162 AMtritall agMbetrign GENESEE EVANGELIST. THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1862. * JOIti W. MEARSI MEMPHIS PALLENI Another of the centres of rebellion in the wicked and violent Southwest has fallen before the advance of our all.conquering navy. Mem phis, that wicked city, full of rancor and venom, and despite of the lawful authority of this benign and great government; not more vehement and malignant in opposing and denouncing the right ful cause, than hyperbolical in its boasts of in vincibility; that presumptuous city, that- dared to interdict the free navigation of the greatest river that God has given to civilised man, how is her boasting put to shame I How was she constrained to be witness to the annihilation of her last dependence, and to crouch at the feet of the victors spreading over her once more that newly.conseorated and sublime emblem of liberty and of constitutional government—the stars and the stripes The Mississippi is enfranchised, from the lakes past Colnmbus, pest Island No , : 10, past Fort Wright and Fort Randolph, plot Memphis, past Vicksburg doubtless, past Natchez, Baton Rouge and New Orleans, past Forts Jackson and 'St. Philip, out to this Gulf. May its mighty current be consecrated not merely to the grand and mul tiplied uses of commerce, but as a highway for new ideas, traveling on the wings of free speech and a free gospel; reaching even to the pulpit of Lafayette Square Presbyterian Church, and of all the churches of the Southwest, awakening them to a sense of duties more worthy of Chris tians in the nineteenth century, than that of per petuating and conserving the institution of slavery. CORM-STONE LAID.-011 Monday after noon the corner-stone of the NORTH BROAD &BET CHURCH was laid, in the presence of a large assemblage, with appropriate and highly interesting ceremonies. Addresses were deliver ed by the Pastor, (Rev. E. E. Adams) and by Rev. Messrs. Darling, March and Brainard. The addresses were of the most inspiriting character, worthy in very way of the hopeful nature of the occasion. We congratulate the North Broad street people, with their pastor and generous friends, upon the progress they have made in this enterprise, which is, in every view, the most important and most promising, undertaken in our church in this city, perhaps for the whole quarter century past. THE JUKE IidETHLIES. THE ATLANTIC, the CONTINENTAL and the KNICKERBOCKER Maagazines for the present month were duly laid on our Table. They are, for the most part, well-conducted periodicals. They exhibit a great degree c l f skill on the part of editors and writers in providing acceptable entertainment and a lighter sort of instruction for the public. The powers of invention, the range of subjects and , the qualities of style which they exhibit, are highly creditable to , the authors and to the literary tastes of the public, .which, demands and pays liberally for them. We have freely accorded our praise to these enteprises, so honorable to American literature, and have done what we, could, as journalists, to promote their interests. Trifling fault's we have not.paused to notice amid such general excellence; And grave faults we notice with reluctance. Grave faults they all exhibit in the issues of the present month. Antipathy to evangelical religion is more or less clearly revealed in each of them; and the very wariness of the expressions renders them more dangerous. The ATLANTIC opens with an article, under stood to be from the pen of the late H. D. Tho reau, on Walking. Mr. Thoreau's style of thought and writing abounds in the peculiarities, good and bad, of R. W. Emerson's. There is the contemptuous, patronising air towards Chris tianity which characterises modern pantheists, who superciliously imagine themselves the pro phets of a higher, order of civilization than the Christian, and who feel, privileged to regard Christianity as obsolescent. , By some means this class of thinkers has attained great prominence in the field of Belles Letters, and the ATLANTIC, especially at the first, seems to have been their favorite organ. In the article on "Walkftig" we find the fol lowing language: "As a true patriot I should be ashamed to think that Adim in Paradise was more favorably situated, on the whole, than the backwoodsman' in this country." Culp he wise utterly ignores the spiritual element of the Bible history, and who refuseit to consider it an' ele ment,of human welfare, could lliasit penned Alia a flippant sentence as ' Again, in another place, " Hamlet and the Iliad, and all the Scrip tures and mythologies," are strung together, ,as if there were no essential difference between them. And again, the outrageoui immorality which we believe Emerson is not guiltless) is committed of "rejoicing that men themselves have some wild oats to sow before they become submissive members of society." For allowing such a sentence to go upon its pages, is not the ATLANTIC MONTHLY liable to be impeached of a crime pronounced capital by a heathen commu nity two thousand years ago—the crime of cor rupting the morals of the youth of the Common wealth 'I Rejoicing that men have their wild oats to sow Listen to it, and learn what is the vaunted new gospel. Learn the moral tendency of New England pantheism. See it encouraging the young in their wild, courses, tempting the pure to an acquaintance with vice, sneering at the care of parents for the morals of their chil- dren and rejoicing at their excesses and de bauchery 1 We doubt not Thoreau and Emer son, and their sort, would have us "rejoice" at the pioture of the prodigal son away from his fa ther's house, and wasting his substance in riot ous living, as " sowing his wild-oats." We care little what ouch men think, but the ATLANTIC MONTHLY deserves the reprobation of all the good who are now patronising it, for defacing its columns with a sentiment which is almost too infaznons to be dangerous. Traces of an anti-Christian spirit are also to be found in the laudatory notices of heathen cha racters like Confucius; in quotations paraded from