270 - STYLE OF CULTURE NEEDED BY AMERICAN THEOLOGIANS, 3VO I. BY EDW. CLARENCE SMITH. I. We suppose that the clergy, as a mass, are rather wanting in culture than in piety. The age seems to demand of the American theologian that he devote a larger measure of his time to the work of getting for himself a muscular and well furnished mind. Infidelityisbeleaguering Christian faith with strong armies, and Christianity needs to thrust through its iron embrasures ordnance that are o,f rifled steel and long of range. In this belligerent work that Christianity has on hand, no degree of enthusiasm or emotional power can take the place of mental strength. Enthusiasm is always sh6wy and striking, but when not worn by sterling qualities is in no wise better than the bright armor and splendid trappings of some effeminate Paris, and will prove no safeguard against the rough blows of a sturdy antagonist. We wish to see the smoke and blaze of the cannon followed by the blue steel that will splinter the tough spar, or shiver the hard granite. The present stage of theologic specu lation is unfavorable to this thorough work in the way of culture. The fields of orthodoxy are carefully surveyed and staked off. We have no imperative need to hew out doctrines and carry them together to be compared and matched, and built up into creeds and systems. This hard work would strengthen us, but our fathers have done it for us, and we are too apt to pass contentedly into the full inheritance of their labors If we felt less secure in our doctrinal strong holds, our mental life would be less inert and indolent; and though we might spend less time in amiably contemplating the consoling doctrines of our faith, and might have to pass a more sober and anxious life amid the stern mysteries of unan swered problems, yet, perchance, we should be stronger men ’for all this dis cipline. Historic induction tells us that the dominant races, those which incar nated the ideas of their age, and gave them splendid and permanent utterance wherever they fought and triumphed, have not breathed the balmy air of Southern climes' or made their abode in rich valleys, burdened with the profuse wealth which genial suns and gentle showers have forced from a soil teeming with fatness, but have got their nurture in a rougher school; have gazed with care-worn brows and saddened hearts upon mountain crags and barren wastes; have hadtheir hearts made brave and self-reliant, and their wills sharpened as the flint, and their sinews wrought and twisted into hardness and iron strength, by exchanging quick and rough blows with nature; by unceasing struggles to wrench from her clenched hand security against want and death. PeThaps the use of the analogy will not be denied us. We thelogians of this country do not find ourselves amid the sterile wastes and mountain heights of theology. On the contrary, we luxuriate upon the smooth and fertile meadows of ortho doxy, and see the fields about us waving with the mature fruitage of creeds, and confessions, and systems. But to return, it would seem that our theologians must not let their minds lapse into a state of indifference respecting doctrines; must not repress, but strongly encourage a positive and forceful attitude of mind in the matter of its beliefs. It is an unnatural thing for the mind to stand upon the magnet of doctrine, and stubbornly brace itself over the point of indifference. The alacrity with which men adopt the sentiment of the Roman moralist, “ in medio tutissimus ibis,’ 1 not only in the province but in the less practical sphere Of philosophic and theoretical belief, is often a token, not of the wisdom of human nature, but of its indolence or timidity; and these mathematical moralists, and philo sophers, and theologists, who are for ever factoring and radicating extreme views, are those who may perchance commend themselves to us as humble in their self-estimate, and amiable in their tolerance and liberality, but generally do not deserve to be ranked with minds that are active and earnest, strong and self-reliant. Weak and fearful persons are very apt to put on the robes of ecclectieism, simply because they deem it safer and easier to sit as judges than to agitate as advocates. These ecclectic conservatists in doctrine are always to be looked upon with suspicion when they are not old enough to. be wise, and have no reputation for nerve or fire. True ecclectieism is admirable ; but it is an ecclectieism which rejects extreme views, not in that they are sharply de fined and strong, but because it believes them untrue. We honor the sturdy and earnest mind that has canvassed the whole field of speculation, and given itself sincerely to the work of finding agreement between doctrines seemingly variant, but really reconcilable; but we condemn mere indefinite, negative views, when they proceed from sheer mental inertness or timidity. We relish a strong doctrine, sharply stated. We like men to take perilous places on the outskirts of doctrinal strongholds, provided they have strength and valor enough to main tain the conflict. Indeed, nothing is more refreshing than to see a warrior for the truth, who, in long and thorough courses of discipline and culture, has been forging for himself close-linked corselets and well-tempered arms and making himself tough and sinewy, quick and elastic in every faculty, plant him self squarely on the van of the conflict, conscious, as he swings his trenchant blade and delivers his blows, quick and strong, that there remains so great strength of resources and endurance in his arm that, like Horatius Codes, be can keep the bridge against a thousand men. We must not be too slothful to think positively. We must not be too certain that extreme, or rather strong views, are always untruthful or unsafe. 