Vol. VII, No. 36:---Whole No. 348. Tutu. Christ Washing the Disciples' Feet. BY REV. G. W. BETEUNE, D. D. O blessed Jesus, when I see thee bending, Girt as a servant, at thy servants' feet ; Love, lowliness, and might, in zeal all blending, To wash their dust away, and make thenr meet To share thy feast—l know not to adore, Whether thy humbleness M. glory more. Conscious thou. art of that dread hour impend. ing, When thou must hang in anguish on the tree; Yet, as in the beginning, to the ending Of thy sad life, thine own are dear to thee; And thou 'wilt prove to them ere thou dosk part, The untold love which fills thy faithful heart. The day, top, is at hand, when, far ascending, Thy human brow the crown of God shall wear; Ten thousand saints and radiant ones attending, To do thy will and bow in homag e there ; But thou dost pledge to guard thy. Church from Or bless with good, thyself a servant still. Meek Jesus I to my soul thy Spirit lending, Teach me to live, like thee. is lowly love; With humble service all thy saints befriending, Until I serve before thy throne above ; Yes, serving e'en my foes, for thou didst seek The feet of Judas inArservice meek. Daily, my pilgrimage as homeward wending, My weary way, and sadly stained with sin, Daily do thou, thy precious grace expending, Wash me all clean without, and clean within, And make me fit to have a part with thee And thine, at last, in heaven's festivity. O blessed name of EIRIVANT *comprehending Man's highest honor in his humblest name, Fur thou, God's Christ, that office recommend- mg, The throne of mighty power didst truly claim; He who would rise like thee, like thee must owe His highest 'glory to his atooping low. N4itoviaL ARMING THE NEGROES. FEW things have seemed to us in every way more incongruous at the present time, than the proposal to enter seriously upon the work of colonizing the colored population of our country, It would be a most serious enter prise, even in time of peace, worthy to en gage all the attention of our statesmen, phi anthropists, and financiers ; and when we talready have a question of absorbing and supreme interest on our hands, it is a piece of e impertinenoe to attempt to thrust another of similar character upon us. Besides this, while war is wasting away our laboring pop talation, in one section, and of one race, it would be little less than suicidal to - accelerate the destructive process by the voluntary de portation of hundreds of thousands of labor ers, because they happen to be of another race and chiefly in another section. Nay, more than all, it is these very Africans who might long ago have been turned to the great est account in carrying on the war, who would have proved an element of peculiar , and ter rible efficiency in military operations, and who are more directly and deeply interested in the war than any other separate class in the community. To talk of sending them out of the country while the war is raging, instead of taking the most vigorous and deci sive measures to enlist them in it, would be. to ignore one of the chief elements in the meaning of the struggle. The whole course of events has cried out: Don't colonize, but arm ! " Congress has fully authorized such a poli cy, and nothing has been wanting, to reap its good effects, but the hearty and vigorous consent of the Executive. At length, this seems to have been given, and Adjutant- General Thomas has been sent to the South west to carry out all the necessary measures. His address to the soldiers at. Lake Provi dence, La., three weeks ago, is evidence of the most satisfactory sort, that the President has fully determined upon developing to the utmost the resources to be found in the col ored population of the revolted districts. We quote from the address : I came from Washington clothed with the fullest power in this matter. With thispower, I can act as if the President of the United States were him self present. I am directed to refer nothing to Washington, but to act promptly—what I have to do, to do at once,---to strike down the unworthy and to elevate , the deserving. . . . I know this whole region well. I am a Southern man, and if you will, born with Southern prejudices; but I am free to say that the policy I an now to announce to you\l indorse With my whole heart. You know full well —for you have been over this country—that the rebels have seat into the field all their available fighting men ; every man capable of bearing arms, and you know they have kept at 'home all their slaves for the raising of subsistence for their armies in the field. In this way they can bring to bear against us all the strength of their so called Confederate States, while we at the North can only send a portion of our fighting force, being compelled to leave behind another portion to cultivate oar fields and supply the wants of an immense army. The Administra tion has determined to take from the rebels this source of supply—to take their negroes and compel them to send back a portion of their whites to cul• tivate their deserted plantations, and. very poor persons they would be to fill the-place of the dark hued laborer. They must do this, or their armies will starve. . . . You know that vast numbers of these slaves are within your borders, inside the lines of this army. They come into your camps and you cannot but receive them. The authorities in Wash ington are very much pained to hear, and I Tear with truth in many oases, that some of these poor unfortunates have, on different occasions, been turned away from us e and their applications for ad mission within our lines, have been refused by our officers and soldiers. This is not the