Vol. VII, No. 1.--Whole No. 313. Nottvg, ;Who are these, whence came they? Not from Jerusalem alone To heaven the path ascends ; As near, as sure, as straight the way, • , That leads to the celestial day, From farthest realms extends; Frigid or torrid zone. Wliat matters how or whence we start ? One is the crown of all; One is the hard and glorious race Whatever be our starting place ; Ring round the earth the call That says f Arise, depart I From the balm-breathing, sun-loved isles Of the bright Southern Sea, From the dead North's cloud-shadowed pole, We gather to our gladsome goal— Our common home in thee, City of sun and smiles 1 The cold, rough billows hinder none; Nor helps the calm, fair main; The brown rook of Norwegian gloom, The verdure of Tahitian bloom, The sands of Miaraim's plain, Or peaks of Lebanon.. As from the green lands of the vine, . We from the snow-wastes pale, We find the ever open road To the dear city of our God ; From Russian steppe, or Burman vale, Or terraced Palestine. Not from swift Jordan's sacred stream Alone we mount above Indus or Danube, Thamesi or Rhone, Rivers unsaiated and unknown; From each the home of love Deokons with heavenly beam. Not from`gray Olivet alone We see the gates of light; From Morvan's heath', or Jungfran's snow, We welcome the descending glow Of pearl and chrysolite, • • Under the setting sun. . Not from Jerusalem alone The Church ascends to God; . Strangers of every tongue and clime, Pilgrims of every land and time, Throng the well-trodden road Tlttit leads-up to the throne. —Christian, Treasury. CONLESPONDENCE IN 3USSACHUSETTS. LA slump enclosing the article from the New York Observer, which we insert below, accompanies it with . the following timely and stirring note];— I do not believe your readers need such an admonition, yet I. do feel that the Church is awfully at fault in this matter. of omitting constant prayer for the nation. It wont do to pass this matter by with a brief allusion to the war—we must pray for men--Presi: denteabinet,—afilaers—soldiers—sailors---- editors (I fear these last need more prayers than all the others, for how tremendous for good or evil is their power I) This war has been the grandest commenta ry for me on the Old Testament ! Oh, how those pages, once so dim and, perplexing, now glow with a divine radiance ! r rejoice that I have lived in this day. How clearly the Scripture histories show that God'a pre sence a'nd help are absolutely essential to success 1 Think how we boasted of Our thirty millions of men, and our wealth, and mechan ical skill,as sure to put down rebellion in stanter. And yet here we are, one year and four months, and *the endo is not yet. Is " God on the side of the heaviest artillery'?" Yes, when that, artillery is made, up of the batteries of living faith, and the policy is based on justice and righteousness ! Other wise, vain is the help of man. Think how God, has disappointed us in regard to a glo rions leader in this struggle. l o Moses, nor Joshua ; not a man upon whom the great heart of this nation can repose with fond en thusiasm ,or, lively hope. •Is He not saying to us—" This is my battle—the glory shall be mine" Last Sunday evening, our Sabbath School toneert was held in the presence of a large audience in the' °hunt'. The superinten dent took for his text these words : Be sure your sin will find you out" (Numbers xxxii: 43). He first sketched Jonah, running away from god, and the storm that brought himup against His terrible presence.- Second : Josh ua, the major-general commanding the "grand army" of the Jordan, defeated in a Bull Run disaster at the assault on the city of Ai, and for no other cause' than that there was an " accursed thing" in Israel Which God meant should be removed.. He told Joshua that He would not be with'lsrael any more, nor would his "%rand army" be able to stand against their enemies unless the .abo minable sin was eiposed and punished. So Joshua ferreted out Achanls sin, and then the city of Ai was taken in short order I Finally, the fifteen voyages of our ship of state, the Constitution, were described, and the present (sixteenth), a voyage of unexam pled peril—the black waves of treason and secession rushing madly by the timbers creaking—the breakers roaring, and Captain Lincoln, finding at last that he must take his truinpot and stand on the quarter-deck, to shout to the American people : " There'S a Jonah- onboard—he must be thrown over board or we are lost I " With this decision, the good old ship feels the helm, comes upto .the wind, the sails fill, the reefs are cleared, the glad sailors gather around the main-mast, and, cry aloud— " lip,, with the Florictus ensies up Long shall it wave. on high .I And every heart'shall dance to see, That banner in the sky I Rain mast-head high, that hallowed flagl Let FREEDOM fill the sail I And GOD will bring her through the storm, The lightning, and the gale I " At the utterance of these hues-- " And every heart shall dance to see That banner in the sky.' a concealed. flag of immense size, and great brilliancy, rose as if by unseen hands, imme diately behind the pulpit, and crept tt . p the wall as thaugh , it was alive, till• it reached the ceiling, where it hung, covering the en tire recess I The effect was sublime. There vas a moment `of breathlessi `suspense, and then the pent-up emotions burst forth like the roaring' of a mountain torrent ! That grand old flag of freedoia