Jiouttfannuis. JOHN HUSS AND MARTIN LUTHER. The story of John Huss, the great Bo hemian Reformer, has been often told, and is sufficiently familiar to the student of ec• clesiastical history. But it may be doubted whether it has been so well known 'to ordi nary readers, either as it deserves to be, or as that of Luther unquestionably is. This is partly to be ascribed to the remoteness of the age in which he lived—it is now just 450 years since his martyrdom; partly to the character of the reformation he aimed at, and which did not touch the great doc trinal abuses, the correction of which, after all, was an essential preliminary to any rad ical reformation, such in a word, as the Church required, and Luther achieved ; partly to the fact that the 'heroic effort, he made was not successful, and that his morn ory has been clouded by the subsequent excesses of his followers; lastly, and above all perhaps, to the circumstance, that the more illustrious name of Luther has eclipsed that of his great predecessor, ' in the blaze of whose fame this bright morning star of the Reformation has almost faded from our eyes. For these reasons it may be well to say a little respecting the principal inci dents of his life, and the more striking traits of his character, a periodical, which must have many thousands of read ers who have not paid much, or, perhaps any, attention to , the. claims of the great Bohemian to the grateful homage and ever lasting remembrance of mankind. Nor can any who love and revere the name of Luther forget that it was probably due to Huss that' LUther was able to do so much; nay, that he, lived , to 'do anything. We may say this,,not merely because Huss was a pioneer in the same great work; that he shaped many of the stones, and hewed much of the timber of that Temple he was not permitted to build; that he made an impression on the outworks of the fortress which it was reserved for Luther to storiti; not merely because Luther derived some lights, and still greater stimulus, at an early period of his career, from the history and writings of Huss, as is seen clearly in his letters, and in the allusions he made to him at the Leipsic Disputation ;* not mere ly, I say, for these reasons, (in fact, all, the "Reformers before the Reformation," as they have been well called, are entited to some of that praise,) but for a more special reason. In all likelihood, Huss was not simply the precursor of Luther, but liter ally paid down, in his , martyrdom, the ran som of his life. That violation of the imperial safe-conduct which, to the eternal shame of Emperor, Pope, Cardinals, and the whole Council of Constance, involved the death of Huss, was the very thing which probably prevented the like crime in the case of Luther at Worms. Vehe mently was Cherie§ V. urged to imitate the conduct of Sigismund, and violate, for the sake of the Church, the safe-conduct granted to Luther; strongly was he plied by the same casuistry, namely, that "no faith was to be kept with' heretics ; " but Charles replied that " he had no wis to blush like his predecessor Sigismund,"—in allusion to the story of Sigismund's having mani fested so much weakness, when Huss al luded to the subject of his safe-conduct, at the Council of Constance. The scandal of that iniquitous transaction 'of the previous century, was Luther's aegis at Worms, and hence he safely quitted that place which he had entered with such dauntless courage, in defiance of so many omens of evil. Thus was Huss probably the saviour of Luther— Dipped in his fellow's blood The living bird went free. The courage of Luther indeed was as great as though he too had died a martyr. During his whole progress to Worms, whither he went with such inflexidle ob stinacy against all the remonstrances of his friends, and the muttered threats of his enemies, it is evident that he contemplated the too great likelihood'Of sharing the fate of Huss. The genies and maxims of ec clesiastical policy were unchanged; the terrors of Reformation at least as strong; and the inheritors of the persecuting prin ciples of Constance equally unscrupulous. He would assuredly have died if .Charles V. had not been afraid of "blushing."' And as Huss deserves the veneration of posterity, scarcely more for what he,did in the cause of Reformation than for the spell which his mane and fate.thiew around Luther, so his history itself is full of deep est and most tragical interest. ,In the vast catalogue of martyrs there is hardly a victim whose fate awakens such unmingled admi ration for the unflinching fortitude and constancy with , which he adhered to what he deemed truth, .and suffered for it; or which, inspires such vivid, and, indeed, exquisitely painful sympathy, as we read the story. Exported, single-handed, to the concentrated enmity of the whole Roman Church and hierarchy, as embodied .in the Conned of Constance,—to Pope and Cardi nals, Emperor and Princes; feeling that the whole might of prescription, both of the present and the past, was against him; doubtless often tempted to ask himself; as Luther sometimes did, and as Huss wasstill: more likely to do in that earlier and darker age, "Whether it was possible that he alone should be right, and all the rest of the World wrong?"