way to use freemen. . . . They are to be encouraged to come to us, They are , to be received with open arms; they are to be fed and clothed; they are to be armed. This is the policy that has been fully determined upon, I am here to sav that I am authorized to raise as many regiments of blacks as I can. I am authorized to give commissious, from the, highest to the lowest and 'I desire those persons who are ear nest in this work, to take hold of it. I desire only those whose hearts are in it, and to them alone will I give commissions. . . . While I am authorized thus, in the nettle of the Secretary of War, I have the fullest authority to dismiss from the army any man, be his rank what it may, whom I find mal treating the freedmen.' This part of my duty I will most assuredly perform, if any case comes before me. . . . I would like to raise on this river twenty regiments, at - least, before I go back. I shall take all the women and children, and all the men unfit for our military organizations' and place them on these plantations ; then take these regiments and put them in the rear. They will guard the rear effectively. Knowing the country well i and familiar with all the roads and swamps, they will be able to track out the accursed guerrillas hnd ran them from :the land. When I regiments raised you may sweep oat into the interi or with impunity. Recollect, for every regiment of blacks I raise, I raise a regiment of whites to face the foe in the field. This, fellow-soldiers, is the determined policy of the Administration. You all know full well, when the President of the United States, though said to be slow in coming to a deter mination, when he once puts his foot down it is there, and he is not going to take it up. He has put his foot down : I am here to assure you that my official influence shall be given that he shall not raise it. ovrtoponietta, THE AFRICAN RACE IN THE LIGUT OF HISTORY. BY REV. E. E. ADAMS The nations of the East which, ages ago, were in the enjoyment of a high civilization are now degenerate,—The Hebrews, Egyp tians, Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, and among them also the Ethiopians. All departed from God and lost their best life. We have to do now with Africa, and the cruel prejudice, existing as a national sin, against the color ed race. This prejudice is not primarily against color but against condition. Were the condition reversed the feeling would be reversed. Such is human nature that the Caucasian would bow to the Ethiopian to-day, were the latter, I will not say more intelli gent but the more wealthy and powerful. It is often stated that the African has not had a history. This is a mistake. Those who would divest him of his humanity, and rank him with things and brutes, are not only un christian but ignorant. Every scholar knows that Africa has not presented from the be ginning only a dead levet.of barbarism, We give you the' testimony of historians and scholars:fro* tl4time of the Greek, Heroda-. tus, the it sties Tacitus and Pliny, downvto the present time, embracing that of Hereen, Champollion, Lander,, Hornemann;, ~Lyou, Mingo Park, Burkhardt, Moffatt, and Liv ingstone. Accordingidthese men, and other. Physiologists, some of the Negro tribe are white, some yellow, others reddish brown, and others still intensest black. They in habit what was Ethiopia extending through Central Africa from the coast of Congo to the marts of Ophir; where the ships of Solomon traded for gold. This region (especially the oases) is inha bited by the Tuaricks of whom Lyon says, " they are the finest race I ever saw, tall straight and handsome with a certain air of ipdependence and pride which is very im pbeing." Father east between the Sahara and the Lybian deserts is a nation called Tib boas. Their color is of , the darkest black. They have aquiline noses, fine teeth, and lips forthed like those of Europans. Along the upper valleys of the Nile are the people of Nubia, once hardy and independent, and able' to cope with Egypt. Burkhardt says they " were a handsome race" their features noble and , their-faces Grecian: These-negroes - all speak_ the ..same language, a dialect of original African. Homer speaks of these Ethiopians. In the first Book of the Iliad is this allusion.: "Achilles implores his mother, a goddess, to intercede for him. She consents, but adds that the intercession must be delayed twelve days, for. Yesterday Jupiter went to the feast among the blameless'Ethiopians, away upon the limits of the ocean, and all the gods followed him.' The Jewish literature, and Scriptures allude often to this people as among "the best, of men," as "men, of strength," as "bearing the shield," as "having vast armies and many chariots." Isa. xlv. Jer. xlvi. I Chron. xiv ; xvi. Josephus also says they overran Egypt, and, conquered all her cities. Hero dotus testifies that the inhabitants of Ethio pia " are remarkable for their size, their beauty and , long life." He relates that when Cambyses, the Persian King, had made war upon Egypt and subdued it, his ambition urged him to invade Ethiopia. But before entering it, he sent spies under the friendly guise of ambassadors, who carried costly pre sents to the black prince. They arrive at the court, the prince sees their designs, and takes down a bow of such enormous size that no Persian could bend it. " Give your king this bow in my name," saline, " and speak to him thus from me : The . King of Ethiopia sends his counsel 'to the King of Persia. When his subjects shall be able to bend thi: bow with the same ease that I do, then le him venture to attack the long-lived Ethio piens. Meanwhile, let him thank. the