382 Contoponituct. OPEN AIR MEETINGS. BY BDWARD PAYSON HAMMOND In the State of Maine, during the spring of 1862, open air meetings were held which were blessed of God in the conversion of soals.. During a series of meetings in Lewistown, Me., I became deeply interested in an editor of one of the papers of that city. He had been anxious about his soul, he told me, since ke chanced to attend an open air meet ing in Portland some two months be fore. He soon found peace in believing, and has since joined the church. This editor, in his own paper, gave a short sketch of the very meeting which was blessed by the Holy Spirit to lead him deeply to feel that he was a guilty sinner against God. . I remember that some of the good ministers in Portland were, at first, a little troubled with regard to the out door services, but when some of them fold& how distinctly God was setting his seal upon them, their objections disappeared. The editor referred to says: "About seven o'clock, on a clear still evening, we heard the voices of children in sweet and silvery tones, apparently led by a strong masculine voice. We listened for a moment in surprise and wonder, and then made our way in the direction from whence the sound proceeded, and in front of the Custom House, found the'preacher engaged in solemn exhortation to sinners, the sing ing having ceased. The scene was an unusual one for the staid and quiet city of Portland, and we were in doubt for a few moments as to how so unusual an occurrence would be received. In a short time, a large number had gathered to hear the appeal of the man of , Go(; We were apprehensive of scoffing ansl jeers from the roughs,' who will always be found on such an occasion ; but not a word or a lisp did we hear to break the solemnities of the hour. Every one was deeply, seriously interested ; and we doubt not, that some who,werepresent were made fully and sensibly aware of their sinful condition, during the few minutes' exhortation addressed to them. After his entreaty was ended, he broke_forth into the well known hymn— Word& the Lamb, &e.' in which he was joined by the children with which he was surrounded, and moved, for ward to the church, the whole singing joyfully, and making melody that we have rarely heard surpassed. The scene was novel and startling, and the earnest appeal was responded to with great unanimity ; hardly a man who had witnessed the occur rence failed to accept the invitation, and the crowd followed the preacher to the old Payson Church." At Bruns wick, open air meetings were held on the Green. When these meet.. ings commenced, fear was expressed with regard to the results, tut when it was found that God was blessing them with the presence of his Holy Spirit, the ministers and professors from Bow doin College were ready to help on the good work with all their powers. At one, of these meetings, while a student who had been a Romanist was telling the story of his conversion, an infidel student was brought under conviction of sin, and in a week irom that time told to a similar audience, on the same ground, that he had Oben led by the open air services, and+ especially by the words of the converted Papist, to re nounce his infidelity and to believe in the Lord Jesus. At one of the open air services some four hundred persons from Lewistown, mostly young converts, had come a distance of twenty miles to be present . The singing of the large audience, led by Dr. Adams, the well-known pastor of 'the college chuitch, was delightful. Some of the professors and students spoke with great power, making all to feel, as Dr. J. J. Carruthers, of Portland, who took part in the meeting said, that "these apostolic methods of reaching and saving men may be- now wisely employed" In looking over "A Pastor's Jottings," a book just published by the New York American -Tract Society, I was much pleased - with an - account of two -open air meetings held near London. Those who have. become interested in this subject of open air preaching will enjoy reading this graphic description : OPEN AIR SERVICES. I had the pleasure, many years since, to attend the anniversary meeting of one of our associations, in a village about twelve miles west of London, then blessed with the able labors of a son of the venerated Andrew Fuller. Beautiful, indeed, was the locality, for nature had invested it with some of her moat lovely and ever-fascinating aspects ; but alas, its inhabitants were very generally under the influence of unsanctified influ ences, and were especially addicted to violations of the holy Sabbath. it: WAS thought desirable at one of the meetings of the association, with a view of