GENESEE EVANGELIST.—WhoIe No. 715. For the American Presbyterian. BISE, JUDA. IV J. 0. BLYTHE. Let Jttda tift her harps of gold, From off the willows now, For Jesus reigns, her mighty King, Amt glory crowns His brow. The battle lingered all the day, And through the night and on; But when the Sabbath morn drew nigh, The victory was won. 0! what a shout was that went up, From off the field of war, Like thunders rolling through the sky, And sounding every where. It was the triumphant voice of Him, Who died on Calvary, In greatness of resistless strength, Proclaiming victory. Like ligbtnlngsmn his flashing eyes, Through all the fleeing hosts, And scorched and crushed them down to hell,’ In spite of all their boasts. The hearts of God’s angelic sons, Were startled when they flew; And saw the flaming thunderbolts Consume ’th apostate crew. Hail! holy Jesus, flaming King! The victory is thine, Accomplished by thine own right Arm, That Arm above divine. Rise, Juda, rise! Shake off the dust, Tby King is on the throne — Hear how the ransomed captives shout, Hark, how the demons groan. Rise, Juda, rise 1 no slavish yoke Is on thy bended neck: When Jesus swept the field of foes, The Iron yoke He broke. Rise, Juda, rise! no foes are here, Why longer then lie down? Put on thy garments beautiful, And wear thy princely crown. Go forth in songs and dances now, . To meet tby glorious King; Let every harp and every heart, Be swept in every string. Rise, Juda, rise! He is thy King, And worthy so to be— Seel where ’th Eternal Throne is set, He sits in majesty. ' Rise, Juda, rise I why sit supine, ' When Gentiles throng the way? In blood he bathed the field of war, To wash thy shame away. Rise, Juda, rise! Behold thy King, He cometh thee to meet! O, haste thee, Juda, hail thy King, And worship at His feet. For the American Presbyterian. HEAVmitISIC. “ There is a strain sweeter than my sister’s song, at even-rholter than my mother’s prayer.” There is a name, a major name, Sweeter than any other; More precious than the voice of fame, Hearer than thine, my mother. It fell upon my listening ear, This holy starlight even, Anti then I knew we stood anear The golden gates of heaven. 1 knew It was the angels there, So softly, sweetly singing; And that within those portals fair, Heaven’s holy harps were ringing. In blessed tones of joyful praise Sod- like in their completeness; Dear earth! thy softest strains would raise But discord mid that sweetness' Yes 1 E’en thy thrilling words of love, So passionately spoken 1 The sighing of a wounded dove— A lute whose chords are broken! But oh 1 That name the angels sing, My soul! That glimpse of glory; I hear again heaven’s arches ring With that glad wondrous story* This name—is Jesus! Lowly now, In deepest adoration, Here at thy cross I humbly bow, And bring a heart’s oblation. Thine! Thine ! In life and death the same, Naught from Thy love shall sever; The precious music of Thy name, My song, Oh Christ 1 foreverl For the American Presbyterian. THE UNION PE AYEE MEETING. Within the last two years a new feature has arisen in our religious services, namely, the daily Union Prayer meetings. The whole Christian world hasexperienoedthe benefits of these means of good. Of those meetings held in other cities, we every day either hear or read, so I will not speak of them, nor even of those held in different parts of our own eityj but I wish to write particularly of the meeting held every day, from four to five in the afternoon, in the Presbyterian Church (New School) in Green street. It seems to me. that if there is any hour of the day more suitable for social prayer, it is just at the close of the day. When the day is passing away, we feel so much our need of forgiveness for the ills of the past hours, and our great need of fresh supplies of grace to carry us through the night and coming morn. Oh! happy, happy, hour. How many souls will thank God for it when they join that great assembly above, where no more prayer will be needed j but where onr voices will all unite in one eternal song of praise without one note of discord! How many a weary, tired pilgrim will praise God for allowing them in the wilderness of this world such quiet Elim spots, beneath whose palm trees’ shade and beside whose gentle streams they pitched their tents, before they onward went. We are in a dry and thirsty land, and need daily supplies of grace from the great well of sal vation, from the ever-flowing fountain of life. How blessed is it then in company with others, who serve under the banner of King Jesus, no matter what might be their sectarian differences, around one common altar, to offer our daily sacri fice of praise and prayer 1 To the unconverted, this daily meeting has had a blessed influence. To those who scoff at holy things, the simple fact of seeing Christians, day after day and week after week, going to the Prayer Meeting,-induces them to go in and see what , draws people there. And often the sword of the . Spirit, by the instrumentality of some God-directed | word of prayer or exhortation, has entered their • hearts and brought them to the feet of Jesus, i t^ oBo who are not scoffers, those who for l years have stood just without the walls of salva tion, almost persuaded to be Christians, these meetings have been God’s means of making them make the great decision, we will serve God. And to poor, perishing souls who have never felt what happiness it is to have a Saviour,' how blessed