heathen books, as the Vishnu Parana and the Chaldean oracles, and in the allusion to Ma . hornet. ''....k N D-. Editor. In the succeeding article—War and Literature _ —the question is argued, whether there can be such a thing as a religious wai; when, with evi dent allusion to the wars of the Reformation, it is said, " there can be wars to transfer the tra dition of infallability from a pope to a book," and it is claimed that the present is " the first truly religious war ever waged" 1. Now, such a sentiment is too plainly aimed at the reverence felt for the Bible as God's Word, and too plainly reveals the antipathy of these Pantheistic literati towards Evangelical religion, to pass unchal lenged into general circulation. But enough of the ATLANTIC for the present. The COTINENTAL, a new and an able competi tor for the public favor, seems to be follbwing in the same odious track. True, it , has contained , some specimens of genuine Christian poetry and articles on the Huguenots, from which we have largely borrowed into our own columns. But we have felt pretty well satisfied of late, that the track marked out for themselves by the conduc tors of the " Continental" involved ,no clear and settled recognition of Evangelical Christianity, but rather an indifference towards it, verging.on contempt. In °sadly this spirit opens Mr. Kimball's new romance, " Was he Successful f," the first two chapters of which are given in this number. Of this story we were informed before-hand, in the publisher's afinouneement, that the chief character is a " 'bright and shining light,' in the church." As introduced to us, Hiram Meeker and his mother are designed to show up the deep and subtle hypocrisy of seemingly -consistent church members, in•Vorldly - matters, and an im pression is already• begun to be made most unfa vorable to Christian effort and to parental train ing and anxieties for the conversion of children, by presenting them in the repulsive aspect of a mere mechanical effort, with nothing but worldly. or formal reasons at the! bottom. The minister, too has his place in the offensive recital, which no, Christian can read without being shocked and feeling indignant that such a monstrous carica ture should go before the world, without a hint of its utter untruthfulness, as a representation of the pious labors and anxieties of Christian pa rents and of the workings of true religion in the heart. Mr. Kimball is, we fear, about to Show, in his inferior, meaiure,"that, like Dickens, he has lived so far, or kept himselfso isolated, from true Christianity, that he has never seen it; has fallen into a melancholy unbelief of its existence; and is about to communicate this unbelief to as -many readers as he can. We regret that he has found-opportunity to do so in the pages of a po pular monthly. The critique' of Dr. Scott's "Church in the Army" closes with an extremely coarse sneer at the doctrine of eternal punishment, which in manner and matter is Anite unpardonable. We designed to =add something in regard to the -KNlCKEitneemyly which, having changed hands of late,-seems to be drifting under the same influence. :'The series of articles entitled " Sunshine in Thought," which have abounded in sneers at seriousness in religion and in worn out infidel cant against orthodoiy, has culminated, in the present umber, in a eulogistic 'criticism of Rev. J. L. Corning's well known = sermon on the " Law of Christian Amusement." -To these who know' Mr. Corning—who has long since ceased to be a Presbyterian - minister—it is amer sing to see how much stress the writer' lays upon this sermon. He quotes from it largely; in fact, .his article is little else than extracts from it With approving commeitts i interspersed. Mr. Corning is a true preacher of Mr. Leland's new GosPel of Joyousness—no seriousness in it—an exemplification of " the purest Protestantism of the present day ;" a Christian after the Knicker bocker's own heart. We do not know whether Mr. Corning would think it friendly in any one to congratulate him upon the reception his ser mon has met with from such a quarter. One or two things are plain. . There is • more or less divorce between belles lettres in the literature of the day, and piety. Our leading magazines show it. The unitarian and pantheistic clique around Emerson and in the vicinity of _Harvard and Boston are, undoubtedly, the most cultivated_ in aesthetics and the most pelished and finished titeratesis in the country. All the other maga zine writers amaffected by their influence, and • all light literature takes its tone from them. Another point—the evangelical people are brought to the question whether there, is not enough culture among them to furnish and sus tain a magazine of high literary charicter, which shall exert a refining influence upon their falai liesj be a real ornament and pleasure to their own and to all society, and be free from the vices of those already in. existence. RARPHR'S MA GAiINE is, we are happy to acknowledge, guilt less of these gross blemishes, and, so far, worthy of the immense patronage it enjoys. But it is`' not what we need. It cannot take the place off' these higher literary enterprises in the hands of our cultivated young 'people. We need some thing-which, a' year ago, we begin to hope the ATLANTIC MONTHLY itself was approaching, bet which we imagine it never designs to realise--‘-a, Christian magazine, in which the highest literary'' forms shall be used to express the noblest and healthfulest sentiments, aided by •the free play ora pure imagination, the whole illustrating the compatibility of culture with piety, and the ser viceableness of sietheticicto the cause of true re ligion. The Church naturally looks to New Eng land for such a service. If she doei- not render it, then shall enlargement come from another, quarter; fOr, come we think it must, unless the Church is willing to leave the literary culture of her families to aliens and bigoted foes, like Dr. Holmes, R. W. Emerson, and (we fear we must now add) Richard Kimball and the Lelands. LANE SEMINARY. The catalogue recently received reports 75 students. The faculty proper is reduced, by the removal of Prof. Smith, to two—LProfessors Allen and Day. Besides these, however, regular in struction is given by Rev. Dr. Thompson on the composition of sermons, and ReV. Llewelyn - J. Evans on Church History. Rev Dr. Smith, the former Professor, is announced as special lectu rer on Sacred Rhetoric. Several other special lecturers are announced; so that the students will suffer no lack of competent instruction. LITTELL'S LIVING AoB, for this week, con tains Jesse's Memoirs of Richard 3, from the Edinburg; Sister Anna's Probation; Chronicles of Carlingford--both continuations; _Death of 'Dr. Bethune, from the Independenti with choke selections of poetry and short articles. Am'tl.ir - ,4:4 - . .gte#)t - tc : .,t.i..,4.. i # -- . - . 