gods that we are not inspired with the same love of conquest as himself." The Macrobians were once a 'powerful tribe. Travelers as cending the Nile,, have discovered obelisks, columns, statues, and paintings, which repre sent the color and the curled hair of that race; and ruins of temples so vast and abun dant, that the region has received the name of the " Church-yard of Pyramids." Thebes was an Ethiopian city, and Meroe, which the Egyptians regarded as the cradle of their arts and refinement. Thus we find that Egypt derived some of its elements of civilization frozn_Ethiopia ; Greece some of its refine ment and .art from `Egypt; ; and Rome the same from Greece ; and modern Europe the same from Rome. Some not all. Pliny tells us that Meroe was the capital of a kingdom which. in the time of the Trojan war, had 250,000 soldiers, and 400,000 artificers ! One delightful feature of the purely Afri can races is their song. At evening time, all the land from Congo to Ophir, is vocal with music. It is rude but often rapturous, a perfect out-break •of passion; sometimes tender and plantive expressing filial affec tion, and, in the language of Mungo Park, "bursting sensibilities.' One of their songs is about the white man.— "The poor white man, Faint and weary, Came and sat under our tree." This song melts the travellers heart.• The Caucasian race is distinguished above the negro for clear cold intellect, but the latter excels in sentiment, in emotion; and often rises to the type of the European in eloquence and in power of thought. Even to this day in portions of Africa, the ancient glory of the race reappears. We ask if the Anglo-Saxon, the Chrjstian whit man may scorn the African? We ask if there is room for any boasting of our ances try, who in the days of Tacitus and Omar dvyielt in the German forests, drank the blood of their captives from human skulls and poured offerings to their "grim and gory idols." Let the negro rise if he will. Let hhn trust God and believe in his destiny. Let us measure men by their hearts, as well 9 • P SPAY, MAY 7, 1863. as. heads and pockets.! We are safe when we judge - by the standard of Heaven. Give every man the place for which he is fitted, in trade, in position, in the cars, and in the Church of God. The distance between me and the lowest on the footstool is nothing to the distance between my LORD and me! gtitttiono. 11 Rll al) 13 al ill, lila 3fi 01 Cil 3ko) A WE may theorize and, philosophize upon revivals for years; but a minister will learn more on the subject in one week, when the Gospel is-taking effect upon sinners, produ cing its distinct and positive results in their conversion, than he could by many years of mere theorizing. We may say of a certain kind of revival speculations, what a writer remarked re specting a review when compared with the actual scenes peculiar to the real battle -field : "It has been truly said that nothing is so unlike a battle as a review." " The art of war," says another, "is one of those sci ences which no theory or application of fixed and established rules can possibly teach ; it is one thinglto write from experience oPthe past, and another to acquire a facility for directing, operations by a servile adherence to the maxims of others," I have known \places, however, where they had no revival ; but on account of a revival at a distance; given by an intelligent observer, who was engaged in it himself; hat' there produced the most salutary effects. Indeed;.. this may in part account for-the prevalence of revivals. Popular periodicals have what they term the " Revival Depart ment." These papers circulate , through all the cities, towns, and villages of the nation, • It is seldom any of them appear without a accriat of six, seven; or a dozen revivals { , the . instruMentaliy which God has "been pleased to acknowledge and honor, with most of the remarkable peculiarities of each.; are there stated, and read by many hundreds of thousands. The.population of the CQUII try is ' thn,s made familiar with, revivals, Such descriptions fan the revival, flame in the hearts of ministers and people. A re vival which has occurred, or is going for ward, in such a place, becomes the •theme of general conversation. Often the effects are thrilling and powerful beyond description. An entire . church will be, thrown into a state of sanctified excitement after reading or hearing the account of a revival in some city or town with which they are acquainted. " The revival in " " is talked of in the counting-house, work-shop, parlor and kitch en ; and why should it not be ? Is it not a •mighty and glorious event, before which the interests of science, commerce and politics should disappear, as stars sun_before the SU arising iri - glory-I - If is. then that the inquiry goes forth with emphatic meaning : Why may not we have a' revival, as well as the people of such a place ? Why may not we use the means which they used ? Is God any more a respecter' of places than of per sons ? Frequently such revival news prodiices great " searchmgs of heart, both among pastor and people. It is impossible now to persuade each other that they are doing as well as they might, or equally well with other parts of the church.. They now know to the contrary, and facts cannot be put down, nor conversation hushed. Fine prea ching, learned and eloquent preaching, will not satisfy the church. The people of God ask for effects; they inquire after results. There is deep humiliation in certain quar ters; and a provoking to love and good works ; nor will they rest satisfied Mill their ministry and town are blessed with a similar outpouring of the Holy Spirit. In the