was conse crated with a new baptism on that evening, and 'not a soul was ignorant of its thrilling power. Ever your freed, - THE TWO MEETINGS, IS THERE A GOD OF RATTLES? Messrs. Editors :—A few weeks ago I was visiting'one of the beautiful towns on the Hudson river. While waking at twilight, enjoying the view of hill and dale, of Cottage and, mansion, which characterize the place, I heard a church bell ringing. On inquiry, I learned.that it was the call to the weekly prayer meeting. Although I knew I should be an entire stranger to all who miglit be present, I re solved to go. When traveling, I always make it a rule to unite with my brethren in the faith, wherever I can find them. lam often, specially refreshed by their , new methods of presenting old truths; or ,by the ferior of heart-utterances in prayer from lips with which lam not familiar. I entered the Yes. try of the church, and sit 'down- among the people with a freedom that every believer has a right to exercise as a member of the church universal. I joined in the 'prayers, and in the singing, and listened to the exhortation of the minister, but will you believe me, when I say that from the beginning to the end of that service, not a single allusion was made to the condition of the country ! I could have excused the omission in the address, but that not a single prayer gave utterance to the longing of any soul for God's blessing upon our nation was absolutely painful to me.. I was grieved, and wended my way, in a sor rowful mood, to the house where I was visit ing. Thought I, " When the • Son of Man cometh, will he find faith on the earth ?" Why, if there had been a Jewish syna gogue in the town, and I had gone . there, could I have failed of having my soul re freshed with - the glorious promises of the ancient scriptures ? Should. I not have heard David saying, " I will cry unto God most High, unto God, who perfornaeth all things for me ?" "In the shadow of thy wings will I make my refuge, until these calamities be overpast !" Would not some pious Isralite have recalled that brav6 youth,(a man " after God's own heart ") as he stood before Goliath, with the armies of Israel at his back, .and the mighty host of the Philistines in front, saying: All this assembly shall know that the Lord sa veth not with sword and spear, for the battle is the Lord's and he will give you into our hands!" • Miht I not have heard Moses exclaim "For the Lord thy God walketh in the midst of thy camp to deliver thee, and to give up thine enemies before thee ?" Per haps, nay, surely,. some devout Jew would have told , me of Jahaziel, who; when the Spirit of the Lord come upon him, in the midst of the congregation, shouted, " Heark en ye, all Judalt, and ye inhabitants of Je rusalem, and thou King Jehosephat I" Thus saith the Lord unto you, " Be not afraid, nor dismayed by reason of this great multitude, for the battle is notvours,butGod's * * Oh, if' I could have had these brethren with me at a prayer meeting in: a country vil lage on the. Friday evening previous ! It was held in a small room, with low walls, in the basement of a very plain meeting-house. There is not a rich man in the church bit I am 'convinced they are, rich in faith. There were five prayers offered, and every one of them bore an earnest entreaty to the Lord for his mercy upon our stricken land 1 They implore God'to give our Government success, not for the sake of victory, but for` Jesus sake,. that He might, have all the honor•anjl glory. They prayed for the President of the United States, that he might have divine guidance ; for the Cabinet, that they might have the wisdom that cometh 'from above; fol. the • soldiers of the country, that , they might become valiant soldiers of the cross; for the officers that they might do and dare all as servants of the King of Kings. Such, lunderstand, has been the testimony of their prayers since the war began. More than this, their little Sabbath school his sent soldiers into the field, and the school partic ularly remembers them in their weekly as semblings. That obscure church is a power in this wicked world, depend upon it! May not our reverses be given to us to teach our church members that they have not carried their ;troubles to ,God as they ought, nor thrown their burdens upon Him. , A WORSHIPPER OF THE GOD OF OUR FATHERS. LESSONS OF WAR. • ' NO XVII. Exchange of Prisonere. DURING the tNloporinesian war,. the Lace dremonians had thrown three hundred men into the island of Sphacteria, where being closely blockided by the Athenian fleet, they were ready to perish for want of provisions. The Laced%monian, afflicted on their account, sent Ambassadors to Athens, asking that people to permit them to fetch off, their - countrymen, and offering to restore to them three hundred Athenian prisoners of war, who' happened at that to be in their hands. This request, and these terms the Athenians promptly rejected. Whereupon the Lacedm monian ambassadors said, " It is plain you set a higher estimate upon the. Spartans, than upon your own countrymen, for you:refuse to accept three hundred of the latter in the place of an equal number of the former." This was sound argument, and will apply to every case of °a similar kind, whether in public or private life. Every instance, in which .national enemies refuse to exercise toward each other those acts of couresy and humanity which civilized warfare admits is a confession of inferiority in the party that is guilty of such refusal, 4 tyossibly an exception may sometimes ex ist, arising from the peculiar character of the war in which the case occurs ; where it might be supposed that some principle would be relinquished by treating the enemy upon equal terms, as an honorable belligerent, and where it is .deemed better to endure any ma te4al loss and affliction whatever, than make any concession that might bear a. dangerous significancy. A scruple of this kind found place in the mind of our government at the commencement of the present straggle, when PHILADELPITIA'• i TIII:4O": - sy,Pp.f.m . 