attracting public attention, to hold a special service on the evening of the second day, on the Village green. About six or seven o'clock, a far larger congregation had assem bled than the church edifice could have oontained ; many highly respectable persons attended, some were in their crested car riages, but the larger number were persons who never worshipped God in any form. The preabher was the Rev. J. H. Hinton, eminent for piety and learning, for zeal and useful ness. His pulpit was a chair, and his sounding-board the canopy of heaven. Deep and solemn silence pervaded the crowd, while he offered a fervent prayer. \Tone of the assembly appeared disposed to `er the shadow of opposition to the solemn ice, but rather seemed to say; " We are ere present before G'md, to hear all that are'cointuauded thee of him.'/ . -an d praise being ended, the preach er read for his- text, " Herein is love ; not that we loved God, but that he loved us, and sent his Son to be a propitiation for our sins." I John, 4: 10. The shades of even ing, before the worship closed, had en wrapped the earth in darkness ; but not an individual appeared to move. Many a tear was shed, many a devout prayer was offered to God, and if an inference might be drawn from the silence and undivided attention of the people, many of the hundreds of persons present sang with the understanding and the heart, after the sermon, the language of the sainted Watts : "Blessing forever on the Lamb Who bore the curse for wretched men; Let angels sound his sacred name, And every creature say, Amen." . Such a scene must have impressed th . e mind of every minister of Christ present with a conviction that out-of-door preaching has no insuperable digiculties ; it must have powerfully affected many hearts; nor is it too much to hope that some will curry the holy impressions they then received into the world of eternal glory. It was my happiness, two or three years after the occurrence I..have described, to originate and .assist in another interesting service of a similar character.. Some five miles south of London Bridge is a vast plain known as Blackheath. Here, and in Green wich Park, which adjoins the heath, the inhabitantit of the British metropolis, from time immemorial have been accu,tomed to congregate • for recreation and pleasure in all their varied forms. A somewhat elevated site on the heath, distinguished by the late. Lord Dartmouth, who planted some trees upon it, is called '° Whitefield's Mount," it being the hallowed spot on which. that eminent servant of Christ, a century ago, addressed five, ten, or fifteen thousand persons at a time, on the infinite realities of the eternal world. Multitudes now in heaven were• born to God on that lovely heath. Many who went to gratify an idle curiosity, and others who went even to per secute, retired from the service to pray for the pardon of their sins. The spot is always regarded with a hallowed interest by Chris tians of every class. It was resolved, as religion was awfully neglected in the neighborhood, as thousands on every Monday evening resorted to the heath, and as open air preaching had been recently revived in the district around, to endeavor again to collect congregations on "The Mount ;" and Dr. F. A. Cox kindly consented to open the campaign. Perhaps at the commencement of the Service some five hundred persons were assembled ; the singing soon attracted many others, and probably when the preacher reads his text we had around us two thousand quiet and attentive hearers. His theme was admirably appropriate: "I thought on my ways, and turned my feet unto thy testimonies." Pea. 119: 59. As I walked away with the excellent and beloved doctor after the service through the park, we observed two young women trying to overtake us. We stopped till they came up, when one of them introduced herself as a member of one of our churches, and said that the other was a stranger to her ; that she had invited her on the heath to hear a sermon, and that she had often heard of the preacher, she had been induced to listen, and now wished to talk further on the subject. The girl, who had stood bitterly weeping, told us a most interesting story. Shelived on the other side of the city, near the preacher's ownychurch ; she had never before thought of her soul; she had that evening come down to the heath simply in pursuit of pleasure. Her heart was indeed broken under a deep sense of sin. We Liked in the park some quarter of an hour. She afterwards again and again visited Dr. C kx at his own home ; and after a few weeks ho received her into the church of which he was - so long pastor. Truly this was the