Tgß AMEBICAN PRESBYTERIAN AND GENESEE EVANGELIST. A Religions and Family Newspaper, IN THY INTEREST OF THE ConstituticTid Presbyterian Church. PUBLISHED - EVERY THURSDAY, THE PRESBYTERIAN HOUSE, .1384 Chestnut Street, (2d story,) Philadelphia. Rev. John W. Nears, Editor and Pnblisher. Rev. B. B. Hotchkin, Editor of News and Family Departments. Rev. O. P. Buih, Correspanding Editor, Rochester, N. Y. gmtritan. Vuestaitstian. THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1865 CONTENTS 01' INSIDE PAGES. SECOND PAGE--THE FAMILY CIRCLE: The Pilgrim's Pillow—The Clouded Intellect— Making_ a Difference—Christ and the Children— , About Tobacco. For the Little Polite: Familiar Talks with the Children—A Justßebuhe—A Child's Idea of Light ning. Rural Economy: Varnishing Furniture—Salting Hay—To Remove the Taste of New Wood. THIRD PAGE—RELIGIOUS WORLD ABROAD: Great Britian — France—ltaly—Germany. SIXTH PAGE—CORRESPONDENCE: From our London Correspondent—Acknowledg ment of the Gitt of a Bible by a Heathen Prince— Jottings from a Parish= Journal—Father says so I A Word for Returning Soldiers—The Reception of our Returning Braves—How to be Satisfied—Good for One Pound. SEVENTH PAGE—RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE : Presbyterian—Congregational—Reformed Dutch— Methodist Baptist—Episcopal —Unitarian—The Jews—Roman Catholic—The Friends—Miscellane ous—ltems—The Publication Cause. PRESBYTERIANISM AND REPUBLI CANISM. "He that will not honor the memory and resbect the influence of Calvin, knows but little of the origin of American Iiberty."—BAN CROFT. There are three important peculiarities of a republican form of government such as that of the United States, which contribute more than anything else to recommend it to the friends of human liberty and happiness : 1. It is a free government,—self-govern ment, on the principle of the majority being the controlling power. 2. It is a representative government-- net a democracy. 3. It combines by federal representation the wisdom and the authority of all, in di recting the affairs of the whole. The first principle distinguishes it from a monarchy or an empire; the second from a democracy; and the third from an oligar chy or an aristocracy such as 'that of Venice or the States of Holland. • Considering how great an influence is exercised upon the characters, tastes, and susceptibilities of a people by their eccle siastical relations, it becomes a question of leading denominations of the country is most nearly allied in its arrangements to a republican form of government, and which would be likely to cultivate in the people most effectually an, attachment to our free institutions. The temper of the individual members, or indeed of the great body of a denomination, cannot always be judged by the peculiarities of their creed or church government; men are often better or worse than their circumstances would lead us to believe; but tendencies inherent in the very nature of an institution cannot be ignored by the observer, and he will nearly always find that, if sufficient time transpires, those tendencies make themselves good in his tory. Nothing in the world is clearer than the antagonism between hierarchical forms of church government and all forms of politi cal. liberty. The Papacy is a complete system of spiritual despotism. Obedience and not liberty is its ever-recurring watch word. People, nobles, kings, czars must all alike acknowledge the absolute sover eignty of the Pope. Subordinate to the Pope are the various orders of the clergy, who _manage the affairs of the church, in utter unconcern of the mind of the laity. The governing and the governed are as widely distinguished almost as master and slave. Liberty is a tabooed idea in the Romish church. It is heresy of the most dangerous sort, for the Catholic to have any mind of his own distinct from that of "his spiritual adviser." History shows us that the most powerful ally of despotism known in the civilized world, has been popery; and at this day the spectacles of France, Spain, Portugal, and Austria, where Ro manism is by far stronger than anywhere else, prove the inherent adaptedness of Popery and political despotism for each other. In the radical form of Congregationalism called Independency,—understood to have been claimed as of Divine authority by 'the preacher of the late Boston Convention,—we find the opposite extreme of democracy and individualism, tending to anarchy. Here, we are struck with the almost utter absence of authority and organization. Here, we are greeted on every side with the ory of liberty, until we wonder where even the power to preserve and insure liberty is to be found; or until, in the cry of "no creed," we lose sight of church and of order alto gether. Here, the final authority is the majority of all the members of the indi vidual church, of which the minister him self is one. Everything else is advisory. There is no federation, no representation, no interdependence, no authoritative inter position of the whole, to correct the errors and supplement the wisdom of the few. We have a mere aggregate of, small inde pendent immunities, in which no idea of New. Series, Vol. 11, No. 26. government is cultivated beyond