4R -. 4:.....150 it rejected the proposition of the exchange of prisoners with the enemy, not because it un dervalued its own citizens, but lest, by con senting to that proposition, it might be as sisting to make rebellion appear respectable in the eyes of the world. However, this scruple has been at' length surmounted, and the practice of the exchange of prisoners h been adopted, without any loss of dignity on the part of the government, and with the ap probation of the Whole nation. Thus that very important consideration which appeared for a time to justify.the government in acting as it did, and which would justify it still, if anything could, in acting so, is found, in the light which time, and 'experience, and the deliberate- dictates of human nature, cast upon the question, to be insufficient to set aside the claims of kindness and of mercy. From this example we learn, that no good cause, and that neither national nor individ ual self-respect can easily suffer , any damage, even in the most delicate cases - that are likely to occur; by the conceSsions of tenderness and humanity. This seeming exception being thus taken out of the way, we return to the principle in volved in our first example: that every un generous action, towards another, *of which we are guilty, is an , impeachment of: our own worth..,. Every act of unkindness, of revenge,. of unforgiving hostility, is a confession of insignificance and inferiority. Insolence, harshness, severity, and an exacting and im placable disposition, are proofs ' and acknowl edgements of hollowness and bankruptcy of character ; On the other 'hand, - gentleness, meekness, and a forgiving spirit, spring from the consciousness of something valuable in one's self, that needs no exactions to vindi dicate its rank. It was justly said of the Athenians, in the story related at the begin ning, that they cast reproach upon their own countrymen, bY-refusing to give up as many Spartans for their release ; and so we re proach ourselves in every act that is lacking' in magnanimity and compassion. By with holding from others the respect that is due them, we 'betray disrespect for ourselves ; whilst we effectually assert our own virtue' and importance ' by every. and, tribute we pay to the dignity and happifiess - of a, fellow man. - S. —Banner 'of the Covenant. INDIVIDUALITY :PRESERVED: IN ZELL - NON. - It, is quite a possible thingthat Christiani ty may have been pressed on your acceptance in unjustifiably close, or too exclusive, cOn nection with the actual specimens of Chris tianity with which you come in contaet. Agcl in these there may have been somewhat to irritate and revolt you. There may have been a narrowness; a want of symmetry,;' want of fire or forCe, on the one hand, or of calm and steady regulation, on the others! a stuntedness or ill-proportion ; a, firmness .of: principle ; passing over into sternness and severity for want of an. element of geniality; or a geniality degenerating into tame effe minacy for want of an element of strength and` vigour. And, in particular, in these realized exhibitions of the religion urged upon you, there may have'been to your -view no scope, noindulgenee,—no quarter, one might almostlay,—for the, very pursuits in which you find your innocent and invigorating re creation ; or to which perhaps you purpose dedicating yourself as the leading business of your life. Now, doing you the justice, or exercising, towards you the charity, to believe that in this you are not seeking to cloak over and conceal, to justify or excuse, an enmity to the essential spirit of Christianity under the guise of your dislike*-to•soine mere form of it ; might it not help you to remember that there is no obligation laid, on you whatever to em hrace the particular form which you dislike ? Christian,ity never proposes to force on you, for instance, who are in the bud and bloom of opening manhood,—it maybe, also, in the conflict with sincere and earnest doulots,—it may be, also, in the possession of individual special gifts; with endowments that may fascinate you towards ; the keen; severities of science or the bold ,scopefulness of specula tion:; with tastes that ,turn. you to the fine arts ; or tendencies that prompt to energy and. business :—Christianity. 