Lord's doing, and encourages us in the morning to sow our seed, and in the evening not to withhold our hand; knowing not which shall prosper. this,or that, or whether both shall be alike good. BROWNING-'S DEATH OF ST. JOHN. SECOND PAPER Without stopping to dwell on the setting of the story, which is very artis tically yet naturally done, we bring the reader to the side of the dying Evange list, who, with three or four fellow- Christians, had taken refuge from the rage of persecution in a deep cave. Roused from dying stupor by the voice of one of thesa brethren, pronouncing the words, " I am the Resurrection and the Life," the Apostle " opened his eyes wide at once and sat np and looked at" the company. The peculiar interest of his approaching •death arises from the fact that when he has gone, the last witness of the great events of the Gospel history will disappear frozn the earth. There is left on earth No one alive who knew- (consider this I) —Saw with his eyes and handled with his hands That which was from the first s the Word of Life, Row will it be when none more saith saw' 7 The declarations of the living Sohn were generally sufficient. His testimony was received. Much of the Lord's life, he says, had grown Of new significance and fresh result ; What first were guessed as points, I now knew stars, And named them in the Gospel I have writ Even men who insisted on explana tion as a condition of believing, and the young ones, who in their strength 'and their impatience asked : " Where is the promise of his coming?" under his teachings, he thinks, in the main believ ed. But recently going to sleep, as he says, with the thought; that We had the truth, might leave the rest to God Yet now I wake in such decrepitude As I have slidden down and fallen afar Past even the presence of my former self Grasping the while. for stay at facts which snap, Till I am found away from my own world,. Feeling for foothold through a blank profound, Along with unborn people in strange lands, Who say—l hear said, or conceive they say-- Was John at all, and did he say he saw ? Assure us ere we ask what he might see? The dying apostle asks, uAnd how shall I assure them ?" His own convictions are not merely based in history; to his quickened moral sensibility, in which these doubters do not share, the great truths of Christianity are ever under going reiteration and illustration in the world. Ito says To me, that story—ay, that Life and Death Of which I wrote ' it wa—to me, it is; PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1864. Is here and now : I apprehend naughi else. Is ,not God now i' the world his power first made ? Is not His love at issue still with sin, Closed with, and cast, and conquered, crucified Visibly when a wrong is done on Ear h ? Love, wrong, and pain, what see I els around? Yea, and the Resurrection and Upris To the right hand of the throne—wat is it beside, When such truth, breaking bounds, verfloods my soul, And, as I saw the sin and death, eve so See I the need yet transiency of both, The good and glory consummated thehce ? I saw the Power ; I see the Love, oncelveak, Resume the Power; and in this word' lees,' Lo, there is recognized the Spirit of both That moving o'er the spirit of man, unblinds His eye and bids-him look. These inquirers whom he recognizes as" the children, His beloved ones, tool' yet who are not capable of recognizing these great contemporaneous manifes tations and proofs of the truth, need to study the historic facts of Christianity, until " that Life and Death" becomes their " world," as it is John's. Here the poet, catching the very tem per of his inspired Hero, introduces that favorite theme of the. beloved apostle, which gave such honied s weetnestfr to his fetters and exhortations, and which in vests the memory of his serene old age with such an unwonted charm—Chris tian love. This spirit of love, of which John was the embodiment, is all that gives value to life : grasping it, we ob tain all that is worth having : the gos pel doctrine of love is the grand solu tion of life's questions. Says the apos tle, in Browning's paraphrase, For life, with all it yields of joy and woe, And hope and fear,—believe the aged firiend— Is just our chance o' the prize of fearning love, ! How love might be, bath been indeed,' l and is ; And that we hold thenceforth to the uttermost Such prize despite the'envy of the world, And having gained truth keep truth; that is all, The chief argument of the poem is here stated. Men by skepticism lose all things, because they lose hold of the grand manifestation of love in the gos pels. The apostle is next described as anti cipating