,11 E MAHAN PRESBYTERIAN m 4Cr) AHD GENESEE EVANGELIST. lalgritiln t i ts fr oan A R g iota* and Family NewspaPer, • IN TIE INTEREST OF THE ".°••• , ftlIP %On IT Constitutional Presbyterian Church. Pi: :p• :• • : • Y 1, AT THE PRESBYTERIAN HOUSE, 1334 Chestnut Street. (2d story,) Philadelphia. Roy. John W. Hears, Editor and Publisher. liev. B. B. llotehkin, Editor of News and ramify Departments. Elev. C. D. Bush, Corresponding Editor. Rochester, N:Y. Puritan Urt*gttrialt. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1866 COIfrENTS OF INSIDI.PAGES, SECOND PAGE—THE FAMILY CIRCLE : The Star Enamoured—The Young , Bavarian—A Painting from Life—Grinding the Diamond—A He roine-r Sensible Maxima--"Not Grudgingly, or of Necessity"—Scripture land Hygiene—The North Polo. THIRD PAGE—EDITOR' S TABLE : Ellicott's "Critical and Grammatical CommentarY en the Pastoral Epistles"—Butler's "St. Paulin Rome" Beecher's "Autobiography, Correspondence, etc., of Lyman Beecher, D.D."—Magaziries and Pamphlets —Thanksgiving Berrtions. , Atlantic Cable—Obituary, Extraordinary . Neigh borly Feeling—A Mightyklistake—Christ is Suffi cient—A New Fire Extinguisher. SIXTH PAGE—CORRESPONDENCE: Open Air Preachers—" The Enlightenment" of the Modern Hindoos—Agrioultural Colleges—Mr. Ham mond among the Children. Literary Items; New Religious Monthly—German —Miscellaneous—French items. SETENTE PAGE—FOREIGN SUMMARY: Holland — Saxony—Raly—Germany—France-Rrazil ingular Coincidence. Miscellaneous: The Great Transition—Come Away —The Vicarious Atonement. A.gricultural: Window Gardening—Annual Fruit— How to Catch Curoulios—Eggs in Winter. THE IDEAL OF CHRISTIAN EXPERI- EWE. The highest of all arts is character building. The true beauty is the beauty of holiness. Higher than poet, or` paint er, or sculptor, or architect is the faith ful Christian, dealing with his own heart, and disciplining his character upon the principles and patterns of the Gospel. A genuine Christian experience is a pro cess as interesting, as truely aesthetic, as worthy, and as wide a field for the ex ercise of the artistic faculty, as the 'paint ing of a fine picture, the shaping of a noble statue, or the rearing of a goodly structure. All other forms of art are but symbols, copies, faint reflections of this art of self-culture, in which the soul is both the artist and the plastic sub stance, Divinity incarnate the model and teacher, Providence the guide, the Holy Spirit the source of inspiration and eter nity the scene of full development. Some there are who regard the experi ence of the practical Christian as mere superstition; as a weak surrender of the intellect to the. vagaries of an unhinged imagination, or to the authority of an antiquated unlovely volume, or to obso lete prejudices. Some regard it as step ping quite out of - the Tine of tainfarpro - - - gress, as narrow, bigoted, unmanly ; as the growth of fear excited by priestcraft ; as an interference with the free develop ment of the intellectual powers and the enterprising dmpulses of the soul. Some view it as glooiny and monastic, as dyspeptic and hypochondriac. But a true Christian experience is a progress in the noblest elements of human character, an artist's daily ad vance towards the-realizing of his loftiest ideal. True, in many Christians the marks of this advance are .few, and only a very faint resemblance to the great ideal may be traced, but this is because so much had to be done. The material being a fallen soul, was too ruinous; was too far removed from the glory and beau of the divine image, to warrant an early approximation, to that standard. And, alas one of the discouraging fea tures of its fallen condition, is its' utterly false notions of beauty and perfection, which blind it to the true, 'and which lead it to pursue and applaud perverse methods of culture. Even: where these evidences are present, therefore, the un regenerate man is incapable of recog nizing or appreciating them. And. the Christian himself, only partially rescued from his blindness and apathy, discerns but little of the glory and dignity of the object he has chosen, is often dazzled and drawn aside by false schemes of living, and rarely labors after his, ideal with the zeal 'and the enthusiasm worthy of its greatness. He is often entangled in the common cares of life and can see but a handbreadth beyond the im mediate pressing concerns of the hour. That he is engaged in any thing more than an ordinary effort to discharge the duties and meet the cares and burdens which Providence assigns him, seldom enters his busy thoughts. For all that, he may be an artist in the school of -spiritual self-culture, unconsciously work ing away at the material of character placed under his hand, and bringing out a result which shall shine in the last day with heavenly lustre and symmetry, and shall receive the prize of the high calling of God in Jesus. Yet, it would relieve the tedium of his cares and new-kindle his zeal, were the nature"! and dig- N•ew Series, Vol. 11, No. 8. pity of the work he, in that humble way is doing, made known to him. Over the common-place, every-day cares of life, in the household, in the workshop, in the counting-room and in the more public walks of life, as encountered by the true Christian, this conviction would flash a new light and significance, a worth which