. • j,..... . . . , . . I . . . " ..• ~ ' . A., . . • - . ... ... • Z. , - de /: \ 1 . . .. ~ .. • , . . .. --- ~ , ( 1 7 -- • . . . . . ~ .. .. .. .. ~ . .. • - ~•., .. . • • • ~' °. Ijl_. •• . , . .... . . • . _. .. .• . . , .. :. . ... . • . . ......... . . .. . , . . / • . .. . ........_ .. Il i No: 13.--Whole No. 325 .. • : ....:, :• -: c-tF. .:1 l. I . ~, ~ , ~ : 7., , . , . x',0..,, —.v,..., . , , , • . . ... iN y i.ol : ' .`____ __'J :f _ ''"' -_ __ . _ '.; !''' 1 - : ' '.- ' . ' PITILADELPHIA,' 'ItILT — UIt 4 i'' . f - NOVEMBER 27 1862 -- H... - ,,,ww),45-F.A,_EYOO.EIJIBT.77 „ :_. . ........... _b. -,..... . , ...... be ,li„,. len :!,':)1 1 ' 4 the ... wn .ii i kin' 0... th ,- . ;ndith,. ii -IF. ' - nteab. , ;1 r-f to ~ , ' exte... ra 9, ha ' , us .1.... ,nd ' - ass u- p 3S, , -nine,- 3 ) .. f It t ; RS a , 811 ' ' (I it ' WII., 0 . elm ' ii - irici t Len , ieerf 4be ... ju' - i i lii . Rai: r : nd'{ gory '- 4 ory 3r - ;red LG. .iru, ,th ' -yt d .„. ea' ; :007 ' 11 43 tn., .. pec ner d ,-- 1:1', es; .d, itl 0 3rf: ;7 I fe; t, r 4 0 , y, :e 1 dn. I AY . 4. stip d . 1 0 . 4 `.;.roj i adi Till d Str .nd - It e ly . t. 'ay be 'tr :land :.,, .. , • . . .. .. LE )5 8.0 , 'Ol • .Yo'. • !...:IX Vol. V ~a fj t Wrestling Jacob Charles Wesley's versos on Gen. mail. 24, etc., are full of strength and, beauty. They have been greatly praised and admired, but beins , unsuited to congregational singing, are not found in the hymn books of the present day. Come, 0 thou traveler unknown, Whom still I hold , but cannot see My , company before is gone, And 1 am left alone with thee ; With thee' all night 'I idean to stay, And wrestle till the break of day. I need not tall thee who I am, My misery and sin declare : Thyself haat called me by my name ; Look on thy hands and read it there; But who, I ask •thee, who art Thoul Tell me thy name, and tell me now. In vain then strugglest to get free, I never Ntill.uolooso nip hold Art thou the man that died for me I The secret of day love unfold ; Wrestling, I will not let thee go, Till I thy mum, thy nature know. Wilt thou:not yet to me raved Thy neiv, - uhutterable name.? Tell me, I still.beseeoh thne, tell; To know it now resolved I are ; `Wrestling, I will not let thee go, Till I thy name, thy, nature know. What tho' my shrinking flesh complain, And,marmur to contend so long ? I rise superior to my pain; When I am weak then I am strong : Arid when my all of strength (loth fail, I shall with the God-man prevail. Yield to me now, fer I am weak; Bupponfident in seltdespair ; Speak to my heart, in blessings sPeak ; Be conquered by my. instant prayer; Speak, 'or thou never hence shalt move, And tell me if thy name is love. 'Tie love I 'tis love I thou diedst For me` I hear thy whisper in my heart; The morning break-s; the shadows -7 Pure, universal' love. thou art : To me, to all ; thy bowels move, Thy nature and thy name - is Love. torreopoudinta. TRUTH MUTANT. [TAs following is the substance, of a •ser mon preached recently in the First, Presby terian Church, St. Louts, by the pastor, Rey. 11. A. Nelson, D.D. Our readers are fit zanier' with the great and hopeful changes going on in 'Missouri in the direction of Etrittneipation and thorough-going loyalty. .This sermon will help to explain these changes, and furnishes another proof of what Missouri owes to her faithful clergy.] Think not," s a id our Lord, c "that lam come to send peace on earth ; I came not to send. peace, but it mord." . .HoW- Cali this. be ?' ' • l'he whole - Gospel representation of Him is, that He was, per-- sonally,--eVen as He declared of ilimself,) " meek : 'and lowly.ln heart:7., His..personal behavior,. always, corresponded to . the pro phetie description ,of Ain 4 .,-- "He shall not cry, nor lift up, nor cause His voice to be heard in the street." —`With wonderful wis dom He repressed every tendency to popular tumult and lawless violence on His behalf. The,lamb f in its meek,: submissive gentleness, iS ever ,thescriptural emblem of Him, com-, pletely :fulfilled even to the extremity of His being led, dumb and unresisting, to slaughter., In the most, glowing , prophetic pictures of : is exaltation,and gleey,•among the " many . nuns " that. He wears none 'is more con :.picuous, or more resThendent,..:than that '.which bears the inscription,. "PRINCE . 10 'EACE." And , in that notable prophetic. `, ese,ription of the glory andhappiness of Hitt , ign upon earth, you ,rornember . he . ,delight i I imagery which so forcibly' represents its ! neefulness : "The woll* .also shall dwell th the lamb, and the. leopard shall lie ,wn with the 'kid ; and the- calf and . 'the wig lion and the' fading together . ; and a ( tie child shall lead them." . iThe recorded teaclaiap. of Jesus are equal opposed I' , l to the indulgence of all those Violent i ' '4 lions which lead to them. If a 'Man ;Y.'. ite thee on the right cheek, turn to him' the other also." "Resist not evil." "Love cour enemies —bless them that curse you—' t o good to them that hate you—and pray for t em that despitefully use you and persecute you." Forbearance, forgivenessi meekness, i are prime virtues in the character most lion - 1 ored in His heavenly kingdond. Clearly, we cannot understand Him to avow a desire on His part to stir up strife iand contention among men,-4o arm men in mutual hostility s lor mutual outrage and de struction. Neither ctn we understand that the proper tendency of His teaching His doctrines and His precePts—if ail men would' ' adopt theni, and obey them, would be to occasion strife and war. Preciaely the con trary is their obvious tendency. ' How, then, shall we interpretJ,his saying of our Lord ? It plainly shows, :that our Lord well knew that the promulgation, of His doctrine, the inculcation of His