and describing faithfully the false prinCiples of philosophy which lie at the foundation of the Straassian and Tuebingen speculations on the histori cal character of the Gospels and Epis tles. Thus the poet makes him speak : One listens quietly, nor scoffs but pleads Here is a tale of things done ages since ; What truth was ever told the second day ? Wonders, that would prove doctrine, go for naught. Remains the doctrine, love; well, we must love, And what we love most, power and love in one, Let us acknowledge on the record here, Accepting these in Christ : must Christ then be ? Has He been ? Did not we ourselves make Him? Our mind receives but what it holds, no more. First of the love, then ; we acknowledge Christ— A. proof we comprehend Hislove, a proof We had such love already in ourselves, Knew first what else we should not recognize. 'T is mere projection from man's inmost mind, And, what he loves, thus falls reflected back, Becomes accounted somewhat out of him ; He throws it up in air, it falls down earth's, With shape, name, story added, man's old way. How prove you Christ came otherwise at least? Next try the power : He made and rules the world : C.?rtes there is a world once made, now ruled, Unless things have been ever as we see.' But the new question's whisper is distinct, Wherefore must all force needs be like our selves ? We have the hands, the will; what made and drives The sun is force, is law, is named, not known. Go back, far, farther, to the birth of things ; Ever the will, the intelligence, the love, Man's l—which he gives, supposing he but, finds, As late he gave head, body, hands, and feet, To help these in what forms he called his gods. First, Jove's brow, Juno's eyes were swept away, But Jove's wrath, Juno's pride continued long; At last, will, power, and love discarded these, So law in turn discards power, love, and will. What proveth God is otherwise atlpast ? All else, projection from the mind of man!' Miracles according to this philosophy are not needed any longer in proving the truth of the Gospel. They bad their use once. [The apostle is not repre sented as aware of the latest phase of advanced rationalism, which, speaking in Dr. Shenkel of Baden, asserts that "miracles are the dark shade which has been cast upon the bright splendor of the activity of Christ."] They have been superseded by the fruit of the book itself they were designed to prove. Says the contemner of miracles : You stick a garden-plot with ordered twigs To show inside lie' ems of herbs unborn, And check the careless step would spOil their birth ; But when herbs wave, the guardian twigs may It is no longer for old twigs yo look Which roved once undeineath lay store of seed But to the herb's self. . This book's fruit is plain, Nor miracles need prove it any more Of this John says : This might be pagan teaching: now hear mine I say that as the babe, you fend awhile', Becomes a boy and ELt to feed himself, So minds at first must be spoon-fed with truth : When they can eat, babe's nurture is- with- drawn. I say that miracle was duly wrought When,save for it, no faith was possible.''• So faith grew, making void more miracles Because too much. They would compel, not help. DR. JENKINS CALLED TO RONTEDAL.- We see it stated, in the secular papers, that " the Presbyterian Synod of Mon treal has decided to call the .Rev. John Jenkins, D. D. to St. Paul's Church in that city." We presume the Doctor has been callea as slated, but, us every . Presby etian - knows, by domaody other than the )Synod. t4ditortio gablt. STANTON.—The Church and the Rebellion : a Consideration of the Rebellion against the Government of the United States, and the agency of the Church, North and South, in relation thereto. By R. L. Stanton, D. D., Professor in the Theologi cal Seminary of the Presbyterian Church, Danville, Ky. New York : Derby & Mil ler. 12mo. pp. 562. Philadelphia, for sale by Martien. The tone of this volume, especially as emanating from the other branch of the church in' Kentucky, is most wel come from its healthfulness, its uncom promising loyalty and its high and bold anti slavery position. The aim of the accomplished author is to put the blame of the rebellibn, so far as it rests upon the church at all, on the right shoulders, viz.: the champions of ex treme pro-slavery views in the pulpits and professors' chairs of the South, with their sympathizers in like posi tions in the North. The part perform ed by such men as Drs. Thornwell, Pal mer, Robinson, Stiles, Ross, and others is portrayed-in bold colors and exposed in its anti-scripturalness and criminali ty with an unsparing hand. Many val uable and curious