to be told here what they must do to he saved. Told in simple language, fettered by no doctrinal dis course, told simply of Jesus and the story of the Cross. Yes, that is the great subject, the Gross, the Cross, the Gross I And oh I how can any soul leave the room ene mies when they might be reconciled to God, when they are told that Jesus is waiting, with out stretched arms, to welcome them to him! Oh! what a fearful account those that die in their sins, who have attended these meetings, will have to render at the bar of God for these mercies they scorned. God forbid any should die so! Many a poor wanderer from his father’s house has been brought back here, and like the poor prodigal, been received, and with a father’s tless mg. How many a toil-worn saint, borne down by afflictions, has been comforted, as such words of sweet consolation as these, “When through fiery trials thy pathway shall lie, My grace, ail sufficient, shall be tby supply; The flame shall not hurt thee, I only design Thy drOsS to consume, and thy gold to refine,” come to tbeir hearts as the words are sung. Or, perhaps, a homeless Wanderer has felt that he, too, has a home, when those sweet words of Mont- gomery— full on his ears. Often, often, have I felt as if my feet were al most treading the heavenly hills, and earth far, far below, as we have sung, as with one voice and one heart— Joyfully* joyfully, onward we move, Bound to the land of bright spirits above.* 5 May God’s blessing, “which maketh rich and addeth no sorrow,” rest upon those few watchmen on the walls of Sion, who have done all in their power,by prayer and othefiheans to keegup these meetings! r ’~‘ ‘ And, more especially, may it fall on that one, who amid all his laborious duties as pastor of a large congregation, can find time to spend this hour qf social prayer with us. He, who in a ser mon on this same subject, was too modest to say, what all, who have attended these meetings will acknowledge, that by God’s help, his presence, prayers and pious, earnest exhortations have done more than anything else in continuing these meet ings. May God grant him' many souls for his hire, and though almost the only one of our clergy men who meet us, may his owu soul be refreshed, While asking mercy for others! A. G. Baltimore, January 16th, 1860. J. H. B. A beautiful and interesting meteorological phe nomenon appeared at Wyoming, lowa, on the night of December Sflth. The sky was clear, the air cold. In the morning the thermometer stood at twenty degrees below zero, and at sixteen during the day. . At ten o’clock in the morning-there was a circle of soft white light around the moon, intersected by a horizontal and perpendicular diameter, and forming a perfect Lunar Wheel. The lower edge of the wheel rested on the horizon, and the upper edge was about forty-five degrees from the zenith. At the intersection of the radii with the peri phery there was an elliptical enlargement as if to give strength to the felloes. <’ Various explanations might be given to this phenomenon, but the most probable Is, that it was produced by minute crystals of ice floating in the atmosphere, and at certain angles reflecting the light of the moon to the eye as if they Lad been ten thousand little prisms. The production of hales may be illustrated ex perimentally by crystallizing various salts upon plates of glass, and lookingfhrough the plates at a luminous body. D. THE SCHOOL OF THE PEOPHETS* There has arisen, daring the stirring years which still run their course, a very wide-spread attention to the study of unfulfilled Books on the subject are in great demand, and the supply apparently meets the demand. It is not unnatural to expect this. The last ten years, dating their beginning at the great Eu ropean convulsion of 1848, have, without doubt, witnessed so many national complications, so cial changes, and individual sufferings, event has so -rapidly thundered on event, and scene flashed on scene,—so altered , have the face of Europe and the relations of Cabinets become, and so unsettled is the European sky at this hour, that intelligent and sober-minded men, with no spice of fanaticism in their nature, have begun to conclude that the sublime predictions uttered on the Mount 1800 years ago, are being daily translated into modern history. Students of prophecy allege that they see the apocalyptic “vials” pouring out, and hear the “seven trum pets” uttering their voices and pealing in rever berations through Christendom. From the earliest times there have been stu dents of prophecy. Bishop Newton, Bishop Horsley, Mede, and others, are names familiar to every reader. In recent times the authors of Boras Apocalypticae, The Great Tribulation, and many others, have at least awakened an in * terest on this subject in the popular mind. The last, and not the least noteworthy, student is Lord Carlisle, the present Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. He has translated, or rather turned, a whole chapter of Daniel into metre, but evi dently with the intention of introducing, under this disguise, learned and elaborate notes and opinions. Substantially Lord Carlisle concurs with the writers whose names or works we have referred to. In his preface he expresses his be lief that we are now on the verge of stupendous events, and “in all probability approaching the close of this dispensation.” This conviction his lordship draws from his own well-ascertained coincidences between the prophecies in the Apocalypse with the book of Daniel, and the phenomena recorded in history and in the daily jonrnals. Many people denounce alhprophetic investi gation as a priori unnecessary and injurious. This is hardly fair. On the assumption that these persons are Protestants, it strikes us that they must abjure the Protestant rule of faith, which is not, as we understand it, the Bible with out the books of Daniel and Revelation, but with these books as integral parts of it. These books are entitled to study in virtue of the cha racter they have in common with all Scripture, *l. Hon* Apocalyptic*. By the Rev. E. B. Elliott A.'M.j late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. 