4,.:.,41 '....-i!titt,-,0,c_.....:(6,tait1-tliot THE REV. A.. .CONVERSE AND HIS "CHRIS TIAN OBSERVER." IT is with no pleasant feelings that we call our readers' attention once more, and we hope finally, to the Rev. Dr. Converse and his Richmond Christian Observer. But though he has left us, his influence still remains in the prejudices he has excited, and the' Southern principles he has advocated. Dr. Converse, by his boldness, industry, plau sibility, softness of manner; apparent piety and candor—by his skilful reiteration of partial.facts and sophistical .argunients—all garnished with professed reverence for the Bible and love of his country,—by his readiness to pray for peace and union in Church and State, had suceeeded 'in perverting and prejudicing better men than him self, and combining them into cliqtes and parties which are not yet entirely dissolved or innocuous. He profeiseGl to he loyal, and hung out the Stars and Stripes from his office be was every day at the " Vnion prayer-meeting," surrounded . by some men of his own stripe, eulogizing peace and praying for peace. His paper became more pions, as it developed a more bitter latent trea son; so that when it was suppressed by the iSlo 7 vernment, some thought it a pity that such a good loyal man should be troubled: Even after he bad left, his son issued 4 half sheet,,inwhi* father . and =soilMostiloudly protested loyalty to the Ociveriment, 'and 'asked - the sympathies of the world for their persecution& . No doubt some took them at, their word; and greatly blamed • those who questioned the candor and sincerity of such meek, pious and patriotic individuals. There are doubtless some sympathizers with ':Dr. Con verse in Philadelphia yet, and such ought to be , obliged -to us for allowing -theta to - look -in on the old Doctor and his Christian Observer in Richmond, Where he IS allowed to ley down his mask and be himself. If lifting the curtain shows the Doctor so transformed that 'they cry, " If thoube' est he, oh; how Moved!" the fault is not ours A friend recently from Norfolk, has sent us a copy of the Christian Observer'and Presbyterian Witness, published at Richmond, Va., May Bth, 1862, by A. Converse, editor and proprietor. T. Bartlett Converse, associate: editor." It is about half the size it held in Philadelphia, and printed on thin paper. Otherwise it is in all respects like the old paper—neitigh like it to be &twin- sister. We wish all the old friends of the Doctor could see the whole paper; but as that is impos,sible, we will indulge them with liberal excerpts, under " headings" which are our own. As we quote from. leaded editorials, we allow Dr. Converse to speak for himself. Why the ; Doctor went . Sputh.—"We came here to labor , and suffer with the people, and we have had many: proofs that -our labors are appre ciated." Claims of the Paper. "Up`to the time of US suppression -in Phila delphia, by order of the President of the United States, it was the . ONLY PAPER OF ANY KIND in that city, andthe ONLY RELIGIODS paper, with one exception, in the United .States, which op posed the unholy war whieh that power is now waging against the Southern - Confederacy. -" It has been repeatedly' commended to the confidence and .patronage of the Sonthern Church by many. Presbyteries in this Confrderacy." . How, the Doctor promotes peace at the South. —He says . : " These prayers must be accom panied with the most determined effort, skilfully directed, to conquer a peace. The united forces of the Sauth-have not yet entered the field. Let every man haste to the rescue, and the deadly conflict wilt not be long continued. We add in the words of the Southern Christian Advocate, that twe cannot afford to fail. To lose our cause -is to lose everything , except our souls; and to many this loss also would be imminent. It would be to lose all one earth we .hold dear. To say nothing of the ignominy of subjugation, a thought that no high-minded man can endure, every selfish as well as every patriotic instinct revolts at the thought of failare. The patriot loses his cherished country and its independence, the Christian freedom to worship God as his con. science dictates—the father the hopes he -has-en tertained for his'children-4he man wealth his possessions,— the Government funds become worthless—the banks fail—the wealth of the land Is absorbed by our enemies to pay .the price of Our subjugation, and we all together become miserable slaves and paupers—crushed under the heel of a brutal' and tyrannical mob? " How the Doctor comforts the rebels under de feat His love of the Union. He says This is not the hour for desponding, but for earnest, un ceasing prayer, and united and undaunted effort in defence of our homes and of rights. dearer then life. The fall of New Orleans and the threatened attack upon our City, should dishear ten no one, and create no panic among our'citi zens. • It is time to lOok to God for succor,"and not tUdistrust his Providence, or Grace. " We can readily conceive how the material and religious interests of the South:will be promoted- by its independence of the North; but we will not prophecy. And if the separation shall crush the malign fanaticism which has corrupted glen- extensively at the North; and silenee -the vaunting spirit of pride and wealth—if it shall humble the people under the mighty hand of. God,,, it 'may Prove a great blessing to' them as well as to us." Pow the Doctor instructs the rebels as to the suf.: firings of ,the North by the war. He says :--- "FEDERAL SACRIFICES FOR WAR.