course of a few months their prayers are, answered; their ministers preach as they never did before ; sinners are broken down and 'are turning to God on every hand ; so that their town appears, in its turn, in the Revival Department, with all the circumstances of a gracious visitation; and similar effects are produced upon other declining churches. ROW TO CURB DOUBT. We counsel the &Ater not to think- so muchas to work—to act on the basis of Scripture doctrine, even if it appear illogi cal so to do,before the premises of his belief are settled. In a condition of intellectual uncertainty that can find no present relief, logical fairness will sorely admit, as well as common sense dictate, the adoption of that question which secures the greatest, in this case, only positive practical benefit. One who has been no unmoved or incurious spec tator of the mental struggles of others, says Of moral, what - we may here also apply to in telleetual perplexity : " Let him who gropes painfully in darkness or uncertain light, and prays vehemently that the dawn may ripen into day, lay this precept well to heart, which to me was of invaluable service : Do the duty which lies nearest thee which thou knowest to be a duty. Thy second duty will already have become clearer." By the unvarying direction of the mind to some special interest, either temporal or spiritual, it becomes incapable of rightly esti mating and measuring other equally impor tant, though, perhaps, less imperative claims; as the eye, long adjusted to a close focus, be holds in the distance only undefined forms. It is a uniform law, that all our physical and moral powed must find their proportionate action, else imperfect development will en sue. If contemplation is made the chief busi ness of life, its power will become impaired, or, we might say, destroyed, so far as any resulting usefulness is concerned. "Every study," says a writer who was as accomplish ed in hie scholarship as he was earnest and successful in his more active life work, " re quires to be tempered and balanced with something out of itself, if it be only to pre vent the mind from becoming one-sided or pedantic ' • and ascending higher still, all in tellectual study, however comprehensive, re quires spiritual study to be joined with it, lest our nature itself become one-sided,---the intellect governing the higher reason, the' moral and'spiritual wisdom stunted and de-, saying." If, then, there is a morbid undue action of mind in relation to objects of reli gious apprehension, the dictate no less of philosophy than a common sense is to restore a healthful condition by rest as to ,one set, of agencies and exercise as to another. Study, then, the Scripture, you who are in a state of religious doubt, less to ascertain precisely what you are to believe and how you are to hold doctrines susceptible of vari- OUS• interpretations, than to find in .what manner, supposing the authority of its teach ings undisputed, you are to conduct yourself in reference to them'. From the continual watching, of your mind, the observation of its capability on the one side and inability on the other, turn your attention to the world around you, of which you form but, a frac tional portion. Put it'to yourself if, what ever you believe, or however those great questions are to be settled, you 'Will ever stand gazing at what You cannot see; `unero.= ployed and useless where there is so much actual and urgent demand for your exertions. Say, not you cannot find an object adequate to engage or,worthy toixetain. lour attentinn and interest. There i tae 'conceivable con dition in which you can l be utterly bereft Of the power of benefiting iothers. The mode may be indirect, the 'result postponed or un certain, the work itself 'very small,—the cup of cold water only ; but this scantiness of tangible result is nothing, so far as the inward principle is concerned,, and is everything, reckoned by that balance in which the widow's mite outweighed the largest unloving, easily spared offering of the proud and self-righte ous. It is to carry yon,out of self and con duct you to Him, that 'those commandments were given which refer it , 6 God. It is no less to carry. you out of *selfP as well as to secure the general good, that those commandments were given which refer I to man. Then are yp#, ! spiritually most secure, then ;are you most heavenly-minded, most like the,Sayiour whom you seek to iinitge, when, 'directing Eng efforts primarily to the obedienee of his urecepti, and' not to the direct conflict with: nbelieving thoughtS, you, "feed Ms flock," and " follow him whithysoever he goeth ;" whigterso,ever,—iir, ;vqh.ittn;vei. - condition and duty,—h,e !teachings, Ms , Spirit, may you conduct', You m'a,y not 'be able, like Howard or Elizal)eth Fry, or like ano ther, in 'our own, time and country, not, per haps, surpassed by then) in self-denying labor aid constraining_ love for the souls` of the sinful and suffering;,, to visit the prisoner; or relieve in person the wets of the hungry, the naked, and the sick., But in yoUr own home, in your neighborhood, as you walk the street or travel for business or pleasure, as you enter the humble habitation of the poor or the surely more destitute mansion of the rich, if among its treasures and adorn ings it lack the "pearl of great price," there must be some occasion for deeds of love, some, burden you can bear, some claim upon your head' or appeal to yOur beart.