putrican AND GENESEE EVANGELIST. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1864 akir - W, mEmts, SE 4 I2ITH VOLUME. THE present unmet. is the opening one of a new volume,—the Seventh—of the AMERICAN PREsnymn* Considering: the difficulties generally attendant upon such an enterprise as is the establishment of a religious newspaper, ag gravated in our case by peculiar circumstances, we think it Just gibund for thankfulnes4 to God, and for congratulation to the friends of the pa 7, per especially, that we have reached such an age, with a fair prospect of .00ntinuance. We ask their sympathies and their prayers. None can be 'more conscious of the defects and short comings of the AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN than, are we: Our firm purpose is to labor steadily to make it in every respect a truly evangelical paper, worthy the patronage of our own people, and of the good and the, loyal everywhere. Our God—our church- 7 -our country OITININATION OF TIM' STRUGGLE, For the last ten ,days, the fate of the nation seems t) have been hidden. in Awful :Clouds of battle. Behind a veil, which could' only from: time to time be uplifted, our friends and brothera,. our whole army, have disappeared,' arid mingled with scenes, of which we could learn little more than that death was holding high earitiWl there. Borne over the heavy. smoke wreaths/ came the booming efcarknon once more heard in the avenues of the nation's capital, and the progress:of victery, and of defeat—for we have' had both—had to be divined from the rising and falling of , those artillery eadences. And' 'When the din:mess has been withdrawn, we have just been able to catch glimpses 'of lines of battle swaying to and fro, • of brigades swept down now on Tie ,hand and now on the other, otadvantnes gained, and lost, of strategy met.by' itrategy, of victory snatched away by reinforcements, of charges and counter chargel ) of hostile divisions interlocked with, and mutually intercepting each other, of multitudes of captures which were but •annoyances in the ertgeneies,of the oocasioni—an unparalleled se ries of conflicts , in which all the fearful splendors of war are etincentrated, whOse story iw strangely inwoven again and again with the sad names and painful recollections 'of the first great hattle ground ; while over all the smoke of.conflict, thank God, we can yet descry 'the glorious ban ner of freedom, unsullied, undimmed, full hi,..1 1 1- atjvaneed,the ,ensign of valor, the beacon of hope. " There's proot -through the night that •our flag is still there." Here, rebellion has at last gathered, for•one intense and agonizing strife and one desperate blow, almost the absolute total of ber organized strength, skill, abd resources. Here With frantic effortramt-at vzbeAver dost, - ehe seeks to humble the power that fostered her into all - her great , nem Here she bows herself upon the pillars, of the national 'temple, heedless if she rerwhelme herself and all things in the stupendous. rain. Here she wrestles with the very spirit of the age, and seeks to turn him back on his bentfieent and Christian course towards freedom and equality for all that are made in the image of God. Here, by these battle-fields pauses the muse of history,wait ing and Wondering whether, with inverted sty las, she , ie to erase the grand records of the cen tury past, and once mote write upon man's no blest strivings and aspirations in lines , of dust and ashes---vanity of vanities, all is vanity and vexa. tion of spirit l In.this tremendous conflict between the wa ning and waxing forms of - civilization', the disor ganizing tenancies of slavery and the conserva tive tandem:Abs.& true freedom, be sure God is near at. hand. Men are his party instruments. Their wrath is made to praise, him. His foolish-, ishness is wiser than, they; his weakness is strong'er,than they. rWhile we do our part in labor, in sacrifice, and in prayer, let us firmly and calmly believe that the issue will be exactly as he wills, and that the advancement of Christ's kingdnin wll4e infallibly promoted 'thereby. '" No* unto the Kinedternal, immortal, invi sible, the only wise GOA be honor and glory for eirer, Amen!' Mi. BARNES AND THE LONDON RECORD. Alwyn , two, months ago, a communication of an extraordinary character touching,the orthot dory of 10v. Mr. Batites.of this city` appeared' the' London 'RecoOd, was asserted by the w4r that Mr. Barnes had changed his vieers, on the essential points of the Evangelical systeta of decttines—the Trinity,' atonement, and 'so on, The Edjtot. the Record did not en dorm the statement of his correspondent, but spoke 'of it as a matter of regret, if true, while the works of Mr. Barnes, having all been written before the supposed change, would lose,none of their value to Christians. - The paper anntain;ing- the article was sent to Mr. Barnes, who treated It as too absurd to need attention. Subsequently he received a commit nicatlon from a person in, England unknown to 4114,, who represented himself as taking an inter est in the circulation of Mr. Barnes' works in tliat Country, and as desirous of knowing the truth of the charges in question. If Mr:Barnes had really changed his views which he would greatly'regiet,'l he would like to know his reasons fbr so doing, if .not,.it would gratify him to be informed of the fact. The letter was courteous - raid kind, and Mr. Barnes replied to it in such ternis saltight be expected, declaring the false hood of the statement, reiterating his convictions of the truthrof the views expressed every where in his writings, recording his firm expectation to die, as he has lived, in the belief of the doctrines which he avowed at his ordination, and hai sought to defend for nearly forty years in the pulpit and through