4 vols. 'Seeleys. 2.. Remarks oh me : Eighth Chapter op Dahiel. By Lord Carlisle. Longman. 3. Tjje Great Tribulatiok ; or, Things Coming on the Earth. By Her. Dr. dimming. Bentley. “Jerusalem, my happy home, Name ever dear to me,” . A LUNAR WHEEL. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JAM 1 ARY 26, 1860. and which is declared to be “profitable,” antl, T of the special blessings pronounced in them on those that read and understand them. We do not think that rational interpreters of prophecy do in fact or of necessity set up to be prophets. They foretell what is written, rather than at tempt to foretell what is about to come to pass. They state their conclusions as inferences from the inspired record, accepting it alone as their only premises, and leave’to their readers to ac quiesce, or otherwise, in their deductions. They pretend to no interior inspiration. They may be mistaken, but certainly they are not fa natics. There are three schools of interpreters. A few—and these are very few and feeble—believe that the book of Daniel was exhausted and ab sorbed in the book of Revelation, and that the book of Revelation was all fulfilled in the days of Nero, This theory is discarded by every ra tional writer, from the days of Bishop Newton . and the learned Joseph Mede to the laborious Elliott. A second class—far more numerous, learned, and intelligent-incline to believe that the Apocalypse has not yet begnn to be fulfilled, and that in a very short time all its prophecies will develop themselves in portentous propor tions on the stage of European Christendom. This system, which is going out, or receiving many modifications, assumes that the whole pe riod of 1800 years, replete with moral, and so cial, and religions phenomena of no ordinary nature, is wholly overlooked and ignored in a prophecy written in the first century, and proclaiming itself to be the record and history of “things that are” and “things that are to be hereafter.” The most able and laborious school consists of those who believe that the Apocalypse is a continuous prospective history of Christendom from the days of St. John to the close of this present ’mat, or dispensation, of course necessa rily not so clear as history. These divines hold that the Seven Seals, already broken and done with, are a history in symbol of the fourth great kingdom, or Roman Empire, in its pagan and persecuting character, down to the conversion of Constantine; the depression, if not entire an nihilation, of Paganism; and. tKe elevation of Christianity to national plaee and power. The , “ horse,” which is the basis of each seal-symbol, as sacred to Mars, is regarded as the representa tive of the Proles Mayortia, just as in Daniel the Persian Empire fs represented by a ram, and the Macedonian by a he-goat; and the co lor of each horse denotes the material condition of the empire in historical succession; the “white” describes the prosperity of the empire from A.D. 96 to A.D. 180; the “red " blood shed from A.D. 192 to 284; the “black" de noting famine; and the "palehorse” represent ing piugue, and pestilence, and death. It would be impossible, within a short space, to show the very remarkable coincidence between this inter pretation and the historic facts recorded by Gibbon. The one almost seems the literal trans- of the other. The infidel but brilliant historian is made the unconscious amanuensis of Providence, writing out the historic facts that respond to the inspired prophecy, as echo to sound. Be the system true or false, the coinci dence is striking. The second series of symbols consists of the Seven. Trumpets. Those writers whose inter pretations appear beyond comparison the most plausible say, the first trumpet was fulfilled when Alarm the Gdth burst upon the’ Roman Empire amid. “hail and blood;” that the second after Alaric was Genseric, meetiy represented by a “mountain burning with fire east into the sea,” and so on to the sounding of the last trumpet. Here, again, the historic facts, too numerous for our space, in date,, and character, and suc cession, are so parallel, that one is almost driven to accept the interpretation. The last of the three great divisions of apo calyptic symbols are the Seven Yials, there be ing in all twenty-one great symb'ols from Pat mos to Paradise Regained. The Rev. E. B. Elliott and Dr. Gumming believe that these be gan to be pointed out—that is, that their effects began—in 1792. Passing over the illustrations of the first five, we read in the sixth that when it was poared out “the waters of the great river Euphrates were dried up.” Lord Carlisle, in common with the writers we have quoted, refers this symbol to the Turkish Empire, which, from 1821 to the present hour, has been manifestly in a