--troubled with those tremors of heart which such a pOsSibility could not bat awaken, he yet held on his way—though darker and darker at every step—undaunt ed. Such was the mastery which the truth had over him, so gloriously imperious was conscience, so profound his reverence' for Scripture, and so resolute was he, like Luther, 'to yield obedience to that alcine, that he was proof alike against shame and ignominy, cajolery and adulation, promises and threats, and at last sealed his testimony by enduring death in the most appalling of, all shapes. This last proof of heroism, in deed, many men have given, both' before * " When I studied at Erfurdt," says Lather, in the edition of the letters of Russ (1587), " found in the library of the convent, a book en titled The Sermons of John Huss. I had a great curiosity to know what doctrines that arch heretic had propagated. My astonishment was incredible. I could not comprehend why they burnt so great a man, who explained the Scrip tures with so much skill and gravity. . . But as his name was held in such abhorrence that I imagined the sky would fall and the sun be darkened if I made honorable mention of him, I shut the book with no little indignation." and after hail. But very few, if any, ever passed such an ordeal of absolute abandon ment to the " cruel mockings" and wrongs of a hostile world, with so majestic a pa, tience as he did. Huss before the Council of Constance is one of the sublimest pic tures in the whole gallery of history. * * * While it is true that John Huss was a pioneer of the Reformation, it is also true that the Reformation he sought was not of doctrine so much as of morals and of gov ernment. He pleaded, quite justly, that he was not guilty of the heresies of which his enemies accused him; he was, as already said, burned for very different reasons. He was orthodox on transubstantiation, believed in the, intercession of saints,. worshipped the Virgin Mother; held by'purgatory and prayers tor• the dead; and, though, he thought the cup ought to be given to the laity, did not make even that (which was the bond and characteristic symbol of his followers) an essential point. In inveigh ing against the monstrous evils of the great schism, against the corruptions in the gov ernment of the Church, and the vices of her ministers, he had done little more than many others, both before him and after him. Nay, at Constance itself almost equal freedom was used, But, as Wad dington justly observes, the offence of Huss consisted in this—that the "Bible," and not the "Church,", was the source of, his reforming zeal. It would have been well if the Reforink tion that Huss contemplated hid included dogma; for there could' be no effectual is, formation without it. Hence chieflYit was that Luther's ,was .more durable and effica ohms: Both reformers had their eyes first opened by those moral enormities which most readily struck the sense, and which were the ne plus ultra of the recession of the Church from Christian truth. Both spoke with - almost equal vehemence against false miracles, indulgences, and the vices of the clergy. But Luther looked further, and saw deeper; and attacked, one after another, those' corruptions of'' doctrine which were the secret roots of the evils in practice. So little force is there in the modern .and too favorite notion, that dogma is of little or no consequence, or that one set of doginaS is nearly as good as another I Looking at men in geheral, as are their convictions, (supposing these firm and sin- , cere,) such also will be their life, whether good or evil. The superstition which buries truth, and the scepticism which doubts whether there be any, are in the end almost equally pernicious to the morals' of mankind; .both alike tend to repress all that is noble and magnanimous in our. nature. What we find true in politics, is certainly not less true in theology; and we all know what sort of patriot and statesman he is likely