--.Forrna,- tion, of Be/ief. THE PROTESTANTS AV_ _ROWE TO TDElErljtitliafiN ENGLAND, We have been amazed days The Evaugelist at the course of the British Protestants towards this country since the beginning of our civil war. They, who were the most vehement in their denunciations of American Slavery, who could hardly suffer a clergyraan from the United States to pass through England without reproaching him for the existence of such a blot upon the fair name of his coun try, have now turned against us ; and , since the commencement of this great struggle, have been cold and indifferent to those who were fighting the battle of human liberty, and have given their sympathies io those who were impiously seeking to found an em pire having slavery as its chief corner stone. On such a spectacle we forbear to :comment. Any free-souled Englishman must think of it only with sorrow and shame. In ,noble contrast with this base desertion of principle has been the. course of the Pro testants of France. , Ourb6st defenders have been Frenchmen. Gasparin, Cochin—a Ro man Catholic, but a true >liberal—and Pas tors Frederic Monod and Fisch, who have been in this country, have steadily upheld our cause. Their last proof of friendship was to address .a Letter to the Protestants of Great Britain, gently expostulating with them as to their unfraternal attitude towards America. This letter is so kind in spirit, and yet so decided in tone, that we cannot forbear to quote it entire. The Protestants of France are divided into theological sects, but all join in this letter. The venerable Frederic Monod signs the same document with the eloquent •but Rationalistic. Coquerel ; memb(rs of the. National Church, both. Or thodox and Liberal,; Lutherans, lethodists and Baptists, all join in this appeal for Free dom and for America. May their voices not be unheeded ! PARIS March 12th, 1863. Honored and Beloved Brethren in the Lord:—lt is the glory of. England to hive given to the world the example of abolishing first the slave trade and then slavery. It 'is her glory to have continued for the last sixty years the work of supressing universally the the slave trade and slavery, at the cost, it is asserted, of fifty millions of pounds sterling, and, it is under God chiefly to, her religious men, to her Clarksons, her Wilberforces, her Buxtons, to her missionary sooieties, that England owes this glory. Will not the sons and successors of these great Christians complete their work by urg ing their country to declare itself openly for the holy cause of the liberation of the slaves in the terrible struggle which is at present convulsing the United States of America? No more revolting spectacle has ever been before the civilized world than a Confedeiacy consisting mainly of Protestants, forming itself, and demanding independence in' the nineteenth century of the Christian era, with a professed design of maintaining and pro pagating shivery; .a Confederacy which lays ,down as thern coer-Sw aa Constitution, the system of slavery as it exists at present in the Southern States; a system which may be defined briefly as the_right,ito treat men like cattle, and to commit adultery and murder with impunity. Setting aside all political considerations, can any Christian heart, fail to be stirred to indignation at hearing the chief of that Confederacy answering a decree of emancipation by an implied threat of ex termination The triumph of such a cause would put back the progress of Christian civilization and of.humanity a whole century. It would make angels weep in heaven and demons re joice in hell. It would, enable the friends of the slave trade and of slavery in, all lands to hold up their heads, ever ready as they are to reappear at the first signal, in Asia, in Africa, and even in the great cities of Europe. It'would give a fatal blow to the work of evangelical missions, and what frightful re sponsibility would rest on the, Church which should remain the silent spectator of such a triumph , , • If there is a peaceable means of hastening. the end of the war and of rendering its, issue such as is, desired by all the friends. of u manity, ought not the sincere Christians of Europe to give to the cause of emancipation a powerful testimony which would leave to those who fight for the right -of oppressing. the slaves no hope of ever seeing those Christians give them the hand of fellowship ? Ministers and pastors of all the evangeli cal denominations , of England, Ireland, and Scotland, it is here we need your assistance. Take the lead and let us call forth a great and, powerful manifestation of sympathyfor the 'colored race id Ling oppressed and de baSed by Christian nations. Let us strength en and' encourage those who wish to abolish slavery, at the same time disposing them to listen to our suggestions. It. is in free Eng land that such manifestations can be power ful. What, may we not hope for if through out Great Britain the voice of all the minis ters of the crucified Saviour,, and in. France our voice echoing`theirs, pray and plead that soon there may no longer be in the United" States a colored man that is not free and equal with the whites'. May God grant it, and may his blessing rest alike on Great Britain and the United States in. Christ, the true liberator. Sign.Adup to this day by six hundred and o:ghty-mne pastors in France, as attested by Grandperre., by William and Frederic Ma ,. ned, and others in Paris. PRACTICAL INFIDELITY. . I,• carkunderstand ; _that very, ignorant At, r heistsshould be. heppless regarding . • this war. peopie Who have a knowledge of ; this world's history on the one side; or of God on ' the other, are without excuse. True leaders may be incompetent, generals may' blunder, avarice, - jealousy, 'greed, and all manlier of 'selfishness, •May seem to push our cause on to certain shipwreck ;:but do you suppose