principles, among mankind, would, in fact, occasion strife and contention ' yea, cruel and blOodj violence : that, although the final triumph and complete prevalence of what He taught would be the extinction of all warlike vio lence, exchanging everywhere the weapons of war for the implements of peaceful indus try, —the cessation also of private enmities, and outrages, so remarkable as to deserve to be symbolized by the lion and the ox quietly eating straw together, and the kid sleeping safely between the paws of the leopard, nevertheless this blessed state of things was to be looked for after long ages of conflict between the spiritual forces of His kingdom and the malignant powers of evil : -that during' this period of struggle, in which His principles would' be making their way to their final ascendancy, it should be manifest that the force of 'those principles in collision with the falsehoods, and the:passions opposed to them, would occasion the most terrible conflicts, the most bitter enthities, the most fierce and' unrelenting hostilities. It also, shows, that our Loll. deliberately i purposed to have His principles promulgated, and to secure their final ascendancy, even at such cost. The kind of peace Which' can be hint by universal acquiescence iii wrong, and universal acceptance of falsehood,—the kind of peace which can be had by the ignoring of all solemn truth, and the negation of all righteous principles, --the kind of peace which_results from the general indifference and apathy which cares for nothing but ease andpleasure, all , such peaee.He 'meant to break. up. Ali the strife, and tumult, and agonizing struggle, which naturally result fromothe -contact of truth with•antagonistic errort,of mighteous principles with obstinate human selfishness, —;.from the persistent, earnest protest of evangelized human con sciences against wrong, --- all this He delib erately ,accepted as the clearly foreseen process by which His kingdom should come in this world. Tenderly as. He cared for, and pitied, every human sufferer, He pre ferred that any one should suffer for right onusness' sake, rather than 'be at ease in unrighteousness, .that any one should be hated of all men for His name's sake, rather than enjoy the esteem and favor of men in disregard of His name, that any one of a faniily should incur the hatred of brothers or sisters, or children or.parents, and even be delivered up to death by them, for beL coming His disciple, rather than secure the continued enjoyment of domestic tranquillity by refusing to be His disciple. 'Highly as He must value - the peace of communities, He preferred that there should be tumults, and strifes; and wars, resulting from the struggles of true with .false prin ciples, rather than that communities should stagnate in apathetic indifference to. truth. He doubtless preferred that faithful disciples of Him should be torn by wild beasts in .Roman amphitheatres, to, the savage delight, of: admiring pagan crowds, rather than that there should be no faithful disciples in the' Roman empire. die doubtless preferred that in later times, the fierce troopers of Clever house should hunt and 'slaughter the cove nanters in the glens of Scotland, rather than that there should be no such people to wake the _echoes of those glens with the fervent voice 'of prayer; and the quaint strains of their psalmody. He doubtless preferred that the blood of the Huguenots should flow in the St. Bartholomew massacre, than that there should he-no such people for the per fidious king to butcher. He doubtless pre ferred that the bones of His slaughtered saints should whiten the Alpine mountaini, rather than that His Gospel should never ascend those heights, and sanctify those souls with its truth, for - which they would be will ing thus to suffer and to die. He, doubtless preferred that the ringing of Luther's ham mer, nailingg, his defiant theses to the church door in Wittenberg, should reverberate through Germany; should rouse the papal power to fury; and disturb the peace of Eu rope,rather than that Europe' should slumber on under the poisonous Opiate of papal in dulgences till it should lose 'all power and spirit to,break the papal He doubt- , less, ps,eferreil,,and does :prefer, for. .Iqe "'the .same • yesterday, to-day,,and forever," --that, in our day,, the .Christians of Mada gascar' should speared to death, and pushed' off from precipices' by command' of their heathen queen, arid that Christians :in 'Turkey should suffer all the varieties of persecution which they have, borne for their testimony against the corruptions of their apostate churches, than that the darkness ,of paganism should brood unbroken over that African island, and the sepulchral quiet of cold dead formalism should' reign in 'unbroken silence over those Eastern Churches. He knew that, in all these ages, and in all these lands, the spiritual forces of His kingdom would-never triumph over the forces of error and 'of sin, without such painful struggles and. costly sacrifices. Yet He,, even He, the Prince of Peace, ordered the struggle to proceed, and He will have the triumph, even at all its cost. He purposely inserted' the leaven of nig doc trine into human society, well knowing how it would seethe there how it would heave, and 'vex, and agitate the mighty grass; mtil the whole should be leavened. I think we are prepared to understand how it is that our Saviour came not to send peace on earth, but a sword, —to understand in what sense it is, that this was the _purpose of His corning,-44d to see that this is entirely consistent with is mild and pacific disposition SOhave we sometimes seen a skilfur:and kind physician order an application upon the tender and sensitive skin of a child, : under the intense smarting and