that of a majority vote in a company, at most, of a few hundreds. We need not say that we consider both Hierarchy. and Independency far removed from the ideal of a republic like our own. Both of them are lacking in equally essen tial, though in very different, elements. A hierarchy withdraws power from the peo ple and lodges it absolutely in the hands of a spiritual head. Independency almost equally removes power from the people, but lodges it nowhere;. A hierarchy crushes the church into unity and nearly kills •it; independency explodes it- into -fragthents, and evaporates the very .idea of the aura into the rarity of rationalism. Neither Hi erarchy nor Independency would suggest or nurture the idea of a federal republic. Neither of them can be regarded as in and of themselves friendly to its development. And if history be appealed to, it can be said for our own country, that the Puritans, who settled New England, resembled the Dutch of New Amsterdam or the Hugue nots of the remoter South, rather than radical Independents of our day. In the New England churches, ruling elders and synods were not the objects of abhorrence that they have lately become to those who boast of their Puritan lineage most loudly. Whatever the present genus of- " Ply mouth" churches may be, the original one of all was Presbyterian, with John Robin son as its pastor, , and 'the famous " Elder Brewster" as one of its session. The prin ciple of liberty may indeed be made good against despotism by men like the Indepen dents, destitute of a profound sense of order; but such are not the men to organize it in a wise combination and balancing of foi:oes, nor are they the men 'who give steadiness and solidity to republican insti tutions. And the strength which thew England of to-day gives to the government, does not come from- the rabid independency and "no creed" which shelters under the loose folds of Congregationalism, but rather from that soberer and steadier portion of Isar' • o a ..reciate a .of government in Church or State So remarkable, on the other hand, is the likeness between the Presbyter an polity and a Republican form of government, that we find no difficulty in admitting some thing more than likeness,—actual kinship, a relationship of cause and effect. Presbyterianism is a government by the people; the people organize the church, choose its ruling elders, elect their pastor, in whose license and ordination they have had an equal voice in the councils of the church at large. No assembly can con vene, no law can be passed, without their presence as judges and legislators. This is essential, not accidental, in Presbyterianism; it is part of its very idea as a polity, in fact a leading part, and the chief difference between it and all other church polities. In no other denomination, are the repre sentatives of the peoPle admitted to plenary authority in all acts of government and of counsel. No other denomination therefore can compare with ours in adaptation to the tastes and wants of a self-governing com munity. Presbyterianism is representative not d: mocratic. So is the whole form of our ci ; government. Our citizens delegate every official function, and transact every public act by their representatives. Pure democ racy is hardly maintained in the manage ment even of very small towns. If this system is superior to that of bringing every public matter to the notice and judgment of the people at large', as it plainly is; if it is important that the people be trained to value it, and prefer it to the loose, imprac ticable methods of democracy; if indeed it be altogether essential in the working out of our problem of a free united govern ment, which the opposite method would utterly frustrate; then Presbyterianism must be accepted as a grand school of republican ism, constantly and effectually training its adherents in the general duties of Ameri can citizenship. Again, Presbyterianism is federated, al most precisely as are the various members of our political system. It forms a whole, which might with entire propriety be termed a Federal Republic. Its ideal is federal unity, realized by representation. Its individual church, with its delegated officers comprising the session, corresponds in civil government to the municipality ; its presbytery, made up of representatives from a number of neighboring churches, resembles the government of the county; the - S . ynods embracing a number of contiguous Presby teries and composed still of representatives from the churches, may be compared to the State Assemblies; while- the General Assembly, made up of ruling elders and ministers in equal proportions, chosen by the whole number of the Presbyteries, is the representative body of the entire PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1865. church, in which the wisdom and judicial authority of the whole is embodied. It therefore resembles the highest representa tive body of the land, the Congress of the United States. Hence we have a close analogy, both in spirit and form, both in elementary parts, and in outward organiza tion, between the entire structure of the Presbyterian polity and the whole scheme of representative government by which the people of the