11. It would seems that the culture of our ‘ theologians should have pre eminent regard to the great conflict in to which the church is about to enter. Nothing is plainer than that Christianity is about to fight its last battle on the field of philosophy, and that when, by its puissant might, it has laid in the dust this colossal and arrogant giant, Panthe ism, which is the last hope of the Philis tines, and has come up against the hosts of God with the targe of brass and spear of iron, it will have little to do but to make men as true and as good in their lives, as their philosophy will teach them they ought to be. All philo sophies that have refused to do obeisance to faith, as wielding a rightful sceptre over the vast empire of mysteries, have thus far been overthrown. Human rea son has demolished sensualism, as a philosophic system, and pronounced such a curse upon Atheism that the serpent no longer erects itself, but crawls, and eats dust, and is abhorred. It is true that we still meet with occasional at tempts to solve the highest problems of philosophy on grounds exclusively ma terial. We have young and ambitious Buckles, trying to pick the complicated lock of human history with the old and worn-out skeleton key of materialism, but these attempts are not formidable, and only excite the ridicule of thought ful and scholarly minds. So, too, pure idealism, with its scep tical conclusions, has been rejected as inadequate. Thus both sensualism and idealism having been overthrown, the world of thinking men had been satis fied with a sort of ecclectieism, quite humble in its mien, and living on terms of peace with Christianity. But Chris tianity finds in the absolute philosophy a more sturdy opponent than it has ever yet encountered. No other infidel sys tem has ever armed itself with so ulti mate and gigantic an hypothesis as is wielded by this daring Titanic philo sophy. What other hypothesis can issue in so tremendous a synthesis, so comprehensive an ecclectieism ? This opponent Christianity has to meet. There is no avoiding the conflict. Hu man nature will endure no antagonism between its religion and its philosophy. The power of Christianity is pre-emi nently moral, but it must make human, reason its faithful ally before its do minion over the world can be complete. Men’s philosophy may be purer than their morals, but their morals will scarcely be more worthy than their philosophy, provided the philosophy is deliberately ichosen, and accepted with a sincerity of belief. Christianity must therefore arry itself for the battle. It has it on hand to fight this arrogant Pantheistic Goliath, and smite it in the forehead. It will scarcely need more imposing weapons than the simple missiles of reason and revelation, but great strength, and swiftness, and skill, must lurk in the arm that hurls them. Our theologians have found that the champions of the opposing infi delity are no mean opponents. There is something brawny about the Teutonic genius that makes it a dangerous foe. The old barbaric Germans had rude weapons, but opposed splendid bodies and resolute wills to the horrent Spears and blazing banners of a more advanced civilization, and maintained a desperate resistance. Perhaps we may learn wis dom from the hewing which" the mailed legions of Yarns got at the hands of Arminius. LETTER FROM REV. E. P. HAMMOND. Dear Brother :—My last letter was written on board the steamer Inland City, in Chaleur Bay, lat. 48 deg., long. 66 deg. 12 min. Some account of our journey homeward from that point may prove of interest. We could scarcely realize, while there, that we had by the power of steam been borne so swiftly away, and that one thousand one hundred and sixty-three miles of the salt-sea waves rolled be tween us and the city of Boston, which we had left but a little more than a week before. We then bade adieu to the old mountains which so often reminded us of the Highlands of Scotland, and just' as the sun was tinging their tops with crimson and gold, rolled out into the deeper waters where the great white porpoises, which are only found in that region, in their playful gambols were throwing their milky sides above the surface. I shall not soon forget the thoughts of gratitude to God which filled my heart as I walked the deck, breathing in the fresh cool air of that delightful evening. It was four years almost to-day since I passed over these same waters on board'’ the Great Western, with three thousand souls, on our way to Quebec. It was then my purpose, after a few months’ visit, to return to dear old Scotland. The war in the States was absorbing all minds, and Dr. Hopkins, of Williams’ College, whom I had met in Paris but a few weeks before, had told me that he thought it would be impossible to turn the attention of