to prove who believes that it matters not what party-badge he wears or what political creed he professes; who doubts whether it be not wisest to let the world jog on as it will, and to acquiesce in any time-honored' abuse or inveterate cor ruption which it will trouble and involve sacrifice to: extirpate. But there is this difference in the two cases, that the world will tolerate in theology the character which it is too astute not to abhor in politics. It is in vain, however, to blame Hues for. not going deeper or further. He' lived a century before Luther; and neither he nor his contemporaries were prepared in the' fifteenth century to receive or act upon views which were feasible only in the six teenth. But to this high praise he is un questionably entitled, that he asserted the very same maxim on which Luther justi fied his resistance at Worms,—the absolute supremacy of conscience, unless its errors' be demonstrated by clear proof from what both of them affirmed to be alone the ulti mate authority in matters of faith,—the Scripture. Though much more than this is required-fora full and consistent system of religious liberty, it was a large instal ment of it; and for vindicating so much of the great charter of the "Rights of Con science," and ratifying it with. a martyr's, seal, John Huss is entitled- to be, held in lasting and grateful remembrance.—Good. Words, SKETCH OF COUNT BISIvIARK, Count Bismark was,, says the Pall Mall Gazette, born in 1814 at Schoenbausen, on the : Elbe, and is of a family which: claims lineal descent front one of the ancient chiefs of a powerful Sclavonic tribe. He studied at the Universities of Gottingen, Berlin, and Griefs Wald, becazne volunteer in the in fantry, was made member of the Diet of Saxony in 1846, and of, the general Diet in the following year. The singular vivacity of his language, and his irrepressible ten dency to start some bold and audacious paradox, which he then maintained with remarkable vigor and ability, quickly fixed the attention of political people. One of the theories which he expounded in this fashion: was to the effect that large cities were centres of all that was mischievous and w'rong—that they were obnoxious in the highest degree to the general welfare of nations, and ought to be destroyed as hot beds of evil principles. The Revolution of 1848 had the effect of completely confirm ing M. Bismark in his absolute tendencies. The King had attentively watched the career of the young statesman whose politi cal views were' so eminently, acceptable to him, and in 1851 M. Bismark was invited to enter the diplomatic service. His talents„ were,, it would aPpear, quite understood fiom the first_; for soon afterward the post of Prussian representative in Frankfort was vacant ; it -was . certain that difficult and delicate questions would then require to be discussed- and settled, and Bismark was appointed. Whether anything occurred here to wound' his susceptibilities or irri tate his Aogmatie and overbearing temper, cannot be actually ascertained ; but, un doubtedly, from that period may be dated his constant manifestations of enmity to ward Austria. He' never lost any opportu laity of declaring, in season and out of sea son, that Austria was not only the heredi tary foe of Prussia, but was a common source of danger to Germany, and disquiet and uneasiness to the whole .of Europe. Though, in point of fact, Austria always has been, and in the nature of things always raustibe, a conservative power rather than otherwise, sluggish in commencing war, and more often condemned to defend her self than to attack others, by continual THE A'.I4EIiICAN PI,EBRYTERI4N. TiftliSDAY, AIiGUST 2, 1866. reiterations these accusations received a certain amount of credit. The Prussian Liberals did, indeed, dislike M. Bismark, but not with that bitterness with which a man is said to regard the enemies in his own household. At any rate, they detested Austria more; and when, in 1862, M. Bis mark was sent to Vienna, and contributed largely to the exclusion of Austria from the Zollverein, organizing a systematic opposition to Count Rechberg and all pro positions which emanated from him, the hatred of Liberal and Constitutional prin pies which has always distinguished the Prussian Iliniater was apparentlY forgiven, if not forgotten; It will be remembered that in 1858.,a remarkable brochure ap peared,, entitled, ; ," La Prusse et la Question Itahenne," in which an alliance of Prussia, Russia, and France was advocated as the sure means of establishing a German unity „which should be at once safe and honorable. Of