a1ir..._.:.:..i : .'..*,0:i.c40....0,bg.tr:r.iar1i New Series, Vol. - VI Nn C3l ' . J o hn Weir Strictly in Advance $2:50, Otherwise *3. Postage 20ots, to be paid' where delivered. 3'nutiran tobiltrtiait. THIIRS'D AN",' 'JULY 8, 1869 —The corrier.Stone of the new edifice of the Central church (N. L.), corner of Franklin and Thompson streets, Rev. J. Y. Mitchell, pastor, will be laid to , day i at 6 o'clock, P. M. —The Managers of the Midnight Mission have, in the past eighteen tnonths,_had over 700 indi vidutils under their ohatge. They are asking for aid: Princeton has conferred some of its highest honors upon, men of our. body : LL.D. upon Rev. Wm. Adams, D. D., and Henry B. Smith, D. D., and D. D. upon. Rev. John Crowell of Odessa, Delaware. The University of New York con ferred a D. D. upon Rev, Wm. Aikman, and Wil liams' College a similar degree upon Rev, John W. Bailey of Illinois.' —The Directors of the Philadelphia Library Co., are inclined to • pause .before accepting the Ridgway bequest. At.a recent; meeting, Judge Hare expressed his belief that it it would be mainly consumed in erecting the library build ing, which, with taxes and increased cost of keeping it up, might, make.it not so desirable a legacy after Ll. ~Judge Cadwalader spoke earn estly in favor of accepting it. A joint commit tee of six directors and pix stockholders was raised to take the matter.into consideration, and report to a meeting of the stoekholders to be held in October. —The diminution of our public debt since the incoming of the new administration, to the amount of thirty-six millions and more, is grati fying indeed, in a merely financial and economi cal point of view ; but the Christian citizen re joices at the proof it, gives of the fidelity of our Government to the simple principlei,of morality which it professed, and the consequent healthful influence certain to be diffused through the business life of our country. National repudTia= tion, open or implied, would have unhinged all the business relations of society and have thrown a veil 'thicker than Jewish prejudice over not only the Eighth Commandment, but the whole moral law. We beg the prayers of our readers that the Government may=be sustained in its de termination honestly to administer the affairs of the country ; a purpose which will require all the courage and the wisdom of great generals and accomplished statesmen. WHY RE-UNITE. Among the many causes which are bringing the two branches of the ,church together, none is more potent than a deepening sense of the great work laid upon the evangelical churches of America at this time. Right or wrong, the in terest in theological questions which once pro : . foundly agitated the church, and consequently, the interest in, liberty of theological opinion, are passing away. Christ's people are asking, now, not so much what they shall think and believe of Him, as what they shall do for, Him. The great, universal, massive truths of Redemption, on which we ate all agreed, are now in such need of earnest advocacy and extension, that, Christian people, especially in America, feel called upon to forget their differences, and to rally for great practical achievements in their behalf. The old familiar work of Home Missions and of City Evangelization and. Church Erection is pressing upon us as heavily as,ever before. Some of the problems it presents are as far from solu tion as e'er. We are but scratching; on ,the outer shell of the home heathenism'of our cities. Worldly enterprise, with its transcontinental railroads, its inter-oceanic canals and its Atlantic cables is enthroning Mammon higher than ever upon the hearts of men. Teutonic, Scandinavi an, Celtic and Anglo-Saxon immigration is rol ling upon us at the rate of six to ten thousand a week. One seventh part of our population are Rornanists, and the commercial metropolis of the nation is virtually a part of the Pope's domin ions, and the. Empire State is laid under contri bution, and . taxes are wrung from unwilling Pro testants to the amount of millions, for the sup port of Papal, schools and Papal charities, and for the building' of costly Romish cathedrals. The flood of intemperance must, a second time, be arrested. The•day of sacred rest must be guar. ded from universal license. The four millions of freedmen, victims of. Me enforced ignorance of divine and human knoitledge, and of ;the 'bru talizing influences, of slavery must)be raised,an4 fitted for citizenship in tbe , ,heaseer4 and', the earthly country. Infidelity mist be , rnet in its new and attractive form of scientific materialism. The battle rages around the pram, the,miracles, s'uly69 the cross and the sepulchre of Jegus. Why do we linger over the nicer distinctions within' the Calvinistic system ? ' The battle -ground of to day is not here; :the"wave of att.