-A BILLION DOLLARS In a. year of war the United Stites has aCcuroulated a national debt on thousand million . &Mars. The war debt Of thegovern , meta . alone thus far amounti to a thousinisl mil lion dollars. It is not an exaggeration to esti- Matti' that. at" Jeast a hundred thousand men in the Federal service have been killed or wound . ea, or died or been crippled for life, hy wounds or disease. The value of an able bodied servant in the South is at least a thousand dollars. The labors of these men must have been worth a like sum to the community in which they lived, and the enormous loss occasioned by this FF., is in creased, from this source, by the addition of a hundred thonsand times :a thousand dollars "A few years ago a European nationshipped to. New York two or t three thousand of its paupers and the country was in a blaze of indignation.. But that people'has now - ielantarily assumed burden equal Ao that of nearly four thousand paupers . for life, , and foolishly expend.' ed it in a war that can never yield them anTre turn except mp misery; sorrow and'death I ... What -the Doctor tells. the rebels concerning the, Federal Gobernmente " COIRIIPTION" OP tTRi FEDERAX'GOVERPIMEN . P.:-Litlo admit a• 11l tke discussions on the floor of the Washington House of Representatives on the frauds of officials, that " the Federal Government has been plundered in the first year of. Black Republican misrule in a greater amount than the entire annual expendi tures of the Buelkanan administration." The frauds have b - clisi i lterpetrated by government officials. Is it iii;tliine for our Northern neigh bors-to erect another government ?" What the Doctor thinks of the " Stars and Stripes." Sad omens !"'"'""'" TUE UNITED STATES FLAG IN THE REVOLUTION OF 1861.—The be ginning of this war was marked by many curious coincidences which it is pleasant to revert to at a time 'when the black clouds of war obscure so large a portion of the heavens. By the Greeks and Roinans tliey . Would have been regarded as favorable omens. The believer in the providen tial interposition 'of in all-wise hand in the con trol of every 'event,, however minute, can scarce ly fail to remark the singularity of such a series of events, symbolising the desiruction of the Ifni te. a States and the successful establishment of the confederacy. " We observe that since the election of Mr. Lin coln to the Presidency of the ljnited States, there has been a remarkable fatality attending the " Stars and Stripes" at his hands. It will be re membered that;after his election,. while the coun try was in a most tstitical state, instead of devot ing his attentiowM - the• inomelitaiis' questions which would shortly demand -his - decision, he made a triumphal March through the Northern States to receive the adulations and enjoy the hospitalities of his political friends and admirera. In Philadelphia he addressed a large assmblage from the steps , of Independence Hall, and was requested to hoist the American Flag: Pulling off his coat, to the great admiration ofithe rabble, he set to work with a will to raise it. But the leader of a 'sectional party, subversive'of the con stitution of his "'country,was not eimaged' in an appropriate work whin 'trying to raise the honor ed flag upon the building venerated as that in which our forefathers laid the corner-stone ,of the great republic in:the declaration of indepen dence of '76 : and by an unfortunate, but omin ous accident,' the flag of the country, when it had, scarcely half reached'the eminence; was'humiliat ed by falling -to the dust in the'presence of the as senibled Viousancls " A few days later, Mr. Lincoln had reached Washington, by his memorable hegira thither at night, and the unfullirig of the deified stars'and stripes in the presence of vast multitudes, form ed a part of the imposing ceremony of his, inau guration. Here the accident that had (recurred in Philadelphia mas.repeated, and,in the presence of the representatives of foreign nations And of the people of all the States the lag again fell• to ground, and when after alittle delay it was un furled, it bore marks` of its unfortunate defile ment." .Dr. Converse' rehtike of Raj. Anderion for saluting the United &Iles Flag to Fort Sum t er: —He says: " Sumter fell. , Major Anderson re quested permission to salute his flag before lower ing it.. The eourtsey was accorded him. The fight was now over without bloodshed. A Call. non fired to salute the'43fars and stripes,—to pay it the last tribute of honor before its removal. from. South Carolina sc4;rieverrto be permanezit ly replaced,—exploded-six--men were either killed or wounded., *: signal rebuke for 'the , , superstitious reverence paid to a piece of. bunt• - ing !" How Feaven frowned on the United' States flag in, Philadelphia.—The DoCtor says "In Phila delphia a ma:gni - fleet plee of bunting was floated to the breeze above' the custom house—but the winds, as if indignant , it the prostitution of . the national flag to repfesentthe policy of a party, snapped the, flag-itaff and swept, it to the earth. From Independence Hell one of the largest and handsomest flags in the city. was stretched across the street, and the wind seized this too, and rent it through the middle stripe from one end to the other.. Six stripes and - the union were on one piece, six stripes on - the other. The remaining stripe'was split through the middle. , And as the two fragments hung 'side 'by aide cni_ the, same rope, they seemed to announce Trom the very spot• where the Indepd..,,dence of the American colonies was toile& tha f' henceforth there would be : two nations side by side ;on ; this continent, formed out of that one."