he newer saw before. He is in God's school of art. Providence shapes his circumstances into a system of training for his soul. And he is every day put ting touches on a piece of work, which it is but half trifling to say, will outlast all the obelisks and sphinxes and pyramids and domes, the Apollo Belvideres, the Venus de Medicis, the Dying Gladiators, the mosaics, and frescoes, and glowing canvasses of ancient or modern art. What are the elements of a genuine Christian experience, which justify our high estimate of its aesthetic value ? What constitutes it the ennobling pro gress we have described ? We answer : it is a work in the affections, and moral nature of the man— a field greatly neglected in the world's processes of training, yet the most im portant and most worthy part of man's complex nature. It is the purification and enlargement of the affections to com prehend the riches of Divine love. It is the awakening of conscience to the great problem of man's guilt and God's remedy_ It cultivates the moral sense by showing the difficulties of man's posi tion by nature, by pressing home upon him his sin, and by exhibiting to him the perfect, glorious, unparalleled triumph of the Gospel overthe difficulties. A still higher sphere of the inner life is _opened, a loftier capacity than the moral sense is called into play in a genuine Christian experience. It is FAITH. Not only is a whole exalted class of objects, unknown to any other faculty, brought within our range by faith, but our own relation to them becomes pert sonal, practical, endearing. Faith is an ap propriating knowledge of spiritual things. It . is a trust which links us to God and gives us treasures in heaven. It puts us-in: right, relations_to thie-world---attd the next, saves us from the delusions of, sense, raises us above the fear . of man, puts large, elevating, purifying hope as a bright and boundless atmosphere around the soli? It shows us an Advo cate and Intercessor at the right hand of God, and teaches us to PRAY. Prayer is the chief act and glory of the genuine Christian experience. Believing prayer is almost: another name for the Christian life. In communion with God, and in submission to God, the Christian aims to live and to act. He learns how to offer true prayer. He accounts it to be, and it is, the supreme accomplishment of man to pray aright. To, wrestle in prayer and to prevail, is to be a Prince of God. To have power with God in prayer, as a settled element of character, is to have a more than princely endovi ments. The excellence of the Christian life .con sists not only in having the , perfect Jesus for a model, but in being united to him by faith. The Christian's life opens up into the persOnal life of Christ The strength, the beauty, the purity, the di vine merit of that perfect -character be comes ours by the appropriating act of faith, and by the in-dwelling of Christ's Spirit._ The divine ideal, after which we strive, is not a mere ideal. Nor is it merely an embodied and glorious reality. It is the Author and Finisher of our faith. It is He in whose vicarious death we die, and in whose resurrection we rise to newness of life. He has exper ienced our conflicts, we triumph in his victories. Faith in Him is the living, formative principle of the true Christian experience. It is the root, the germ from which must be evolved• all the possible developments of the Christian life. By this we are made, partakers of the Divine nature." To faith we add manly virtue ; to virtue, knowledge ; to know ledge, temperance ; to temperance, pa tience ; to patience, or noble endurance, godliness ; to godliness, brotherly kind ness ; and to brotherly kindness, charity. A. beautiful sisterhood, a harmonious choir of graces spring from the fruitful source of a living faith in Christ. And faith still walks hand in hand with these graces ; gives them their superhuman PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY - , FEBRUARY 23, 1865. CENTRAL CHURCH, ROCHFATRIVIfEW -YORK. character ; takes from them their pride and their selfishness; makes them living, growing elements of a living, advancing character ; saves them from wreck amid temptation and preserves their unity and their repose without the sacrifice of energy and the sinking into formality. " Looking unto Jesus" is its watch-. word. Christian artist apply thyself cour ageously to thy daily - work ! It is .no com mon place, no dill undertaking. Steadily, as the long patient painter or sculptor, unfold trait after trait, in increasing distinctness and beauty, of the glorious spiritual image in which thy perfected soul at last shall shine. Christ, the Archetype and the Master Workman is with thee. His Spirit is thine to inspire thee with zeal, with enthusiasm, with Christian ambition. Thou art encompassed about with a great cloud of witnesses. Press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. " When I consider," says Dr. Gillett,_ "the several doctrines the reception and of which- aro implied in a Christian profession, I feel that Id who would build upon them in justice to their true proportions, will rear such a struc ture of religious doing and enduring, of heavenly-minded beneficence and ' of saintly purity and love, as can find nothing but the merest and feeblest sym bol of it all in the shapes of beauty and of grandeur into which the marble has been piled, and I feel that no architect, of however exalted a name, can be com pared for a single moment with him, who, in the humbleness of the obscurest lot, cuts the years of his probation into living stones, that will but shine in a brighter and more lasting beauty, when the fires of the last conflagration sh'all have helped time to do his work of de struction on the crumbling palaces of the kings, and the nobles of the earth.