'does not' propose to force on you, and'uo wise pleader of its.claim will urge upon you, a style Of piety, let us say, suited to your godly aged grandmother. And yet, young man, you may have been deaf to her kind expostulations, merely , be cause conscious that a form of piety like hers would never do with you. You have your individual character ; your individual career. And while she, good soul, may all the day long croon her quiet hymnbeside the hearth, you have to face, with brave nplifted hand, life's opening battle, or follow out, with trem bling thought, inquiries and fears that never cross her simple mind. Be it so. .But there' is as little need for you to follow the type or form of her piety as there is room for you to despise the spirit and substance of it. All honour to the spirit that breathes in it : Youneed not be in bond age to the form. I say, all honour to ''thO spirit of her piety :-- She, for her humble sphere by nature fit, Of little understanding and no wit Just knows, and' knows no more, her Bible true, A truth the brilliant Frenchman never knew ; And, in that charter, reads, with sparkling eyes, Her title to a treasure in the skies, Ah ! well might you lay all your tastes and gifts and tendencies—all your sciences and arts and speculations, with all your progress and all your pleasure in them—at her feet. And wisely might' you barter 'them all for a portion of her spirit. Yes : wisely and well— were it' needful. But it is not. You may be baptized with the same Spirit wherewith she has been bap tized and you may keep all your ta,stes, and gifts, and arts, and sciences, and speculations, too ; and all the laurels of the schools that you may have gained,--provideA `you can wear them humbly. The Spirit of the Lord can baptize you and all your individuality of character besides. The Christ living. in you can fill and sanctify: you wholly. There was nothing cramped and stunted in his own character when he dwelt among men, visible in his own person. And there is no stunt ing, cramping influence in his Presence and indwelling in his visible Church which is his body. „And he can dwell in you, " a mem ber in particular;" filling all your heart and all your soul with his Preienee ' and ing - with. his own healing, hallowing power RlMill . every endowment Jie may have assigned to you. He is the anthor and giver ..of, every good and perfeCt mental gift which you pos sess. He knows and under Stands them all. He knows Whit,education they are suscepti. ble of. He knowS tihat . perfection they are capable of reaching; what service in hia kingdom they are. capable of :rendering. :He will have a just regard, for thein. .1.19 will respect them with a .tendernesa and care which none like the,t t he veryauthor : of them can feel. No repressive.action will he exert upon them: very much the' inverse. Only let him wholly pass is your inner man. And will he not wholly sanctify yeu,'soul and body and spirit ; giving lin Warrantable' scope; and all free, healthful Movenierit';=` giving ; firmer action and , ller fruit; and grander prospect of future-fr :t/ andfuture-action ; to every trait of indivi4ality..which, seeing the end, from the beginnk, and contemplating le your history into. e Jnity,” he. himself from the first beStowed pon yoli?-L--Bev. Hugh Martin HEBREW AND . . REEK SYMBOLISM. Rv. 4.12--20. Tars description of the glorified Lord, . which has now been ;brought to a conclusion ; sublime as a - purely mental conception, but intolerable, if we were to' give it an outward form and. expression and picture Him .with I L this sword : proceedin from hiamouth, these feet as burning bra s, this hair as white as wool, and the, rest, , _ay suggest a few. mike-, tions on the apooal tie, and generally- the Hebrew symbolis - and the very ,signi ficant relations of 'fference and opposition in whickit stands' ' 'the. Greek. Religion and art for the Gr k - ran , into one' another with no very grea (preplinderance" of the claims of th'e forme , over the latter. - Even in his religious sym , lism the sense of beauty, 1 ofform, of preporti 'n, overrules every .other, and must at all cos, find its satisfaction; so_ that the firct necess ty of the ,symbol is that it shall not affront, t at it shall satisfy rather, the msthetic sense. 'Rather than it should offehd this,"it wouldfbe me-hided and modified even to ihe serious injury of the idea of which it was intended to '''be the exponent. But with the Hebrew syMbolism it is altogether different. The firs necessity:, there is that thesYgibol'sh9u l 4 4 4t fort . h truly and, fully the religious idea df which it is intended to be the vehicle. iiiir , it would appear when clothed itself in ah. outward form and shape, whether, it would 6.14 favor and allowance at. the bar of taste, thia was quite a secondary consideration; may''be- Confidently affirmed not to, have been a' consideration at all; for indeed, with the one exception'of the cher ubim there-was' no',intentiontthat it' should embody itself there,'but rather that it should remain ever and o. ' a purely mental con-` oeptien,.thennembn ' igy 4. 49,n,idea. I may observe, `by the ''firi,y, 11.4 ho--ekiil.....ef . delineation can make the . cherubim other than unsightly objects to the' eye. Thns in this present deicription Of Chsist sublime' and majestic as it is, it is only such solong as we keep it 4F - holly apart-from any exter nal embodiment. Produce it ,outwardly, the sword going forth from the mouth; the, eyes as a, flame of,fire, the hair white as wool, the, feet as molten brass ; and each and all of these images violate more or less eur sense of beauty. Bengel, Missing this important distinction, has' sought to give a picture of the Lord Jesui according to this . description, prefixing' it-to- his , . German Commentary on the Apocalypse; a *Picture which_is almost' degrading, and only- not deeply offensive to every feeling of reverence and awe, because we know that it was not so intended by this admirable man.