- : , How • Heaver& punished- the' North at Great Bethel; when the lamented Dop tor says The fifstbattle 'fougbt on 'behalf of that doomeit , llag . was at, bethel. "God Protected our men=otlys a single one was, killed. The, loss of its supporters was so great that to this day no. official account of the battle - was' pub lished, and when•called for by Congteas, reply was made that its riblication would be injurious , to theltervice. "- Sinde then the ivar to, avenge the misfor titles of the Star-spangled Banner' and, to .re= establish its sway has been, fiercely, waged. :Mere, than a_thonsand million dollars, and probably hundred thousand lives . have been sacrificed 1)y the-North in , the vain effort. •We haVe suffered much and will have'Much still to suffer. But lie who sustained the children of Israel d rung: forty'pars'of trial affeici t heY had thrroWn off the: Yell& 6f'their t Wyptiijli f iashmasters,Wili Sustain . US if,me PII'Pe.TIFAPNI*Pc.:e4I:4{IDI. "t The-above incidents may , be relied-` upon as correct: -They may Afford 'isome 'eneouragement to those who :are disposed' to lookr-un fho;dark side of the Struggle we are engaged in. But if .they are not to be regarded as a finger pointing ' to our ultimate seccer,:,t 11 at I east viewed as remarkable this wart shall, atnodistant,,daz, havobeen brought to triumphant conclusion." - What News ,the:Docter selects for 'his Readers. He 'quotes; froxn lhe Memphis Appeal, which says : "The 'bogies! TGovernor, Andrew JohniOn; hie' been reduced 14) the 'UeceSiity of keeping an armed guard it'his'door t ill the time, as a protection to his person. " Johnson hes beentattemptiug-forz.more than a month to ,raise -a - full regiment ts II body guard, but has so far succeeded 'in - getting only about eighty Dutchmen to vOltiiiteer in that dirty on- peaty. rs " Great consternation prevailed among John son and hie minions-it l consequence, theitill available - Federal' forol was kept under arina night in . anticipation of an attach. The despot himself is said to havebeen very, much, terrified, and.liaditis clothes picked and _his papers put up preparatory Jolt., wok' hegira.in case of such a necessity 2! - 7 • What Dr. 'Converse thinks of the New York Annivershrielle''says :jl O Most of these meet iiigs Ceased a:fie thitigsvcif much interest except es deirelopuifn i ti of religibue feeling, IS really and disastrously perverted, as it was in the days when the Puritans in both Old and New England persecuted and hung obnoxious women for witches." Why was Col. Ellsworth's Death just 7—The Doctor says : " Southern soil was first invaded in the Occupation of Alexandria. The first act of Colonel Ellsworth, on entering the city, was to tear down the Confederate flag upon the Mar shall House—but he paid the penalty of his life. The bosom friend of Abraham Lincoln was the only man in his regiment killed at :the time, and he lost his life in the first attempt to remove our flag from our soil." We will make no more ,extracts from this Christian Observer. Can any doubt that the paper is most malignant in its wholesale, un blushing treason, and most dangerous from its religious parlance and palaver. Yet the old maxim in this case holds true. " Crelum non. animum mutant, . Quip trans mare currunt." Dr. Converse here, at heart, was what be now is openly'and malignantly in Richmond: We knew it to be so at thetime, and were therefore prepared for his wbole - subsequent conduct. There are others who may profit by the exposure we ,have made, for we fear their love of the Union and peace would not bear transportatien to Virginia. Those who cry "persecution" when a traitor is ;exposed, are at heart traitors. ADDRESSES AT THE HISTORIOAL !MOIETY. (Continued from first page.) THE Rev. Professor T. V: J. Wylie next ad- Oressed the meeting as follows : Mr. President; I beg leave to offer the follow ing resolution WHEREAS, Presbyterianism has a. noble his tory, and its records are therefore worthy of per petual, preservation, Resolved, That the Presbyterian Historical So ciety deserves and shall receive the encourage meat of-all who desire the welfare of the Church or of the world." At this lateltour and after the eloquent addres ses to which we have been listening, it would be unpardonable, in me to detain this audience by any extended remarks. It is principally because I desire to manifest my cordial interest in the Presbyterian Historical Society, that I say a word. The first question which the resolution sus , c gests to us is, What is Presbyterianism ? Here we do not mean to refer to it in regard, to the great doctrines of Evangelical Faith, which it cherish es, but as a system of Church government and order. Viewed in this aspect it is simply Ministe rialyarity and eccle,sictslical unity. Presbyterianism implies that all ministers of the Gospel are equal in grade and 'authority. We have no popes, no prelates, although if there is any value ';3r honor in the name of bishops, we possess that to the, full. We consider that all , ministers are Presbyters, and that all Presbyters who have charge of cOngregations are Bishops. You, Mr. President, are -a Bishop—so am I—so is any Presbyterian pastor. This is the true New Testament - Episcopacy. - nett, again, we consider ecciesiastical unity as another element of Piesbyteri,snism. We do not regard each separate congregation as having a right to determine subjects of doctrine or disci pline for itself, but we regard all the congrega tions-of the faithful as forming,-one church. We maintain that thethurch does; Cot consist of iso: lated, and disconnected fragments but that it' forma or ought to form one united, 'homogeneous whole. Is 011ItIBT divided ? We think not, and eons that we ' " that it is the duty of all who pro fess the ti , eligion, to combine together under one banner, on the basis of Gospel truth as a uni ted host.. The unity of the whole Church of Christ is one great feature of true Presbyterian ism. • If we look at Presbyterianism then, in this form, we find it exhibits in the domain of reli gion those great elements of liberty for which the oppressed have sighed, and which true patriots and philanthropists have died to defend "Equal ity and fraternity;"—noble words, however much perverted. Presbyterianism presents them in the Church as our American system presents them in the State. - Now the, resolution asserts that Presbyterian isin has a noble history, and this is so because really its history is connected more or less with the struggles which man has been making for emancipation from oppression and moral and po litical freedom, wherever the Christian religion has prevailed. It is true that records to which we have access-are but scanty.'