United States manage their political affairs. No civil government in the world is so much like the Presbyterian polity as ,this?f the United States; no de .nominitional polity is so closely allied to the republicanism or America as is that of our own church. It is not surprising, therefore, that Chief Justice Tilghman should have remarked that the framers of our Constitution bor rowed very much of the form of our Re public from that form of church govern ment developed in the constitution of the Presbyterian Church of Scotland; or that Mr. G. C. Verplanck traces the Declara tion of Independence to the Solemn League and Covenant as its model. Republicanism, in fact, sprung up in connection with the very origin of the modern Presbyterian Church. Geneva was the early nursery of Republicanism and Presbyterianism. Ban croft says, that Calvin made Geneva, " for the modern world the impregnable fortress of modern liberty, the perfect seed. plot of Democracy." The commonwealth of Eng land and the modified republic of Holland, were both the work of Presbyterians. The republican elements in the present govern ment of Great Britain;are largely due to the teachings of John Knox and of Calvin. The Presbyterian. Church in this country was the first to protest against. British tyranny, and the first to acknowledge the Declaration of Independence ; in fact, it went before Mr. Jefferson by the famous 4eclaration of Mecklenburg, N. C. And to the Presbyterian Church of this country is due the separation between Church and State, a separation- which was fully consum ?.'; rmarram dependency in. in New England felt the need of the outside support of the civil power, while well-organized Presbytery could afford, to dispense with it, and oppose it as the he of liberty' everywhere. We have not the slightest doubt.that the spread of the _Presbyterian polity over our land, is adding strength to our free institu tions, and is training the people to an intel ligent estimate and right use of them; while Independency tends to breed restless ness, and to lessen the popular regard for order, system, and organization, in public affairs. Hierarchical and prelatical forms of church government, on the other hand, accustom the minds of the people to the idea of simple obedience to irresponsible authority, which is equally unfriendly to re publicanism. In a word, Independency re presents liberty without law; Hierarchy re presents law without liberty, while Presby terianism and the better forms of Congrega tionalism represent the true republican idea of liberty-in-law. OLICY AND DUTY OF PUNISHING TRAITOR LEADERS. 11. With the lapse of another week, we find no sensible progress made by our Govern ment in the administration of justice to the guilty authors of our troubles. We cannot suppress our feelings of disappointment at the seeming haste exhibited to pardon rather than to punish, when such enormous crimes are concerned. We are willing in deed that such a prerogative should be ex ercised, but not that mercy should force herself into the Executive Council Cham ber while justice stands neglected and waiting outside. Let the majesty of justice be honored first; after that, give mercy abundant room and range. Let rebels first feel the weight of authority; as yet they know nothing about it, for they have been successfully resisting it for four years, and the first taste they have of it is in the restoration of their States to all the privi leges of their former federal relations. The oath they are required to take, may or not be regarded as binding, by men fresh from a monstrous act of treason and perjury; but whether kept or not, it can hardly be viewed in the light of a punishment. This eager haste to reconstruct rebellious States, and to put whole communities of rebels back in their forfeited constitutional position, before a single act of formal jus tice has been done, is a sacrifice of the dignity and honor of the nation, for which we shall sooner or later be made to suffer. We would like to see our Government, now that the amnesty proclamation sufficiently vindicates its clemency—bending all its energies, summoning all the legal' ability at its command, clothing itself with all the majesty thatinsulted but victorious authority can assume, in order to put upon record, in the most lasting and memorable form, its solemn condemnation of the treason which his brought into the verge of ruin. We need, not merely the monuments of the nation's power to put down a vastrebellion, which are found on a hundred battle-fields; we need, such a monument of the' sound moral sentiment of the nation, of just in dignation at the criminal authors of these bloody interruptions of our peace and proiiperity, as can only-be found in a calm, deliberate, and eompiehensive decision - of the highestAtlbunal of the land, sustained by tlie.Vznotit4penalties of the law. This is called for first, and we suffer, North and South by every hour of delay. What protection are we to have against treasonable plots in the - future, it we take the advice So officiously Obtruded upon us from abroad, to shed no blood, to punish no traitors more ? Shall we treat the section of our Constitution which defines treason (Art. 