* , , The explanation of the difference does not lie altogether in the fact,that the Greek cre ated his symbol, and therefore could do what' he *Cal with his '`own;'while'the Hebrew received his from God,, and could not there fore venture 40 touchiC It would have 'ex isted more or, less without this .distinction be twe,en the >given and the invented, the in spired: and uninspired: The unsightliness, often the repulsiveness, of the symbol, so. long as it is judged merely by the laws of mthestic beauty, is common to all the religions of the East. 'What an, ugly sight the Artemis xitultimmamia. of Ephesus; an Oriental deity, it need not be said, and not a Greek. ; Whajt, monstrous forms the Indian gods, with their hundred arint, present.' At the same time, we Altogether err if we accepted this as mark of the inferiority of these nationsto the areeks. Inferiority in one sense no doubt it does indicate, a slighter perception of beauty, but superiority in other and more important matters, a Aeeper religious earnest ness a .feeling upon their part that the es seiice was above the form, a conVictionthat 'truth, such as they conceived it, was - better than`beauty, and that everything else; as of lesser moment, was to be sacrificed to'tb:is.--L- Trench's Seven Chureites. • ' * Others have done the same, though with quite a different object and aim. I can Perfectly, remem ber seeing exposed in Carlisle's .shop-window a blasphemous picture with the title, " The God of the Bible, " constructed `aceording to - a similar scheme. Two or three days after, a'erew was brought before the magistrates, who in a righteous indignation had dashed his - hand through the win dow, seized and destroyed it ;.and:l do not think it appeared again. BRAVE SUFFERERS. ` ' The 'excitement in reference to the battle of Cedar - Mountain is nearly over here, though for two or, three days it was deep and strong. A thousand wounded men have al-, ready been sent up from Culpepper from the field of battle. It is astonishing to see how. cheerful, the wounded men are. Almost without exeeiition they are lively ; and, garru-,- lous over the incidentsof the battle. The' 'most of these gallant fellows are in the Alex andria hospitals, though, some`are out at Falls Church: One roan in an Alexandria hospi tal, who had lost an arm,:wa.s one'of the haß piest fellows the very night he was brought' in that I ever• saw. ' You are in good spirits for a wounded man V' 'said,a, stranger to him. He looken up from Ms coi, with a smiling, happy face, and replied, " Yes. Why shouldn't Ibe happy ? rhave saved my life, and now I have soniething to show to- my ,family as long as 'I live. My children won't ,be ashamed . to have it knoWn 'that I lost that ,arm fighting for my country l N,o, sir I I 'doubt if now I would' have that arm put-on JAY eindfather losts, Twin the 14- volationary War. Our family...has bOasted of that for ; ileara hundredl yeani .It WaS alidut time that somebody. else::did: sogkething for the. credit of the family. Thi3.old:story was ge,t,tiAg to be a little too, old; end ilow 4 .siry you see that I am to be the hero,of t.,he !" . 'There was patriotism, pride of _char act.Or" 'and philosophy, froin a' commoit sol dier.—Waskington Corr. IndepVntilint. RELIGIOUS WORLD ABROAD. SoomOD. • PP.eit. l 4 l -* Meetings, ir.: in . the -.beginning, of July, the .gunily gathe.ring-Aookaplace; in the beautiful. park of 'the buelnui, of, Gordon. This, noble, lady has,;yeesly given the use ,of her fine . PO* fo,t thiSmirpose during the last thith'esignineri;' and by . for countenance and hospitality on'each` ocoluii6'n 'his greatlyen- • couraged-the movement:The :Weather; toit' timately, was fiilrOttfable, 'and the services were cOnduOted with'-comfort tiothl to kers and heaters..:An - average of about 7000 or 8000 persons were present on each of the• two days f of the golenizOty; and there was Ike sides*a large meeting Of..cjilidr,,en, w ho-were addressed separateli. .4.l:tout.the sau4titne, open-air Meetings . preaching ; the gospel, and for- prayer; held Boildam, in Aberdeenshire, 'nide: anipiOes or the NOrth-East Coast Mission. This was a most' interesting meeting: The spot Selected for' the gathering, was the-roolty island onawhich the lighthouse stands; and which :is 4onnect ed with the mainland by.'a wooden a bridge. -Attheno the ' wheather was gloomy and cold, a goodly number assembled i f:t:pm.P.iialdeort, • Peterhead;' and The neighbouring cli . etridis, 'many coming a long distance' 14 Colonel Kirby.oecupied the ehair in the ear ly part of the,day, and- the evening meeting was presided :over :'by; Lord Aberdeen, who delivered a brief but, impressive.. address..on practical „go!ilince,s,, In.,Kirkcaldy ; similar; .; meetings have, .beenpheld; , and, on this ; side of the kiiith, of 'Forth, / the ,departtire. of. the. Neitiliaimili3herinen for the "herring at Dunbar Wai signalized by a lige **- meeting, at which about 140 . 0 were present. The Cardross Case.—On the 9th of July, the Court of Session ,dismissed the,actionr of McMillan against the Free . Church Assenkbly on the grounds .Ist: that :the Assembly of , tii 1858, which' di d th e enege 4 'wron g , `being di, ~ dissolved in the same year, has' ot now, if it ? ever had, any corporate Oxistence,L-cannot therefore be called into Court in its corpcv rate capacity, and cannot be reached by .any : sentence giving damages against them.. In th 9 second place, if an action for, damages would not lie ,against, the Free .Church;As- Sembly, then therelwas no ground for reduc ing her spiritual sentence, -L---a kind of sen tence with which the civil emit had nothipg 1 to do, unless it could be shownthat it stoic) in theway of-4qitigant gettinireparatio i for njuly to his material intereats. .