condition of steady decadence, or national evaporation,—the old Turks crossing the Bos phorus every day to find graves, and all that is characteristic of Mahommedanism waning, and “Turkey dying from want of Turks.” The Times’ correspondent, writing in 1859, states: “ The alarming state of the Ottoman Empire, which country seems going through a succession of financial somersaults, from which, however, somehow or, other, it manages to alight with only an additional contusion, renders the ac counts from the provinces truly deplorable; ex tra taxes being levied on the unfortunate popu lations, to be redeemed by the imposts of future years, while hordes of Albanian Irregulars ren i der the provinces bordering on Greece insecure, and expose the poor inhabitants to every spe cies of extortion and injustice. It is not to be wondered at that the old feeling of hatred to the Turkish yoke, which dates from the day that Mahomed 11. took possession of Byzantium, should be as much alive as ever. The Chris tians are replacing everywhere in the East, by a constant and unperceived effort, the Mahom medans, who are disappearing; and, under these circumstances, those of the Christian elements which offer some guarantee for the future must naturally attract the attention of Europe. Owing to their religion'the Christian popula tions of the East consider themselves specially placed under the protection of Russia, and the influence of that power with the Greeks has been generally considered all-powerful.” There, seems to.be a very general belief in the application of this symbol and the accuracy of this view. From the battle of Navarino to the present war with Morocco, the Crescent has un interruptedly waned,—-the sick man has died down, and in the words of Lamartine, already .quoted, “Turkey is dying from want of Turks.” It is said in the sacred passage that this eva poration of the Moslem nationalities from their channels is in order to prepare the way for “Kings of the East,” literally “from the sun-risings.” These royal person , ages, Elliott, Bickersteth, Camming, and others, understand to be the Jews, the ancient nation of “kings and priests,” and that the recent sym pathies felt towards the Jew, his gradual emer gence from oppression, and the growing interest which be and we cherish in regard to Palestine, are the stirring of national life in the heart of that raee. As soon as the Moslem recedes from Palestine, the best writers on this subject be lieve that, under a supernatural inspiration, the sublimest exodus of the Jews will begin, and Jerusalem be again their capital and “the beauty and the joy of the earth.” It is during the action of the “sixth vial” that “three unclean spirits like frogs go out to deceive the nations, to gather them'” to a great 1 and sanguinary battle, which, when it comes is 1 the alarm-bell of the close of this economy. ’ it would be impossible to enter minutely into this matter here. The prophetic writers before ns understand by these “unclean spirits” one or : other of Infidelity, Popery, Lawlessness, Trae -1 tarianism, Mormonism, Spirit Rapping, and every other “ism” except Calvinism, to which most of them incline. Mr. Elliott fixes the cha ! raeter of each “spirit ” from the character of .his sonrpe, and does not heajfete la name them as Romanism, Skepticism, each frog comprehending ia,pts bosom many tad poles. These systems g&theredfforce from the first French Revolution, or rather from'lB2l down to the last revolution in 1848. The dregs of them still exist. Occasional spasmodic strug gles prove alike their vitality and their dying. It is a singular fact, on ||ich -Mr. Elliottpar ticularly dilates, that the sneient arms of France were not the or the tri-color, bat three frogs, and on this ground it is argued that France is to be most conspicuous in gathering the nations of Europe IS- thii great war, add hence the writers before ps daily expect a Eu ropean war kindled by odr . ally across the chan nel. No man, whether he accepts these pro phetic interpretations or. not, can fail to mark the stormy nature of the political sky, or to ex pect, from existing complfdatidns, some gigantic outburst-. Every Cabinet in Europe is agitated. Every king has his hand : on his sword-hilt. Statesmen’s hearts literajlyfail them, for fear of the things coining on the .earth at the present hour. ' Dr. Camming states, ip&js recent 5 Great Tribulation —th«#stße seventh vial was, inwall probability, pouredkout in -1848; that its being “poured into the air,” denotes the uni versality of its influence—affecting ,physical, so- and moral interests—-its physical effects manifesting themselves in the morbific miasma prevalent during the last ten years, in unprece dented intensity and are% and* showing its force in the potato,,the vine-eholera, and an altered normal condition of human health and disease. He also regards the “Great Earthquake,” with which it begins its action, as that “shaking (nnr/iei) of the nation's” which has spread over India, China, Russia; the Crimea, France, Spain, and Austria, andithat each new compli cation, issuing in a new confljct, is another shock of the same earthquake. He also thinks that the great panic in the commercial world in 1857, called at that date by the Times, “ a commer cial earthquake,” when houses, old and prudent as well as rotten, fell, and hank exploded after bank in overwhelming crashes, was another heave or shock of the same earthquake. He