought in vain for rest, at the end of their feast, we may still say with exulting hearts, "If any man thirst, let him come unto Jesus, and drink." Let us pattern after our blessed Master! He never sought His own glory. Let us leave off seeking glory, but rather be to His honor and glory by seeking to walk in His ways, while we seek the blessing of souls (Ps. 27:8).
A. Van Ryn

  Author: A. W. R.         Publication: Volume HAF47

Expectation

Dark grows the night. The Bride, her vigil keeping,
Looks for the morning star, herald of day.
While all around, a careless world is sleeping,
Faith waits, and looks to see the morning ray.

Soon Thou wilt come-oh, blest anticipation! –
And we shall gaze unhindered on Thy face;
Our longing hope shall have its glad fruition,
And in "those wounds" we shall love's story trace.

Oh, cloudless morn of heavenly light and gladness,
When God Himself shall wipe all tears away!
There shall be no more death and no more sadness,
No trace of sin through God's eternal day.

Oh, haste the day, when waiting shall be over!
Come quickly, and fulfil Thy parting word!
We long to see Thy face, eternal Lover!
With yearning hearts we say, "Come quickly, Lord."

But well we know that Thine's the deeper longing,
To rapture home with Thee Thy ransomed Bride.
Through the dark night, our patient vigil keeping,
In patience near Thee we would e'er abide.

"Arise, My love," we soon shall hear Thee saying,
"And come away" to scenes of light and love.
The day of gladness then no more delaying,
With joy Thou'lt bear Thy purchased Bride above.

And there with Thee we shall rehearse the story,
Thy faithful love in desert, scenes below;
And walking with Thee in that cloudless glory,
To Thee our endless praise shall ceaseless flow.

Until that day, Lord Jesus, keep us faithful
To Thy blest Word, and not deny Thy Name!
Oh, shield Thine own from every harm and evil,
Content to suffer loss and bear Thy shame!

J. W. H. Nichols

  Author: J. WH. Nichols         Publication: Volume HAF47

Work In The Foreign Field

The Monthly Prayer-meeting held at Elizabeth, N. J., was resumed, after the summer intermission, on Monday, Sept. 9th. These meetings have been found very encouraging and profitable. Usually as many as can conveniently do so gather for tea together, and this is followed by the prayer-meeting. It partakes largely of that character a few words at the opening tell of what has been heard of the workers since we last met, with special reference to the field particularly before us. Our meeting at this time was particularly interesting because of the presence of our beloved brothers Deans and family, of Oakland, Calif. They were on their way to Africa to join the laborers in that field-our brothers Woodhams and Gordon Searle with their families and the sisters, Misses De Jonge and Wilson.

Our dear brother Deans gave some account of how, from his early Christian life, the work in Africa had been laid on his heart. His duties to his mother and other causes prevented his going at once, and he went on with his gospel testimony while working with his hands. But at last, after years of waiting, the Lord had made the way plain for the first step, which he and his dear wife took. Their daughter Ella was in accord with their purpose, and their son William, who had not at first been quite willing to take such a step (he was living in a distant city), was drawn to yield himself fully for the Lord's mind in this great work. So the entire family, including the youngest son, Robert, were sailing for their field of labor. William followed his father in an interesting account of how he had been led to the happy decision. The season of prayer which followed included, in an appropriate way, a number of young men. The following Saturday, Sept. 14th, a good number gathered in the dining saloon of the "Cedric," and after singing and a brief address, and a number of prayers, we bade farewell and God-speed to our beloved brother and his dear family. May our prayers and fellowship follow them in this blessed work.

The following letters from different parts of the Field should cause both thanksgiving to God for His mercies and exercise on our part as to our share in this blessed work:

AFRICA

Inkongo, Lusambo, Dear brother:- July, 9,1929.

Very many thanks for your letter of April 22. Yes, we have our hands full, but it is well to have plenty to do, and is good for both body and mind, and I think for the soul too, in spite of what good brethren say who are anti-Marthas, though I appreciate Mary's position too.