( Lord' Carriehill concurred- in this view - 0f, , ? e law of; the ,case as j laid down,j:ty the:l, rd Presi dent, ~and added that the,Tolerati Acts ex tended. protection. .to churches s well as, ether vobintary associations,,' far aS,they ae ! ted in, ,bonct fide, according 9 the rules agreed upon by their 'member . No mem ber of such an association, 'he eld, was en titled to complain of its adjUd . sting upon.a matter which the members hathagreed , should be ,committed to it,, unless he, alleged that the - adjudication was propapted y malice which, in this case, was not alleg . It, wa not even enough to say, that,' the ssoCiatio or its office-bearers had acted , yond the' competency, if their so acting w `merely error of judgroe'nt. ' . It was fully expected that s judgro 1 of , tbe Court would have terminated the e e ; but Mr. M‘Millan has since raised , a e action, directed against the indi iduals 13 posing the,majorityef the Gene al Ass b which suspended him, The, ans fo pr &denting the new action have lread be( partly furnished to the Prose utor b su seriptions,among, some of the F inbur la yers, and more is , eXpected in espons 'to ; appeal Mr. M‘Millau 'is ma ng to t ose the public whwsympathize -V h him. y a ••• FRANCE AND MHZ TAND. Mr:' Bade Mlle's Ministry authorities: The Paris .corri Nein of the - Churches `say , July 19th We werepromised anotl: r. visit from Mr. Radcliffe, Nhem the 'Lord s so abundantly blessing in. Switzerland. Count Persigny, Minister or the Interior, ngaged that he should have the use of the ablic halls ; and a telegraphic message co veyed the joyful news to our. brother, whos heart's desire is to 'reach our masses "wit the 'story of our Saviour's love. lie tame, leaving Cheerfully his work at Geneva. , The Minister renewed his permission? answering for the consent of the Prefect oc Police ; the Prefect of Police consented most politely, and promised, an immediate Ivitten permission. The permis sion came, tb the Reverend B. _Radcliffe, Me thodist preacher (I), to speak in English, in the Salle Barthelenti,— Translation is rohi bitedV .0 Every step was taken to obtain a relaxation of the absurd- conation'to speak in English only, but in vain ; and after three small meetings in a chapel, Mr. Radcliffe returned to Geneva, where he can prosecute his work of evangelizatien in freedom. On the other hand the church at Fou queure (Charente), belenging to the Evange; heal Sock* or Ffance; and so lone closed by the authorifes,haS been opened. The chnrch for Protestant soldiers At the camp of Chal ons, was also consecrated:on the 11th instant, in presence of. , about 700 soldiers, twenty officers, and three generals. It holds a, thou sand hearers. The Wesleyan, Effort—The fegular meet ing of the Methodist Conference was held at Nismes,,-in June.' Three candidates were o r d a i n ed to the work of the ministry. The statistics of the interesting Wesleyan mission in France stand -as follows": places of wor ship; 218 (ten newly opened), 27 pastors, 14 eolporteurs and schoolmasters, 77 lay preach ers, 1586 members 7 schools, 39 Sunday- Schools, with`2ooo pupils. - • • Xncouraging incident. -- An evitNelist, was passing through a village, in 'the- east, of France, whose whole population was in a n uproar, the agents 'of the public authority were taking to prison the priest guilty of un nameable ,crimes; and loaded.withi universal abuse. A. short time after an urgent appeal to the e and give' a religion to the! consideration would be perk another priest. or contin faith ! The appeal was the gospelis being preaej 'The Rag-Pickers.--4 courageous attempt, has the chiffonniers (rag-ga granting, success to„the man vlo has taken the several hour's i.e the lected: children and' he the elementary stei n t pinees, while the Sn voted to-reading' e Geneva —The Mis va'ha:s n field of o its contr ,: but ' , col them .be ten other of Basle and. Ari t i amounted to 641, has not been Tiac ant - Society, of the ' Infidelity i Z rick-4n no part of the Continent ha• modern infidelity taken a bold er position t, an in . Zurich. Its chief organ is the Zlitst, men (Voices of the ~Times), Which ( asset., the most extreme positions of the Infidel . A4ording' to'this paper the al leged appe, ances - of the 'risen Saviour were no more.lll, i.rndre:visions; or `rather, indeed, hallucinati nd, the most empty, sensuous illu sions. . 'I, s infidel party has succeeded in Zurich an some other cantons, in getting into their, han : the functions of the religious, in structor i the Gymnasia, and in„ the teach er s semi I , ries, and, in gaining over to their cause,. bo i the civil and the educational au thorities. They know how to, make a good use of thf:. favorable pesition, and while. they claim an, enjoy' the uttnoit fr eed - om as teach ersa r heir oln . views, they endeavor, by all m aillble ' ns, to restrict the liberty of ot,he l, s as learn s, Wherever it may happen te.beineouveni . nt to them. A strong Teac tion is N ting in, and much evangelical life is revivi among the people. The able pa per of rofessor Iliggenbach, read at the Geneva Ortference, which exposed and at- tempts to refute this party and . its organ, has ex ted. attention and done much good. m!ofe or .Riggenbach Was himself' at one me - .this extreme s'chool, So that he can ea Sr; understand the basis and attractions i system,..and the, method and force of ,ssauhs uponlehristianity. Truits of the June Couneil.