thinks England, for reasons it pr unnecessary here to enumerate, is to emerge from the “great tribu lation,” and, her sun not to disappear tilblost in the greater splend.or in ivhieh“ there will be no need of the sup.” * The leading article Times of Thursday, Oct ST, records an actual and visible fact which students of prophecy have been expecting for years: “Is ours a condition of profound peace? Cer tainly not. We have not done with India. In China all our work is to be done again; we have stumbled on a new race, und, for anght we know, on foreign and morh civilized auxiliaries. No one may pretend to plaeedimits on the war which has broken ont, or on itg bearings upon our Eu ropean alliances. A fraction of the Americans is, as usual, provoking a quarrel, which their Executive may not be able to avert. There is something amiss going' bn opposite Gibraltar. We are called in to assistin restoring peace to Italy, disturbed,, by our .good- neighbors. •At home ten thousand poor simpletons are strug gling and perishing, with their wives and chil dren, for an 'idea.’ There are some other un comfortable things which, like distant thunder, are felt rather than : heai&ygr seei: We talk,, and talk, and talk aboflt rifle, corps, manning the navy, coast defences, new guns, and floating batteries. Of course the talk Is not without occasion, but the things are not done. On the whole, it must be said there is an uncomfortable feeling, something like the distress of nations, men’s hearts failing-themtfor fear.” It is, then, a very general belief, that we are pn the very vergeofa gigantic struggle,- that France is to originate, ride, and if able, overrule the storm; that England, because of her* tree thought, free speech, and free press, and -Protestant religion the spring of them all, is to have directed on her the concentrated fire of Europe; and we must do them the justice to add, they patriotically urge, on their ground, and from their point of view, what sane politicians uphold on theirs, an instant and power ful preparation on our part, at any expense,'to defend Old England's shores. In The Great Tribulation the writer observes “France, the great actor in the prophetic outline, flushed with her Italian Sttnquests, is reposing in her short bivouac, in order to enter on -the. arena refreshed and strong as a giant to‘fulfil her des- Austria, furious at defeat,and disappoint ment, longs to avenge her wrongs, ’ and tries by sacrifice to conciliate Hungary. Italy is one huge volcano, still, perhaps; making ready to receive into her fiery bosom, the Papacy, with all its spoils of plundered nations, and injured kingdoms, and violated rights, and all its sins and its crimes in expiable forever. Our own beloved land may soon be girdled with a belt of fire. Her freedom, her faith, her prosperity, ner accessible-asylum for the refugee and the oppressed, her gigantic power, her out spoken independence, her treasures, and her tri umphs, are the hate of despots, the en vy of courts, and the provocatives of hostility on the part of nations that remember her past superiority, and long to measure swords with her once more. No ordinary events are looming up from eveiy point of the European horizon, like strange birds of eyil omen. All'the ten years that have passed away, and the seven that still remain of the era of the ‘Great Tribulation/ will-cover a time of trouble unprecedented since there was a nation. It is the time when there ‘ shall be great distress of nations, with perplexity/ political, social, commercial, and moral—the disintegratioa«*f political party, the distrust of trade, the defection of moral obliga tions, confusion of principles, and collision of passions, ‘the sea and ;the waves roaring/ There also shall be fulfilled and felt what is written. The lull that now exists among the nations of Europe is very much like that of 1851. It is the eve of more terrible disturbance, and the time of preparation for it. Science, and art, and national resources are tasked in all directions, in order to make the most formidable weapons for offensive and defensive war. The discoveries of modern science, as embodied in the iron rail, the ocean steamer, and the electric telegraph, will lead to such military gatherings, such concentration of troops, such lightning-like rapidity of action, such shocks of armies, as never were equalled in the history of the world. Everything seems to make ready for no common crisis, no ordinary issue.' In t “ e words of Daniel, ‘There shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a na tion. In the words of St. Matthew, ‘ There shall be great tribulation, such as was not since ■ the, be the world to this time; no, nor ever shall be. ’ It is under the action of Vial 7, according to the view? we that- “(freat Babylon, in the wordsof-the S&cred text; “comes mto remembrance to give her the cup of indigna tion.” Certainly this was never so intensely true as at this moment. Pio Nobo stands shivering in his slippers, holding in his trembling hands aeup of no common bitterness. The waters on which he sits, “peoples and nations,” are being literally dried up. The extremity must be great that sum mons, through his episcopal trumpeters in Ireland, an Irish Brigade to his help. Never was the “bark of St. Peter” in so troubled waters, or its skipper in greater distress. -It is during the in fluence of this vial, that a “great northern hail” bursts on Christendom.. This is interpreted