& has swept towards the citadel, and yet some arein ecstacies of blind terror about the smaller'outposts l :Do not play the martyr for your th'edries; while the foundations are in danger of being de stroyed. And while . ws alevbl3Ely with ; -questions which have become more, or, les? familiar, in which there are, fewnew elements save of size and relative position, we need nu i ly turn to our pacific , coast to ,witness the rise of, entirelynewva ten,tonS Plienomsno s 'u, 1 1?atd . irg the foresight:of the most Fagacious philanthropists. The stream of Chinese and Japanese immigration seems to have fairly set in, and if we have been bewildered with difficulties arisinc , from the rapid influx of a,sominally Christian population, what is to be done when the greatest of heathen, nations crowded with one third of the whole human race, is threatening to pour out its people upon our Western shores I These,are some. of the amazipg ponsiderations which ought to draw and which are drawing America,n,ChTistians fi;ftether, and which have had their, weight { in breakino• down the separating • walls of , distrust between, the two branches of our church. At least one of the'Presbyteries which has taken action, on the subject, Shows its estimate of the praetical meaning of ,the Re-union, in the followinc , Resolution • "Reso4ved, That we have heard, with pro fmind satisfaction audLgreat joy of the Conteth plated moVerdent to raise'a fund ofSeVeral lions of dollars, for cdimational and denomina tion ) pArposes il aSan appcopriate,,celebrao.oll,ofthe Re-union of the Presbyterian Church,, and we hereby express our earnest deaire'iliat the Gene: raf kge6richly at its aajoUrned•Meeting 'at:Pitts bnightlike stick 'Measures to favor the , effort as shall enlist all the. members of: our congregations to makp it pupcessfuli so that our ~branch of the Church fail not to do its full share in this grand work of Christian benevolence, in which the Presbytery Ontariois hereby pledged not to be delimvent." J. : LIMITS. By, inspiration we tneau 7 a mysterious, miracu lous influence exerte,d,upo,n the.miuds of a speci fic and limited class of men, and preducing three kinds of effects : (1) a kno'wle ; dge , of truth which they, could not obtain by : , the regular, operations of the faculties, and ,(2) a power of selection among.truths or, facts already known, or accessi ble by ordinary means, according to the purposes of the inspiring Agent:, (3) With, both of these gifts, a third is associated, before, our idea of in spiration is complete., namely that of makin , an infallibly correct record of the truths thusgained or selected. Any and all •attempts at a psyCho logical explanation of the mode of this influence must be given up, just as unhesitatinaly ,as au attempt to explain the miracle of the muiltiplica don of the loaves' and fishes. All classifyin. of this influence with other natural and more or less known operations of the mind, must, we think, be eschewed, as (pit& overlooking its purely miraculous quality, and its place, as a speciffc element, in the economy of ,RedeMptieti. . . Only by accommodation and i analogy .can it, be compared with what men, outside of theological circles, call inspiration." , That power of in: sight and grasp of truth and gift of ; utterance which are the mysterious prerogatives of genius, are; indeed, often spoken of in connection with the writers of the Bible; by some, as if they Were all that could ,be claimed for them; by others, as if they furnished, at least a satisfactory, illustra tion of the mode of the divine ; influence; by oth ers still, as one class of divine influences, not so elevated, but still essentially the same as those enjoyed by the sacred writers. We dismiss each and all of these theories of men solicitous to put a wholly supernatural fact in a natural . and ra tional garb,. The inspiration of these writers is a fact utterly sui, geiteris, no more to be accounted for, on rational grounds, than were the forty years' wanderings of the children of Israel in the wilderness, or than any one of the divine faces through which the plan of salvation was brought into human history and attested to men. We dismiss, too, the question, to what extent these writers were merely machines; what amount of volition they exercised in forming definite verbal,conceptions of what,they knew. in general by inspiration ; and how , far they were permitted to follow their naturaihent in the mat ter of-style and logical form. If we giant that, as a icsulCof the my i sterious co working of the divine, and human in the Scripitires, an infallibly •; • true book has been secured, we need not contend about the relative proportion of thesis , two ele ments,in,the problem. If we deny a dictation Of every, separate word and. argument, but at -the PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1869. same time.' hold that words and arguments convey