—The eorres \dent of the Hews' of ~the Ch; foudent ol— . , ;um' es wren from Tuscany, - July - 16th, as fellows f • g ' L l' The Connell of .be Popish Church held at Rome last month is beginning already to bee'. its fruits: ' These appear, in Rome it self in'-the bolder' attitude assumed by the Pop and .A.ntonelli since'the tempered power '1 as ,been, declared necessary for the indepen dence ' if not 'for the very existence, of the Papal, system. Both his 'Holiness; , and his Cardinal, Secretary have spoken to Lavelette ' in This sense in answer to another proposition he had been charged to make for a final ar rangement, viz., We ref Used to listen to any compromise before;liut it is doubly impossi ble now'Wheri we'are{strengthened and sup- ported by the voice' of the, universal Church, as made known-through its . 'most 'influential dignitaries. , , . . "There is'no doubt that these bishops are to be regarded :as so many generals of divi.: sion, gathered round their .commander-in chief to.. receive their ordcrs, and to have, their places assigned them in the coming con filet, and that their orders are to agitate, to keep up a perpetual fever among' the parti zans of Rome, in their respective countries, to work upon - the Governments of Europe through this and all other chaanels, so as to awaken their fears and enlist them on the side of the Pope's temporal power, There is no doubt.that this assemblage in Rome has greatly,moiedthe zeal of airsincere, not to say the fanaticism of all bigoted, Roman Ca tholics so that they are ready to accept the decision embodied' in the prelates' address to I the Pope' as true gospel,` and to do battle for the temporal poWer; while the whole race of ieactionists, - { anti=progressists,- and finality men,--eall_them Legitimists, Carlists, Bouv bonists, or whatever their distinctive appella tions may be,---have seized on .its dictum as a new rallying point for their, fading hopes." Th,e Wesleyanilave established a mission station in ;Parma,' have' bought{ an old Catho lic church, and appointed , Signor del Mondo their missionary. , The working classes are coming in crowds to hear him. estrieteci by tile poOdent of the hider *date of Persecutions in TUsedny Ceased.—Rev. R 'McDougall , writes to the New York Observer , from Florence, July 22, 1861: "It, affords me. the greatest pleasure to inform you that the whole system of Tuscan persecutions has happily terminated. That, against Gavazzi was illoWed to fall to the, gronnd. After a preliminary hearing, in whiCh Christian courage and steadfastness' were displayed by the eloquent Padre Peace nini,•the Elba eN'angelist was condemned at Lucca, fora simple eNiangelical tract eireula tea. in thedsland. Just, as an appeal against . the unrightemis zentence, was being taken. to the Xigher, Court, of Florence, the King pro claiMed, at Naples, the removal of all, sen tences prbnounced in connection with offences against the laws of the press, whereupon Pee cenini was immediately ibsolved. Last week the - Waldensian. student, Gregori, and his right-hand man,.Del Buono, in the`Elba Mis sion were acquitted, by a majority of nine to threein &Jury of twelve, at Lucca, of all blame in circulating, ;tracts in of evangelical truth? Discussions of the, boldest character are carried on, by the native press, Says the same writer : The press has thrown wide open, its, col uhins to contributions which a year ago would have been* designated Piotestant hyperbole and 'propagandism. Threats of Batista, ex pressions,of impatience., and revelations of Antonellian trickery follow each other fat and furious. Offending bishops and priests are handled without scruple by the law offi cers. The liresence of ,ecelesiasties is .not Coveted at the national festival& Banter,and ridicule hive broken loose in the comic jour nals; on pseudo-religious _politicians of the •Vatican. such '"excitement go onta longer, and no sirpriee need be felt' should" :ihe mayor wrote , ngelist to come ople, - Who on .no uaded to receive in 'the Romish ruplied with; and ed there. SEE VANGELISI I .---liihole No. 850, Paris,- a quiet and been made toireach herersy and God is simple Christian xvo irst step, and spends Lek teaching the 'neg. jien Mothers some of civilization and hap lay afternoons are criptnies: lions' Society of Gene eration directly under c - ts =funds and divides rocietiesOeipeciellythose Its receipts last 'year 0 francs,:a figure which ed by any other. Protest- Continent. ITALY. the questions, publicly debated Is the papacy really the religion of the Bible.? ' Can the Pope possibly-be the Vicar of Jo sue Christ " Mtguo i Ait l t. Dr. Lockhart, the eminent medical -mis sionary of' the London Society, writes from Peking, on March. 