that the Lord God Almighty is going to be stopped in his course by the non-arrival of a pontoon bridge ? lam astonished at the amount of practical, infidehty developed among Christians. From , the manner in which many talk and lOok, it would seem as if God was not in all 'their thoughts. No body expects time-servers to look higher ' than Tammany for, machinery and _results ; but the people who profess to .worship God,; the Father, _Almighty, Maker of heaven and' earth, might be expected to possess their souls in patience. It seems to us that' the , God whom many Of us worship is after our own`tmage'i likenesa—a God . s'nfficient in peace, while everything goes smoothly, but rather taken aback by a sudden outburst of war—a God adequate to the government Of the world in ordinary times, but quite out of his reckoning in these tumultuous days. .1 We.< can, trust him to give us day by day our daily, bread, but we have not the least confidence in his ability to cope with Stonewall Jackson and Gen.. Lee. I know that . God works, by, means, and if Gen. Burnside should say, "God will take care, of his-muse," and should therefore not poet pickets, or watch the ene ray, lt - e - would deny the-faith, and be worse than an infidel.; or if we should say it, and therefore cease to' pray, and to work, in. every possible way for the cause, we should be the same ; but I, and most of those who read,, this paper, have no more influence over the, management of troops at Vicksburg, the dis position of forces in Virginia, the furnishing of plans or material anywhere, than Daniel had over the lions. We have the same' call for trust in God that he had. Things 11711- doubtedly looked very dark when the Israel ites.stood fronting the sea, with the Egyptian cavalry s hard after them; but the sea return, ed and covered both chariots and horsemen ; Things must have looked dark to the Jews when the Assyrian host sat down before their city, but'in the morning they were all dead corpses. , Those were Bible times, miracle times ; but is the Lord's arm. shortened that He cannot save, or his ear heavy that he cannot hear?:True, we cannot be sure that He is on our side, but we can at least be sure, that, we are on His. We talk of our country,. and it is ours—just as' Paul's house was his. The,earth is the Lord's, and the fullness thereof. This country belongs to Godf. It was His when a forgotten pbople held it—His' when it passed into the hands ofthe Indians His when our fathers dwelt here, and His to-' day. If the Lord. can afford to •let it go; rather think we can. If his cause can lie better served by,giving it over a .while to dead: men's bones and all uncleanness, it shall, he given. Possibly, God sees that the only way by which we will be led to the truth is a reductio ad absurdum. He will let us have another pull at slavery, selfishness and wick ed prosperity, or perhaps det,us try anarchy, and division, arid humiliation a while, till we shall be ready to return to Him. I hope not. We ought to strive that it may not be neces sary. I only say that if worse comes to worst, we should not put on mourning, as if the earth were.orphaned of its Maker.--Gag Hamilton. • n COME, OR tOll MUST 'PERISH. f` Neither is there salvation in any other ; for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby"we must be saved."'-- 2 '.:A.OTS iv. 12. No one can meet your case but Jesis. who made must save, and -as all things were made by him,rso all who are saved must , be saved by !dia. .The watchmaker must re-, pair the watch. The sculptbr must repair the statue. 'lle painter, must restore ,the picture. 'So Jesus must save the soul. This, is "the work" the Father has given him 'to do,—to "'bind'up thee broken-hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to :.those that are bound." His blood alone can cleanse. His righteousness alone can justify.' His Spirit alone can sanctify. His word alone can direct. Jesus can save any one, but out of Jesus there is 'salvation for no one. Reject his atonement, and there remaineth no more sacrifice for•sin.. Resisthis 'Spirit, land there is, no purification for thy depraved nature.; You are shut up, to Jesus. He can save, and he alone. Out of Christ, all is danger. He. is the one ark amidst the deluge. He is the only city of refuge, where the manslayer is safe. He is the only house where the weary soul will find rest. All out of the ark of Noah perished in the waters of the flood ; so all out of Christ will be punished with everlasting destruction from the pre.sence of the Lord, and the glory, of his power. Come, oh, come then, to Jesus! lie will receive and shelter you. He will protect and preserve , you. He " save and lift you up forever.' Receive not Christ, and you' are ruined to all , eternity. "He that - believeth not the Sett shall not see life,." but the wrath of God abideth,on, him." The wrath of God I The wrath of God abiding on, the soul.! What, oh, what ;can this be ? PLAIN ,PREAORING. The, late Ebev. Dr., C. Evans of Bristol, having once to travel from home, wrote to a congregation to, say that lie should have occa sion to stay a, night in their village, and that if it were agreeable to them, he would give them a sermon. The poor people hesitated for some time, but at length permitted him to preach. After sermon he found them in a happier mood than when he first came among- them, and could, not forbear inquiring into the rea son of " Why, sir, to tell you the truth," said one of them,'" knowing that you were a very learned man, and that you were a teacher of young ministers, we were much afraid we could not understand you; but you have, been quite as plain as any