Christians in numbers to THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1865. pray for the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. But results had proved that this war had made the hearts of many men tender, leading them to think seriously of the realities of eternity, and thus pre paring the way for revivals of religion. And my soul was filled with thanks giving that we had not only seen peace reigniDg throughout the world, but that during these years many had been led by the Holy Spirit to secure,, through faith in Christ, that "peace which passeth all understanding.” ; The next morning we reached Ba thurst, a thriving village, at the mouth of the Nepisiquit River. We learn that the exclusive right of throwing the hook for golden salmon, which crowd this river, had been pur chased from the Government for about $3OO, by two gentlemen from Philadel phia. Thus we found that others had been before us in this wild region, who could appreciate its attractions. After doubling Miscou Point, the tourist passes the cod and mackerel fishing grounds— “ a mine of wealth,” said a provincial gentleman, “ richer than all the gold mines of the world, and, strange to say, worked almost exclusively by your en terprising countrymen, at our very thresholds.” Passing up the Miramichi River, three enterprising towns, Chatham, Douglass, and New Castle, with their vast-lumber yards and ship-buildings, and green fields, greet the eye. At each of these places, crowds flocked to see the “ new steamboat.” Many of them had never but once seen the like before. I think it was at New Castle, an opportunity was afforded to hold an open-air meeting. Seldom, if ever, did I behold such a crowd of rough-looking men, half of them Catholics. For the first few moments, when the word was preached, an attempt was made to scoff, but soon an awful solemnity rested upon the large as sembly. As I looked upon those hard ened men, not a few of them listening for their lives, with tearful eyes, I could but think of those words in Acts x. 44 : “ While Peter yet spake /these words, the Holy Ghost fell on all them which heard the word.” ~ When prayer was offered, many heads were uncovered. I can but hope that I shall meet in heaven some from that open-air meeting who, for the first time, heard the simple Gospel of Christ. After the meeting was through, the Presbyterian minister of the place, who chanced to be present, greeted’ us warm ly, and a wealthy Scotch lady invited the party of Christians from the Inland City to repair to her charming residence, to partake of a refreshing repast. That night, after our little company had, as usual, read the Bible and prayed together, a young lady from Pennsylva nia, who‘had for days been seekigg the. Saviour, said to me, “Oh, how much I wished that I was a Christian when I was at the open-air meeting and hearing of Jesus.” She now seems to be in dulging the hope, that she has given herself to the Saviour. At Shediac, our next landing place, we took the cars for St. John’s, a-dis tance of about ninety miles, through a wild and interesting tract of country, and Saturday afternoon we caught our first glimpse of the Bay of Fundy. We were all anxious to witness the remarkable phenomena connected with the high tides of those regions, which rise in different parts of the bay from twenty to fifty feet. When we arrived at St. John’s there lay in the harbor just before our hotel, on the full tide, a large steamer; but in the'morning it was out of sight almost. We could' scarce believe our eyes, so changed was the whole appearance of the harbor. I then witnessed a striking illustration of the difference between .what are called “sudden and gradual conversions.” In some parts of the bay where the mud is deep, as the tide recedes the ships sink deeply. When the water comes pouring into the bay and rises around the sides of the vessels which are so firmly anchored by their glutinous surroundings, for some time they give no signs of yielding to the strong lateral pressure of the aqueous fluid. While the ships only a short distance off, that chanced to be in the channel while at ebb tide, began gently to rise the very moment it changed, these, in their slimy bed, seemed satisfied to remain just as they were. But still as the persevering water rose higher and higher, at length, unable to resist its forge, these foolish vessels, as if en dowed with wisdom, come bounding to ths surface, sometimes rising 'several feet at the first leap. So it occurred to me that when God pours out his spirit upon churches and individuals, while some seem almost imperceptibly to yield to its influence and rise to “newness of life,” others seem so deeply sunk in worldliness and sin that a stronger and more persistent power seems necessary to in duce them to leave their groveling exist ence. But when, at last, God, with such mighty power, pours “ floods upon the dry ground,” that none seem able to resist, then those who had so defiantly clung to their evil habits “ suddenly” cry out, with Peter, “ Lord, save or I perish,” and find at once the hand of the loving Saviour stretched forth to bear them up upon the flood-tide of God’s love. Such conversions seem more remarkable and sudden, but they are in reality no more sudden than those that were more