burning of which the little sufferer would writhe in anguish, and look up from its cradle with a most: piti ful expression of imploringhelplessness. The answering look of the physician is expressive of pity for the present pain," but it ha's also a deeper expression' of grateful joy, for he prefers the 'sensitiveness; which' that pain ye veals, to the ease, of insensibility, and he recognizes the evidence of vital activity which, he , trusts, will rectify the morbid con dition. He prefers that diseage should sting and blotch -the surface rather than quietly and fatally. settle upon the vitals. So also the Great Physician, when an un happy father had brought to him his child tortured by a malignant demon which .the disciples had been unable, to expel, did not hesitate,' with His alkpowerful word, to com pel the evil to depart, although, in do ing so he rent the victim - so sorely; that he lay 4 as dead." Deep and dark is the mystery of evil,:un der the government of the supremely: GOOD not only In respect to its origin, but in respect to all its, history, including the phe nomena of its cure, .or removal. Always and everywhere it demonstrates its, essential char acter ; shows forth its utter malignity. The divine, processes of its cure first develop its hatefulness ; increase its intensity ; rouse it to'its most violent activity. Our Saviour .entered into His great strug gle with evilin,this world, fully understand ing all this, 'calmly prepared for it, able with divine composure of mind, to contemplate all the ages of strife, of strenuous debate, Of fierce contention, of red carnage, which it would ,cost,, to .win for,,His truth, complete ascendanciin this sinful world. It was a pleasing illusion, in which we have. lived, during the whole life-time of the old est among us, that truth had; incur country, gained such ascendancy, that opposing error and wrong would never be able to break up the public tranquility. Particularly, we fondly believed that our institutions of gov ernment were so happily framed—that they were so elastic and so strong—so pliantly adaptable to all the genuine growth of free doint and yet so strong to repress wrong, and repel' oppression—that here the struggle- , of free thought; the conflict of opposing opin ions, could freely go on, without endangering the peace, without destroying the security of the, commtuskity. We are waked from that pleasing illusion by the noise of a civil war which surpasses all that we have known Of such conflicts, both in the magnitude of its. forces, and the extent of its arena—God grant that its his torians may ,not- be obliged to add, in the terribleness of its desolations. It is, preeminently, a war of ideas. .The conflict of arms has resulted frum the con flict of opinions. The whole struggle is, to decide Whether one Set of principles or anoth er shall preVail. Foremost in the array are two opposing theories of our National: Gov ernment :—On the one side; is the theory that our National Union is indissoluble, the people of, all its States constituting one peo-• ple—one nation.. (.. Pluribus Ununt . )— and its constitutional government exercising a limited but paramount sovereignty over all the wide land—a sovereignty, limited by the Constitution, but irrevocable within those limits. On the other side is the theory that the sovereignty of each State is absolute, the Union only a voluntary association of States, from which each may withdraw at its pleasure; and that any attempt on the part of the general government forcibly to restrain States from such secession, is sheer and tyrannical usurpation. :Such is the political issue which has been made up between the parties'to this fearful controversy. We do not now discuss this political' issue ; but it seemed necessary to state it,• in order that we may seer *hat is behind these two. opposing political: theories,: in this hostile array. Why haie any States desired to exercise their alleged right of se cession, thus compelling the government either to resign its claimed sovereignty, at their bidding, or to maintain it by ' force of arms? • -Most evidently they have wanted to use. their separate and unlimited sovereignty, first of alli and above all-else, to secure, and to render permanenttheir institUtion of-slavery. The moral right to, hold men in slavery--to maintain auinstitution which reduces human beings to the, condition of chattels—and which continually exposts men, and vronfen, and families, to all the shocking liabilities which that absolute chattelhood involves— the moral right of all this has been very thoroughly discussed throughout evangelical Christendom and outside of these revolted States, the overwhelming preponderance of opinion, throughout evangelical Christendom, is. against the righteousness -of slavery. Al though the holding of slaves within the States was a subject to which the national authority did not extend—over which the National Government under all adMinistrations, dis claimed any right of control, there were questions pertaining to Slavery io national territories, and pertaining to the influence of slavery as a ; political force in the national administration; and there wore .