111., Sec. 3) as a nullity? Are trea son and resistence to treason reduced to the naked question of who is the strongest; so that when any party feels himself strong enough, he may, without any more personal risk than naturally belongs to such a strug gle, and without any crime whatever, launch into rebellion at his pleasure? If he fails, is it the mere overflow of malig nity or popular vengeance tol ; to punish him? Do we stand, in this age of civiliza tion, so close upon the verge of the barbar ous condition where might makes right, as all this would indicate ? Let such a doctrine prevail, and again we ask, what protection have we against the repetition of the crime ? What great les son will the restless spirits of this nation haVe before their eyes for all time, to dis courage them from similar monstrous undertakings ? what, according to the method of dealing with treason,-now,pro posed, besides mere military failure? fail ure :without; a: particle of disgkace ? What security have we that, before this generation ,ases,,some of the very same men who are now-rdeeifing,Eitteutive -clemency, may be , readfoliert-tite,-. same risk of failure without disgrace ? Certainly their immunity will be a perpetual. temptation to unprincipled, disappointed men, in all coming generations, to repeat what will henceforward be viewed as a bold military experiment, and not as a crime. We are deeply and painfully convinced that President Johnson and his advisers have begun at the wrong end in the settle ment of our affairs, and are injuring and offending the sense.-of justice among the people. The country looks to Chief Jus tice Chase for a line of conduct worthy of his high position, and reassuring to the friends of justice a righteous and solid peace. ADDRESS OF THE FREE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND TO THE AMERICAN CHURCHES. Among the acts of the late General Assembly of the Free Church of Scot land, of special interest to ourselves, was an address to the churches of America on the close of the war. It is a docu ment quite as remarkable for what it does not say, as for what it does. There is not a syllable congratulatory of our successes, or expressing gatification at the result of the salvation of a free Pro testant nation from dismemberment and overthrow. •We cannot learn from the address, that it would have made any difference to the venerable assembly which side had succeeded, in this unpro voked civil war, provided only slavery had been abolished. That the cause of the North was essentially that of free dom, and of the South essentially that of slavery, does not seem to have pene trated the prejudiced minds of these "Free" Church men. Indeed, the con vener of the committee, Lord Dalhousie, took particular pains in presenting the report- to accuse the North of indiffer ence to the questiod of slavery in the contest; saying, most falsely and oppro briously, so far as the long-suffering and peaceably-disposed North was concerned, that the war arose from the evil pas sions of men out of the struggle of party against party, and that it was the hand of God alone that overruled the vain purposes of man, and brought the grand issue of the abolition of slavery. We presume that Lord D. in these ex pressions fairly represents the large ma jority of his ecclesiastical associates, as we cannot find that they met with any dissent upon the floor of the Assembly. Certainly the address, for the language of which he is responsible, contains nothing incompatible with the narrow and blind sentiments uttered in his speech. We doubt whether our readers are concerned to see an address of the type of this from the Free" Church Assembly. Perhaps we need say no more of it, than that it speaks in complimentary terms of. G-enesee Evangelist, No. 997. the work of the Christian Commission, refers with deep feeling to the assassina tion. of Mr. Lincoln, and rejoices in the abolition of slavery, regards all causes of alienation between the American and British churches on this subject as-re moved and proposes a closer union be tween them by interchange of delegates. If we have space, we may, at another time, give the address entire. At pre sent, our readers will rather be pleased to read what another titled member of the yree Church,--not as we presume, of the late General Assembly—thinks of Lord Dalhousie's statements and of the state of opinion and causes of the war in our country. We refer to the Dux OF ARGYLL, whose intelligent and earnest sympathy for the North, we have already had occasion to notice in these columns. In reply to the speech of Lord Dal housie, he has written a letter to The Scotsman, in which he points out that the " platform" on which Mr. Lincoln was elected is a written document, and that of the seventeen paragraphs, not less than one-third were devoted to direct and emphatic declarations of the anti-slavery principle. The duke con tinues:— It is true, of course, that the abolition of slavery within the slave States was not con templated, and this for the very sufficient reason that the constitutional powers of the President and Congress did not make even the discussion of such a measure competent. But on every one question connected with