gentle in their manifestations. True, many of the best Christians never know the time when they caught their first glimpse of “ Christ and him crucified ;” but if “ born again,” there must have been such a time, and then they were converted—turned from the error of their way.” And as I saw some of those ships, in the deep channel, rising majestically at the first approach of the flood tide, I could but pray that not only individuals, but that whole churches, all over our land, might be quick to yield to the first indications of the special reviving presence of the Holy Spirit. After spending a day and a half visiting in and about St. John’s, we em barked on board the large steamer for a sail through Passamaquoddy Bay for Eastport, on a beautiful island on the eastern coast of Maine. That locality has been somewhat famous in the States as the “jumping off place,” but when we arrived there we felt we were almost home. From the time we left Boston we had to make all our purchases in gold, and it was a pleasant change to get where our currency was available. We do not wonder that we found the majority of the people in all our travels through Nova Scotia, Prince Edward’s .Islands, and New Brunswick so de sirous of annexation with the United States. At Portland we took the Grand Trunk Railroad for White Mountains. The day we ascended Mt. Washington, tower ing six thousand two hundred feet in the air, was said to have been the finest of the season. It was none too cool even at the. “ Tip Top” House, though the the morning before the mercury stood at the freezing point. Three years before, on the first day of July, we stood a long time on the same spot, waiting for the clouds to clear away, shivering in the cold, which was so intense that the rocks around us were covered with ice. But this time we could see the ships entering the harbor in Portland, though ninety miles distant. But we must here close this already too long letter. But as there is now a telegraph station here on the “ tip top” of Mt. Washington, if any thing remark able transpires we can easily communi cate. Yours, REV. A. M. STEWART IF'THE OIL REGIONS. MORAL ASPECTS OP OILDOM. These seem very similar to that of the camp. It is not for religion that men come here, but for oil; men go to camp, not for the enjoyment of Gospel ordinances, but to fight. Should any attention be given to such matters, the consideration must be pressed by some faithful evangelist. A few, who were religious in former localities, may prove sturdy and resolute enough to carry their piety with them here, as into camp. A large majority who made professions at home, are speedily freed from such at tentions by the fever of oil. Many who come in hopes of a fortunate strike, had but little thought of such matters in for mer homes and haunts, and have less, if possible, here. Others were about as bad as the devil could make them, before emigrating to Oildom, and with no signs of improvement here. Several denominations have either effected or are aiming at organizations in different localities, with, however, irregular and often doubtful success When, after much effort and persever ance, a religious organization or co operation was effected in camp, the next terrible battle was most likely to send one-half of it to heaven and the other to the hospital. So here, the next locality that may chance to get up a great ex citement, will likely carry off to it a large portion of the adherents some toil ing missionary has been gathering around him. The population floats. The thought seldom seems to be enter tained of arranging a habitation for a permanent home. No marvel therefore, if but few stakes are tightly stuck about the church. A few on the hills around Oil City, seem to have built houses with the intention of living in them. Last Sabbatb, I preached under an old shed at Petroleum Centre. Good congregation and attentive. Much easier to get a congregation in such a place than to keep it. - Interesting prayer meeting same place in the evening. Regular preaching has been had in this place for the past two or three months. Some consultation about a church organization, yet the man on whom most seemed to depend, told me he was off to Pit Hole with his business on Mon day morning DERRICK. The derrick in Oildom may fairly be looked upon as an institution. It is a strong wooden frame-work erected over each well to be sunk, about fifteen feet square on the ground, forty to fifty feet high and tapering to the top. Nineteen out of twenty wells either prove oilless or yield so small a quantity that they are speedily abandoned. The derrick hardly pays to remove it, and hence in nearly every instance is 'left standing. The valley of the Oil Creek, and up the side of the steep bluffs for many miles, as well as many adjacent localities, seem almost covered with these quaint, sombre, unique structures. The hun dreds and thousands of these erections present a peculiarly desolate appearance In some localities they almost touch each other. Memory has been taxed for comparisons, but refuses to yield any fitting likeness. Imagination suggests long irregular rows of gallows on which might have been hung many ancient rebel gaints—numerous Dutch fleets long since stranded, and their cumbrous old masts still left to bleach in sun and rain, or a forest of enormous trees, blasted and riven by the elements, with the dry and peeled trunks alone left standing. A. M. Stewart. 