the press. The letter was published, with expressions of satirisation in the Record, and there the matter rests. The origin of the slanderous rumor is cer tainly mysterious. If it should turn out to be a " Yankee° trick " a some 'cute English pub lisher;-who wished to advertise Mr. Baynes books we should not be greatly surprised. .. _ Our subscrib/rs poking for good schools for t air children will find tt number of the right sort ative4tised in our columns. That of RA I. M''Ainni . s,,A.Mv at Pottstown, , had by some acids t been omitted, but will now be found in its prop r place. It is for boys, and under the care pf e accomplished and expe- 4 , rieneecl principal an lady, gives great satisfac tion to all who iry it Mr. Wm. F. - sv-3-, , s, elder in the church at West Chester, also a acherjof long oxperience, with a full corps of as tants, is cordially recom mended to our friends, Rev. Dn. Staves 1 Young Ladies 1530 Ai been spoien of in-our cc) ,the patronage it enjoys. Edito There is no situation ) Seminary more deairablel , , ness, and right religious mington, foel., where: our well•conducted Seminary A.M., in new buildings an, bor of students admitted. Rev. J. ADDISON Whits er's ,Be lviere-Sem-, . . mary, is still advertisedtin ur column and we presume is carried on by\ eo *eat pens du ring his temporary absence. BelVidere .J. is one of the most delightful . slip in the country. Dn. CORNELL'S Boarding an' Day School No, 1432 S. Penn Square, is 'counlenaed to public regard by the ability and expetAencii, of the prin cipal arid by a strong array of &Wirtislie;d ref ii erences. Other equally good Institutio s wil # ifi r the advertisinc , columns of oqr Thi CHRISTIAN CIVILIZATION ,ON TIIE conflict in Which we are engage for they. Union is assuming . still 'greater proporti...s. Ite:.. duration, has been prolonged. It t reatens more sweeping consequences. There is othing in this to alter "our' original convictions of the justness and necessity of the conflict on ti e part of our government. Yet this very justne.- and necessity make us pause and inquire in w at age of the world are weliving witat stage t ofthe world's progress—at what point the ad.4,fance— meat of Christ's kingdom—that we arecornpelled to engage in a conflict so vast, so liestrue.tire,lso desperate, so extraordinary ? How has' }t come' to pass that in a country do / phristian in its rigin, in the spirit of its laws, In the professi' n and practice of : millions of its inhabitants, the la d of free Bibles and free pulpits, of reiiVals, of evan gelical efforts and beneficent, chat4ies for ate ignorant and the needy, a land enjoying blessings of peace,, prosperity, and freedom that in such a countryirreconcilable'antagonism should spring up t sedition .anctrebellion of the most desperate character_develop4telnselves,. and the government be driven , those4Violent mea sures, for its preservatien, which woke& thought to be falling into disuse in the _rapid progress of ChriStianity. In one word : why could not our Christian' civilization, save ms'Anierioans from war in 'its worst form ? ‘`. Christian civilization is on trial in our country. We have taught that. Christianity diffused amol, and accepted,by, a people was the surest fourid - tion of national prosperity. The intelligent. and faithful proclamation of the gospel is the tree means of preparing the people- for the legitimate exercise of their rights and the perfermanee of their duties as citizens of 'a free relinblic. distributing Bibles ? establishing'evangelical' pulpits and diffusing the issues of the, religious press,threugh the length and.breadthof our land,, we have believed ems)lves. to be providing most effectually and certainly for our national peace and perpetuity, and for exemption from the dis-' turbance, rand anarchy,' ,and Overthiow, which history shows us tole the lot of the unevangelizd nations of the earth. Let us confess it; this war to those who held, such opinions is a deep and bitter disappointment. The insertion a this blood-red page in the midst of the history of, perhaps, the most favoured and the most advert?, cod in true . Christian , civilization of ,the nations of Alm world, ,makes :us weep no common tears. That the soil of such a land should be drenched with the blood of brethren; that a`:million and a -half of its population . should forsake the tirts of peace and tax all the resources of the country to marshall them against each other and provide them with the means of mutual destructiOn on land and on water, that, we should, witness all the horrors of the 'battle-field, the hospital, the , military arrest and , .captivity, , the devastation:4)f vast regions of country, the burning of towns, of bridges and of steamboats, the destruction 'of cotton crops, cruel outrages and persVentions highway, assassinations, Indian scalpings and clis embowelling,s and - even therifling of graves and shameless' boa,stings over the mutilated remains of the . dead;—to say nothing of the enormous= guilt of perjury and false witness, bitter alien stion of friends and near kindred,'schism in the churches,' coldness. of •Cliristians arid the dry ing ,up of .the resources :of good enterprises-- that we should come to witness , these things, may well cause untold grief and perplexity to the sin-" core Christian ' philanthropist in every land. Vast 'bodies of Christian peoplein this land are praying against each other, and Christian men and ministers of the Gospel of the same denom ination are arrayed against each other in mortal strife., There are some things which need to le said just here, `both admonitory and explanatory, dis couraging perhaps to hopeful'enthusiasts, yet on the otherhand, encouraging'and not a little mit igating the first hard aspects of the case. 1. Let