slavery on which the President and Congress could act, Mr. Lincoln was pledged by . his "platform" to measures adverse to the inte rests of slavery. One of these questions was the restriction of slavery within its existing limits, its non-extension, its exclusion from the great " territories" of the republic. ,Nor was this all, though this was the main question in dispute. In dealing with this question, and in laying the basis of a firmer and more organized resistance to the aggres sions of the slave party principles were laid down which cut very deep indeed, down even to the very roots of the " peculiar institu tion." Here are some of the pledges taken by those Northern States who, we -are now told . , were partners with the South in an or ganized opposition to defeat the purposes of, Providence for the ultimate overthrow of slavery. The fifth paragraph of the Republican Platform has these words :—" That the pre sent.Demearatio aclministration-(Bu.chanates), has far exceeded our worst apprehensions in its measureless subserviency to the exactions of a sectional interest, as especially evinced in its desperate exertions to force the infa mous Lecompton (slave ) Constitution on the protesting people of Kansas ; in construing the personal relation between master and servant to involve unqualified property in persons," i&c., &c. The seventh paragraph is, "That the new dogma that the Constitu tion of its own force carries slavery into any or all of the Territories of the United States, is a dangerous political heresy, at variance with the explicit provisions of that instru ment itself, * * * is revolutionary in its tendency, and subversive of the peace and harmony of the country." The eighth para graph is, "That the normal condition of all the Territories of the United States is that of freedom ; and that as our republican fa thers, when they had abolished slavery in all our national territory 2 ordained that no per son should be deprived of life liberty or property without due process of law, it be comes our duty, by legislation when neces sary, to maintain this provision of the Con stitution against all who violate it; and we deny the authority of Congress, of a Terri torial Legislature, or of any individuals, to give legal existence to slavery in any Terri tory of the United States." Another paragraph denounced a threat ened revival of the slave trade. In view of these solemn declarations of principle, to which Mr. Lincoln was pledged at his elec tion, and in view of the consequences which they involve, reaching far beyond the mea sures with which they were closely connected, I have never doubted that the slave States had serious cause for alarm in the triumph of the Republican party. That triumph meant a great deal to them. For the first time in the history of the Union, the central Government was no longer to be under their prevailing influence. The new Administra tion was constituted on declarations of prin ciple directly aimed at their opinion, at their aspirations, at their policy upon the subject of slavery. It is as unjust to them as it is to the North to affirm that the slave States ilkolved their country in a bloody civil war for no intelligible reason, or on account of differences of interest or opinion which were not essential. Nor did the Southern. States ever pretend in America that the interest which they rose to defend was any other than the interest of slavery. On this subject there is another document which also I am afraid that my noble friend, Lord Dalhousie, has never seen. When the civil war was upon the point of breaking out, a committee of representatives of every State in the Union was appointed with a view to some compromise which might avert secession. I suppose these men knew what was the real subject of difference. I suppose they knew what was the " cause" " origin" of the calamities which were then' in sight. I suppose at that solemn moment, when they were already in the rapids, the efforts at the helm must have been directed to avoid the "rock ahead." What was it 7 Slavery, and nothing else. The proceedings of the committee have been published. Long and hard did they pull, and writhe, and struggle ' • but not a word did they speak ; not a stroke of the oar did they give; not a caution did they shout into each other's ear, which had not exclusive reference to the rock of sla very, and on that rock they split. It is in deed, by God's mercy, visibly extended to the United States, that now the rapids have been passed, the vessel of that great State has reappeared, not " bottom-up, ' a wreck upon the waters, but sound and whole, with the black reefs of slavery already far down in the heroism of the past, to which in the history of nations there is no return. So far I agree -with my noble friend; but there is no speeikl honor -paid to God in refusing to recognize that agency which he honors most, the human heart and will. TERM 8. Per annum, in advance: By Mail, $3. By Carrier, 83 60. Fifty cents additional, after three months. Clubs.—Ten or more papers, sent to one address. payable strictly in advance and in one remittance: By Mail, $2 50 per annum. BS , Carriers, $3 per annum. Ministers and /Ministers' Widows, $2 in ad vance. Home Missionaries, $l5O inadvance. Fifty cents additional after three months. Remittances by mail are at our risk. Postage.