{claims. ,of absolute right of ; property in slavesrto be maintained by interpretations of the national constitution, sought to be eitablished. On' such questions as these, those discussions and political contests proceeded; on account of the political results of which, war has been made upon the National Govertment, by men who make the theory of state sovereignty their plea, of justification, and who pholaini their purpose to: establish a confederacy of States based upon the system of slavery, as its foundation. I am aware that very many and various other forces enter into ,the contrast on both sides—innumerable persorial ambitions, and personal passions, besides the modifying influence of immmerable and collateral ques tionS. But I assume as unquestionable, that with out the controversy which relates to- slavery there would have been no war. If through.. out all this land, in all the years of its his-' tory, there had been. no one who questioned the righteousness of slavery—or if all who believed it to be wrong had, _refrained ;from expressing that opinion, .and from speaking and printing arguments in support of ,that opinion—if all had acquiesced in the demand which the supporters of slavery so generally made, that that, alone, of all human institz tions, should be exempted from the scrutiny of free thought,.and the liabilities of free, die cussion—if thus there had been no moral opl position to slavery, no religious protests against it, no . attenipt to examine its moral character—there would, have been no pUblic agitation concerning,it.,,,and nobreaking of the public peace onr account of it. There may be those who think that such, peace would have been better than this:fearful war. There are some mph, who think that, in feel ing thus, they exercise the spirit and teinper of Jesus. Have they considered the utter ance of Christ 7 --" I came not to send peace but a swore ?, Can they give it any intel ligible meaning ? lf such had been our Lord's,view of the paramount; importance of peace, it seems to: : me that he would never have sent his servants to disturb anywhere the quietude-of ' bypreaching against any of the evils that baVe' Strongly , entrenched themselves in the world :—nay, it seems to me that, if He had held such views, our Lord would not have come into the .world at all. He seems to me—to'' say as -much—" 1 came not to' Send peace, b'ut a sword." Let us not then be utterly dismayed at the' fearful calamity which has come upen us— nay, let us not assume that it is‘altogether calamity. There might have been a peace that would be far more . calamitous. The peace of prevailing indifference to wroug, the peace of, a benumbed pUblic conscience, a peace:Which depends on abstinence froth all rebuking of wrong, and all 'inquiry Whe ther that which claims to 'be right is so— such peace is by no means to be desired. Dreadful as are the desolations which;this war has already wrought—appa)ling as is the safering which it hap oceasioned-and dark as is the uncertainty which hangs over I ,its future—let us not, think that, its speedy ces sation is above all things desirable. Let us consent to bear all its sorrow and.anguish— all its privations—all its anxieties—all its bitter bereavements—till'it shall have fulfill eit the purpose for which God has allowed it to' come upon us. Does that purpose include the utter "abo lishment " of the institution of slavery by means of the war, and, before its termina tion ? That result has not heretofore seemed to me so desirable, eitlier to the slaves - them selves or to us, as :a more gradual removal of it, by peaceful nieans, and with suitablUtire-, paration for their real ,enjeyinent cf,regula-* ted liberty., , In - the early tiOnthe, of the, re l ." hellion, I hoped (in common with most of my loyal countrymi give the Govel suppressing it, would be only to sion, and give it slowly die. °' On the cont cess in. that ei made, amazing near to success. nation cannot plete abolition client` has at I. the , 'temperate, us Tor our chief continual prayel Let it not be edict can be tranquillity ca, severe; and pf will doubtless edict effective. events, manifest this great undey emnly, in His. To strengthen er we nkay•have progress of this agemen,ts . that from God's hol comfort and expected his t not without ago, conamotions--ay horrors of-war, His kingdom Of peace ? THE DiPOE,TANCE, V DE, t vpsTnErTEs,.. , , had seized and forti into the enemy , thia insult, - resolired their ''soil: And n : preaching in their formidable desoent the other hand, is S: lichorting his men t left their ships,,to,sl beach, to yield not give back for their ten seem thrust upon th she waves they dashed'b i efore the la,st man ' *her &an s which,in the rianie ch* the gallantly taken Passessio stance of one of thame• ry, and the sublimest ti matic effect. It is. a pie, that could not be too ke intrusted with f a, struggl DeMostheneS was convict better'not to haVe` (imp ing - done--4o;tv-itbiadol that if it Were• a politic 'n • 'place, it was mueli tram to keep possession , pfit. hostile coast, should •rim, with the well that every foot that should be Initiation to use every pr, possibility of a repulse, I prise. It is the-fray.of• cy, to adopt strong meals port them by corresponi means. It is, to acquaint dangers of his situation„, the necessity, of watchful never should be done, ord. inflicting a Mo.* from, wh for hith to recover. It is ice of the invader, withou , ability to execute7it. ' It out intircidating his .foe. to expose his 'own weak the enemy, - in histurn to ass A victory;:hy, its: moral a commander-a reinforc• as many Men as, he, empli After a successful battle, with little diminntipn,. of whiCh the victory was w , the_ power Aleh . that viet From this it fo lows that ry; the result of .power, s contains in itself the geri cess. And the leader with niftes 4othing, and who the...hope of adding vic More than sluggard,. and that his successes were of not by the influence 'Of despite 'of 'his' iCapanity The same pr'incipl'e is cation in hump. life. It succeeded in gaining sof he should •begin , to. act and determination.. It. is best, afford to address hi,' he had 9. 