by the students of prophecy as a Russian descent on Eu rope, as indicated by collateral prbjibecibs in Eze-- kiel, and in ali-probability ihvcbiyunction with Prance. Not a year ago,; the hest -informed ;por*. tion of the press alluded to a secret compact he : tween France and Russia. It is very singular, to say-theieast; in whatever light we'regard it, that inferen.ces-frpmtprophecy should shadow'out what is still strongly suspected to be the fact. . We now turn to the most remarkable and diffi cult subject, l —the prophetic dates. In a chapter in The Great Tribulation, headed “1867,” it is attempted to show, and with some: success, that, however much our best interpreters- of prophecy differ in details, they all agree that 1867—if their views be correct: —must prove* a great determining crisis in the world’s history. - There are certain dates in the Books of Daniel and the Apocalypse expressed in various formulas. One is “Time, times, and half a time ” —-that is, a prophetic year, two prophetic years, and half a prophetic year, or 1260 literal years. Another form of, the same period is forty-two months. This is a governing period, but its commencement is the difficulty. It describes the dominant duration and tyranny of a great apostaey in Christendom within the ten kingdoms, and at the running out of these 1260 years that apostaqy is steadily to begin, its decay. The> authors of. the Emm Apocqlypticm, and The Great Tribulation incline ’to Sate -the beginning of this period,in A-D. 532, when Justinian gave his vast prerogatives to the Bishop of Rome. On this hypothesis the 1260 years run out in 1792, and certainly at that date Romanism began its deca dence in a baptism of blood. One remarkable proof is the following:—Sixty years ago there Were 5000 priests in. Paris. The population has doubled since’that time. There ought, therefore, to be now 10,000 priests in Paris. The actual number is 800. To, this period of 1260, ending, as we assume, in 1792, Daniel adds a period of thirty years. This would bring us down to 1822. Then, also, and that very year, was the beginning of a great change.in Eastern Christendom, “ The drying up of Euphrates,” or progressive decay of Mahom uiedatiism at its fountain. , What goes far to confirm .this is the fact that another period is given by Daniel, called 2300 years, at the end of which the “ cleansing of the sanctuary/’ ?', e., the prepa ration of Palestine for its people, was -to‘begin. Dating this period at what has been, if not clearly at least probably assigned, B. C. 478, we find its termination in A. D. 1822. To this period Daniel adds another of forty-five years. This brings us down to 1867.. Daniel says, he is specially “ blessed” who arrives at 1867. Supposing this correct, 1867 would be, in the words of Lord Car lisle, “ the. close of this dispensation,” and, accord ing to others, the restoration of all things, the baptism of the earth, and the regenesis of nature. . Another class of interpreters date the 1260 years at the decree of Phoeas in 607, which they think was the real transformation of the Western Church into a corporate apostaey. If so, they would ehd In 1867. The same writers also hold that Daniel’s great epoeh, ending in the restora tion of the Jews, began B,C. 433, and will end, therefore, in A D. 1867, and that then, as .they believe, the crescent in the east, and the crucifix in the west, will both disappear, and Christianity, the light of a few, be then the glory and the glad ness of all mankind. What casts some light pn this subject, is the ancient, and, as Bishop Russell has shown, almost universal belief, that the week of Creation' was in brief the type of the great week of the world— that is, that the six working-days of the Creation week correspond to -the 6000 working-years.of the -world, and that, as the forme? onded.in the Sab bath-day the latter will culminate in’the Sabbath of 'a 6000 years,-—what St. Paul calls “ c-ajSSoTi the rest that remaineth for the people of God.” ' Now; the question occurs—have these 6000 years nearly run out? . According to the vulgar chronology, they are short of their end by at least 140 years. But Fynes Clinton, followed by others, has proved to demonstration, that there is a mis take in the vulgar era, and that the birth of Christ must consequently.be: put forward to the year of the world, or A. M. 4132.. This is really brought ont with immense force, and in all likelihood it is correct If so, we are again brought down to 1867, as the> close of the world’s long working week, arid the eve of its magnificent and long predicted- Millennial Rest. Dr. Camming quotes, in his chapter of The Great Tribulation, headed “1867,” an array of names who concur with him in looking forward to 1867 (not, as ignorantly chaTged, prophesying the end of the world) as a great crisis—-a testing crisis—intersected by the various lines of prophetic dates. It appears from all this, that these writers on prophecy have handled this branch of investiga tion: as others treat geology, chemistry, or astrOf nomy. It is a legitimate subject of research. The errors of geologists and chemists do not fairly militate against their respective fields, and we do not see why the errors of interpreters of prophecy should be adduced as a reason for ignoring what is difficult, but divinely commended to our study. We do mot discover any fanaticism in : the works on prophecy-.referred to. The writers constantly gua-rd themselves against misapprehension, repu diating the claims of the prophet, and accepting only the relation of the student. Some of their works are very learned. The Horae of Mr. Elliott does credit to the theology of the age. - Others are very popular. It is not, therefore, fair in: rash and reekless writers to confound the sober, , even if mistaken students of a grand text, with fanatics and enthusiasts. But, whether these interpretations be right or wrong, there ismo doubt that the barometer of Europe singularly—?it mayfbe accidentally—cor responds with their deductions from, prophecy. THE BEAUTY OF AGE, The sacred biography of the church is full of the most pleasing descriptions of age mellowed by experience, sbbthed by Divine comfort, and beauti fied with all the fruits of Christian culture. 