—Five cents quarterly, in advance, paid qy subscribers at the office of delivery. Advertisements.—l 234 cents per line for the first. and 10 cents for the second insertion. One square (one month) $3 00 two months 550 three " 750 six 12 00 one year 18 CO 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. THE FREEDMEN'S BUREAU. We cannot doubt that there remains in large sections of the South, a revenge ful and implacable spirit which vents itself upon the freedmen. Facts are transpiring such as those named by our Richmond correspondent, which prove that the old spirit of the plantation not only exists, but is intensified by the crushing disappointment it has just re ceived. The condition of the freedmen would be deplorable indeed ; but fortu nately their interests are represented by a National Bureau, in the construction of which the largest views have pre vailed. The appointment of General Howard as the head of this/Bureau, is the best possible assurance that could be given, that the Government has the real interests of these people at heart; and General Howard, by the appointment of General Fisk to a prominent position in the Bureau, has only fulfilled the best expectations of the country as to the mode in which he designs to carry out the purposes of the Government. In his address before the Ladies' Christian Com missions at the Academy of Music in this city, June 9th, General Howard de clared that the Bureau was to be guided, in its treatment of the freedmen, "by the simple principles which are in ac cordance with the religion of the blessed Saviour." Again, he said, that " this people were free ; and that the whole power of the Government, if necessary, should'be exerted to defend them in this thing." General Fisk declared himself in the following emphatic language : "He had long been enlisted in the work of elevating these people. He was in the first movement for giving - the Bible to the negro in a Southern State, and, he thanked God, among the first to put.a bayonet on his shoulder in the defence of this glorious, undivided, indivisible Union. He hoped and believed that with the Bible and the ballot, with the Christian Commission and the Freed men's Bureau, they would be able to raise the black man, and the next time he should appear before them it would be to recount the success and triumphs of this honest effort, for the good of their fellow man." It is- one of the most cheering of the signs of the times, that two men of such noble sentiments, and such warm, tender, and intelligent Christian sympathies with the black man, to say nothing of their great executive abilities, have been placed at the head of the Bureau of Freedmen, Refugees, and Abandoned Lands. We should like to see the crip pled hand of the slave power laid upon any of the objects of the care of these men, within the circle of their knowledge. The experiment will be dangerous and not often repeated. Indeed, we think the freedmen will be found rapidly attaining the ability , to take care of themselves. The latest re port of their condition comes from Gen eral Fisk, who informs us that "in Mis souri and Arkansas, the affairs of the freedmen are at present in a very pros perous condition. There is a great de mand for laborers, and good wages are offered. In Missouri there are only two hundred, and thirty-six colored people de pendent upon the Government for susten ance; while there are forty-four hundred and fifty-two whites supported by the Government." A NEW ENTERPRISE.—Under this head, last Saturday's daily papers had the following notice:— " Rev. E. V. Gerhart, D.D., President of Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pa., will preach to-morrow morning at the Academy, Powelton avenue, below Thirty fifth street, Mantua, at which place a Mission Church is being organized under the auspices of the German Reformed Church. All those friendly to such an organization have been invited to attend." It is often the case that Scotchmen and Scotch Irish in this country, find a pleasant homogeneity by associating themselves with churches which, like the United or Reformed Presbyterian, surround them with ancestral church customs. So the German often turns for church fellowship to a Lutheran or German Reformed body. The same law of mind forbids that Christians of purely American modes of religious thought and worship, will ever, in any considera ble number, ecclesiastically denationalize themselves. If there are about Mantua a sufficient number of Germans by birth, or near ancestry, to require and sustain this " new enterprise," there is no rea, son why it should not become a popular one. But if it is to be gotten up by at tempting to Germanize Americans, its road to prosperity will be a long one. ERRATA.—In the first column of " Religious World Abroad," page 203, 4th paragraph, 9th line, read " This is the greatest proportionate gain, enjoyed - by any great" (not one) " Society." Also add to the concluding sentence of the paragraph which undertakes to tell the total'of gains of the British Benevolent Societies for the year, " £.78,891."