* Life Lessons, p. 205 WHAT OP THE LATE FIRE IN THIS CITY-7—Perhaps more than has yet been .developed. Next to no doubt remains that 'it had an incendiary, origin. We are not alarmists, but we regard it worth the while, in this connection, for . our people to take review of the devilish threat uttered by the Richmond Exami ner, a little previous to the late attempt to burn New York. " A million of dollars would lay the proudest city of the enemy in ashes. The men to execute the work are already there.. There would be no difficulty in finding there, here, or in Canada, suit able persons to take charge of the enter prise and arrange the details. Twenty men, with plans preconcerted, and means provided, selecting some dry, windy night, might fire New York, Philadel phia, or Boston, in a hundred places, and wrap it in flames from centre to suburb." So it appeared in the Examiner, word for word. It would be well for Phila delphia and all our Northern cities, to reflect that men who are capable of de liberately starving Union prisoners, have in them enough of the demon to follow up such a threat, watching their oppor tunity from month to month, and, if necessary, from year to year, until their fell purpose is accomplished: - _ THE FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN SOLDIER.—The Army and Navy Journal of Feb. 11th, contains a fine and well considered article on this subject, which we have marked for insertion next week. CENTRAL CHURCH, ROCHESTER, N.Y. The Central Presbyterian Church, of Rochester, was organized in 1836 ; first called the Bethel Free Church, and es tablished as a missionary enterprise. Its first house of worship, a substantial stone edifice, was erected on Washington street, adjacent to the Erie Canal, during the autumn and winter following, at an expense of $15,000. The first elders were Geo. A. Avery, since gone to heaven ; Walter S. Grif fith, since an honored and useful elder in the South Church, Brooklyn ; and Pres ton Smith, who is still, here, and still an elder in the present organization. The church embraced thirty-nine mem bers at its beginning ; all having re ceived letters of - dismission from the First Presbyterian Church, of Rochester, to enter upon this enterprise. Of those thirty-nine, who entered into this organi zation twenty-nine years ago, only five still remain members, and only seventeen are still supposed to be living. Rev; Qeo. `S. Boardman,. since Dr. Boardman; pastor of the 'Presbyterian Church-in 'actzenovia, was its first minis ter. 4e Was.installed in October, 1837 ; and: , continued to hold the office until jtay; In 1841 the name of the organization was changed, and it was called Wash ington Street Church, according - to its location. The church had no settled pastor from July, 1842, to February, 1845; during which time the pulpit was sup plied by Rev. John T. Avery, now of Cleveland ; Rev: Mr. Bassett ; Rev. G. R. A. Shumway, now of Newark, in this State ; Rev.l F: W. Graves, recently deceased ; and Rev. P. C. Hastings, now a prosperous business man in New York. ..In- February, 1845; Rev. Milo J. ,Hfciok(now Dr. Hickok, of Scranton, . Pennsylvania,) became its pastor, and continued in that relation until April, 1854. Rev. F. F. Ellinwood o succeeded him, in that relation, in November of the same . year ; and it has been under his prosperous and happy administration, that the church edifice, of which we give the outline above, was erected, in a more central and desirable location. It was commenced in July, 1856 ; completed and dedicated_ in April, 1858 ; built of brick at a cost of about $45,000. The whole length of the building is one hun dred and forty-six feet ; width of front, outside of tower, sixty-eight feet ; height of principal tower one hundred and forty-four feet ; smaller tower one hun dred and fifteen feet. The audience enter through,the right tower, and by the big doors in front. The pastor's study is at the left of the main entrance, in the base of the tower. The infant class-room, also on the left, and - the prayer-room, or smaller lecture-room, on the right of the great hall, (which is fifty feet by twelve) lead ing into the audience-room ; and the larger lecture-room, or Sabbath-school room, which is forty-five by fifty-eight feet, is in the second story, over these smaller rooms, and the great hall. It will thus be seen that about fifty feet of the front portion of the building are devoted to the Sabbath-school and lecture rooms, and to smaller rooms for in fant and Bible classes, and pastor's. study. The main audience room, in the rear of these, and approached by a broad pas sage-way under the lecture room, is eighty-two by fifty-eight feet, with gal leries upon three sides. The pulpit is in the back end of the building. The choir gallery is so situated, in the oppo site end of the audience room, that, the great organ, having two faces, can be played in the church proper or in the lecture room, directly in front`of the au dience room, and over the main entrance. It will thus be seen, that the edifice is Genesee Evangelist, No. 979. quite unique in its structure, not wanting in some , peculiar advantages. But the best part of the church is the people The building furnishes for the Sabbath congregation about a thousand sittings, and they are ordinarily well filled -from Sabbath to Sabbath, with an earnest, united, happy, useful people. It is one of the strongest and best church organi zations anywhere to be found. It has been blessed with powerful revivals of religion. It has often received large ac cessions to its numbers ; as many as one hundred and fifty-six at one time, only two years ago. It is a church peculiarly well satisfied and happy in its minister: And certainly Mr. Ellinwood has been greatly blessed in his labors among them ; and now while he is far away, in quest of health, he is constantly remembered in their conversation, and their prayers, with an interest and affec tion, suchrras the, greatest and best in this holy calling might earnestly covet. PRAYER FOR COLLEGES AND INSTI TUTIONS OF LEARNING. _ To-day is eminently the day of pious parents and their children, of the Church and her sons and daughters. The eyes and heart of God's - people are 10-day upowtheir choicest treasures; those who, under God, are their hope for the per petuation and prosperity of the Church ; those who are to be the ornament and delight of their old age ; those to whom the highest interests of man are, for this life and .the next, to be entrusted. To-day culminates the feeling of con stant regard in the church, for her youth under tutors and professors, in a public and solemn demonstration. She commits them to God in an especial manner ; she humbly, fervently, unitedly pleads for their conversion and consecration to his service. She asks that in them the line of chosen witnesses for the truth may be perpetuated, and that a sufficient supply for the ever enlarging wants of the world may arise from their number; that a spirit of devotion and self-denial-may be poured upon them such as shall dis pose many of them, in answer to the call for the increase of the ministry, to devote themselves - to the work. She asks for those already happily devoted to the ministry, ardent, prayerful piety ; en larged views of their work; thorough preparation of mind and heart to meet ita great responsibilities ; an inward ar mor of faith to, meet the grave assaults of scientific unbelief for which our day is, .o—hatl.l7eminent. She asks that they may be fitted to fill the place of the min istry in this land of ours; by patriotism, by sympathy with the great movements of the age proceeding so triumphantly under the manifest leadings of Provi dence ; that they may be men above mean prejudices of race or color, prepared to advocate justice and to apply the gos pel fearlessly to every remaining iniquity public, social, or private ; fit guides to a people whose destiny is so manifestly onward, to be a blessing, an example and a stimulus to the nations of mankind. God grant that as in past days, so to day- in answer to our united supplica tions, great and precious revivals may appear amid our youth in colleges, schools and seminaries ; that they may be led by the Spirit to turn their noble enthusiasm and their high and elastic purposes into the alone worthy channel of devotion to Christ ; that they may re ceive into their expanding souls the sub lime principles of the gospel, and that we may yet live to see them worthily filling the high places of power in the land, an earnest, humble; thoroughly - - trained, manly ministry; or, in whatever other sphere of labour or influence, acting as _a powerful leaven of godliness, a sup port to the church, and a restraint to wickedness throughout the community. CHARLESTON EVACUATED : A BLOOD- It is of God, we must all exclaim, that the fall of this pre-eminently rebellious and inexpressibly guilty city, has at last been achieved by strategy and without a blow being struck or a drop of blood shed in its final defence. It is not merely the weakness of the rebellion now, even fordefensive operations, that is revealed by this silent and un resisting surrender. It not only shows that their entire strength is in the single army of Virginia ; it is not only a shame ful and humiliating sacrifice; but it proves that the spirit of desperate re resistance which can put on the very guise of heroism and of martyrdom, and of which the South have always been claiming to be largely possessed, has oozed away. Charleston was the very city in which this spirit of defiance should have made the most determined and deadly manifestations. Here, where the spirit of foul revolt has been nursed for half a century ; here, where the nul lification movement culminated thirty years ago; here, Where the first gun of the present war was fired at our flag, with wicked and delibdrate design to precipitate the hesitating South into open LESS VICTORY. TER Ms. Per annum, in 'Avenue: By Mail, SS. By Carrier, $3 be. /Volv cent,: additional, after three months. Clubs.—Ten or more papers, sent to one address. payable strictly in advance and in one remittan ce: By Mail, $250 per annum. BY Carriers, $3 per annum. Ministers and Ministers , Widows, $2 in ad- Tame. Koine Missionaries, $l5O in advance. Fifty cents additional after three months. Remittances by mail are at oar risk. Postage.—Five cents quarterly, in advance, paid by cubsoribers at the office of delivery. advertisements.-1234 cents per line for the first. and 10 cents for the second insertion. One square (one month) ta 00 two months . 5 50 three ' 750 sia 12 00 one year 18 00 The following discount on long advertisements, in serted for three months and upwards, is allowed:— Over 20 lines. 10 per cent. off; over 50 lines, 20 per cent.; over 100 lines. 33% per cent. off. rebellion and the North into open resist ance ; here, where proud fleets and armies have for nearly four years been successfully held at bay,—we should have expected the most signal exhibi tion of that spirit which' made every block of houses in Saragossa and in Puebla a citadel, and which gave the Spanish and Mexican people a name for vehement obstinacy that will live in all history. It was even given out that the elegant ladies of the Southern cities would join in the desperate defence of their homes. And Charleston is ours without a battle! To-day, doubtless, the insulted • stars and stripes wave over the battle fringed shores of its harbor, and float above the shattered walls of Fort Sump ter. Would that the brave and pious An derson and his chaplain had been there to consecrate that new act of national tri umph with preyer. Would that Crawford and Doubleday, and the survivors of that gallant band, had witnessed the unfolding of that banner, which they raised in trem bling faith, but which now waves with a lustre and an authorityand a majesty that a long career of triumph, inaugurated at that solemn and critical moment, has poured upon it. Then , dark were the omens of the future, while the ship of State swept, like, an unmoored helmless bark, into the angry sea of civil strife ; imbecility and party divisions on the one hand, and defiant well-organized and vastly ramified 'rebellion on the other. Now rising, as if new created amid the blinding war of the elements, the Great Republic throbs with new strength, glows with new beauty, and looks grand ly down at the triumphs of her sons, as city after city, fort after fort, and State after State are laid at her feet, in token of her resistless might, and in vindica tion of her affronted dignity and violated laws. Charleston is ours, God and the right are vindicated. MINIStIERIAL RELIEF FUND. Principles and Rules to govern the dis tribution of the Ministerial Relief Fund, adopted by the Executive Com mittee of the Fund, Dec. 29, 1864, and approved by the Trustees of the Presbyterian House, Jan. 9, 1865. The Ministerial Relief Fund, established by the General Assembly, meeting in Dayton, Ohio, May, 1864, is intended "for the relief of disabled ministers in good and regular •standing in connection with said Assembly, and the families of ministers who. have deceased while in this connection." While the fund is to be sacredly guarded against every species of imposi tion, the Assembly would hereby invite those whose circumstances bring them within the rules, to avail themselves of its benefits, as an aid most justly bestowed, and that can most honorably be received. In order to give effect to the benevo lent intentions of the Assembly, the Executive Committee of the Ministerial Relief Fund Agency have adopted, and the Trustees of the Presbyterian House have approved, the following principles and rules of distribution : 1. Every applicant for relief must be recommended by the Presbytery to which the claimant belongs. To facili tate applications, Presbyteries are ear nestly requested to appoint standing committees with authority to act. 2. Every application for aid must, in the case of a minister, state his age and circumstances ; in the case of a deceased minister's family, the circumstances of the widow and the number, sex, and ages of the orphaned children. 3. Every Presbytery c er Presbyterial Committee, endorsing an application, will be expected to inquire into the circum stances of the applicant, to assume the responsibility of recommending the case to the Executive Committee, and to state specifically what amount of relief should, in their judgment, be given. It is, however, clearly understood that while the recommendation of Presbyteries will . be always regarded with great respect and confidence, yet the Executive Com mittee reserves to itself, in each case, a final decision, to be regulated by the urgency of the applicant's necessities, the term of active service in the ministry on which the application is based, and the State of the treasury. 4. No appropriation will be made for a period exceeding one year, and should the renewal of an appropriation be de sired, the application must be again en dorsed by the Presbytery or Presbyte rial Committee. 5. As-the Executive Committee meet quarterly, on the third Tuesday of June, September, December, and March, appli cations should be sent in full time to be presented at one of these meetings ; otherwise action thereon may be delayed for more than two months. 6. All applications and letters per taining to the. general businesi of the Fund, should be addressed to the Rev_ Charles Brown, Secretary, 1334Chesngt street, Philadelphia, Pa.