1 * motiVe Ptlri tion, he has a hundred` Serve it. • ItlieWfici ne *mild not haVe'repiiaoh , scurity ;• 'but 'new he'dan notice . and itsoriticisrn.. encounter sloth and inac jealous' descent upon;:hire nation r tp.,exhaust, every e' yield the auspicious, spot pf,,ff.eayen .upon,hi§effor to plant,hs foot.' F9r 7 oi the less of glory and 'se Scarcely be able to advai time 'in the road of honor , It is better , to occupy 'd blestpost, than . b'e only , to•prove to the; world equal to its duties. For, our friends are A t liberty to, contradict them, that, 0 equal_to our desert . ; and i dulge through life the belief, that our qualifica4o proved in ferfdr tc . higher • it was ;our let to- enjoy. even , this imperfect. censol It Was said of Galba, th been thought capable, of never reigned. One of the greatest m between men is seen in of success upon their mi elated and self-confident i it; the, 'other beconies mor , trustful of himself, and cal hensive that his success w: deserved.- One regards unquestionable , fruit of hi' and doulits not hisability he wild ; ,the „other ba!s,gro' than before, and begins ilia t voct peed success in et' iipon slaveiy "dwth and eiten- - i .which it would not given us ,ze,ilet.gt°ll; has d ; 4s-iP 4 RIBP BO eeins evident the #. 1 , 0 , 1 , 1 t 61,4: exPe reeigiel upon by GOillas 'given iivhoge guidance liaOdd43 peotile. ,tEs preaulential: $34,,, 1 m that, Awl, TPFART.4.- 4 #aetecl, i .atrnggle of y; ; to . ,e . er tbe oideiiiik as the nation to -t 118 accept it B°l : and ortwhateir ;to en tire, in the led all t 13 , ' encour ',lititnately dorivn 1 8 it not a, great 'tow that our Lord nce in,` the"world;" : gles itiid t feaif4.l . • n in-I,h'e' bloody old th coming= of' ighteonsness, and Wita. oviNck., tkian oommarider, a, a place. belong e latter, stung by, • the inyatier''frOm are deSeria iii epared till:fake a Demosthenes, on ling on the , shlre; them .before they them ,on the-very of ground,. nor• Lt. cdri Est. assa ught e prows, as they nor for the fierce em ; but to die to render`the Soil, of ountry;"theyhad This is the sub-. iassagcs; of histo . - s moral and dra-.. e of earnest- war, studied by. thew iike the present. that'it' had' 44 , itt Y I to . thfc'enenif sure to seize.that 1, •at ..any hazard: descent upon .a be .planned,-only bility to preserve, in, and the detor 7 ution againit the force by'sur ard incompeten 's, andfaiLto:Eittp g and adequate e enetnywiththe id suggest .. to him ss,—a thing that n the very act Of it is imposible . reveal the Mal- . ern migrating' his to provoke with t is.gratuitously ss, and to invite e the aggressive. ects is orth nt eopsisting of ed in gaining it. • is yet possessed, 11 the ,power by enhanced by all y added tp hiin. e genuine victo -11 and discipline, of ultimate sue 'horn victory sig tot be fired with y to victory, is, akes it, evident accidents, won, genii* but in d mistakes.' universal whew a min has • advantage, that th renewed vigor at then .he can if to xspose. fora .botter p9si7 ci.ng him to pip risen, - the world him with his ob. t fall without to erefore Ile should , ity in their. , first ith, the Aletermi- , rgy,j,wtner tuau.. ! , ere the l ,l4eauin.g. has,. enabled him driVen Off, with reliance, he will e sofa a second firdsperity.' ing fife the huni to,the highest hat ;tee' ; :un the'forruer ease say ; ,, with moue fortune ,was not "selves, Might in eeable, and fond wohid. not have spoiritrnents than tut in the latter, ion is denied us. he would have 'Tire if he had. ks of difference different effects ds. - One grows consequence of subdued, and dis 4ot but , be appre- , greater-than he success as the own, superiority ) U . repeat it when more solicitous edulonsly to iin- prove, the, point and temper of hismeapons, lest a second trial might prove how little his 'former advantage was owing to himself. One leans upon his success, and securely makes it his reliance for the future; the other lonks ,upon it with diffidenCe, ani determines to support it by every addition which it is in the power of his arm to make. Indeed, the prosperity:that God affords to men-is not in to fill them with pride, and: their faculties io sleep; but to encourage exertion, to stimulate desire, ;to awaken hope,.. and gradually to, lead them forward to:the attain ment_ of yet unconceived and incomparably higher things. And the man who is not wont tnmake this use ,of the instances 'of' tsuceess with whit'''. `meet's, proves `hiingelf incapable of greatness, and wanting in .first element of solid progress in every case of honorable ambition. These, prineipiee m are. "auk* tlfft''' religion. The, folloyirog nguage,it everywhere speaks : ," Hold fast. that thou halt." " Take, fast hold of, instruction ; let 'her not go : keep , her ; for she is thy life?: When a'man is able to trace in his heart one foot-step of the`Divine presence, one emotiori, of gratitude to God, one feeble inclination ask his blessing, this is aCritical moment: if he neglect it, it were better it had not been afforded ; but if helaw learned promptly to embrace, and cheriskthese happy motions of, 'his soul,wpoing ..their stay,, and eagerly atrk yang, to set ,the stable seal Of habit them, he hes master e d the chief Secret in the art of living . for eternity. , POLIES : OF NO USE., IT cannot be' denied that the Chaplaincy, from just caiMes,'has in part fallen into dia repute', hi ,same; cases,. immoral men, de ,posed minister* and even in ordained lifeacht. ers= have, from improper' influences, been elected, :or; arbitrarilyappointed Chaplains. In order 'to remedy this great evil, and draw-back to the - usefulness of worthy, minis ters, of the Gospel serving, as. chaplains, Con gress' -at-ihe close of last ,session passed ; , Beni act, whieh makes it the duty , Of the comm!" a. 