us frankly admit that there is much yet to gain in Christian civilization even by this evangelized and intelligent pepple. .What we have attained is not to be boasted uf,,bUt -forgot ten in view of what is before. The gospel leaven has gone but a little ways through the `.lump. We are moving forward hopefully iViS true, but we carry along a great mass not aisimilatpd in character to the Christian elements which ani mate and guide the onward "movements of the age. What frightful masses of our population in the cities and in remote districts of country are unevangelized! What regard has been paid by party leaders to the rude prejudices of these masses in the nominations they have made How little have many of our public men deserved the name of Chrjstian; and how ready have they shown themselves to, sacrifice Christian , princi ple to narrow views of expediency, to party prejudice, and to personal interest ! Many a heathen statesman has acquitted himself more nobly, more wisely, and pore, honorably than these representatives ofa Christian nation. Nay!, ollegiate Institution for b Street, has recently mns; and well deserves or a Young Livlies' for health, accessible influences, than Wil friend,s will find the:, If Rev. T. M. with a limited num-, be fAnd American Vccolltterian and 6entort Coirangeliot it is the absence of ' the needed degree of' Chris tianity in our civilization which has involved us in these calamities ; it is because so much yet remains to be, done in evangelizing our populace, it is because our efforts have fallen below the un exampled exigency of our circumstances as a nation of self-governed freeinen, that the' exper iment of our republic is in danger of failure and that Warin this frightful form is upon us. How idle to dream of enjoying anon the'halcyon days of prophecy ; ; how 'presumptuous to be suprised at the obstinacy with.-which swords remain swords, and. spears ; spears; they'will not• become anything else' spontaneously, or in the`hands of men and nations so extensively Under the influence of oor , ruption Oki age still is. • 2. But let us iiut the chief blame of this ,war , Where it really _belongs. " I detest, war, ",says De Gasparin, "•as much as it is possible for any one to do, but I am accustomed to lay the blame on thosCWho'nrake it, and not on those ,upon whom it is made." It is not Christian civiliza tion in general, nor yet chiefly the Christian civilization of the North, but that of i. the'Sonth that is to be made responsible for the war. And,' is not . the' South Christian and civilized ? Aas it not a most able and orthodox pulpit? Has it not been the scene of extensive missionary;labors, colportage,.and revivals? If Christianity 'tends to introduce such elements into civilization- as respect for government, and charity to one's fel low-man, should we not expect to find them • in the civilization of the','SoUth? Why are they absent? 'r • Again we reply ,If thelesVan. of the gospel is abiolutely victorious in no form of society, not . even. the best; if Northern society is but imper , featly Christianized and guilty of many offences against the divine laws and therefore subjeet to many evils, much more is this true'of the South:: It is not the Christian elements. of Southern' civ ilization which hive prompted this rebellion, but those .unforennate eleinents of Southern character,: and those unfavorable. social eircemstances, end those strong: impulses, of selfishness, which the gospel leaNien had as yet, scarcely reached and lut sliglitly affeeted. It was the irascible tem-, per and reluctance tow labor of people near the tropics, the pride and sense of power in.dominion over a servile rate, the, beWildering prospect of commercial empire= y the cotton-culture held up to the cupidity and ambition of individuals and of a whole people, which- have proved, `: . for the time being, too strong for the leaven of the gos pel,arid suspended . the progress of the leavening n process, if it did not actually 'repress and coun teract it. These were the forces of corruption which-checked the growth "of Christian gentle ness;placability and charity, which loosened the tie of civil - obligation and rowered the sanctity of the oath, which tiirew areund the "necessary evil" of slavery, the hue of a divine, and benefi cent ordinance, hich muzzled and perverted the pulpit, the professors .chair and the religious press, which created a party-demori so "outrage ins, so unscrupulous, so grasping that it had egun to extend-its horrid sway over the North, tat had begun to muzzle and pervert the or b. ns of Christian morality and free speech there a • , had got a sweeping verdict in its favor fr, .1 the ,SapremeJudiciary of the nation, and was ~,nt subsidizing us .all to its passion, to its_am bitioni anl l to its organized. injustice. The car :rapt eleniel i which Christianity as yet had not .ucceeded_in bringing , under control, suddenly , *heart an threatened to establish-themselieS i the policy of our country in the very face of i lt e forwardmovements of true Christian civili z tion whic maintained themselves, with at least - 1 1, ft -er corrupelements, at the North. . And no would , the maintenance A cf peace by 1 authoritiei in the face' of this Outrage of our - ~, nitizens'against right, and good goVernment, a , liberty, leading'' 'elements of civililation, a , - proved t e North to' be any better, or the it . to be an further adianted in civilization, an -ould app ar from the existing state, of war? .18 on ,; peace h : been a surer mark of progress, It e'fragme of a dismembered, humiliated, c`..m - dered ,r ; public, once the hope of the .1, t 4 the one side; and a—haughty empire, ide, on the corner stonea . „‘of treason and of ;tel • n very, rising tritinipfiintly from its ruins