.. We are sorry that there were then no Presbyterian .Historical societies to collect and preserve the documents, which it would be so desirable to refer to. If there:had been some. SAMUEL AGNEW to gather, old musty books, and portraits, and autographs, and relics of more kind and another, we , might - have known more about these - :matters. Then,. too, "what we have is generally from the hands - of, those unfavorable to our cause. It is something like the fable 'in /Esop of" the painter and_ the lion. The artist had placed on his canvass a re presentation of a man killing . a lion. A lion pose-, ing by stopped to look at it. The painter in quired what he thought of it: The lion replied, , if lions were painters-the - Character-of the picture would be somewhat different,. Instead of finding the man killing the lion, we should have the lion killing the _man. So in the history of the, Church; we would not have the friends of sound doctrine and pod order represented as, heretics, and seliis maties,but the representation,would be reversed. Yet even, as it is, there, is enough' to show that wheneVer there.has been in the Christian world. a struggle for liberty, for mind, for man---Presz byterianism in its essential elementkhas been in ;volved in the contest: We might thus review the history of the Christian Church, and we would find that those who have contended .for religinus .and civil liberty were Presbyterians. -The Cov enanters were. Presbyterians-. , And -When we come nearer still to our own times we find _that, those who achieved, our, own, liberties were to a Very ,cnusiderable degree Presbyterians. My friend and brother ,(Rev. Dr. Baird), who has preceded me, has shown that the National Decla ration of =lndependence may be traced to the re a-ninth:ins passed more than a year'beforeat Meck lenburg; North Ciii-Olitia,-fibm which some of the most significant aild'stirring Declarations of In are -copied. In this Mecklenburg Declaration we find that Presbyterians had a pro minent part. There is, however; a link •which connects that Deolaration with the old,Covenan ters which is not generally known. About one hundred years ago, the Scotch Covenants were renewed at Octorara, is this State, under the di rection of Rev. Alexander Craighead. In come (pence of the suspicion of the then preprietary government Pennsylvania,,,that 'this was an inelpienreiTert te.renounce the allegiance of the British Crown; Craighead was"compelled tO to North Carelina, and his' influence in that sec tion of the country Where the Meeklen,burg De claration was made,,had undoubtedly great-effect in producing it. ; We -have in. our pessession the only copy• we have ever heard. of or seen of the Renovation , of the Covenants , at -Octmana, and as we , read the , Aeeount,of the r trAnsaebion, of the drawn- sword pointed North, South, East .and West, defying all the enemies, of Christ:the Me diator, we feel .that the, principles for which our fathers contended are those which we have real- Red in: a *great measure, at the Present day, As one who is a true Covenanter, outside and inside, and down;Pireugli acid through, we feel, that we 'may glory in the Struggles' for liberty ivhieh these noble men made, whom we all rejoice to claim as our common parentage. Our country is now engaged in a momentous struggle, and when the history of this contest is written, it is to be hoped that some records may be preserved which will show what part Presby terianism had in sustaining the cause of liberty and law. The principles which our fathers have avowed are such as we have defined. One of the Westminster divines declared that " man was a sacred thing, and could never become property for man." This, after all, is the great issue at stake ' and when, as the result 'of the struggle, it it shall be found that " liberty is proclaimed throughout the land to all the inhabitants there of," we are confident that it will be found that no department of the Church has furnished more numerous and more valiant soldiers than our Presbyterian family. Bright as are the pages of the past with deeds of glory,still brighter will he the pages which the pen of history is now recor ding. These noble deeds it is the aim of this society, to preserve in remembrance, and certainly it should be cordially sustained. Mr. President, I offer the resolution. " The Rev. Thomas Brainerd, D. D., rose to se cond the resolution offered by the Rev. Dr. Wylie. He said he knew not why he was ap pointed to speak last, unless it was because his denomination was the youngest child of the Pres byterian family. Though last, =it=was not, how ever, least in numbers nor interest in Presbyter ianism. Alluding to the lateness of the hour, he said he understood a collection was yet to be ta ken up, of which "fact some seemed to be fully conscious, as they had already left the house. It was hardly necessary that he should make a speech after the able and eloquent eulogies which his brethren had pronounced on Presby terianisni, and which he fully endorsed. It might be proper, however, to allude, to one attribute of Presbyterianism, which his brethren had failed to notice and make prominent. He could not but regard it as a noble characteristic of Presbyter ians, that in enlarging and conserving the Church, they had relied mainly on God's own Truth, by which Jeans prayed , that his Disciples might be " sanctified." This has saved us from making little things great and great things little. This has saved us from appealing from God's own Book, to books of tradition which were not