'der of, a post, to inquire into the efficiency, credentials, and moral character of all Chap lairi,s, and to muster` out of service any *liose papers, labors, or character are not satisfac? tory. As a matter .of course all good men .rejoice at this, sifting the 'chaff from the wheat, and am glad to say, it will, if faithhilly attend, ed to, re-establish the chaplaincy in the confidence and estimation of the whole, army. Nevertheless there are those in every re-. gitneiat,Who prate' aboutthe Chaplaincy, ,and with a deep sigh lament that'the GoVernment is put to se much expense every month to pay the Salaries of the chaplains. I have'taken pain's; for the last twelve months or more, to inquire into the character of `this, class of. in-. 'cliviclualSomid after strict obserffation, and particular inquiry, I am - bold in_saying that, with ,scarcely an exception,. I haire found them to be men whose- habits, occupations, business, and influence at home were, and are now diametrically opposed - tO - the religion the Bible-L-nien, who have in no .way aided to promote the moral welfare of the soldiers; who have proclaimed, that a Dian in the - army is not supposed to have a. soul:; :who on march, or after battle, have , given orders., to "let the soldiers, go, but to,gather the , horses, as it costs government ; ,moire to re place the latter than the former ;" Otters whO strike men, under their command, with sabers, and heap the most awful curses upon them, officers who defraud the government dur ing the Year, by 'drawing 'pay for horses - they have not by pominuting their• foragea nd yet 'stili'drawing the forage; by using the govern 'meat and making, their : ; official positions!the 'base of operations for self-aggrandizement, more than Would pay the salaries of 'half a dozen° haplains.. Ihave feundthem to be, men who lead lives of intemperance ' gambling,, and profligacy. Yes ! it •is becatise the faithful chaplain . standa in the Way. Of such men, as a Silent if not, a personal and•public "reprover; because he hedges up their way with moral impediments' against bringing abandoned characters. into. camp ; , because he is a restraint upon unscrupulous . sutlers,, :in their dealings`with soldiers whose wives and children, and, widowed mothers, are sue fering for the necessary comforts of life. It is, that scheme§ 'of plundering the' Govern ment,,,through quartermasters' departmentii and bakeries: capturing horses, anknillag ing private property, may not be known to others than'those interested, and thereby be come exposed. It is. beeause a... ? faithful chaplain cannot and , will netlecorne a party to, or a winker at, these gross evils in the army, he is, lOoleed' upon by - the above class as a "banger-on," and. Of 21 .° 'use 7!! This is why, at the sutler's counter, or in the, Ade room of ' his establishment, while theli.ottle passes' round, the chaplain:o- is' diaigeil ~ 1 7K and made to appear, if .pesSible, diSrepu table: • • - . A few ,days ag I over-heard. an officer discoursing. to others with a popippua air on., the, utter uselessness •of the chaplainey; and,. upon .inquiry of those who knew his autecp-, dents and his course since he came to the. ai'My I learned that his charaCter was ruined;; honie, and that only n few days before he had" stolena horie•and sold him. I visited a regiment se ime ago, and found' a chaplain, a most worthy man, aliaost heart-broken.' lie' WeS persecuted' in -the most cruel manner thy the Colonel, so litEtell so he had to leave head-quarters and' stay with a detached party elsewhere.: I felt deeply for ,him,, and wept witir,hitn, . Net long afterwards, that very Colonel was dis missed for• cowardice. Ah l the very presence. of a faithfu c ap lain, to say nothing of hiS daily . Visits to the tents of the officers and men, of his weekly and' Sabbath meetings, is a check to vice, a restraint; to imniorality, and exerts an almost irlesistible influence on 'the whole command. If • the chaplain is faithful, all will x.spect him, even shoublthey, feel,, as most, of us do, that the chaplaincy has.been dishonored by the course of many in it. " Chaplains of no use I " Who would address words of encour agement to the depressed soldier in, hie tent, pondering over the destitution of his •wife and children? Who. would 'be disposed to bring. Up before the wayward son of praying parents - and unfaithful:husband of a devoted wife, the, home left behind; with: its hallowed associations,? Who would so continually and faithfully. Minister to the . poor sick, 3704114.1, 'and4yipg soldier ? Chaplains of no . use " What I: sitSil the sordiei buried like the horse shot under him? Shall home - frietids receive no intimation of the death of the one they loved, the particulars of his sickness, and how and where he was buried ? " Take ,:away the faithful chaplain, and you take away the soldier's best friend, the officer's silent monitor, the wife's, and &flare*, and parent'sr vediator, and safe. guaid. Pray for the 'ehaplaip ! His work is.peculiarly difficult ; but in its results none more delightftd. ' • ' 'CHAPLAIN 1:1111 Pa. Vol. 