he o, , er? We make bold to say that the fac of w r proves us to be on. higher tof I 4 ristia civilization• than, that • that if :Halle ge of w from the, South proved the !tive, 'BS of h civilization,lhe refusal ;to )t it o i , the pa of :'the North would have tally or I :till mor proved her ,civilization de fective; and, that e , zeE,d,-,patriotism, energy, steadfastness, and If-sacrifice, with which. the North pursues ,the war,' each, illustrates more clearly the.genumeess of her civilization; that every battle-field is a new vindication of her claim to ad that • her triumph will be the confirmation or all ages of some of the, most essential piaci es of Christian civilization, and is more a necessity fOr the . restoration of the 'South as a Christian countrypartially apes s tatized thin it is for, the North itself. on . very scale tlie de e i acre; Our grief then, which still remains, is.,not primarily for the war, butfor the. comparatively low grade of civilization which'welave reached; iii which' war is still a necessary= instrument' in the hand of a Christian government, against other Christian crovernments or individual& A.h ! W,e.must lay, aside our boasting—not in• Christ, or in what he is accomPlishingin his church and in the; World—but in that mixed phenomenon which we call our Christian civil . ization ! Who knows what .depths and' what powers of corrtption, yet untouched by grace, may lie concealed in the fairest and most advanced forms of society? And at what juncture of „affairs they may spring, into sudden activity— may seduce the church of Christ* into temporay accord with their doctrines and devices, and may compel the less perverted and more traly advanced in Christian civilization to ..meet them with the carnal weapons and, the physical restraint which our Savior evidently expected would come into play in the leaVening , process of I his Gospel ? He said : I came not to send peace but a sword. Hence "Christian civilization proves itself by war to be indeed sadly imperfect, but not so much so as if, under the circumstances, there were noFar at all. REV. SAMUEL JEssuP, of Montrose, Penn sylvania, has resigned the chaplaincy or the 6th Regiment Pennsylvania Reserves,rand has been honorably discharged from the service of the United States; for the purpose of going as a mis sionary to, Syria. Mr. Jessup was under, ap- Ointment by the American Board for. Syria when the rebellion broke out, hut,has been a chaplain in Ahe army from;that time -until now. , DR. HICKOK'S PHILOSOPHY. THE opening article of the July number of the Princeton Review contains a clear and succinct statement of the essential points and outlines of Dr. Hickok ,philosophy.. In such .a brief space. 'as an ,eighteen page articleoneWould scarcely ex pect that justice could bedOneitio a sYstem reputed so. abstruse and difficult Of, mastery. And it is certainly with no expectation of adequately re presenting the distinguisted thinker's views, that we attempt.' to bring the substance of the above essay within the meagre limits of a news paper article, biit simply, to call the attention of our readers to Dr. H: ; s system, and to stimulate them to inquiry in so rich a field of thought. It is ; a cardinal principle in Dr. Hickok's phil osophy that-the human spirit asserts its own ex istence' absolutely—not as a matter needing proof or testimony from anY quarter, nor as allowing doubt or question. "It belongs to the very tieing of spirit that it - Should know itself." This .faculty of _self-knowledge he calls " reasoii.". " Reason is spirit so 'far. as it is self-knowing." But " in knowing itself, itl:knows what reason is and • can thus ,detect reasen whenever it passes before its eye. It is the 'original function of reason 'to' knoi not simply what is; -- but what must be.. * By its ovenimmediate insight it knows eternal princiPles and necessary truths."' The function of "reason may be regarded as widened beyond the range of mere abstiactions, from the fact, as claiined-byTr. H., that there is Which we truly knova iii`Whieli some contribution of the reason is not an essential ele ment. The reason furnhilies an, idea for every fact of knowledge, mid only in the light 9 iF this idea' can any fact be truly known." True science is attainable" only in the disclosures which rea son makes 'of herself in the facts. ' , The functions of• the reason in perception are of the highest importattep. First,qt;overlooks the process and determineS that such and such things are' essential' to i4as the distinguishing and defining of the object Next, as "the eye of the mind," it " clearly 'beholds the reality of an objective world," as it one., suggests the, in quiry respecting this reali y. Next, it assures us that, unless ther*be something behind the phenomena, .which cannotibe perceived, (sub stance) then there is • nothing which ',cannot be perceived. `"it would bS,Most unreasonable to say that thqre can be quantity or quality without some ground for these." :'.Again : " The reason sees that if we ever assign one phenomenon a place and period in a whole of space and time, different from that of another phenomenon, and with determined relation to this, then there must be some permanent substanee by vlhich this May be effected. Oar knowledge of substance is thus es clear as these determined relatiens are 'evi- dent." . _ Poising now to the reoion covered by Dr `H.'s Rational Cosmology we inquire can anything be known—in the strict sense—of this substantial world, ;besides its 'bare existence ? • _Dr. H. as. Berta that many and impoitant principles are within immediate sight of, the reason on this field. The first one'whichi he lays' down is that nicater is force. This helrclares to be'" imme diately beheld by the:realn, and as necessarily and