minister we ever hear. , " Ay, ay," the doctor replied,- " you,.certainly mispderstood the nature of learning, my friend; its design is to make things so:plain that, they cannot be misunder stOod.7:: ,Similar was the - vie* of Archbishop LeightOn, 'who says, in one 'of his charges to his cleigt: " How much_ 'yearning, my bre thren,-is • required to make these things ANOTHER VOICE FROM ENGLAND. Another portion of the English conamunity, says the Philadelphia North, American, which has seemed to be unfriendly to us gives evi dence here and there of a change of feeling —we mean the clergy of the Church.of Eng land. Mr: Bernard, Professor of Interna tional Law at Oxford; who, though a layman, holds, a sort of ecclesiastical position, being assessor of the Vice Chancellor's Court, has taken strong ground against the government iri the matter of the Alabama. More than this, the Oxford lJnion, theleading club . 'or society in connection with the= University, decided recently, after a lengthened debate, that, ‘fthn moral support given by England to the southern confederacy was a disgrace to the nation." But as, evidence of a begining, at least of friendly feeling. among the clergy proper, we cite the following communication, which we find in the .London Guardian, of April Bth, the writer of which we take to be a son'of Dr. Arnold; • NORTH AND SOUTH. Sir : I hope you, will, by the insertion of thiS letter let your readers in the northern States of :America see that all at least `of the English clergy do not sympathize with the south. I confess, indeed, that itis to me a painful reflection that, :whether on , the platform or in, the press, -there has been so little express sion of sympathy on the part of the clergy with the cause of the north. It was a saying I believe of the great Na poleon, ,that it was impossible to say what, view would be' taken in England of any great public event, because so many perso nal and party considerations came in there to modify 'publie opinion; and certain it is that; whether owing to our aristocratic dis like to the Yankees and their democracy, or our - jealousy of, their rising wealth and power, the public opinion in Figland a.mong the, uppe,r classes is less liberal and more violently opposed to all their former profes sions than that ofany nation on the Conti nent.' I am not going to . deny that there are many peculiarities of manner in the Ameri cans which make them often personally disa greeable, nor that they have as a nation shown touchy irritable sensitiveness in their foreign relations with this country which has made their conduct often overbearing and offensive. These are the characteristics of a young na tion whoie head'his been turned by prosper ity, and which is being constantly recruited by noisy and diScontented immigrants from the old world: For the sake 'indeed, of America herself, , I do not altogether regret this war. She needed the fiery furnace of adversity to sober and purify her character, and get rid of ,some of that frantic bombast and "bunkum" which seems ready to dare Heaven itself, and whiph must always pro voke from older and more cultivated nations that quiet ridicule which the Americans find so hard to bear. But an unprejudiced thinker will not allow these personal considerations to affect his estimate of, a war with the merits of which theyla,ve nothing to do. For what are the, merits of the present straggle ? They are briefly and incontestably these The election of Mr. Lincoln as President set a limit tb the extension of slavery. If this litnit'was 'acquiesced in on the part of the, sonth, it was clear that the constantly increasing wealth and population of the north must swamp the.political power of the south, and in the end snuff out the domestic ifisti tution." So the south 'revolted against the north, and the war began. Those who pre tend that the war was caused by questions of trade and trallicknovitoore than, the anthill's of the war Themselves, for thesouthern lea dera,und newspapers have never for a mom ent concealed that slavery was the •one great question, at stake. Let us observe that the election of Mr. Lincoln was no coup ,d'etat, but in a.ccorffancei with the ~ordinary. nary. laws of the Constitution and The will of the majority. The morst part of the conduct of the south, in a philosophical view, is. that it is subversive of all law`and govermient - that without any grievance except that their own selfish inter ests were touched by the legitimate action of the' Constitution' which they themselves had' helped to establish, they broke through all the restraints of law, and 'determined .to abolish the whole. fabric of the Union. It is, as.. if Parliament were to enact, some scheme of organized mingration for the Lancashire pp.. eratives, and the mill owners and manufac turers Were at once to rise in rebellion. GE.NESEE EVINGELIST.:-. 