26th My, work,proceeds steadily and: prosper ously and as the cold weather has ,gone, I lifn beginning:to orierate for cataract, and removed three `the other day, and have many more to do. When people see a friend , who has long been _blind. coming, among. =them . with'restored 3iglit, they : do not fail to ap preciate the benefit received.' Much pain' and: much distress are relieved. day by day, , and many that i come in, agony .and,suffering, go away rejoicing. May 'God give one wis-. dein and latikiildge to keel) from mititakes` and errorsiq lest l'shoultildot evil 'rather than good, for I-feel deeply the sense of responsi bility in the 'position I. occupy in this city. With all humility I would ever look in him for strength and , guidance—in all I do, lest from self ,condfience I fall into error .that would spoil all the future. A Presbytery or' elassil was formed at Amoy April 2d, including missionaries of the English,:Presbyterian and American formed Dutch-societies, now laboring in that field. There were five 'elders included in the, organization from churches organized by the latter named missionaries. Two students, were examined in part with a view to the ministry. Rev. Wm. TV. Meriant missionary of the American. Board at Philippopolis Western Turkey, was murdered July 8d by a band of robbers, When returning from the annual meeting of the mission at Constantinople. Mr'. Coifing of Central Turkey it will be re membered was murdered in a similar manner in March last. The Bulyarians.—:-The American mission aries at Philippopolis say in'the last Mis sionary Herald:—Two years and a half of trial have convinced us that the desire of the American Board, and indeed of all intelli gent Christians, for the evangelization of the Bulgarians, may not be speedily realized. So deep is the, spiritual and mental darkness, and so universal and persistent is the super stitiou,s _reverence for old church forms and ceremonies, everywhere shown by the Pul &liana, and, withal, such are the difficulties under which the nation is struggling from a rapacious Government, and a corrupt, insa tiable priesthood, that'we can have little hope of anything more than a gradual refer. mation among this , people. Attaining independence.—Araong the most encouraging indications presented by the missionary work is the attainment of finan cial independeuce; or . t . the•approximation _to wards that point which is to be seen in vari ous parts of the field._ Dr. 04:if•--Con statitinople-givall as the result of his servations on a recent tour in Central Turkey, that missionaries are in danger of staying too long at samtpoints. He says `" At some the missionary stations, the g3spel has taken such root that it now seems to be groiving in its own native soil ; and it is, already bringing forth its appropriate fruit,. The work of the missionary., if it be not al ready accomplished, seems on the very point of being so ; and there is evidently more danger, that he will, in some instances, stay too long, than he will go too soon. At Ain tab, for example, the ' , church , supports its own pastor, its own common schools, (of which, with those abroad, there are nine,) and takes upon itself the supply of all the out-stations except one. The missionaries of that place ask for no appropriation except for the theological ckss, the female boarding school, and for one out-station. For all the rest the church at Ainta,b provides. At Mar ash and Oorfa, the churches have nearly or quite grain up to the ordinary stature of perfect men; in Christ , Jesits ; and like the church at Aintaly, they are taking upon them selves the expense off the entire supply of their. own .field, unless it may be' wo or three out-stations." Tn Western Turkey, Mr. Farnsworth Of : Cesarea reports the g etermination ef the church, if possible, to. secure a pastor, for which - purpose they have now made subscrip tions, and pledge themselves to pay - two hundred. piasters . (about 18,00 a _month.) The reluctance of the„peopie to undertake the support of their own institutions had long been a source of triatat Cesarea, and this new movement is ther'efore 'specially grab- fying. The man selected as the pastor,-- educated at Bebek, end considered as very promising,—was supposed to..be on his way to Cessna. At the annual meeting of the mission of the American Board in Eastern Turkey, it was " evident that the financial embarrass ments. of the Board have not proved an un mitigated evil, but in many - bases have been even productive of much good, in promoting among the people a-better understanding of their own resources and their duty, and a far greater degree of self-reliance. The feeling of the meeting was that this, spirit should be as much' as possible developed and encour aged' at cur several stations ; not 'merely that *e may'comply with the wishes and in struction of the Prudential Committee in this respect, but that we may secure, at an earlier day, in this lank the healthful,",life-giving fluence of Alf-sustaining Christian churches and congregations." . The Free mission church' at CaTcutta, the fruit of the labors, of, Rev. Dr. Duff and his , Scotch brethien having a native paitor elders and deacons, pays more .than half ,of the sal ary Of its pastor with only 50 subscribers. 'DR. WOLINTOCK, in the Methodist says The only other thing in Strasbourg which one need care much to see is the monument of Guttenburg, ; the inventor cif printing; and it, is a pleasant ;suprise to an American to find that one side of the block which supports the statue is taken up with a bas relief, in bronie, representing the signing of the De claration. of Independence. All the figures are there, and those of Franklin, Hancock, jeffersory and the other great chiefs of the Revolution, are distinctly recognizable. IT is better to consider our own failings before V) censure &OBS of others.