1. It must not be overlooked that to old age, when found in the ways of righteousness, belongs preeminently a beauty of mental expression. The outward tabernacle shows, indeed, the marks of decay; l but the light from within shines with a purer and softer splendor. The human counte nance, whatever may be the natural cast of the features, is more or less the mirror of the soul within; so that beauty is not so much a mere ‘thing of contour and of lineament as it is a thing of expression. It lights the eye with its own heavenly glow, and suffuses the most irregular features with an attractive softness all its own. We see, in our everyday walks, how positively ugly and loathsome the most regular countenance may be, if it bear the marks of vice, or burn with the fires of consuming lust. So that it is not true that beauty is but skin-deep, for all true beauty is far beneath the skin; and in so far as it gains a mastery of the soul, will it be sure to shine out in look and expression of the faee. Every unre strained or ungoverned passion writes itself legibly upon the features. .Sound moral feeling chastens, softens, and beautifies the intellect; and the in tellect mirrors itself in the outward feature. Selfishness hardens the cheek; and anger darkens the eye; and sensuality clouds the brow; and de ceit writes its falsehood on the brazen lip; and so, every bad passion works to the ruin of personal beauty, and disfigures the otherwise attractive face. 2. To an old ago of piety belong, moreover, the ripened fruits of wisdom. They who have had a long and varied experience of human life, have learned to estimate things according to their.wonh, especially when that experience has been modified; under the influence of Divine truth. They.have lived to see the vanity of all that the world styles pleasure. To them,, the emptiness of fame, the ideoeitfulness of p&wer, the treachery of human friendship, arc.demonstrated. They.have . learned to know'and feel that there is nothing stable but truth, nothing good but holiness, and no being to be loved and trusted so much as that God who will not forsake them when they are old and,gray T headed; for to such He has declared, “Even to your old age, I am He, and even to hoar hairs .will I carry you.” The aged do, indeed, ] iswell|jwell for ever. I see, wherever I n my I liye or die, nothing but tory. I.am'cradled in the arms of love and mercy. I long to be at home.”— -Lady Hunt ington. • ■ y There is nothing at.all melaneholy in the death l °e , Christian. I feel very happy in the prospect S>k death. .—Sarah Lanman 'Smith. VOL IV.—NO. 22.—Whole No. 187. “I see, indeed, no prospect of recovery, yet my heart rejoiceth in my God and my Saviour. Such transporting views of the heavenly world is my Father now indulging me with, as no words can express.”— Doddridge. “ My heart is full, it is brimful, I can hold no more. I now know what that means, ‘the peace of God which passeth all understanding/ I can not express what glorious discoveries God hath made to me. How lovely is the sight of a smiling Jesus, when one is dying V—Janeway. “ I cannot tell the comforts I feel in my.soul: they are past expression. The consolations of God are so abundant that He leaves me nothing to pray for. My prayers are all converted into praise. I enjoy a heaven already in my soul.”— Toplady. “ I am ready to die, through the grace of my Lord Jesus, and I look forward to the fall enjoy ment of the society of holy men and angels, and the full vision of God forevermore:"— Carey. “All things are mine. God sustains me through wearisome days and tedious, painful nights. Sim ple faith in his word keeps my mind in peace, but He generously adds strong consolation. Death has no sting.”—David APeeli ■ “If the Lord has no more for me to do I can cheerfully leave the world now.-, My trust is in the Lord. I have no fear to die;.my faith is fixed on Jesus.”— G. S. Comstock. ■_ “This is heaven begun. I have done with darkness forever. Nothing remains bat light and joy for ever.” —Thomas Scott. “ Home, home—l see the 'New; Jerusalem,— they praise him—they praise Him.” —Normand Smith. "■ “The celestial city is fall ih my view. Its glories beam upon me, its odors are wafted to me, its sounds strike my ears, and its spirit is breathed into my heart. A single heart and a single tongue seem altogether inadequate to my wants; I want a whole heart for every separate emotion, and a whole tongue to express that emotion.”— Payson. “ I am going; I am going; the cords of life are breaking; O the pain—no, the bliss of dying! There, is no pain. Blissful, blissful, blissful!”