the exact truth, just as lunch as if they had been dictated, we are on' orthodox ground, without be ing bound to any 'mechanical theory. We'do not intend 'repudiate What is.'called `plenary in spirationT but'we'd`eny that it is beeded in its tnebbailial form 'to Mike Out the case. Indeed; t,he plenary,' or ineehanical-theory•cannotgo - with us whole; a step beyoul the" Original text of the record: If it' wa's the Teri' *ords thativere 'clic taited, the eharni whenevee you transL kle 'there ; wherek on 'the other view, - S: faithful translation is, to all intents and purposes, the iii epire'd' ' ' No* we hold eXPlicitly that 'all Scriitureig given' by inspiration; thiit• the Inspiring:Agent is'evei'kaihere, in every page and itibi)Osition, in every sehttirice and word. That which is given as matter-of record-cis an infallibly true record. Sometimes-it is, a record of, things g 004141 1 .4 true, sometimes of things evil ,and false, but as a;re pord, ,it is, in each, ease,, equally, true..., Sometimes it is a- prophecy, ,a _disclosure, a 99mMand l a warning;, in eiaoh• and all• these it is supreine— divine. Whatever, wading to all fair, corn ; mon sense rules 'cif 'interpretation, the inspired writers felt themselves charged to Convey, that the Holy Spirit •spealtS,,to,•us. ErrizT in the pas sage of the truth from the Spirit, ttrongh 'their minds and pens to-us, cannot be adtutteekl i i any shaie, form or 'degree, without vitiating the very idea of inspiration as the sole, infallible source of truth and; authOrity, and thus• destreying, the value Of the Seiititures. , ••Nothing:is) gain'ed-tci the wOrld'by Revelation, if meremaygo through the , )3ible, , eaeh One ehObsing what ac oldswith his• own' 'judgment ; • and iiejecting , all the'.rei4t. -A ReVelition eouldi•be made•available by such a firo dess; onlynn•ihestiipositidn that man as already in' full ' 1 sympathy withs , God;• and, in• >that ease, there would be virtually no need of 'a revelation at all. i , • • However, it is' wbusinbss of.prime iiiipOrtance, which ever theory.' of inspiration wechoose, to learn in what degree we ha;ve secured a TPerfect copy of the 'original. We.raay , not h el d.-the .in. g siirinAgent-tickicruitibieltor erierstluit crept into manuscripts:. ~TherhWasno pledge:en the' Part-of Deity in giving:na- Hifi word; to. pre serve an absolutely 'perfect copy 'of the original record through. all,time. This have re quiredu a econstantLsuccesSion of , miracles, an in spiration of 'copyists,' as well as original 'writers; it suspension 'of the Jaws:of deba.y, as to the 'ma terial of the , Manuscripts. and: the 4ike. .While Divine Providence, in a wonderful manner,,has guarded the)subitantal purity, theie precious docrtments;'their dondition !shows that He: has wrought- no such tniracles .as .- these. 'The oorigi-i nal work :of the authors,' thoJe .copies =of the Epistles Which. Paul authenticated, with a 'con cluding sentence in his own handwriting, have not.been handed down,to.'us:• The versions:and copies , ofs these Writings which we possess, dating from the second century and onward, although sufficiently. ancient,. accurate and well attested ; areinot; by any mean's, free from errors, as their various ' , readings show. And while not one in, a hundra of these variens'readings of any prac- tical importande, not one doctrine of religion be ing changed;' nor one .precept taken away, nor one 'important fact altered by, the whole of them takentogether, yet itis well to take , ground tinctly; that 'only as ! we approximate exactly to the original text, can we hold' the Inspiring Agent responsible rfor the, work.. If, for instanceoound Criticism rejects the passage in 1 John v. 7, as we believe•it does, we, may remove it from the text without tonching.the question of inspiration at all. was not in themanuscript as it came from the Apostle's hand, and we do not want it in our copies. It is no part of the Holy Spirit's work. The judging, critical faculties of man are designed, in providence, to, be used in tracing the exact verbal form, and in maintaining the verbal pirity, of the divine communicatioq,,as well as in unfolding their, meaning. Nor was inspiration such an endowment that it preserved the Writers, at all othertimes, from error or 'infirmity: Bala= and even Balsam's ass might be under such influence as to utter in fallible truth, and immediately afterwards-relapse into ''a condition with which the word, .of God has no concern. Peter was blamed to the face by Para, yet'he was inspired 'to write part of the New Testament. So mach of the activity of these , men as was actually employed =in forming the inspired reCord=--eo ranch, and.' no more,—is covered by the specific influence of the Inspiring Agent; the argument is' not affected by their 'onduct-as fallible men, at other times. to be said of the •characters intro duCed;ind. of