facts, not to be found readily elsewhere, illustrative of the deliberate purpose of this class of men in the South to poison the minds of the people against the North and the Union, and to prepare 'them - for secepion, are even. Cases involving the relations of the church_ and the government like that of Dr. McPheeters• are discussed, the Providence of God in the rebellion from the inverted Southern point of view, as well as from that of the en lightened author himself; is stated; the action of the Presbyterian Church on Slavery is given from the earliest times, turning off, of course, after the division, into the history of the other branch, the broad inconsistency of whose action up to 1849, with that of earlier times is clearly exhibited, and the subterfuges of the supporters of such action exposed and denounced; the concessions made to southern opinion by the action, in stead of tending to hold the Union to gether, are declared to have hastened the disruption. The action of 1864 is described, defended and applauded. The interest of a large part of the volume, it will be seen, is local and de nominational : a criticism might justly be made also upon the absence of a felt unity in the miscellaneous materials brought together, but the facts and dis cussions are of great value, and will go far to settling truthfully andiffinally the grave_question of the responsibility for this great and bloody national convul sion. CHARLES SCRIBNER'S BOOKS BustmELL---Nature and the Supernatural, as together constituting the one system of God. By Horace Bushnell, New edition. New York : Charles Scribner. 12mo. pp 528. For sale by J. B. Lippincott &Co AB a contribution towards meeting recent movements of scientific infidels like Strauss and Renan,who are spread ing their leaven by cheap and popular editions of their anti-Christian lives of Christ, Dr. Bushnell has put forth a cheap edition of his well known and very able work in defence of miracles. In this, as in other attempts of Dr. 8., for the defence of revealed religion, great as in some respects his services as a champion must be acknowledged to be, his work is marred by some eccen tricity which goes far to neutralize its power. In the'l4th chapter he gravely argues that " miracles and spiritual gifts are not discontinued." If the miracles for which Dr. B. contends are nowise different in essence from modern mar vels they are not worth-the argument. So, in-his " God in Christ," the author's argument for the divinity of Christ would be almost as good for the divinity of every Christian. CHRIST AND HIS SALVATION ! in sermons Va riously related thereto. By Horace Bush nell. New York : Charles Scribner. 12tno. pp 456. For sale by J. B. Lippincott & Co. Dr. Bashnell's sermons must ever be favourites with the thoughtful, cultured Christian reader and preacher. yhey are original, fresh, suggestive and quick ening to such minds. Their literary excellence is most marked. There is the glow of real, if not of commanding g9nius in their construction and devel opment. Views of duty and experience are presented of a most instructive character, and errors are skilfully and swiftly exposed. All the outlying truths of Christianity, until you come to its very heart in the sacrificial blood of Jesus, are upheld and illustrated with singular grace and acceptableness. But Dr. Bushnell acknowledges no real connection of the sufferings of Christ with - divine justice, and has no true sympathy with "the article of a stand ing or a falling church'' justification by the vicarious atonement of Christ. 'There is every, thing in his teaching that evangelical Christianity demands save this vitalizing, essential, supreme truth ; and it is painful to see how he almoz-t recovlizes and yet fails to grasp Sertuurt XII PRIME.—The Power of Prayer, illustrated in the wonderful Displays of Divine Grace at the_Fulton Street and other meetings in New York and elsewhere, in 1857 and 1858. By Samuel Ireneus Prime, author of " Travels in Europe and the. East." New and enlarged edition. New York : Charles Scribner. 