God's own. To con vert and sanctify men we have not been able to avail ourselves of a hereditaiy apostleship, of baptismal.regeneration ; of priestly absolution; of grace on the heart, received sacramentally, through the stomach. We have bad no splen did outward forms to give an external symbol of Church life, when the Holy Spirit.had failed to give unction to our ministry and our worship. We have not been allowed by -noise and cla mor to appeal io the passions, and thus excite religious rhapsody without thought. We have been shut up to cultivate intellectual growth; to bring the weight of God's truth in its eternal motives, in the bands of the Holy Spirit to bear on the understanding, the conscience and hearts of our hearers. ' As we have had little to com mend us to the poetic sensibilities, the worldly taste, the superstition of our hearers, we were compelled "to be mighty," if at all, " the Scriptures." . • It is said, a waggish Scotch minister seeing his. ".gude wife" sleeping in church, called out: "Ha chef l I.did nae marry ye for your riches, for ye had, nave; neither did I marry ye for your beau ty; all the congregation can witness that;'and if ye have nae grace, Rachel, I have made a sair bargain on't." So with Presbyterians. When we have failed in God's truth, we have had no othe'r reliance, and this has shut us up to the pure Gospel. This has given dignity to our con troversies, and even to our unhappy divisions. We have disputed not for shades of ceremonies, but for God's noble truth. ,-We are satisfied, with three centuries of ex periencei that ~ we lave .not over-valued truth. Another experiment has been -- tried:for(Med thousand years, the Church so called, relied on I the incidental and the external.. It-bad the_ pres tige of antiquity—of supreme authority—of apos tolic succession—of an imposing ritual—of priest ly vestments—of elaborate architecture--of fine music---of the world's aristocracy, and govern mental support and defence. What was the final result ? The world got into-the Church, and the " true Church." came out, to find = CI ristianity. - We are surprised that any in-our age and, land are turn ing back to re-enact this exploded experiment: Certainly Presbyterians will not follow them. Dr. Brainerd said he regarded the history of our denomination, studiedand pondered, as the Church's consciousness—its materials of self appreciation, and self-respect. When claim to' be a Presbyterian, I draw to myself the aggre gated spirit, tone, and prestige of my denomina tion. That I may be neither bigoted nor finati cal, I need to know what my. Church has' been and is. History is the church's experience. We. can not separate from our age, the.memory of youth, and the events of life without loss. Neither can a church afford to lose the wisdom of its expe rience. We lengthen life, not as we prolong days,' but as we live Mentally in the lona past and 'future. He Who is at home in church his tory, has sat in a hundred councils, been thrilled by the best preachers,- stirred by - the best ex amples of the pions dead, Witnessed the explo sion of a hundred plausible heresies, caught the impulse. of a thousand religious revivals,. and clasped ha.nds with the "noble army of martyrs." The Presbyterian, who like the fabled Salathiel, has thus mentally passed along generations, live ing and dying, may number but, thirty years, but he is older than kethnsaleh, As the Church grows , wiser by experience, we , owe it to, our children to gather up the history of ,the past and Present, and embalm it for their. use. To break the telegraph wire between the past`and future, is a treason to unborn genera- Church history is a means of Church unity. We are divided as Presbyterians' into diverse families, but our Presbyterian Historical Society lifts us out of our chaos as, tribes, bears us back to sit with common reverence and love at the feet of Jesus, and gathers around us there the blessed dead of our Church, whom we all delight to. honor. The*;rock which divides the stream may be huge and stubborn, but as the stream. Was one in its origin,.its ) divided waters will meet belOw every obstruation, and flow broader and deeper"to the sea. With the same Westminster Confession of Faith, and noble form . of, govern ment—with the same origin, history, literature, enemies and friends, Presbyterians have , : a real, ii.trinsie unity, Which will ultimately find mani festation in ,outward organic fellowship. who then, let us love and wait on God. Some who admit our Christianity, deny our churchisro ; but so long as Jesus comes to meet our Sessions, Presbyteries and Synods, we think no Bishops nor Archbishops " will be -.needed to make a quorum." . Let, us: mark our love to our Church by our liberal, contribution to this Society. An addre.ss was expected from the esteemed and eloquent'pastor of the church, the Rev. Ar. J. B. Dales, but to the general regret, the late ness of the hour induced him to decline. • The resolutions Were adopted, a collection taken up in aid of the Society, and on motion of Rev. Dr. Cornell, seconded by - the Rev. Dr. Edwards, the following officers were elected for the. ensuing. year:'. President,, Rev. Albert Barnes , -Philadelphia ; Pa. Vice President's, Rev. C. 'O. Beatty, D. D., Steubenville, O. • Rev. George Duffield, D;D., Detroit, Mich; Rev. Peter Bullions,-D.D., Troy, N. Y. • Rev. George Scott, East Palestine, O.; Rev. Wm. L. Roberts, 40p)tiuton,:priva t .. Baird,Corresponding . Seerctar e y, Samuel D.D., Woodbury, N. J. -J. . Recorchng Secretary r itev. J B Dales, Philadelphia, Pa, ' _ . • .Treasnrer • and' `Librarian, Samuel Esq. Executive Committee; Rev. John C. Backus, MD., Baltimore, Md.; Rev. Alfred Nevin, D.D., Samuel Hazzard, Esq., Rev. Benjamin J. Wal lace, D.D. ' Rev. Thomas J. Shepherd, Henry J. Williams, Esq., Rev. John B. Dales, D.D., Rev. Joseph L. Cooper, D.D., and Rev. Samuel 0. Wylie, Philadelphia, Pa. Nix toublizatietto. The Sermons of Rev. Messrs. Rice, Hague, Ganse, Adams and Vinton, on the Sabbath, de livered last winter in New York city, under the auspices of the indefatigable - Sabbath Committee, have been collected and published in a handsome 12mo. volume; under-the - title of the CHRISTIAN SABBATH. The first is by Dr. Rice, on the Ori gin and History of the Sabbath; the second by Rev. Dr. Hague, on the Authority and Perpe tnity of the Christian Sabbath; the third by Dr. Ganse, on the Duties of the Sabbath; the fourth by Rev. Dr. Adams, on the Benefits of the Sab bath, and the fifth by Rev.