'Cay. Suffolk, Va,., Nov: 6,1862. PRAY AND DO. JOITAIT AND THE MARINERS. TOSE mariners their danger cried to their'goda. Prayer is the language of nature. Men pray s , wheu 'they are dying' Danger awakensi conscience, Unth - the - soul utters its true thoughts.' Religion,is given us -,for the hour of dan ger ; , but also for all other hours. It is right to cry unto God when other helps fail, but wrong to be silent until they, fail. God is ready to bless us in extreme difficulties; but waits to bless us in prosperity. Indeed, did we 'know it, our greatest peril is in our most peaceful; our - fearless hoUr. Jonah was're ally., as safe in the jaws of the tempest, as when.he first started taxon away from God. The.greatest peril is in -sin. When the soul departs from God it matters, little where the body is. It is hablly worth the while to Shelter the outer man when the intimr mauls dead ! It was guilA that called Up this ele mental war • ' But prayer 'was, not all on that occasion. The.shipmen used the ordinary means. They lightened' the ship. Anything to save life. Throw out the wares. This is the motto of the penitent "Away with my dearest sins ! They will sink nv. I make the sacrifice, Go wealth ! go, pleasure I go fame ! go society ! go all,that would separate me from God, and lifer , But this is' humiliating to human pride. It will cling to its idols until it must let go. The first:Choice of God and heaven is often a Stern necessity. The sinner does-not-take hold of theicross, Until-the waves dash over himl;—does•not enter the ark until the roar of the deluge is in his ears and the dark wa ter& are hurling their spray at his feet ! Through appointed means salvation comps' to us. We , insult God if we pray without doing. The fact that God can, and will save shbuld stimulate our hearts the mere; and not lulfus to lazy expectations: Paul in the storm was assured by the angel of God, that all aboard - should be saved. That was abso lute certainty. God had decreed it. And vet Paul : assured the centurion. and the sol :diers that the shipmen must not leave the vessel—" Except these abide in the ship, ye cannot be, saved." They must.remain to do th6ii.a4ty.-ittAt is -oipially a' decree of God. The two' decreeS harmonize. God 'will save but you must do-what he cotnnaands—=pray, repent, use the means.- SucCess depends on the :will of God, but does not dispense with the action of, man.,--Bev. E. B. Adams. kelerticito, SUPREMACY AT ROME. THE appointment of M. Drouyn de Lhuys as the successor of M. Thouvenel is signifi cant. That gentleman was Minister. for Fo reign Affairs during the first years of the present empire, and has been a, consistent advocate of the old policy, which dates from the middle ages, that France should never al leviate Papacy to be quite independent of her, stilrlese to fall under the power of any other State: Pepin le Bref *inaugurated this po in the eighth century, when he extinguished 'the Exarchate of Ravenna, and laid the foundation of the temporal power of the Popes, and it was confirmed by Charlemagne, 'who became " the, eldest son of the Church." From his time down to the present French armies have been , continually seen in Italy, ; and it has beccmie a kind of religious belief 'in the Minds of 'the majority of Erenchmen 'that interference in Italian affairs' is their birthright... It is something 'that'" French ruler, whether Bourbon, Orleans, or Bona parte, always fancies to behing to his coun try. Even Cavaignac, the hero of the last revolution, entered upon the policy of defend ing Pope Pius, against the Italian revolution ists, and new the Etnperor, after long men tal struggles, declares that he cannot forego it. He has not forgetten Villafranca nor the conferences of Zurich. He then did his best td 'establish that curse of Italy, a confedera tion.of = States and was , deeply - mortified at theimiversal ridicule the scheme met with. The Princes whose...thrones he had guaran teed were ,sent to the right about min:in:tardy, bythe Italians, before he bed time. to inter fere their behalf. He made a show of saving Francis of Naples at Gaeta, and would' have doneit effectually bit that such an act would` hive cost him'all his influence in Italy. But aibe haS got a.hold_ on Rome, he clings to-'it with the'determination that nothing shall be wanting on his part to prevent the unification of the country. Venice is just as. far.frouLobtaiument as Rome, and, will re main so until, a favorable •concatenation of circumstances shall alter the present chances. Death May , remove the great obstructor a patriotic ope may succeed the present 'one ; a reVoliition in' Germany" may swallow up the Austrian Empire, and Italy may-then take her owne.again.. These, 'contingencies: are not Merely -possible. bitt probable, and:the Ital ians would do well to devote their 'attention now, to 'the consolidation of their present kingdom,: instead of diverting their thoughts, to Rome and Venice, and dwelling on the grievances of foreign influence and interfer- Owe. There is much' to be done in organiz ing the due administration of the various 'departments of governinent, some of which— especially the Departments of Justice And the Interior—are said to be in a deplorable state ; so much so, indeed, that it was with the utmost difficulty that any, one could be found to fill them, when the last Ministry was formed. These abuses cry aleud for reform, and the 'Roman question may -well they are rectified. IrL ten years time both Pope and Emporer may have - ceased to troll; ble the world, and it is quite possible that the great question of " Supretnacy at Rome" may, solve itself of:its own accord .in, favor of the It halts • said, end not without out reason that' the protracted solution of the Roman ques- tion—as it Cannot be hastened by any display of energy or by any bold resolution—has a tendency to Paralyze the activity of the. Ital inns' and to perpetuate - their, helplessness and desponioncy. The ,-,their, however, lies not withM',` hat .with their rulers. None of t& statesman' have dared to • lay the ieir state of affairSlefore them, or appeal;te their Sense, or call foitli their .real strength. They have trained theni to an ex.; pectant, transitional and pusillanimous poll., cy they haye.taughtthem to look to Patis, for salvation, and to submit to its statesman-, ship. WerotheEmperoT full of the evest in tentions towarde - thcm, he could not help them so king as they lean so heavily and in dolently on his suppoi.t.' ; Italy must have career arid, a life of own. So-far'as Rome is coneerned,:Shemay, perhaps,: have