12mo. pp 418. _ This is a wonderful record of factrin which the prayer-hearing God is shown to be true to his nature and his promis es in events of our own time. it has acted, and doubtless will continue to act, as a powerful stimulus to the faith and prayer of God's people all over Christendom, having been re-published in England, translated in two different versions in France, and published in the East. The present edition contains four additional chapters, bringing into view the power of prayer in that won derful field for the display of divine grace, the Army of the United States. We cordially recommend it to our readers who may desire to 'cultivate a spirit of prayer. TICKNOR & FIELDS' BOOKS. CHILD.. Looking towards Sunset. From sources old and new, original and selected. By L. Maria Child. Boston : Ticknor & Fields. Square 12mo. Fine cloth gilt bevelled edges, gilt top, tintectipaper. pp 455. For sale by J. B. Lippincott & Co. This is one of the books so rarely is sued from our presses, which it is a luxu ry simply to hold in one's hand. There is an exquisite grace and finish, without any extravaginceobout all the externals that at once created a strong prejudice in favor of the aontents. These contents are in fact, as choice as the exterior would lead us to expect, being a miscel lany of Original and. Selected articles upon topics connected with our every day life, especial reference being had to old age, gathered by the accomplished authoress with consomme skill and taste. Nothing but gems are admitted within this casket. Besides the contri butions of the author,we have such names as Bryant,Dickens, Barns, Wordsworth, Uhland, Hood, Heber, Tennyson, Jean Paul,Wbittier, John Sterling,Mrs. Stowe, Henry Ward Beecher, and others as a guarantee of the quality of the mate rial. One cannot go amiss for half-an hour of the best miscellaneous reading in opening at any part of the book. At the same time it must be noted that the mild but decided dislike of lif.rs. Child to New England orthodox is not concealed in these articles. As a parlor table ornament, as a gift to a friend, or as the companion of one's stray half hours, with the single, -bat grave, ex ception referred to, we know of nothing that surpasses it in the issues of the press for many months. • A. NEW ATMOSPHERE. By Gail . Hamilton. Author of " Country Living and Country Thinkog." Boston: Tickhor & l6mo. pp 310. Bevelled boards, red edges, tinted paper. For sale by J. B. Lippincott & Co ; The well-known newspaper essayist and magazine writer has, in this volume, dispensed with the inadequate and un• satisfactory method of unfolding her views afforded by those channels, and has wisely given herself the range of a whole volume. We notice a decided advance in the intensity, breadth and volume of her thoughts as here expres sed. She seems to be swayed by a just sense of a mission to her contemporaries, and with new dignity and force she urges her views, with illustration and argument, on her readers. What those views are, is doubtless already under stood in general. The new atmosphere she would have diffused, is one of healthier, truer appreciation of the sphere of woman in America. A higher degree.of independence, a liberation of woman from all merely mercenary res traints in the solemn business of marri age, the admission of the capacity of woman for self-support, and justice to her in the various spheres of labor al ready opened, as well as in opening new ones, to her skill and industry—these are some of the ends aimed at in the vigorous, ardent, bold, witty and versa tile rhetoric of one, who in her own great success well illustrates the posi tion she would gain, so far as talents and character admitted, for all her sis ters. We recommend the book as at once the most earnest and able of all yet produced by the fertile pen of the author. JAMESON. Sacred and Legendary Art. By Mrs. Jameson. Vol. I. Containing Legnds of the Angels and Archangels, the Evangelists, the Apostles,'the Doctors of the Church, and St. Mary Magdalene, as represented in the Fine Arts. Vol. 11. Containing the Patron Saints, the Martyrs, the Early Bishops, the Hermits and the Warrior Saints of Christendom, as represented in the Fine Arts. Boston : Ticknor & Fields. Blue and gold edition, pp. 417, 420. The reputation of Mrs. Jameson, as an appreciative and accomplished critic of works of art, has long been estab lished. The themes of these elegant and compact volumes are novel and curious, as well as exceedingly instruc tive. - They, show us an aspect of Ro manism which has given it, perhaps, half of its power with the aesthetic as well as the ruder classes of people. They furnish, too, a luminous emninentary upon such poets as. Spenser, 'and reveal, in fact, the sources of much of the in spiration of early literature and art. A handsome engraved portrait of Leonardo da Vinci accompanies the first volume. MARTIENS' BOOKS A batch of excellent books for young persons in bright vermillion covers, with gilt backs and illustrated, has just come from the press of W. S. & A. Mar den, of this city. We note: MARGARET'S SECRET and its Success, by Mrs. Carey Brock, author of " Working and Waiting." 