course, it was to be under the, guardian care of Prussia. There is hardly any doubt 'that M. Bismark, if he did not actually write this pamphlet, inspired it, and super intended its introduction into the world; and this fact gives a light whereby to read its character, for it would seem that he is not only despotic in theory And' . daring in 'action, but that; contrary to the generally accepted idea, he has patience and can " bide his, time." In 1859 M. Bismark : was lent as ambassador to St. Petersburg, and remained - for three years at the Court of the Czar. Whatever influence he imay ,have acquired there,. will probablY remain 'barren exceiit - under, certain circumstances which are not very likely to arise: When M. Bismark left ,St: Petersburg, he was, for about six - months, ambassador at Paris,. and was s summoned' thence to Berlin to ;officiate in the double capacity of Minister of Foreign 'Affaiii and Maker of the Mlles Household. This was in 1862. At this time Prussia was a prey to internal conflict, carried on, however, with a phlegmatic calm and cumbrous slowness which were both incomprehensible and vexatious to English politicians. The Lower Chamber steadily and'resolutely resisted the military reorganization, which tended to weaken the landwehr as much as it would strength en the standing army. That in this matter the members were guided by a wise in stinet,- is shown by the reluctance of the landwehr to commence hostilities in the ,present unjust quarrel, whereas M. Bis ;mark's strength lies in the readiness, of , professional soldiers to engage in any quer qel. The Budget then was condemned by an immense majority, but the Upper House approved it, and the session was abruptly i closect by Royal mandate. M. Bisniark , continued in power, and his administration was distinguished by extreme rigor toward the press. In 1863 an address was pre sented by the Deputies to the King, in which the Minister was straitly charged with having violated the constitution. Soon after the Polish Revolution broke out, and contributed not a little to the difficulties of the Government. A secret treaty was concluded with Russia on the lith of February, in 1863, and as soon as the Chamber was cognizant of the fact, a vote of censure was passed against the Ministry. N. Bismark was nothing daunt ed thereby, and his conduct at that time may indicate what we are to expect of him, generally. He became more than ever in flexible-and -- headstrong. His .` apparent success in the Danish question did not, however, materially alter the hostile atti tude of the Liberal party toward him, and in June, 1865, a storm broke in which Constitutional rights and principles were effeetually trampled on by ihe audacious Minister. It would appear that his abilities are by no means unappreciated at the Tuileries, since, when he left the Embassy at Paris, his Imperial Majesty conferred on him the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor. Count Bismark, has been,, not in aptly named by his disaffected countrymen, Der .Maan von Blut and Eisen, (the-man of blood And iron.) His portrait is familiar to us 'A large "head: capacioue -fore head, firth, resolttee mow`h;,and bearing Brilliant and' bingul i arlY restless eyes rather take from the otherwiseAfoi 4 euahly German character of his features , THE IVIEAAST.IIICHTY WIN GOD . . Nothing is more . remark.able in the Bible than to see how God, as if to. teach us to trust in nothing . aticrin none but:flimself, selects means that seem theworse fitted to, accomplish His end.' Does He choose'an ambassador to Pharoah ?—it is a man of n stammering, tongue. Are the streams of Jericho to be sweetened ?—salt is cast into the spring. Are the eyes of theblind to be opened ?—they are rubbed with clay. Are the battlements Ora city to be throth dovin ?—the means employed is , not the blast of a mine, but the breath of an empty trumpet. Is a rock to be riven ?—the lightning is left to sleep above and the earthquake with its throes to sleep below, and the instrument is one, a rod, much niore likely to be shivered hti the rock than towshiver it. IS the world to be converted by preaching, and won from sensual de lights to a faith whose symbol is -a cross, and whose crown is to .be won among the fires of martyrdom ?