unchangeably _true as - that matter 'Occupies space',"'etc. Net thateyery eye at once beholds it; no more than it ,doeS,xnathematical truths, which often require;long, and arduous processes, before they can be brought within the mind's range of view. Once within this range " they need no further proof, for they Prove themselves. They stand reVealed in -their own light, and de dare their truth with thiir own 'voice beyond a contradiction!' .Thus reason Sees matter to be force according to Dr. H. • "Force," continues our author, "is action and reaction." This, he . will fill its whole conception.,. It points, too,. to its, origin,, which mist of necessity be spirit, to which activity purely and'essentially belongs. Spirit therefore is the author of Matter. And creation is the work of the Absolute Spirit making " his act react upon itself" Creation is limited, i. e. it is "'the activity of the Creator restraining itself at the point where creation began. '* * This self imposed' restraint is exactly what we mean by creation." • „ The reader cannot butt perceive,in this " ra tional ". theory :0 .matter; l a walling Away of mat ter itself out of the universe, and the : substitution of spirit-activity in its plaee. The: world is spir itualized and we approach Pantheism by a new, but as-it seems - to us, a sure and short road. It must also appear to many minds as unreasonable to represent the Deity as restraining hii activity in creation, orthat it is the puttinc , a cheek upon 4 • his activity, that gives usA world Having reached the region of theology, we'find Dr..H. admitting human reason , to, be finite,. yet with the knowledge of God. The reason "knows God, not because -it doe&or can coinprehend him, but because the truth of being is mirrored in its own being; i. e.,' in.-its self-knowledge it finds that'which would ,be contradicted by the denial of God." In %Dr. H.'s own language " The cenception of the non-being of the Absolute Reason involves the. ahsev . lity of conceiving 'reason to lie unreasonable." Be sides this simple primary, truth of the divine ei istence, we have almost an entire system of the ology which our, author claims to be involved in it as known to the reason. Moreover, the same faculty is `competent to declare that God is and must be eternally under the control' of principle& " It is only, he claims, r in the clear insight which our reasons possess, of the truth that the Abso lute One, the Supreme and Perfect Spirit will ever act worthy of himself, controlled alone by the unchanging behestsof his eternal glory, that we feel any obligation f tei reverence, or any in citement to adoration. !‘ It is only;," says the Rational Psychology, a ,whep I see all these [ores- Ones] standing in the presence of that absolute sovereignty and pure- moral personality„ who searches them all in the light . of his own dignity, and' judges them by claims of, is ow n exce lle nc y, and estimates their work solely in reference to his own worthiness; and when also I see that thus it behoved they Should have **made to be fit creatures of his ordering -.and. accepting, and that he made them after ythe behest of his own uncreated reason, and in the light his ethical truth• and. righteousness, and governs them and holds them ever subordinate to his own moral glory and Authority if is in nuch a pres ence only that I reverently cov e t my face, and fall prostrate, and cry from my-inward spirit, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Alminghty.,' Thoti art 'Worthy, 0 Lord, to receive glory, and honor and power, for thou hest created all things, and for thy pleasure , they are` and were created.' The functions of the Reason' underlie every portion of Dr. , .Hickok's System.' His Rational Psychology, his System of Moral Science, his Em pirical Psychology, and his Rational Cosmology are so many different applications or exhibitions of this wonderful, self-conscious, self-asserting faculty. " The Rational Psychology furnishes his statement of whatthis power is, and his proof that it is. *‘* The System, ,of Moral Science takes the rational rule of right as grounded in worthiness of spiritual approbation, and 'system , atically applies this to the whole course of hu man conduct. The Empirical Psychology gath ers the facts of the human mind 'as .given in con sciousness, and contemplates these in the light of that rational insight which detects their true and organic-relations. The Rational Cosmology skews that the reason possesses ideas to which the' universe conforms, and that no science of nature is possible unless the actual facts of the world around us are seen in living accord with the principles within." , It is claimed for. Dr. Hickok's system that its fundamental,doctrine of the self,asserting reason completely demolishes philoiophical scepticism: The." common sense" propositions of Reid and the Scottish School'are inadequate. The" com mon sense," says the reviewer, "`utters what it universally believes, but for which ikknows no ground. The reason declares what it beholds and' knows in. its own ground. *.