— PL. M. Adams. “ Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his.” Prom a report of a sermon delivered by Rev. Dr. Creighton, pastor of the late Washington Ir ving,.we make the following extracts: 1 thank God that I am permitted to indulge this one feeling—that he was sound in tie faith of Christ erucified. I have often been asked if our deceased friend was a believer in the cardinal doctrines of our holy Christian faith, and I have declared then, as I now declare, that he was. This opinion was founded, not alone on his ordinary language in conversation; not only in his uninter rupted observance of the days and ceremonies con nected with the Christian institution—and I have ■never heard a syllable otherwise from him—-but upon a voluntary declaration for which there was no occasion, except that out of the fulness of the heart the mouth speaketh.—One Sabbath morning he approached me, said Dr. Creighton, and asked why we could not have the “Gloria in Excelsis” sung every Sunday. I replied that I had no ob jections, and ,there was nothing whatever to prevent it, and at the same time inquired of him—“Do you like it ? ” “Like it ? like it ?” said he, “ above all things. Why it contains the sum and sub stance of Lour feith, and -I never hear it without feeling better, and without my heart being lifted up.” No.w, whoever will take the trouble to look at this sublime confession of faith will see that it is nothing but an adoration of Christ Jesns, our Sa viour, as God—as the “Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world,” as the Lord Christ, and of the Holy Ghost as equal to him in glory and in power. Therefore, when we consider the unobtrasiveness of the character of the deceased, we can only say that when he thus spake, the view which "he expressed was one of the forms of sound words once delivered to the saints. Nor was he only sound in the faiths He was also ex emplary in practice. He was not only a hearer, but a doer of the word. You all know, said the reverend gentleman,, how regular and punctual was his attendance in this church—so regular, in deed, that when not seen, it was at once under stood that he was cither absent from home or de tained by indisposition. * * * * * The deceased was for many years a communicant of the church, receiving, on every stated occasion, with contrite spirit, the emblems of the Saviour’s body and blood. In his intercourse with his fellow men he was always the same kind and generous heart, and he always put the most charitable con struction on their words and conduct. Charity with him was not a duty, but an instinct. Every discourse from the pulpit, or from any other place, which set forth these things as the bond of peace, was certain to meet the approval of the deceased. Every measure of the amelioration of the condition of the poor and afflicted was sure to meet his ap probation; The relief of the poor and needy—■ the improvement of schools, of chapels and churches—was always of the deepest interest, and especially interesting to him. His advice and his experience were always readily given whenever required, and his contributions from his puree were always of the most liberal kind. Of the ex tent of his private charities no man shall know until the day when the Saviour shall declare, “In asmuch as ye did it to one of these little ones, ye did it unto me.” He who now addresses you has been more than twice the recipient of doable the sum asked for, when the occasion was one that re commended itself. In fact, he was oneof the few on whom positive dependence could be plaeed for a favorable answer, whenever the application was of a meritorious e^raeter. Workmen were recently building a large brick tower, which was to be carried up very high. The architect and the foreman both charged the masons to lay each brick with the greatest exactness, espe cially the first courses, which were to sustain all the rest. However, in laying a corner, by acci dent or carelessness, one brick was set very little out of line. The work went on without its being noticed, but as each course of bricks was kept in line with those already laid, the tower was not put up exactly straight, aud the higher they built the more insecure it became. One day, when the tower had been carried up about fifty feet, there was heard a tremendous crash. The building had fallen, burying the men in the ruins. Ail the previous work was lost, the materials wasted, and worse still, valuable lives were sacrificed, and all from one brick laid wrung at the start. The workman at fault in this matter little thought how much mischief he was mating for the future. Do you ever think what ruin may coinc of one bad habit, one brick laid wrong, while you are now building a character for life? Remember, in youth the foundation is laid. See to it that all is kept STRAIGHT. The Age of Pamphlets.—This is truly the golden age of pamphleteers. The organization of the American House of Representatives is delayed to advertise Helper’s Impending Crisis of the South, and the Pope of Rome refuses to send a delegate to the Congress of Paris unless Napo leon HI. will deny the authorship of the pam phlet entitled La Pape el le Congres! Certainly Galileo was right, and the world does move. We, shall probably hear before long that the Em peror of China has been dethroned by the publica tion in Mantchob of an astrdnomieal treatise ques tioning the reality of his blood relationship with the »Sun And the Moon. IRVING’S RELIGIOUS CHARACTER. ONE BRICK WRONG.