—leaving sohools, and halls and colleges,God summons his preachers fiom th shores of Galilee. The helm of the Church is entrusted to hands that had' never steered aught but a fishing - boat; and by.the mouth of one vile had been its bloodiest persecutor. Christ pleads:llia cause before-the philosophers'of Athens and in the palaces of Rome. And when He chose .the weak things of the world to confound the strong and the fool ish to confound the wise, what did .God mean to teach us but that we.are to look, above the instruments, to the great hand that moves them; and that whether it was a giant or the devil that was to be con quered, the eyes of'the body or ,Of the soul that were to be opened, walls of stone, or what are stronger, walls of ignorance and sin that were to be overthrown, men are but instruments in. His hand,—the meanest inighty with Him, the mightiest mean without Him. - =-Dr. Guthrie. HENRY H ASPER, No. 520 ARCIiSTREET, rartLAnxiipaLs. WATCH,ES, • • IEPCX-V,Ef 3 E/ , WARE , _ _ AND SUPERIOR PLATED GOODS. Dealer in and ilanufeeturer,of ''FINE .JEWELRY ku,suraurt INSURE YOUR LIFE IN YOUR OWN 110111 00)1PANY, AMERICAN OP PHILADELPHIA, S. E. eon Fourth and . 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Those who desire machinate which do the beat work, should net fail to send for a pamphlet, and toot and compare those stitches for thoreweleeo. You Gan make Six Dollars and Fifty . Cents. and examine an invention urgently needed by every body: Or a sample sent . five by mail, for 50 meta that retails fork. by A. L. WOLMTT.lloChatharn &pros New York. 101 -ly krinaols ant( grOtutics. NYAIT HSI COMMERCIAL COLLEGE TELEGRAPHIC INSTITUTE ASSEMBLY BUILDING, S. W. COR. TENTH AND CHESTNUT STREETS The Philadelphia College, an Important Link in the Great International Chain of Colleges Located in Fifty Princi pal Cities in the United States and Canada's. The Collegiate Course embrac‘ BOOK - KEEPING, as applied to all Departments of Business; Jobbing. Importing Retailing , Commissio n , Ba n ki ng , Manu facturing, Railroading. Shipping, &c. PENMANSHIP, both Plain and Ornamental. COMMERCIAL LAW. Treatiugof Property, Partnership, Contracts, Corpo rations, Insurance, Negotiable Paper, General Aver age: atc. COMMERCIAL CALCULATIONS.—Treating of Commission and Brokerage, Insurance, Taxes, Du ties,. Bankruptcy, General Average, Interest, Dis count,' Annuities, Exchange, Averaging Accounts. Equation of Payments, Partnership. Settlements, &c. BUSINESS PAPPIR.—Notes, Checks, Drafts, Bills of Exchange, Invnices, Order, Certified Checks. Cer tificates of Stocks, Transfer of Stock? : Account or Sales, Freight, Reoeipts, Shipping Receipts, lee. TELEGRAPHING. by Sound and Paper, taught by an able and experi enced Operator. A Department opened for the ex clusive use of Ladies. PHONOGRAPHY Taught by a practical Reporter. Diplomas awarded on a Satisfactory Examination. Students received at any time. 1030-Iy ILMIIIA MALE CHM, UNDER THE CARE OF THE SYNOD OF GENEVA. This is a regularly Chartered College of the first rank, and presents advantages of the highest order to ;those who desire a THOIIOIIOII, ELEGANT, CHRISTIAN EDUCATION. The. Buildings, Grounds. Fixtures, 4kc., are esti mated at more than $lOO,OOO. The government is firm and safe—the. Course of Study tully equal to the well known Standard of other Colleges, including Modem La without extra expense. Next Session begins SEPTEMBER sth Apply early, in order to secure rooms. Ad. Rey. A. W. COWLES, D.D. 1053-2mdress President. THE WEST CHESTER ACADEMY MILITARY INSTITUTE The Second Term of the scholastic year commences on the Ist of February next, and closes on the last Thursday in June. The Corps of Instructors numbers Ten gentlemen of ability, tact, and experience, beside the Principal, who is always at his nost in the School room. The. Principal having purchased the extensive school property of the late A. Belmar, lately occupied by the Pennsylvania Military Academy, designs re moving his school there before or during the Easter Recess. For Catalogues, apply at the Office of the AMERI CAN PRESBYTERIAN, or to WIGWAM F. WYERS, A. M.. Principal EIRE iD CLASSICAL SCHOOL, FOR BOARDING AND DAY SCHOLARS. FORTIETH STREET AND BALTIBIORS AVENUE, WEST PHILADELPHIA. REV. S. H. McIMMJ:Ir, PRINCIPAL Pupils Received at any time and Fitted for Business Life or for College. RRpgarsaßt4 Rev. J. G. Butler, D.D.: Rev. J. W. Mears; Rev. Jonathan Edwards, DJ).; Rev. James IV. Crowell, D.D.; Dr. C. A. Finley, D. S. Army; Samuel Field, 1023. tf lISTIIIIII YOITIC4Gr M...A.3D I 3EB. NORTWEST CORNER OF CHESTNTT and EIGHTEENTH STREETS. REV. CHARLES A ShUTH , D.D., FREDERICK FEMALE SEMINARY, THE . FIRST MONDAY IN SEPTEMBER. For Catalogues. &e., address Rev. THOMAS M. CANN, A.M GROVER &BAKER'S HIGHEST PREMIIIM { LAST! C STITCH AND LOCK . STITCH SEWING MACHINES: OFFICE, WM FamorrErirr srEERT., PHELADZIPRIA. cc DON'T BE FOOLISH'', SON, President.