My wife and I went to Baka Mbuli in response to urgent letters, leaving here just in the middle of a conference. I got through a baptism before leaving, and asked Mr. Moyes to come for the two days after we left. I gave Mr. Westcott two injections of quinine and his temperature came down, and he has since been keeping much better. I strongly advised him to take quinine regularly, but he is a devout homeopathist, and does not believe in it.

There were lots of little odd jobs to do there. I cleaned out the organ and mended it, shewed Miss Chalmers how to mix up a few medicines, such as phosphorus, etc., which she did not understand, tasted sundry drugs of which the labels had been eaten by cockroaches, and as usual, identified a bottle of hydrochloric acid without tasting it, and told them the name. I do this every time I go. Odd moments were spent in reading to Mr. Westcott, who gets very little of this, and is much interested to hear news. He had never heard of Einstein's theory, nor of Well's and Huxley's latest attempt to analyze Life in terms of chemistry, etc. And he had never heard of a cubist painting, or heard futurist poetry, so you will imagine what an interesting time we had together.

We are getting fine crowds here for the gospel, and dozens turn out in the cold mist at 6:30 a.m. for morning prayers, and the address of twenty minutes or so. I am going through Leviticus, and have already been right through the Bible once. It is nice to see the interest, and makes it all the easier for the speaker.

I must conclude now. Have been tree-felling this afternoon and gave about forty injections this morning for sleeping sickness and leprosy. _

With Christian love in which all here join,

Yours sincerely,

H. Wilson.

3729 Longfellow Ave., So., Minneapolis, Minn.,

Dear brother:- August 16, 1929.

I am at present travelling in Saskatchewan, Canada, with the gospel car, and seeking to witness for the Lord Jesus as we go from place to place and farm to farm, sometimes having earnest talks with souls. As far as meetings are concerned we have not had much encouragement, but we rest upon His promise as to the seed sown (Isa. 55:11).

As to Africa, dear brother, and my exercises, I have that country much upon my heart, and I believe the Lord has called upon me to witness for Him there, and I know I will not be happy in any place until I am there for Him. I believe I have counted the cost. My wife too, I understand, is ready for the sacrifice. So I am contemplating going the end of this year or the beginning of next.

We will make it known to the assembly at Minneapolis when we return there. We are trying to get some brother who may be exercised about witnessing for Christ in the Canadian prairies to take over the gospel car.

Much love in Him, our Hope,

Duncan McNeil.

CHINA

Taitowying,

Beloved brother:- Aug. 23,1929.

"A great door and effectual is opened unto me, and there are many adversaries" (1 Cor. 16:9). The enemy of our souls has more ways than one of opposing and weakening the Lord's work, but as long as he remains a roaring lion he is easily detected, and often can be avoided by even the most unspiritual and simple of the Lord's people; but when he is clothed in lamb's skin, or as the apostle Paul says, "his ministers be transformed as the ministers of righteousness," then "if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect" (Matt. 24:24).

For the past one hundred and twenty years the devil has been acting more or less as a roaring lion in China but now he is manifesting himself by more subtle means' I he so-called Kuo-ming-tang (or, Nationalist movement) is forcing itself into the Christian chapels and preaching the "three man's-principle," or the doctrine of Sun Yat Sen, which in itself sounds quite promising to the ears of the common people, but is entirely without power to fulfil any of its promises. It is by men or of men without any power to forgive sins or to change the evil human heart which "is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked" (Jer. 17:9). Not only so, but in many places those who teach it have manifested themselves to be quite anti-christian, accepting the Lord Jesus as a good example for men, but entirely ignoring Him as God manifest in flesh, refusing His substitutional work for sinners, and His Lordship over all creation. In many churches about eighty per cent of the people, pastors and teachers have joined the league, not realizing the danger of being yoked together with unbelievers.