* T 6 demand a prootiwould be the abiurdity of requiring a reason for reason. Reason declares, affirms, sup ports itself. * * It is not simply because our powers are'so weak that we cannot, go beyond this; rather are they, so ; lofty that they, see in this the true ultimate, the self-supporting ground of all the rest. It is becauSe we are reason, that we rest in what is reasonable, 'and it would`be to deny that self-knowledge that is our crown and rpyalty, could we. look for anything beyond. A Mind,deeply imbued with this order of thought could be no more skeptical thin it could be un thinking." , In conclusion, as. Dr. Hickok's system is not skeptical, neither is -it mystical, nor ideal, nor material. Nor does it accord with any of those systems which, while admitting matter and mind to' be distinct, seek to explain their union • by some third thing. With Plato—as the review er asserts, Dr. H. teaches that while they are intrinsically diverse they have that in com mon by which they are related. Spirit is es sentially self 7 activity ; matter is essentially/ac tion and reaction, e. force. Having thus given the outline of the article by an adherent of the system, we reserve remarks upon it and "tither articles on the snbjeet to another occasion: (For the American Presbyterian l ) lIINSBYTERIAN HYMNOLOGY. THE Presbyterian Publication Committee hope soon to complete a system`of Vocal Praise; Amp proached in excellence by any that the Christian world has ever seen Isolated works there are and have - been, worthy of all commendation, but the church needs no single hook but a system of them. Such a system requires Tour books a fifth is as unnecessary as a fifth wheel to a coach. The P. P. C., has issued three of the four, and we easily see what the suite will he when completed and perfected. Isay completed and perfected, It will be completed when the .future - volume - shall be is sued : its perfeetion may, require . numerous im provements in all the four.. Their adaptation to each other will not be' perfect at first. For in stance the, tune for ',Come _thou Fount " ete., is for eight lines : in both hymn=books the hymn consists of five half-stanzas, and there is no ref: erence •in either book - to the place in- the Other two. In coming time we may hope that these adaptations shall be complete. But let, us look a moment at each of the four books., First, and • highest in importance, and oldest in the series, • is the CHTIR.CH. PsALSK T,. - admitted by good judges to be, decidedly , the best collection of hymns in the English language ; and unless surpassed in the German s - probably the •best that ever yet has existed. When per fected it will Contain Fall hymns .desirable fOr a - selection for public, social, family and secret worship of every description; excCpting juvenile pieces. As it is, tha book is above my prOse and above my criticism, except as to, the numbering of the hymns. At some distant time, I hope the various "parts " of Psalms, will -be, numbered consecutively without- regard to the Metre : and that the, first• hyi nn' that is not 'a version or, intl. tation Of a Psalm, shall bear the,"'number 151. Next in , affe and importance is the ECLECTIC TUNE-EOOK. , With, choirs that are chiefly actu ated by a love for display, this book is not des-, tined to be popular., But the, book was con structed so as- to meet the demanda of a large number of good judges of what pieces ought to be used in worship. Persons whO have remarked . an improvement in their Choir as to the efficiency of their niusie for devotional purpoees, 'have sometimes found that this improvement was en tirely due to the introduction of the Eclectic. Not that all the tunes are there that we need. Wood stock is missing. So is Melmore., .So are a few others that many Christians feel that they can not' do withbut: So. is every - antham" and "set-piece" that ever moved, our' hearts in times of old. But there are tunes enough `that can be spared to make room forall these. • While I never yet knew a book ,befoie in which fully one-half the tunes "were tot useless, or worse ; I think, only one-third of those in the Eclectic (mostly experimentS of the 'author) -should be set down as faiinres.,. But they are' enough o place to all omitted piOces that will beektensively de manded. • The third book bears the name pf. SABBATH SCHOOL HYMN-BOOK, but contains, beside juven ile pieces, ample . selections from ,the These sufficient are sucient for funerals, prayer meetings, the family, and the closet. If ever improved it will be by the reduction Of the number (369) or by substitutions. .No juvenile music, book is needed. Children who can read music cannot read that style. TO them the notes are all a loss of paper and a waste of ink. All adults who sing with them, and are able to read such music, ought to own theEclectie and there ought to be able to find the precise pieces , required for these juvenile hymns. And the fewer such tunes you can content the children with- the better : they take - a place that sacred music might better 0c... °ivy. Of the fourth and future book I cannot speak from auth;rity. I do not even know whether it has a name. I hope its sponsors will give it a short and pretty one, and for my part I should like,a,suggestion from him who first, thought of the name for the,,Eclectic. I imagine the book will fit our pockets in - size and price, i. 0.:16 iuo and 25 cents. It may, contain about 100 tnnes, all from the Eclectic without alteration, andithe 205 hymns that' the smaller' hymn-book has taken from the Church Psalmist and with pre cisely the same verses omitted. To each tune . let there be at least one hymn suitable to - ordinary family worship. And shall we not have those same hymns inserted in some future Eclectic? Then; as we gather to the 'house' of mourning, with the four books of the system as chance or convenience may mingle. them, the same music will be found in two, and the same woids in all the four. So too around the family-altar, each book bfought from the Place of worship will be ready for' daily use. From no .other source than the P. P. C., can we hope a convenience like this, and from no other source' would it be more acceptable to - I. F. H. (For the American Presbyterian.) THEE - SABBATH IN SARATOGA. SARATOGA SPRINGS, Aug. 10. To, the ..Witor of the American Presbyterians Can this be a war-time ? Every hotel and boarding-house is thronged. Houses. - are filled that were never full - before. In the absence