the language Auoted, in the histori partsl'of. the Bible:, The wrong- and criminal of -these nharactere are' put: upon record sim indttet of hiStory and for admpnition.; the Inspiring Agent is responsible for none of these acts, hilt solely for the correetness with which they have been recorded. Wicked speeches, fain' statements, and niiconsciotta errors, are merely'put on record as facts, not as examples to be imitated: Di() one thinks of ascribing to the Inspiring Agent such`a declaration as,." There .instruction it was written diiwn iSin-mtittei reciird, as the utterance of " the fool." We have frequently, in studying the 'higorical , :difficulties of. Stephen's speech, (Acts vii.) asked ourselves, whether inspiration shoUld'be held 'acceintable for them? The ques tion:may be put thus`: We's Stephen inspired to ifiake the.:speech; or was it only Luke who maS inspired to''put the speech on record, exactly as it WIN tieliVernd ? Whatever be the4:nswer, the true theOry of inspiration will be fully satisfied °tithe falter suppoaitfon; and why should we re quire more ? Inlialey's Evidences there is quite an' , argum'erit upon the histoiical difficulties in the sienchof Gamaliel, Acts v. 34-37: The author iwanxions`to remove these difficulties;and'speaks ofthe.discrepaney between Gamaliel and Josephus as if it was actually between Josephus and LUke. The: fact is all Ive ,Can rightfully ,demand of Luk'e, 'inspired ,penman, is the' faithful re portingeof- ;whit Ganialiel said. He is ono more responsible-for _the correctness of the 'statements than the reporter of the courts is for the 'truth fulness of the Witnesses' testimony; 'which he takes down. The inspiring agent again; must not be'beld responsible for the literal trutl of current forms of speech, in which the appearanCe of things is described; as "the.sun: i r ises"- , or "sets." 'lf language scientifically correct bad: been used in place of these current yhrues, it would have con fused readers, whose ideas were so totally differ_ ent. Poetical expressions, such as the pillars of heaven,pillars of the earth, &c., must be judged exactly as we would judge similar expressions in our own literature. Still more important is it to obsre, in the ea#of:suichhooks as Job and the . Ecclesiastes, that there is an. argument with a ),t . r4o.t and a wrong. side i carried through the en tfre.b:6ll;:and that passage's - cannot be cited in discriminately from either Job or Ecclesiastes, as haying a divide Warrant. Job's friends insisted that GO dealt out tempor4l good and evil ac,- cording to the present deserts,of men; a doctrine which !ob rightly cpmbated. We are, of course, not authorized tp cite the language of Job's friendq as inspired. The discission was put,up on record by, direction of the inspirino. Agent, but what part, of the discussion ,five • are to f regard as inspired, is, one of 'those questions which divine wisdom has left for- the trarnium of the judgment of Hispeople.'l l .he- 8 ad i ,despondipg, unbelieving c2Tressions. 7cclesiast i es require to he esti mated not ,by.themselves; for ,then .they would necessarily ,be rejected as ; uutrne but they must be weighed in Connection ,with ; the book as a whole; as.bringing out more foreibly,the leading truth; ." the, conelusion of the whole matter." Mr. Barnes, in his Introduction to the Psalms, makes similar remarks' i ; rl reference to some of the ;most- difficult of ,these very difficult portions of ,Scripture----f-be Imprecatory Psalms says (Intro& $‘ Some of the ex pressions referred, to ; , are a mere record of the feelings of others; ,of the gratification which theY would feel, in seeing vengeance inflicted, on Os guilty, even when.revenge ; should, be taken int the most, barbarous and, savage manner. In . such a case, all that the inspired writer, or the Spirit of inspiratiOnV is`responsible for, is the fairness of the record; or that'He has given' an exact statement of the feelings which would be . cherished and expressed by - those - who would in flict the veiageance, or -wbo shoUld experience gratification' in 'seeing Referring to Psalm 137': S, 9, he says: "In this there- is nothing which necessarily implies that the author of the Psalms would' approve of ;it or that he would have done it' himself. If the ease is 'supposed even to indicate the common feelings:of the He brew people. . . . still it may be a mere record of that feeling' as a matter of fact, and the Spirit of inspiration is -responsible , only for a 'fair ac count of the feelings which*ould actually exist" Th e N. W. Presbyterian charges xis with,sneer ing at and deriding the other branch of the church in our article: of two weeks ago on Re-,union. In that 'article, we.speke ,of both branches of the church as, figuratively, dying to rise and form a new church in,the Union. We proved the death, of the Old School, by the