to 4ctin pound with France: , T6' obtain• Venice; she May, have-to - 4.49 u with Europe: :.I:*t. t . to unite, organize and. .tranquillize her own territory,. to make it thoroughly and perms-, nently her own, is a task which lies' with her self alone, in which she ought not only never to require or solicit fereign aid and interter encei but strongly 'and indignantly to reject such extraneous support. The-mere habit of `managing her 'own internal affairs will give' her :nerve 'to manage her foreign policy. AL ter all, she is at the present moment a nation of 28,000,000 souls, swhich, strongly knit to gether and Veil governed endowed as it is with the highest faculties of the mind, must in time have its *eight with the world. When. Italy shall have achieved a coniplete victory over herself, Rome and Venice will fall to her of their own accord, as something, that it may no longer be possible or worth while to withhold from her---Phi/a: N. Aniericon. OBJECTIONS TO THE DOCTRINE OF PERSEVEIMCE. The biblical objections to the perseverance of the regenerate are not of a nature to un settle the direct averments of its truth. The warnings of inspired men are always largely relied on to disprove our conclusions. Con cerning theee; it is to be said, that they are invariably hypothetical, or supposed, cases. Not' one of them asserts that an apostasy from a state of salvation ever did occur. This is their formula ; " if the righteous shall turn from his righteousness, he shall die"; .Ezk. xviii. 24 : " if, after they have escaped the pollutions of the world, they are entang led again therein and overcome ' the latter end is worse with them than thebeginning"; 2 Pet. ii. 20, 21.. Now, it is allowable, in a fair interpretation of language, to regard these and like passages as employed by way of motive to the exercise of that salutary carefulness, that individual, untiring firmness, which is the human means of final endurance, as a part of Ged's,method of keeping his chit., dren from the power of Satan. This takes as granted that the persons thus specified" are born again. ' 'But tlitif May be somewhat questionable in both of the last references. For not all who are called " righteous" in the Bible are evangelically thus ; and of those who are, it is distinctly declared, the righ teous shall hold on his way." The citation, too, from Peter, may describe nothing deeper than a reform from:heathenism to a decent, outside. Christian life.. Besides, another of these `minatory texts most relied on (Hebrews iv: 4-8) proves too much , if, which is by no means certain, even it refers to inward piety at all : for it unequivocally states that they who - fall away, as it intends, can never be re covered to repentance. Our argument does not-require of us an exegesis of this'passage. This much it evidently conveys—a fearful caution to men enjoying unusual means of grace and the special strivings of the con ,verting Spirit, that, if they resist and fall back into a careless life, their hearts will grow hard beyond all further agencies of renewal ; a, thing not altogether unknown among our selves. ,But if the apostle does refer to per sons in a state of salvation, then: we maintain it to be another instance of hypothetical ad monition put in the most forcible terms. And if it be replied, that, to suppose a cage which never will occur is beneath the .dignity and wisdom of God's revelation;ve answer • not so, if the prevention decurrencelnges morally and volnntarily 'on the restraining power, among other spiritual forces; "of" just such cautions as these. We answer again, not so; for the Bible does adduce supposed cases which are equally unsupposable as the loss of a regenerate- soul. Here is one " But though . an angel from heaven preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed"; Gal. ;—a Opposition ; to say the least, as violent as any which we find in these threatenings concerning a Christian's apostaay from holiness. The expression in Galatians- 7 " ye are fal len.from grace" 7 -has done as much as any one thing to popularise , the dogma which we oppose : but it has no connection whatever with the subject, as the slighest glance at the context (ch. v. 1-4) determines. The reason ing .'of the apostle is this :—if, abandoning Christianity as'a system of salvation, ye will be justified by a legal obedience, thus going back for your ground of hope from Christ to , Moses frem Calvary Sinai;, ye, by, that !act of repudiation, exclude Yuirßelvs from Gespel mercy and,redemption ; ye are sons [ of Abraham according to the flesh, not ,ae cording to the election Bo ston grace.—oston Review. nom ON 1111 r MINISTRY. It would be difficult:to find in the writings of any ago, even in the pages of'Raxter's "'Reformed. Pastor," a lofter standard of pastoral diity, or more thrilling appeals for its faithful discharge, han are to be found scattered here .and there through Alcuiri's letters. He seems to write with eternity in full view ,before him. He describes the pas tor as the watchman on the walls, who is to sound:the alarm, that blood. of souls may not be required at his hands. .13. e is to be, moreover, the light of the world, the salt of the earth, a candle set upon a candlestick. He is, to, be stainless in life and guileless in heart, an example to the, flock, and a teacher of all. ITo vice, no worldly ambition, no passionate indulgence, must stain the'sanctity ofhis character, or expose his official standing to reproach. When the Archbishop of Can terbury, for fear of personal danger, desert ed his post, Alcuin exhorted him to return, and in view of the sin that had,been committ ed both by the people and the clergy, he ad vised aisolenin fast should be appointed and faithfully observed.--Pree: Quay R6ieto.' ►le: No. 862,