2 Whole No. 885. But it is often said, even by professed libe rals in England—whatever may have-been the cause of the war, when*the north saw that the south Was resolved upon separation ;it should have let them go. 1V : ell, sir, it, is not so easy yet to form a correct judgment on this matter. It is quite.possible that the north may yet be victorious, and that the Union mayhe cemented again; though' under different, amid course for tho time disadvan— tageous, conditions, as regards the sinith. But` whether tas may, happen or not 'it ap pears a pr'iorr, to be 'the bounden 'day . of every govern*ent to uphold its anthority when it is illegally attacked, whether by a handfnl of rioters in. the streeter by a league Of revolted States ; and we at, least, who have held Gibraltar, and, are prepared still to hold it in defiance of 'the.' Spanishmation, upon , / 'whose soil it stands, who have fought for the possession of India, and are prepared to fight for it against all its native princes and popu lations, can hardly blame the United States for not quietly allowing their territory to be dismembered by default—a territory, be it remembered, compact and undivided by sea, lakes, or chains of mountains—for not con senting ,to lose all access to the Gulf of Mexico, and the command of all the great river system of the northern continent. I• do not, therefore, for a moment admit that the north ought to have let the southern States, depart peaceably ; but granting, for the sake of ,argnment, that the north was wrong in accepting this war, „still our sym pathies cannot be with the south, if we ask ourselves why they wished to be free and separate from the Union ; for it was not that they might, as has sometimes been the case -with rebellious citizens, free themselves from arbitrary tyranny and oppression, but in order that slavery, which they knew to be doomed by the growing feeling of the mass of their countrymen, might still flourish in their own States unrestrained and uncontrolled. I will, with your permission, return once more to this subject in a second letter. FOREIGN SEMIKIRY. - GREAT BRITAIN.--Midnight meeting move ment. —The third annual meeting of the friends of this important effort in London, was held April 7th. It appeared from the re port and statements made that nearly 1,200 fallen women had been rescued since the commencement of the experiment, and after pa'ssing a sufficient time in homes and refuges, had been restored to their friends, recommen ded to situations, or honorably married, while many'of them have given evidence of having experienced the power of that Divine "which only the grace of God can effect. The general.: summary showed that 33 meetings had been held, at which 7,500 unfortunate females had heard the Gospel, 50,000 Scrip ture, cards, books, and tracts circulated, and 500 poor girls rescued. During the past year eight meetings had been held, attended by nearly 1,500 persons, and 75 had been rescued from a life of sin. There are 13 homes in connection with the mission. The income for the year was £1,124. We have recently noticed the efforts of the Presbyterians of Belfast to meet the 4dritual wants of the growing population. It now appears in the Established Churches there is only room for one-fourth of the Epis copal population, which is now 30,000, while . the number of clergymen ministering to them is only 15. A local paper states that efforts are - being made to provide better church ac commodation. The Ecclesiastical Commis sioners, in answer to a memorial from the inhabitants, have undertaken to build one church in Belfast this year, the cost of which will, be.not less than 1,0001.; and they are not only willing but anxious to erect four similar churches—one in each succeeding year— provided anAndowment of not less than 751, a year is secured for each. In consequence of this response, a society has been establish ed to raise the necessary endowments, and to still further increase the church accommoda tion of the town. MISSIONARY.--Ceylon.—in 1518 the Por tuguese took possession of the coast ; in 1640; the Dutch;; and in 1795, the English ; and in 1815 y the entire island was ceded to the British crown. The religious influence ex ercised by the first conquerors has been great and abiding. There are, districts that are almost entirely Romanist,; there are two resident bishops ; nearly fifty priests ; and churches of imposing appeara.nce abound a long nearly the whole of the inhabited sea board. By marriages especially, and other secular causes, Popery is fast spreading among the people. - z-:----ifissionary to India.—The United Presbyterian congregation of Brough ton Place, Edinburgh, (Rev. Dr. Thompson's) at a meeting, unanimously agreed to send out and support, a missionary in India, at a salary of 3001. per annum. This congrega tion has long maintained a mission in Jamaica, which has now become almost self-supporting.. They also support a missionary in Old Cala bar.—Ohina. —The Bishop of Victoria writes from Hong Kong January 30th:— " Within the last nine months twenty-one Chinese have been baptized in our mission at Hong Kong, including nine pupils from our college; On Sunday last out of fifty persons confirmed by me in the Cathedral, eighteen were Chinese.— In the neighborhood of Swaton the Scotch Free Presbyterian missionaries, after seven years of apparently% bootless labor, are be ginning to receive decided encouragement, Rev. Geo. Sinith writes as follows : "On the first. Sabbath of October, Mr. Mackenzie and celebrated the communion at Yam chow along with twenty native Christians, who, with the 'exception of three; belong to the' village. It• eve-as a sweet sight to see so many men and women, most of who'll had not long before been sunk in the i darkness of heathenism without God' and without hope, now commemorating the love of the Redee mer."rifin The Rev. James Calvert, of the Wesleyan Mission, writes from Ovalau to the . secretaries of the Bible Society we have in this district 394 churches, 172 houses for ' preaching, 12 missionaries, 1 English schoolmaster and 1 schoomistress, 1 ,printer, 11 ordained native assistant mission aries, 17 on trial as ditto, 241 catechists, 250 local preachers, 1,476 school teachers, 13,101 church members, 5,216 on.trial for church membcrship,,B7l schools, 3,500 scho lars, and 66,860 'person's who attend public worship. And now all, parfs of Fiji are , Opening to us:.. E. P. ARNOLD.