fent perfectly patent through all the negotiations„that she had utterly' abandoned her former ,haughty, uncompromising and persecuting attitude toward? our body and our men, and bad joined, with us in a mutual recog nition of ,orthodoxy, ns : the basis of the plan of union senk down„to the IP ; resbyteries. . All that Genesee Evangelist, No. I:207. J Home & Foreign Miss. $2.00. I. Address:-1334 Chestnut Street New School men had felt and seen, in former times, of contempt and suspicion in the attitude of this branch towards themselves, was surren dered and disowned in this action. Perhaps we should have said--not the. Old School Church, but the Old Schoolism of the Old School Church is . dead,—a distinction from which the N. W. Presbyterian is welcome to draw all the comfort it can. Certainly, we intended no offence to the immense governing mass of the other branch, who for six years have been steadily working for re union upon an honorable basis, and have trans formed so completely the character of their branch, that even the most positive New School men can welcome the prospect of union with them. THE THIRD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF WILLIAMSPORT. This church was organized by a Committee of the Presbytery of Harrisburg on the 31st of May last.• It is a colony from the 2d Church, Rev. Mr. l Sterling's ; and goes out with none but the kindest feelings, and with the full approba tion and consent of both the pastor and people of the 2d Church, who have done all that they could to forward the enterprise. The beautiful chapel, for the accommodation of the 3d Church, has just been completed,,•- and it was dedicated to the worship of Almighty God on Sabbath, July ath. • Rev. Wm. Sterling preached the sermon, closing his own church for the occasion. The house was well filled; and before the congregl- Lion retired, they wiped out the bebt amounting to over nine thousand dollars. Thus, through the liberality of Mr. Sterling's church, has this house been erected, arid put into the hands of the new organization entirely unembarrassed with debt. The chapel is a very neat brick building, in Gothic style, with slate roof. It has two graceful towers, in one of which hangs' the old bell of the 2d church, presented by the Trustees of that church. The audience chamber will seat about 350 persons. It is carpeted and cush ioned throughout, and has stained glasspindows, and is lighted on the, same plan as the 23 church, making the house at night as brilliant as the day. It has also a small gallery for the choir; and under' the gallery, an infant school rooth, which 'can be thrown into the audience chainber during the time a public worship. The entire cost, idcluding 'the lot, is .$16,221 '3o.' Two excellent men, Mr. Hiram Mudge and Mr. Percy' W. Bentley' have been ordained hs Elders ; and -their . ydung pastor, Rev. William A. Dunning' from , Montrose Presbytery, enters upon hiS• field df labor with most encouraging prospects of success. The location' of this new church is an excel lent one. It is in the most beautiful part of the city, and' in , the' midst of a rapidly increasing population. The chapel is erected on the rear end of the lot, on Maynard street;—leaving the Main blinding, wheUthe congregation grow large enough' to require it, to front on West Third Street. Thus; by the blessing of God, has this cher ished enterprise been accomplished. We trust that before many years it will be one of our most vigorous, and active, and influential churches. A CHANCE ' FOR. THE ARITHMETIC bIAN. The Christian Instructor of this city can't, make up, its mind about the statistics of its own (U. P.) Church. In a recent item it steps across the IXth Commandment to charge us with " falsify ing the records " in " stating that [the U. P.] Church has lost-5,000 during the year. The records show a gain of over 3,000.", The _lnstructor itself is our authority for our statement. We quote its very words in its re port of its Assembly :—" number of members 65,64 ; increase by profession, 4,121; by cer tificate 3,998; decrease 5,059." We find that the statistical report makes this mean " deaths and removals 5,059;" but we had no reason at the time to know that this was the meaning. The Instructor itself is falsifying the records. It claims an inerease of 3,066, ascribing the ap parent discrepancy to " the carelessness of ses sions in making up the -record." The facts 'stand, however, and are text enough for any ser mon we have preached on them,—that the net gain, of the U. P. Church in a membership of over 65,000 is just twelve. We suggest that if the instructor continue its transpositions:of matter and its substitution of obscure won:U*lr plain ones, that it change its name to The Weekly Rebus. —Rev. R.ll. Allen of Pine St. church re ceived the degree of D.D. from Hanover, Ind. College, at its recent commencement.