of " the Chivalry" there is an air of quiet self-res pact and good.breeding pervading all circles, for which Saratoga was not noted in the palmy days of " King Cotton." I have heard many attempts to explain the philosophy of crowded watering places in ,this apparently unpropitious - season; none of them were satisfactory. One thing• is clear the burdens of the war are not general or heavy enough to affect the resources of multitudes' of families whom health or pleasure have invited hither. The Sabbath here has assumed somewhat chang ed aspects this year. It has ceased to be the day for the display of equipages. The churches are all filled. Passing the "Union". or "Clarendon" of a Sabbath evening, you will find a group in the parlor engaged in singing familiar hymns; and a-general air of quietness pervades the place. On the' afternoon of the last two or three Sabbaths, the Rev Mr. Milburn—" the Blind Preacher," • —has preached in, the beautiful grove, near the Indian encampment, to thousands of attentive hearers. Last Sabbath, the Rev Drs. Hodge, Hawks, Milburn, and Phelps, preached in .the Presbyterian, Episcopal, Methodist, and Baptist pulpits, and.'" Father Walworth " lectured in the Roman Catholic church for an admission fee to the great disgust, I doubt not, of his "father, Chancellor W • An important meeting was held in the Presby terianthurch; on Sabbath evening, to promote the Sabbath Reform. Governor Bradish, of New- York presided, and no one can perform such a: service .with more grace and dignity. After prayer by Dr. Fowler, of Utica, the Rev. Mr. Cook, of the Sabbath ' Committee, the Rev. Dr. Hodge, of Princeton, and the Rev. Dr Durbin, of the Methodist Missionary Society, delivered brief and effective addresses. The large church was, filled, and a noble cause gained new impetus. The meeting was adjourned till Monday morning, in the Methodist church, when David' Headley, Esq., (the President of the Panama Bflread Company, and a member of the Sabbath Commit tee) was called to. the chair, and the . Rev. Dr. Phelps, of New Haven, appointed secretary. ' A conference was entered. upon as to the condition of Sabbath observance in different parts of the country, and in the army, and the measures best suited to effect wise and permanent reforms. The subject was referred tos a committee, consisting of T. P. •Handy, of Cleveland, Ohio; the, lon: Peter Parker, of `Washington, D.C.; and the'Rev. Di. Yowler, of Utica, who rep6rted this morning , a series of resolutions, urging our National and. State authorities to preserve the Sabbath from all avoidable 'movements of troops and needless en-. gagements ;,.and referring the subject, to the New York Committee, to receive due attention in the new circumstances created by the marshaling of 600,000 additional troops. Resolutions 'were also' adopted, requesting the Sabbath COmmittee to consider the propriety of attempting to secure " thetruce of God" between contending armies, by the mutual understanding of the authorities; and, inviting that Committee to extend their la bors ,beyond the limits of New York city. While these topics were under consideration,. the Rev. Mr. Tully, chaplain of the' 77th Volunteers, bore noble testimony to the fidelity of the Commander of the Army of the Potomac to theprinciples of his famous General Order for the protection of the Sabbath, and to the popu larity, in the Army and. Navy, of all officers who respected the right of the soldier and the sailor to hiS day - of rest. An animated: discussion arose as to the policy of the Sabbath Committee in devoting five Years to local s reforms,—gentle men from the-West claiming their co-operation, and the Rev. Dr Holdich, Messrs. Bishop and Hoidley, and others, of New York, vindicating the thoroughness of the local movement as the most effective to general efforts in this delicate and difficult reform. The universal sa tisfaction expressed by gentlemen from all - parts of the country with the principles and measures of the Sabbath Committee must have been cheer ing to the members of that organization present in these meetings. How soon will these thousands of sojourners be scattered again ; and. be absorbed in their sev eral pursuits 1 Scores of clergyman are recupe rating for their arduous duties. Men of business of every branch, are enjoying their brief respite from care and toil, sharing more, it' may- be, of the Moiety of their families in the hurried visit fa the Springs, than during months of city life. Some who are whirling in the dance at these ho tels will, ere long,.be whirling in the dance of death on the Rapidan, or , at Richmond. And what a saoplace, this village, must be when its streets are deserted , by the crewd of temporary visitors, and it relapses into its normal condition of quietude. - Like "some banquet hall deserted," its excess of life must contrast strangely with the comparative solitude into which it, subsides. • THE ALMANAC. t THE^ AMERICAN. PRESBYTERIAN ALMANAC. for 1863, has just made its appearance. It is gotten up with the usual care and good taste, and abounds in valuable inforMation,upon Denomina tional matters. Its statistical-tables are also val. liable. We earnestly recommend, the pamphlet for general distribution among our churches. Sessions. should see to it.. that every family is provided with a copy To be had at thelPresbi terian H01i5ai.N0. , 1334 Obestnnt.street., Nulnizationo. MAGAZINES & PAMPHLETS THE September issues of the periodical press are droPPing on our table like autumn leaves, nu merous and premonitory. THE ATLANTIC con tains a better list than that of sleepy August, in cluding- Agasili's 14th paper on Natural' His-' tory and some good ,poetry. The CONTINENTAL condemns itself in the opening piece on Henry Thomas Buckle, by failing to -condemn, while it coolly describes the : ideous and tmgodly fatalism of its Subject. -We wish the reviewer had ex erted his "refutory powers," as he 'styles them, upon dogmas ad worthy of universal reprobation. Tu AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY has issued its Christian Almanae.for 1863. • • REV. ALFRED TAYLOR has published in neat style his first pastoral sermon, in his new -charge at Bristol, Pennsylvania, entitled : " Much Peo ple'. It is vigorous, earnest, and calculated to do good. REPORT OF THE A:MERIOAN MISSION AMONG THE MAHRATTAS, forlB6l. Bombay; printed at the " Exchange Press," E0rt,1862. This in teresting issue of the mission press in India, is neatly executed, and contains a very full report of the progress of the missionary Work on that important field. The Ahmednuggur Eti,strict'is very flourishing, showing a net increase 4 churches . and F 72 members during the year. Bombay and Satara simply:hold their own.. BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE for August con tains a remarkable article on Sermons in which it is claimed that a weariness almost universal pre veils in England under the preaching of the word, and it is coolly proposed to dhense with this part of the service as generally a hindrance to worship. "Unfortunately he is no preacher" is said to be the popular verdict in one out of every three parishes in. England. It is also as serted that "there is no record that this weekly ordinance of inevitable preaching is any how or dained of God. It was," continues the writer, " the Refortuers and Puritans - who bound us un der this thrall." The Romish church according to him " with that rare perception of human nature which characterises her," has done much better, and, he wishes to know - whether there is any reason against returning to her methods in this respect. He strengthens his position by reference to certain movements towards a liturgy in the pale of the Established Church of Soot , land ; which are pretty clearly traceable to un easiness:atr the rapid progress of 'dissenting bodies in that country, contrasted with her own tardy . pace. And the Witt& article is probably dicta ted by the conviction that the power is passing from the cold formal Establishments of both countries, into the Ilan& of the more active and evangelical - dissenters; with their :popular preach ers, and that something must be done to turn the,tide.. Fitpm . L. 'Semi. a Co., New - York (W B. Zieber Philadelphia) we have regeived the July number of the EDINBURGH ' ERVILE.W. It con tains-articles on the Explorers of Australia— Wellington's Supplementary Despatches; Sir G. C. Lewis' Astronomy of the Ancients; Stanhope's ;Life of Pitt; Troyon's Lacustrine Abodes of Mau ; Weber's Gleanings from German Archives; Iron—its 'Uses and > Manufacture; Remains of Mrs. 'Richard Trench; Dollinger on the Tem floral Power. In the article on Lewis' Astronomy of the An cients we see and welcome a disposition to con test the `Wild chronological vagaries of Bunsen, and his school of unbelieving antiquarians, which 'we regret to-say does not appear in the article on - the Lacustrine abodes of Man, where, similar in . admissablndeniands of geologists and naturalists arntreated , with a tolerance-more fitting the pa ges ofthe , Westminister. The last .;artiele on Dollinger written, in a most friendly mood towards Catholics art argues against-the Pope's temporal power, on the ground that'it is'a real injury to the church of RoMe. It discourages attempts at Protestantizing Italy. - As if there nunciation of.temporal power.would net be a great Step towards. Protestantism. TRAIN'S UNION SPEECHES, Second Series, Philadelphia, W. B. 'Peterson & 'Brothers. TEE EYAI,IGELICAT: REPOSITORY and ;United Presbyterian It'evieW (Monthly), for August is a good number. Careful attention is bestowed upon Sabbath School matters. The " Ecelesias.: tical Record" is a valuable feature, The Edito rial record of ,_the last U. P. General Assembly contains the, following : " We do - not hesitate to give it as our deliberate t opinion, that there is not a morecompact and united Church in the land," i. e.' than the United Presbyterian. We rejoice at this testimony to the success of one of the most irriportant of the recent union movements among Presbyterians. THE NATIONAL PREACHER. AND PRAYER MEETING for September, contains the two ser mons of Rev. J . : R.. Page, of Perry, New York, which have gained much notoriety as matters of litigation. Their subject is : " Laws for the Bes towinent of Divine Mercy." New York : W. H. Bidwell. Wm:Quarr has, we are gratified to say, given to the public in pamphlet form, his able, philosophical, and .Christian paper on the "Future of the. Colored Race in \ Ameriea," first published in the July number of the PRESTO/TR RIAN QUARTERLY REVIEW. Philadelphia : W S. 'Young, Printer. THE FREEDMEN OR SOUTR CAROLINA. Ad dresses of Rey. J. M., McKim; chairman of the Port. Royal Relief Committee, and letter of the same to Stephen Colviell - Esq. Philadelphia: Willis P.' hazard:: . FOR TAR* COUNTRIR GOOD.----Rev. Stuart Rolobisort - and Rev. Mr. Hoyt, of the 0.5., Presbyterian:Church irrKentucky, heAre expatri ated themselves, and are now . in'; Canada. 'The former went out voluntarily, the latter had to ehooSe between Canadi and the rebel lines. VIATOR. AT THE RECENT commencement of Jefferson College, the degree of D.D., was conferred upon Rev. Ge t orge Sheldon, -for , many years : agent of the American Bible Society for New'Jersey and Dela Ware. Oml. holiness causeth not God's love, but God's love causeth our holiness. Pleasure is grief when. God is • displeased; but, grief is pleasure when God is pleased. Ic. : nowledge may be . without-grace, but grace cannot be without knowledge.. BEPT.