'Oil City, August 9, 1865. GLEANINGS BY THE WAY. PORTWLLE, OMAN, PE.V.V TAW, WJtE- During a recent trip, I spent a fort night at Olean, Cattaraugus County, New York, and in one of my excursions, visited Portville, the residence of Mrs. Humiston and her three children. Portville is six miles from Olean, and is a neat, clean-looking village, on the banks of the Allegheny. Learning from Rev. Mr. Ogden, the worthy pas tor of the Presbyterian church, that Mrs. Humiston’s family were living in the place, I felt great curiosity to visit them and report to the many friends of the dead soldier at Gettysburg. I found a small, but very comfortable frame house with a half-acre lot, laid out partly in garden and partly in fruit trees, with a small barn in her possession, and kept in good order. This humble homestead had been purchased through the exer tions of Dr. Bourns, and in addition, the widow receives two hundred dollars an nually, as the avails of the photograph sales, and one hundred pension from the Government. The children are still young, healthy, and smart, and as God has so wonderfully interposed for their present comfort, they may well trust Him for the future. The Presbyterian church in Portville has recently received spiritual blessings. The church in Olean, under the care of Rev. James B. Beaumont, who is most highly valued and loved by his people, is also prosperous, and just now the people are expending between three and four hundred dollars in reparing and em bellishing the house of God, intending, also, to furnish it with a fine organ. The writer having labored with this people during the winter of 1860-61, on revisiting, had practical demonstra tion of their good remembrance of those who had preached the word among them, and of the warm-hearted hospi tality with which they can receive them. It was refreshing to exchange stone streets and brick walls . for - beautiful meadows, a rolling river amjjfc hills of pine and hemlock, curtained with a de licious temperature, a scene that stood perpetually before our eyes, which, with the testimonials. of assiduous affection, was enough to warm up the heart and send it home rejuvenated for further la bors. E. P. H. The same can be said of Penn Yan, the place of former ministerial labors, which for the few days of our tarrying was nothing but an uninterrupted Sun nyside. Penn Yan has much improved during the last five years; a part of the improvement being witnessed in the en largement of the Presbyterian house of worship and the increase of the congre gation. By the removal of Rev. Mr. Starr to. St. Louis, the pulpit is again vacant, and I found brother Sloat, of the Third Presbytery, filling it a couple of Sabbaths as a candidate. Many of the young men of the place and neighborhood had been engaged in the bloody scenes of the late war, of whom the most had returned, but some are sleeping in the soldier’s grave. One of these was Captain Morris Brown, once a young member of the Presbyte rian church of Penn Yan. He was re markable for skill, activity, and courage, and was highly recommended for pro motion; but after having fought “on the line ” from the Wilderness to Petersburg, a year ago last June, he there met an instant death, and in such circumstances, that the body of the gallant young pat riot has never been recovered. In let ters written immediately before his death, however, his friends received his assur ances of firm trust in Cod, of his study of the Scriptures, and of his readiness to meet death ; so that, like multitudes of our noble youth, “he sleeps in Jesus,” wherever the body lies watched and pro tected by guardian angels. During this journey, I fell in with mul titudes of returning soldiers, and took frequent opportunities of conversing with individuals, and the gratification was great to find that these men all knew for what they had fought, and that the great object of the conflict had sustained them in their toils. They were evidently privates, yet they could describe the martial movements in which they had been engaged, as if they were generals, and were able intelligently to criticise whatever had been done. Atjenn Yan, I took occasion to visit "the beautiful cemetery, to look upon’ the grave of a friend greatly lamented. The cemetery lies on one of the easy slopes running down to Keuka or Crooked Lake, and if any connection can be imagined between the resting place of a wearied body and that of a happy soul, this beautiful scene will furnish the bright link; whilst the softness and grace of land and water, as they mingle in rich proportion and finished relation, cannot well be ever banished from the memory. On the top of a gentle knoll, com manding all the bewitching outlines, in a family lot richly enclosed, our friend was laid. She was a woman of noble character, that had shone in every re lation of life. Among thousands of her sex, each of whom had rivalled the de votion of Florence Nightingale, she had labored aB a volunteer soldiers’ nurse, in the hospitals of New York, and the dreadful fever there contracted laid the foundation of her mortality. The sudden removal of two young children