12mo, pp. 340. Margaret is a wise and patient Chris tian girl, the eldest in a large family, which a stop : mother enters, bringing the usual trials of such a change to the younger members, aggravated by harsh ne's of temper. Margaret's "Secret" is found in the verse of Solomon : "A soft answer turneth away wrath" and her great success in practising upon it is admirably told. Joszku rug JEW. A Tale founded on Facts, By the author of Mary Mathieson. 12 mo pp. 303 A story of deep interest the scene of which is laid in Germany in the time of the wars of Napoleon. The consoling po'wer of Christianity is illustrated in contrast with theunsatisfactory creed of the Jew. Row CHARLEY Helped his Mother. By Ruth Buck. 18mo. pp. 195. TEE Two 0017E011,5. By Catharine M. Trow- bridge. Author of Frank and Rufus. 18- mo. pp. 201. JENNIE'S BIBLE Verses. By Catharine Al Trowbridge. lBmo. pp. 153. THE POOR WEAVER'S FAMILY, A Tale of Silesia. From the German. By Mrs. Sarah A. Myers. 18aio, pp 121 AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY, N. Y. Depository, 929 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. CHRISTIAN HOME LIFE. A Book of Examples and Precepts. 12mo. pp. 299. 80 cts. In thirteen chapters, as many topics illustrating the nature, necessities and opportunities for good in the life of the household are unfolded and illustrated, by example and the precepts of eminent Christian writers, forming a volume of great value and attractiveness. All who would make home happy by cultivating household piety will derive - ranch assis tance in their work from this volume. The Tract Society have also issued a number of smaller volumes for Sabbath schools and young persons, all of which may be cordially recommended as suited to their object. We give the titles and prices: At 50 cts, each: DORA HAMILTON. BLOOM OF YOUTH.. PLEASANT PATH. WALTER MAR TIN. At 35 cts : JOHNNY. At 30 eta., each: MADELINE. A LITTLE MORE. At 25 cis.: JEWS IN BETHANY. At 20 cts.: U. S. PRIMER. At 15 cts. each: OUR KATIE. MARY'S FALSEHOOD. SCOTLAND. OALIFORNIA-THE MOUNTAIN REGION Rev. Dr. Kendall, in a letter to The Evangelist, gives the following sketch of our church work in the district named: At Sonora there is a good house of worship ; the congregation is largp, and had a large proportion of females and children, which are far too scarce in this State. These elements represent home comforts, permanency and the material with' which to form and teach the Sab bath school, which I was glad to learn was in a flourishing condition, and which cannot fail to be a source of strength to the church. In Columbia a pleasant revival of re ligion has been enjoyed within a few months past. A former church edifice having proved inadequate to the wants of th congregation, they have just built a new one, more attractive and commodious than its predecessor, an honor to the people, and an ornament to the town, which will be ready for dedication in a few weeks. Aside from causes just, mentioned, [the decline of population on account of partial ex haustion of the mines, and insufficient supply of water,] everything looked en couraging in these two churches. They seem to be acceptably served by their pastors, and harmonious among them selves. At Murphy's, fifteen miles from Co lumbia, we have another church, one of the latest formed in the State and still very small. The pace was never large, for it could never be called a min ing town, but it has some elements of prosperity which do not belong to pure ly mining towns. The Church work here is laying foundations hard and slow, yet necessary and important. A large population, at least several hundreds, needing the Gospel, and, a few taking great delight in its ordinances, make • the presence of our missionary a neces sity. Without him there would be no one to warn the wicked, visit the sick, or bury the dead. My journey has led me along among the foot-hills of the Sierra Nevadas, and through the mining towns 100 miles in extent or , more. In Vallicita, Angel's Camp, Mokelumne Hill, Jackson, Sta ters, Amador, Latrobe; Folsom and Lin coln; I know not what religious influ ence may be on the people, but with the exception of Congregational churches at Mokelumne Hill and Folsom, I do not learn that there are any Calvinistic churches of any name. Yet in them all are many hundreds of souls—great num bers of them unquestionably walking unconcerned in the way to death. Tbere, are many other towns of like extent in the State, but the whole population is so small that many places aro too fee ble to support anainister of the Gospel or to commeno. tlicru , 3ctv the Cht . " fOP aid ; and yet.. a, cannot c2ll - their we.- is wit.'..out pain.