Besides that, there are new kinds of religions springing up almost^ daily, which destroy the fundamental teachings of the Word of God, honor man and belittle the grace of God. Lately, on account of such a system, we have suffered not a little. A man who is father-in-law to this hsien magistrate (who is the highest executive officer in the county) has imbibed various erroneous teachings from different cults and holds them as steps to get to heaven. The first of these is that they must keep the Jewish sabbath day, the second is that all his followers must be baptized by him, by immersion face downward, in the name of Jesus only, in which operation they are to get forgiveness of sins, the Holy Ghost and the gift of tongues, without which there is no hope whatever for salvation; the third is that he must wash his disciples' feet, for if he washes them not they have no part with him; the fourth is that they must have unleavened bread in remembering the Lord's death, and the fifth is that it must be done on the third moon and the 14th day, that is, once a year. Being in a semi-official position (that means that he has power in the courts) he has succeeded in drawing away eighty per cent of the approximately 150 Methodists with his reach. We have lost six to his flock also. Beside these a number of inquirers have been led to follow him, for if he knows of any in any place who have any interest in Christianity he spares no means to get them in his fold. He says that foreign missionaries have come to this country to get the Chinese people under their control. He likens himself and his doctrine to a university, Seventh-day Adventists to a middle school, and all the rest to a primary school.

Otherwise we have been enjoying peace in this vicinity; there have been no new bandits, and the soldiers that have been stationed out here have behaved themselves very well.

Now as to the quarrel between China and Russia, we do not yet know how much it will affect us. It will not do so for some time in any other way than that, when the soldiers have been withdrawn from here to the front, which is some 700-800 miles distant, there might rise up some new bandits; or if China should lose in the war with Russia, and the Russians gain their way into China proper as far as this, we would be in the war zone again, which in my judgment is almost out of the question. It would make some difference also if the Nationalist army should come in this direction, for they have proven in certain localities to be very anti-foreign and anti-christian, and this might work some hardships for us.

We covet your continuing prayers for us all that in spite of many oppositions the Lord's Name should be glorified in us (Eph. 6:18,19). With our united love and best Christian wishes to all the Lord's people.

Yours affectionately in Christ,

Charles O. Kautto.

P. S.-Sept. 1st.

Mr. Kautto has gone again to Shuang-tze and Mutouteng, the out-stations, for a ten days' stay. The roads are not flooded now, and he is hoping to be able to go oftener than for the last few weeks. The soldiers who were stationed here have gone, and all is quiet. The Lord has surely blessed us. Mrs. Kautto.

JAPAN,

Letter from Dr. Kotaro Tsukiyama, Tokyo, by Airship "Graf Zeppelin" on the First Round-the-World Flight. Postmarked Tokyo, 21.8.29.

Translation:

In the Lord esteemed beloved brother and sister Craig. Thinking of you all being healthy doing the Lord's work we are thankful.

We, Japan brethren and sisters also, likewise, by grace encouraged, with all our^ strength are doing the gospel's work. Therefore please be at peace of mind.

Yesterday from Germany the airship Zeppelin safely arriving visited the capital (1:e., Tokyo). And since it passed just immediately above our house, what came to mind at once was the coming of the Lord. This even by man's power has come flying through the atmosphere, but without question what a wonder will be the coming of the Lord from heaven! Also probably it seems that Daniel 12:4 is being fulfilled ("The time of the end:many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increased)."

After this without delay the Lord Jesus Christ to the air will come, and then, not by airplanes or airships, but with resurrection bodies freely by our Lord's side we shall flying come. Indeed, this is a joyful matter! And then even to longed-for America, even to England, even to Germany, freely flying we shall go; and the dearly-loved brethren and sisters of all countries, one-by-one visiting, we shall have happy conversation concerning faith's joyful victory. This will probably be soon.
Do please give our best regards to everyone.

BAHAMAS

Marsh Harbor, Dear brother:- Sept. 2, 1929.

I desire to pen these lines that you might, through the medium of Help and Food, acquaint our brethren, and especially those that have had fellowship to the end, that owing to the inability of upkeep we have had to dispose of "The Evangel." We purpose, however, procuring a couple of smaller boats that can be manned, operated and kept up with much less expense. Since procuring "The Evangel" the Government has put on motor service to practically all of the islands, and we trust, this service being continued, we shall be able to use same in inter-insular service, and the small boat properly equipped will be able to meet our need locally. We cannot get along without this. Desiring the prayers of our brethren to this end.

Ever affec'tly in our Lord Jesus,

K. Stratton.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF47

Fragment

"It is not the things that you do, dear,
But the things that you leave undone,
That give you a bit of a heartache,
At the setting of the sun."

Margaret E. Sangster

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF47