6i,arti,%llk(lolElitg, REV. A. M. STEWART'S LETTER. CAMP TWENTY-FOURTFI CORPS, ARMY OF THE JAMES, Feb. 24,1885. J Dear Brother :—A strong desire has existed for long months to witness a large company of our prisoners, just as handed over by the rebel authorities, after long confinement in their reputed starving pens. To-day this curiosity has been in the fullest manner gratified. Taking an early tour on horseback through the Army of the James, a detour was made in order to examine that apparently abortive Dutch Gap canal, on which Butler racked his ingenious brain, and in which his soldiers so long blistered their hands, and where not a few lost their lives. While thus engagbd, intimation was given that a thousand Union prison ers were presently to be landed a short distance above, at a" place called Cox's Landing,'on the dividing line between the confronting armies. Riding at once to the designated place, I found the re port fully confirmed. There were . the Confederate vessels, just down from Rich mond ; and here were a thousand of our poor soldiers being landed for exchange. The reader, with a map of the James river, can see the locations and the man ner in which the transfers of prisoners are made. Cox's Landing is on the north Bide of the James, a short distance above Dutch Gap, and on the present lino between the two armies. Here the Union prisoners to be exchanged are landed. Those who are able, walk; and those who are unable to walk are hauled across the neck to Aikin's Landing, a distance of about two miles, and not far below the outlet of Butler's canal. Here the rebel prisoners to be exchanged are landed, and walk across to Cox's Land ing. After nearly four years of rugged army service, aipid all manner of trials, suffer ings, mutilations, and death, I had sup posed myself not hardened it is true, but still too familiar with such scenes to be easily- moved. I was, however, alto gether unprepared for such a spectacle of wan, sad, wasted, and listless beings ; squalid, rag.filthg. and *iihVermin. The 14ncis and faces of many gave no evidence of an application of water for months past. The strength and manhood of many seemed so effectually crushed out that they appeared to have neither thought nor desire for washing. When in their midst, even the smell was almost sicken ing. Quite a number were entirely bare foot, and the efforts at coverings for the head were ludicrous. Some had the remnants of their old uniforms; but so torn and defaced as to be scarcely , recog nized. The clothing, however, in which the large majority were captured had en tirely. disappeared. Sorry, yet fertile, were the efforts which had been made to cover their nakedrtesS. Old, torn, filthy rebel quilts, blankets, coats, and pieces of canvass were used, and yet, despite every effort, a bare, bony, glazed arm or leg would protrude. About one hundred and sixty out of the one thousand were unable to walk, and were helped or carried out of the rebel barge, and laid on the cold, wet, muddy bank. Those who were able, wrapped their tattered garments about them and coiled up like so many animals, looking like burlesques of humanity. A long line of our ambulances was soon at the place, when I joined with - a guard of our soldiers to assist the starved and shivering beings into them. While thus engaged, an effort was made once and again to converse with the sufferers; and learn from them the cruel wrongs which had so well nigh crushed out their man hood; but I found the attempt vain. In stead of conversation, not only tears but actual sobbing and crying came. Soon all were loaded, and the cavalcade of ambulances and footmen started for Aiken's Landing, where two of our Gov ernment vessels were in waiting to con vey the ransomed men to Annapolis. The Christian Commission have a ma chine, which so far as my knowledge of mechanics extends, is sui generis—its like is not. The thing goes on four wheels, and with two good horses is drawn to any ordinary locality. Were it driven on a field of battle in front of the enemy, it might readily be mistaken by them for some infernal machine, whose business was. to discharge a continued stream of shell and hot shot. This ca, rious nondescript is, however, a coffee boiler. It has three distinct, yet "con• joined urns, each with a"capacity of ten gallons. Under these are small furnaces, in which fire can be kept even•when in rapid motion. Conveniently located are neat boxes for crushed• coffee, tea, sugar, canned milk, bread, and crackers. On the arrival of the prisoners at Aiken's Landing, there stood on the bank•of the, river this nondescript machine in full blast., There was ready thirty gallons of the best coffee, creamed and sugared, long rows of bright tin cups, barrels of doughnuts, piles of light biscuit and soda crackers, with half a dozen agents and delegates of the Commission as almoners. My horse was soon hitched, and myself added as an, assistant. The scene that followed beggars all description. The lank, hungry, tatterde malions who were able to walk, fell into semi-military order and approached the place of refreshment, where each had handed to him a tin cup of coffee with a light biscuit and doughnut. To the more feeble these were carried._ What intense eagerness, what satisfaction, joy, tears, gratitude, blessings, with occasional curses upon the rebels! When one coffee boiler was emptied,. it was immediately refilled with fresh water and coffee, with a brisk fire underneath, so that by the time the other two were emptied the first was again boiling and ready. Thus went on this benevolent work, until, at least, a hundred gallons of good coffee, with suitable accompani ments, were distributed—each one of the hungry thousand being comfortably fed. Although connected with a different scheme of beneficence—American Tract Society (Boston)—in behalf of our sol diers, sailors, and freedmen, yet can I thus most cordially bear witness to the prompt, timely, energetic, judicious, and liberal workings of the Christian Commission. While our released prisoners were get ting on board the vessels awaiting them, another steamboat came up the river, and landed a thousand rebel prisoners in exchange for ours just received. Hale and hearty were they, and all giving evidence of kind treatment and good feed ing. Honorable contrast this in behalf of our Northern Christianity. Excitable people with outraged feelings may talk and argue about retaliation upon rebel prisoners, yet is the thing not about to be done. We cannot afford such *a costly experiment. It would do terrible vio lence to the benevolence of our people. The rebels must have an entire monopoly of this starving business. Were a thou sand rebel soldiers, while as prisoners in some Northern place of confinement, known to be pining away with hunger, the mothers, wives, sisters, and daugh ters of slaughtered Union soldiers would break through all the guards in Christen dom in order to feed them. A. M. STEWART. ENCOURAGING WORDS. From recent correspondence we ex tract the following kind and encouraging words. A. returned missionary says : " Having been for some years out of the country, I was not familiar with your good paper, but since I have made its acquaintance I wish to hold it. It is one of the most prized of all the papers with 'which I am acquainted, and I have taken no less than four leading religious weeklies for the most part of the current year. I now „atten tor fears, and take the AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN in its stead. My hearty well wishes for its continued success in your hands. Brother Bush's semi-edi torials are of themselves worth the price of the paper.” A loyal lady, wife of a minister, writes : "We are recent subscribers for the AMERICAN. PRESBYTERIAN but we have learned to value it highly, and think there is no other paper that could fill its place. We are especially pleased with the noble stand taken by you during the recent political struggle, now so happily, ended. To be half-loyal in times like these is to be disloyal, and we think that :no man - who is true Jo his country; should leave us in doubt regarding his sentiment& My husband remarked pre vious to the election of Mr. Lincoln, I like the AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN for its out-spoken loyalty, and manly utterances in these times of trial.' While some do not lift their voice for the cause of free dom, we feel that we have double reason to honor those men, who are true to God, their country, and to themselves ; arid we know there are many who can appreciate the lofty motives which inspire them." A minister in New York, who gives his sympathy a decidedly practical turn, writes : - "I am trying to introduce our excel lent AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN amongst my people in this place. I want to get thirty subscribers. I am exceedingly anxious to get the paper among my peo ple. I know it will do them as well as our Church and the cause of Christ very much good. The paper seems to me increasingly good. Every copy has articles so interesting that I want all my people to read them. It is not like the ---, five-eighths filled with advertisements, and I hope it never will be. The article in the last, Rights of Free Colored Persons,' has the ring of the true metal, but I cannot stop to specify articles of real value, it would take too long a time." Another, in western Pennsylvania, writes : "Your labors have made the AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN a most excellent time keeper to its readers. It keeps up with the -spirit and movement of the grand current events. Every reader who watches the finger on its dial from week to week, can find answer to the questions, What of the night ?' or What of the day ?' In this respect its excellence is steadily in creasing." Still another writes from Michigan : " How greatly the paper has improved for two or three years past, and still its cry is Excelsior ! Brother Hotchkin is doing well in the Family Department, judging from the interest my children take in it. Children, like bees, soon know in which flower the honey is. Keep on talking and giving us the same _wide variety, for you cannot tell which will prosper, this or that. What you have said about revivals has been read in many prayer-meetings. And the spirit of patriotism you have breathed has fired many hearts to do and suffer for our country." From a letter enclosing another year's subscription : " Been trying to do without the AMERI CAN PRESBYTERIAN. We've failed ; can't spare all our luxuries." From a minister in New York : You are doing admirably with the paper. I regard it as the best religious paper in the land.", THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1865. DEEP RELIGIOUS INTEREST IN NEW TON, N, J. Our quiet town had been deeply moved by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. A few Christians had long been earnestly praying for, he blessing, but yet when it came, all seemed to be taken by surprise. We could not believe our eyes when we saw hundreds of little children and older ones asking, with tears, what they should do to be saved. Rev. Mr. Hammond spent Sabbath morning endeavoring to get Christians to pray for a great blessing and not to be surprised when God answered their prayers. He had addressed the chil dren's meeting Sabbath afternoon, which crowded the Old School Presbyterian Church and found, as he went among them, that almost hundreds seemed con vinced by the Holy Spirit that they were sinners. But when he asked Christians to come and help—pointing them to the Sa - viout scarce any, at the first meeting, were found ready to assist. But in a day or two Christians were heard asking God to forgive them, that after they had been praying for a blessing . so long there was not found " room enough to receive it." Reference was made to our Sa viour's words in Luke xviii. 8 : "'When the son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth ?" On Monday night, after Mr. Ham mond's sermon to adults, at the sugges tion of one of the ministers, the anxious were invited to one part of the house, that they might be the more readily con versed and prayed with. At once be tween seventy and a hundred came. All heads were bowed and many were in tears. Judge Ryerson was among those who were active in pointing weeping souls to the cross. Numbers also were found in the audience, who were deeply anxious about their soul's salvation. And kalthough they remained in their seats, the ministers and Christians searched them out and endeavored to point them to the Saviour. _ Thursday afternoon, at the childrens' meeting, a touching scene occurred. After the crowded inquiry meeting, at which hundreds of little ones remained, was closed, still nuMbers - tbe ~...... • 03 — large pulpit platform, putting on his overcoat, about twenty children, one after another, clus tered around him, and with tears said: " Will you please pray with us, for we want to find Jesus before we go home." It was a most melting sight to see them, as with sobs they - followed him, in their short petitions to the throne of grace. REV. 0-. C. BUSH, who came over from Hackettstown to assist Mr. Ham mond, stated that the work of the Holy Spirit in Newton seemed to be as deep and as extensive as that in his own place, and that he hoped all of the Christians would unitedly prayand labor : that• tyd work might go on with power. Many in Newton are praying that the Holy Spirit may go with Mr. Hammond to Detroit, where he is to commence,meet ings Sabbath, February 26th. * * * IN MEMORIAM. Rev. Edwin. Elisha Merriam, son of Mr. E. J. Merriam of Plymouth, Mass., died in Salem, Wayne Co., Pa., on the 17th of February, aged 28 years. The deceased was born in Mason, Hillsboro Co., N. H. He became the subject of the renewing grace of God at the early age of eleven or twelve years. Not many years after this he gave him self to the work of the gospel ministry. With this in view, he entered Amherst, College • here he was known as a dili gent student, and acquitted himself with honor He graduated, in 1858... After spending two 'years , in *Chine he en tered Union Theological Sminary. Dur ing the three years he spent in this in stitution, he held a high position in his class, notwithstanding he spent sufficient time in lucrative employmentscto so en large his limited means as .to Meet the expenses of his education. He" ;began his labors in Salein, in August, J 863, and was ordained•and installed:as pas tor of that church, August- 3, 1864, by the Montrose Presbytery. In his exam ination, Presbytery were highly pleased with his clear and correct acquaintance with the doctrines of scripture. - But his pastorate was short, and he has gone to his grave in the dew of his youth. In a little over six months of pesters], labor, he has been called to the church above. Several of his co-presbyters at tended his funeral, and a sermon was preached from the text, "- Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints." His remains were taken to Ply mouth, Mass., to rest in the family bury ing ground. To us his death seems a great loss to the church. After eight or nine years spent in preparing for the ministry, he possessed valuable qualifications for use fulness. But the Master who called him to enter the field, has transferred him from this to a higher one above. The ripe scholarship he had acquired will better fit him for that higher ministry upon which he has already entered. But the time spent in study was not lost to the cause of Christ. He did not wait till he should have entered the ministry to do good ; he heartily engaged in the_ Missionary enterprises of the city. Modest and retiring in his deportment, his excellencies were known only to those most intimately - acquainted with him. Brief as have been his labors among his people, they saw his worth and tenderly loved him. In the large congregation that met at his funeral, the members. of his Church sat as mournerslvith the two brothers who were present. All seemed to feel that they had lost a friend. For several months his health had been de clining. On the 14th of January last, he preached his last sermon, on the text " The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death." In one month he was called to meet this enemy face to face ; but he was a conquered foe. A friend spoke to him in his last moments, about leaving his work too soon. He replied, " I would love to live and preach the gospel, but God knows best." He gently passed away : " As sets the morning star, which goes Not down behind the darkened west, nor hides Obscured among the tempest of the sky, But melts away into the light of heaven." JOTTINGS FROM A PARISH JOURNAL. NO. 3. A FAMILY IIIT THE FIELD Mrs. M., a soldier's wife, with three children, one a few months old, and all recovering from scarlet fever, is support ing herself and her little ones by working for the Arsenal. She is happy and con tented, walking in the fear of the Lord, and constant in prayer. Her tale is one 'of profound interest. She spends a por tion of each day, after its long, weary toils, in reading the Bible and prayer. She says she has many to pray for, and much to be thankful for. " I have a husband, two brothers, two brothers-in law, and two nephews in the field. Her eldest brother has been in the army of the United States for nearly ten years, was stationed - in the South before the re bellion. In a fit of humaneness he aided a slave in making his escape. For this act he was tried and sentenced to nine years' confinement and hard labor in Jackson. When General Grant advanced on Jackson, he was offered his liberty on condition of enterin g ; the rebel service. This he indignantly refused to do; but when liberated by the capture of Jackson, gladly enlisted in the service of his coun try, where he now is, a non-commissioned officer." His letters to his pious sister, while in prison, are full of thrilling interest ; and since he re-entered the service as ful 1,, 8 ,ar.--aactra's - artorother, two brothers-in-law, and two nephews in the service. One of Ins brothers-in-law, a brave soldier; has lost his health from exposure in the recruiting department, and is now dying of consumption in this city. His other brother-in-] aw, after serving three years and being, in several engagements, re-enlisted, and was in the recent engagement of the Fifth Army Corps, near City Point. On entering, as a volunteer, he was promised the usual i bounty, part only of which he 'received; which he gave to his wife, and which has long since been swallowed up by the sickness of -'her three children above re ferred to. The two nephews are in the Army of the Potomac, and have served and suffered in . the- common hardships of - the camp and the battle-field. "Here are six noble fellows, all laying their lives on the altar of their adopted country, and braving the perils of war in its defence; whilst in a retired little street and humble dwelling-place in Philadel phia, the wife, the sister, and the 'aunt; with her three sickly, pining children I around her, is daily bearing them on her spirit before'the throne of grace. Ruler's of the land and generals of the army are apt to count their strength by their numbers, and to overlook how much, they owe to the prayers of such humble, Un pretending agents as this. 'They are sending up their memorials to the God of battles. In the days of Israel's warfare, God honored women and owned prayer, in vesting both with no ordinary amount of power. Blessed above women shall Jael, the wife of Heber, be." Deborah was the chief counsellor of Barak, while for twenty years Jabin, king of Canaan, with his nine -hundred chariots of iron, oppressed the, people of God. By a woman's stratagem, the plan of battle was arranged ; by a woman's noble cour age,' Sisera, the commanding general, fell ; and a woman was the foremost to strike her timbrel and her harp, and chant a song of thanksgiving to the God of Israel, when an invading . and rebel host lay trembling at her nation's feet. Nor are we less indebted than Israel was to the praying moihers, and devoted wives; and sisters of country for their in tercessions and their prayers. The Censer. of Aaron, with which he rushed in between the living and the dead, did not stay the plague. It was the prayer of the high-priest. It was not the - prowess of arms that vanquished Amalek in the wilderness. It was the prayer of Moses. There was no power in the ram's horns to bring down the frowning minarets and turreted battle= ments of Jericho. The great feat was accomplished by the prayer of Joshua. It was not a nation's arms that foiled the invading Philistines at Ebenezer; but the prayer of Samuel, which called into requisition the artillery of heaven ; and while he prayed, the lightning flashed, the clouds muttered, the hail, the rain, the tempest broke forth, and the plain of Mizpeh was bestrewed with the dead bodies of Philistia's entire national army. When Sennacherib sent in his vaunt ing war-message to holy Hezekiah, and demanded an immediate surrender, the devout monarch did not consult his ex ecutive council. He did not send for the generals of the army to raise before them the question of national defences. He sent for Isaiah, the prophet, who accom panied him to his secret chamber, and while the monarch and the prophet were 'on their knees, and one hundred and eighty-five thousand warriors ready to ply their battering rams upon the walls of the holy city, lo " The angel of death spread his wings on the • blast, And breathed on the face of the foe as he * passed." "Like the leaves of the forest when summer -was green, That hostwith their banners at sunset were seen ; Like the leaves of the forest when autumn hath blown, That host on the morrow lay withered and strown." • In conducting the affairs of this great national struggle, it is right that each de partment of the service should be effi ciently managed. The executive must enlist and enroll. The commissariat must supply food and clothing. The Sanitary and Christian Commissions inust lend their philanthropic and evan gelical aid ; but the women "who remain at home" can exercise an influence more potent, though less visible, than any other agency. • I doubt much if the entire Christian Church possessed as much influence as could have opened a single lock in the prison where Peter lay. Yet the united prayers of the little company, who met in a private dwelling,-brought an angel from heaven, who shook off the chains and bore the apostle away from between the Roman soldiers—a free man. Christian wives I Christian mothers! Christian sisters! Pray! Pray con stantly.; pray fervently. Give God no rest till he turn away the tide of war from this once blessed country, and re store to, your happy homes your beloved husbands, fathers, and brothers, amid songs of gratitude and shouts of victory. A PUPIL OF CHALMERS. INTERESTING LETTERS FROM ilEollE.F. MISSIONARIES, WITII A WORD FROM SECRETARY KENDA.LE. PRESBYTERIAN ROO3IS, 150 NASSAU ST., 1 . New York, March 1, 1865. MESSRS. 'EDITORS :—No one can read Gillett's "History of the Presbyterian Church," without noticing that, in the early days, the very best men were accus tomed to go out on the frontier and labor as : • • • • fur young men now seem to fear that they will be forgotten, if they do not keep near the great centres of commer cial life. The probability is, they will be forgotten while waiting for a place ! Dr. Hoge of the " other branch," who died a few months ago, venerable and beloved, at Columbus, the capital of Ohio, went there fifty years ago as a Home Mission ary. He formed his church, and a city grew up with it. Your_ paper. a few weeks ago men tioned the death of REY. LEVI F. PAR SONS, coupled with that of REV. SETH Surrn pioneers in the ministry of Wes tern New York. They went into the wilderness, and formed churches and died there—an enterprising agricultural popu lation settling around them, enjoying their instructions while living and mourn ing sincerely at their death! But they laid foundations which will remain for many generations. Many churches sprung up around them. They saw a Theological Seminary established at Au burn, they were both Trustees of the In stitution many years previous to their death, and lived to see some hundreds o its graduates laboring in the ministry. ti Why, then, are young men so reluctant to go out on, the frontier and do likewise ? A late graduate from one of our Semi naries, now in Minnesota, writes as fol lows : " I find plenty of work, and think there is little•danger of growing rusty out here. The harvest is indeed ripe, and all that seems to be necessary is to thrust in the sickle and reap. lam well pleased that the Lord put it into my heart to come to _this place. I heartily wish that the young men who linger for fields in the East, where it is near home, could only realize that their usefulness, would be increased, we might almost say ten fold, if they would only bend their steps towards these western fields." s But they must wisely forecast the future. Ministers are called on to en dure hardness as good soldiers ; but the reward comes forward rapidly. • It may interest your readers to know an extreme case, and 1 know you will be glad to hear from the young man sent out from a Philadelphia Presbytery last summer, to Montana Territory, and so I give you extracts from ANOTJIER,LETTER Let me say first, however, that it took sixty-five days to get the letter from Ban nock City to New York. The extracts - from the letter are as follows " We have had fearfully cold weather, the mercury reaching forty degrees be low zero, 'and I am entirely destitute of winter clothing, as I left it all in my trunk, which has only reached Salt Lake City and no teams can come through before spring. have written to have it sent by stage. It will cost seventy-five dol lars, but it would cost more than that to replace the smallest items it contains. Paper is now $1 50 per quire; envel opes $1 per package; postage stamps 30 cents each; ink $1 50 for a six cent bottle. Although so near Salt Lake (450 miles), salt is $1 per pound, butter $3 per pound, and sugar $2 per pound, and board per week ranges from $36 to $5O. lam living on the bare necessities, and it cripples me to be in debt. "But I have a very interesting little prayer-meeting ; four professors of reli gion are regularly there, and from four to six other young men ; (the population is mostly composed of men) and last Sab bath evening, I had the largest audience I have seen since I came.out. "There is scarcely any reading matter here. Dr. Nelson sent me some tracts which I received some time ago, and they were very acceptable among the people. I never knewthe value of a tract before. I get the AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN and read it all, even to the advertisements. I re gard this as a very important field—it is to become a large and influential city." If his expectations are realized, how soon will he forget these temporary hardships in the blessed consciousness that he had first planted the standard of the cross on this outpost, and preached the gospel to perishing men ! More such young men are wanted. Michigan, Minnesota, Kansas, Missouri and the Rocky Mountain Slopes to the Pacific, are calling for men. The harvest'is plen teous—the laborers are not few, except as they cluster about the old centres and refuse to go out and mould society in its formative state, when the gospel is greatly needed and when it will produce the best results. The Committee of Rome Missions de sire to send young and energetic men to these destiture fields with the opening of sping. Where are the MEN ? H. K. REV. JAMES GILLFILLAN ON THE CHANGE OF THE SABBATH. It has been• our happines; in these " ends of the earth" to see the juStly celebrated work on the Sabbath of the Rev. James Gilfillan. We have read his chapter on the change of the day, with interest and edi fication. In an argument on so very important a question as the change of the weekly Sabbath from one day to another, the very best evidence that can be secured is demanded. This may have been done by the reverend author ; and it is with due deference to his views, as well as to• the opinions of other great men, that a single doubt is here entertained. But if the criticism is uncalled for, it is hoped that no harm will result from the effort. The nature and the importance of the Sabbath is such, that no power below the throne of God could either originate or change the institution in any respect, especially to fix or change the day of holy rest, and of holy convocations. God will be worshipped in ways of his own appointment, and not by our inventions. On page 303, American T. S. Edition, we find these words, Col. 2. 16 : " The word in the original for Sabbath-days is plural and always in that form has the sense of the Jewish Sabbath in the New Testament." The word isacogflaTary, and is plural. In the English Bible, it is rendered " Sabbath-days" in Col. 2. 16. Webster gives it " Sabbaths ;" which is doubtless correct. , But we deny that acefligaTlVl , in the New Testament al ways refers to the Jewish Sabbaths, or necessarily, to any particular class of Sabbaths. In Matt. 28. 1, this word in its plural form occurs twice.. The same word, the same form, and put up with the same letters as in Col. 2, 16. But King James' forty-seven Ttranslators have not' been true to Matt. 28. 1, if Mr. Gallen is right as to, the import of craNcvrvir; nor will their translation be more in agreement with the original: "04. E SE C7C6I3BCCVEIT, '712 1339 , 12000VGM a<< P3a, 0-ctßigcerrery." Here we have the same word first referring to the Jewish Sab baths, and second to the Christian Sab baths. This is a most interesting and instructive portion of church history, giving a minute and precise account of the going out of the old dispensation and of the coming in of the new. Not only as it' relates to the time, but as it relates to the past, and the present Sabbaths ; one class being dead and buried, and the other class brought to life and instantly put into active service. But in our translation this is totally lost, and one of the most decided and palpable proofs of the change is lost. After the Sabbath, or "In the end of the Sabbath," is not by far a good rendering. It demands a flowing, rather than a literal translation. But to call. " The first day of the week." a good rendering of p.m cretiStgaTerY i is rather too bad. .A translation must, if possible, give the true sense ; what, then, is the true sense of the text, judging by the words, the construction of the sen tence, and the history of the Sabbath ? Let us try. " After the Sabbaths, as the light began to shine into the first-day Sabbaths." Now it is manifest that two classes of Sabbaths are here presented to the mind, which might be correctly ex pressed as follows : " After the close of the Jewish Sabbaths as the light began to shine into the first one of the Chris tian Sabbaths." But a very slight par aphrase might place it in a somewhat clearer light, viz : "In the end of the seventh-day Sabbaths, as the light began to shine into the first one of the first-day Sabbaths*." This view of the text seems to correspond with-itself; with, the history of the case, and of the church, and if cor rect affords direct and full evidence of the change of the Sabbath to the first day of the week ; and it also, gives Mr. Gilfillan an opportunity of seeing the first day of the week being called Sabbath before Irenseus, A. a 178. The first day is called. Sabbath in the New Testa ment eight times at least. See page 369 of Gilfillan's Sabbath Book. The above is given as the candid views of one who has thought and written somewhat on this subject, but without any desire to fight the literati, and es pecially to fight the friends of the Chris tian Sabbath. True religion must have a true Sabbath; blot out .the first-day Sabbath, and you blot out Christianity, and the hope of the world. WM. -M. STEWART CEDAR RAPIDS, Feb. 6, 1865 ALL the good that we enjoy in any kind is but a beam of the face of God.