- Dr. Vinton, on the Civil Relations -of the Sabbath. These are care -fully prepared and eloquent discourses, embody ing a great amount of valuable thought, argu ment and information on their important theme. The view of the committee's labors and successes prefixed to the sermons, is one of the most re markable records of moral reform in a great city, achieved by the dicine blessing on the diligent and careful use of the simplest means, that is to be found in the •annals of Christendom. It is a potent example to Christian men and patriots seeking the moral elevation of their fellows and of their country. New York : R. Carter & Co. For sale by C. S. Luther, 138-1 Chesnut street. THE -PULPIT - AND OUR NATIONAL CRISIS, is the title of a 'Sermon recently preached and pub lished, by Rev. Dr. Rice, in which he seeks to clear biinself from sympathy with the enemies of his couitry. Dr. Rice makes some very fair statements, but inasmuch as he consents reluc tantly to speak on the subject at all, and as not one passage in tliesermon breathes a hearty sym pathy- with the Government, but stops short at a necessary acquiescence in its policy, and inas much as we find a great deal of lamentation about the dreadful evils of war, and prognostics —much in the style of the London Times—of difficulties yet, to come in managing the revolted inhabitants when they are subdued, we must pro nounce the defence, in most respects, a failure. Dr. Rice, with ill concealed egotism, intimates, at the dose, that only the labors and spirit of such ministers as, like himself, have ignored the whole question of public duty in this crisis, can save us in the , reater civil troubles which he iniagines are yet to come. On the contrary, it is morally certain that if therdoyally inclined peo ple had been universally under the influence of such lukewarm !pastors as Dr. Rice has proved himself to be, even in this sermon, we would never have had nerve to face the awful struggle, but would now have been trader the moral and poli tical "rile of Davis, Polk, Thornwell, Palmer & Co. Dr. Rice has one characteristic which has al ways been a prominent symptom of clerical pro slaveryism and lukewarm patriotism--an extra ordinary anxiety.for the utter divorce of things secular and things spiritual in the pulpit. Dr.. Rebinson, - of the True Presbyterian, may be cited as the self-chosen apostle of this new gos pel. We commend to them; and to all like minded; the following language, found . in the Princeton Review, for January,lB6l: "The doc trine that Christian mini : stea l ,- as e a rth, and church c.ourts, have nothing to do with politics, as all other theories either false or half true, has giveaway like.townn the_touch of fire, when the test question °eines: * * * The misfortune is; that the clergy:and the church have riot hith erto faithfully discharged their duty in this mat ter. * * It may be one of the grade= ends which God designs to answer by our present af flictions to rouse the church to a higher estimate of her vocation; to make her feel that if is the prerogative and duty; as God's witness on the earth, to testify in behalf of all truth, and against, all sin; whether, in Magistrates or people, whether in legislation or private conduct, and to teach publicly and effectively that States as well as in dividualinre bound to make the law of God the rule ot their condnet."- By the side of these manly and healthful utter ances, how trivill is, all the special pleading of the Fifth avenneTreacher and the editor of the True Presbyterian.- - - The sermon is puldished by Scribner, N. Y., and is for Sale by 'Lippincott & Co.,in this city. " THE LITURQI.OAL QUESTION, with reference to the Liturgy of the German Reformed Church. A Reportby. thc,Liturgical . Committee." This report was:written by Rev. Dr. Nevin,-at the re quest of.the'Sykrod, which seems to have become confused' in the discussion of the question; and ac cordirigliCalled upon the writer to take an ob servation as to its position - arid the general bear ings of, the question. The work is ably done, but the possibility of the Synod leaving the whole Matter of a liturgy to the individual taste and conscience of .the ministry is intimated at the close. Philida: Lindsay & Blaekiston. WORHTNO !AND WINNING, OR THE. DEAF BOY'S TET6MFH, is the fifth 'edition of Rev. W. M. Thaye's little work on the life of the cele brated biblical scholar Dr. Kitt°, under a new title. The wonderful and inspiring story of the poor deaf boy's progress from the poor-house to the high place he occupied in the theological world, is effectively: told, and forms one of the finest lessons of Providence. to the young to be found outside -of the -Bible. - 16 mo. pp. 340; handsoniely' illustrated. Boston : Henry Hoyt. For'sale at 630 Arch Street. Mr. Iloyt has also issued, in very neat style, Dr. Malan's little tract—THE Fox lIIINTER, which is based= on , the text : Takes us the foxes," &c. For sale at 630 Arch street. We have also received the " Zane Street Girl? Grammar Schoel Year-Book of Facts, for 1861- 62."' Smith, English & Co. This is a fitting memorial of . the patriotism, zeal, diligence and gopd taste of the young ladies of " Zane street;" and is oite`of the fruits of our Common School .systani of which its advocates need not feel, ashamed.. T4s. - rawa's 119 ME MONTHLY, ARTHUR'S Homn ALiciaZIKE, i rlin STUDENT AND SCHOOLMASTER, for June, are all promptly in their places. Tnn lassorT or THE SermOn, by R3V. F. G. Clark, N. Y. T. 14 RECEPTION OF MB.. BROWNLOW on the part of the citizens 'ot 'Philadelphia, will take place; at the Academy of Music on Friday eve ma JUNE 12,