completed UfUISPOBT. the blow, and there the three lie to gether, the initials on the three separate blocks lying on the ground—the ages, respectively, two years, six years, thirty years waiting for a happy resurrection. The monument over these graves is unique; of striking design and wonder ful finish. It is made of two blocks of marble. The first is chiseled to re present a pile of stones, such as the Old Testament patriarchs would heap over a grave. On this, however, is set a Gross, the emblem of the New Testa ment Faith, done in white marble, like the lower piece, made to resemble wood work, with the grains and knots most skilfully done. On the way home, a few hours of daylight were passed at "Williamsport, where everything bespeaks thrift, enter prise, and growth. I had the pleasure of meeting an old and valued friend in Rev. Wm. Sterling, the patient and suc cessful pastor of the Presbyterian church; and this gratification was greatly height ened by inspecting a new house of wor ship, rapidly rising, for the use of his con gregation. It will be built tastefully and grandly of stone, a hundred feet long in the clear, with a corresponding breadth, and furnished with every improvement; destined, doubtless, long to remain the birth-place of heavenly hopes. “ Be cause of the house of the Lord our God, I will seek thy good.” W- W. T. Philadelphia, August, 1865. THE YEAR-DAY THEORY. In our Review there is a notice of Mr. Shimeall’s new book on prophecy. In this notice, the Year-Day Theory is spoken of as “ of Cabalistic origin and a convenient device to sustain the wildest possible vagaries of prognosticators and. would-be prophets.”" The reviewer, in attacking this theory (which supposes a day in the prophetie language to signify a year in actual time), seems to think he is attacking and demolishing the very foundation of Mil lennarianism. He seems to think that this theory is peculiar to the believers in the personal Advent and Reign of the Son of Man on the earth. So also, in those articles which Dr. Hatfield published in several numbers of the Review as an argument against Chiliasm, the same mistake is made, and the Year-Day Theory attacked as if it were essential and peculiar to Millen narians. So far is this supposition from being true that this theory is quite as common among anti-Miileunarians as among the class of interperters so much despised and hated by the reviewer. All that class of anti-Millennarians who consider the Apocalypse as a prophectic history of the Christian dispensation, adopt this theory. It is only by the aid of this theory that they are able to stretch the one thousand two hundred and sixty days, and other similar periods of the prophecy so as to find in the Apocalypse, Mohammed and Islamism, the Popes and the Papacy, the Irruption of the Barbarians, and the French Revolution. Mr. Barnes, who is sufficiently decided in his opposition to Chiliasm, adopts this theory—argues it- in Daniel and applies it in the Apocalypse. And besides adopting this theory, this class of anti-Millennarians apply the pro phecies to very nearly the same series of events as those to which Dr. Cam ming, and that the whole class of Mil lennarians, apply them; these two op posing classes of interperters not differ ing in this respect much more from each other, than the individuals of either party differ among themselves. And further, Mr. Barnes and that class of anti-Mil lennarians have so usedup the prophecies in their application of them to past events, that there is very little yet to be fulfilled, and according to their own showing, if the Year-Day Theory be correct, the millennium cannot be much -further off than Dr. Cumming and his party make it. But not only is the Year-Day Theory not peculiar to Millennarians, and com mon to them with their opponents, it is' also bejected as “of Cabalistic origin and a convenient device to sustain the wildest possible vagaries of prognostica tors and would-be prophets,” by a large class of the most thorough and earnest Millennarians. To this latter class of Chiliasts, the Advent and Personal Reign of Christ is the motive which shapes their daily life. It is the ever present consideration in every plan they make and every work they undertake to do. It is their loyalty to the coming King that makes them indifferent to earthly politics and unseduced by earthly honors. To them Millennarianism is not merely an interesting way of inter preting prophecy, nor a means of obtain ing reputation. These Chiliasts regard the Year-Day Theory, whether held by Millennarians or their opponents, with the same ab horrence with which they look upon Dr. Cumming’s worldly wisdom, his flat tery of the mean and wicked British Government and people, and his wrest ing of the Scripture so as to teach the escape of Britain from those impending judgments which are coming on all the world. We hope the Review will succeed in its attempts to overthrow this baseless and deceptive theory, but beg its readers to remember that its utter destruction will not shake for a moment the founda tions of pure Chiliasm. D.. G. M. Thebe is a world of beautiful meaning in the following rather liberal transla tion from Freville: ‘,‘A S clock strikes the hoar, how often we say, -Lime flies 1 when we that are passing away.”