effrttigpllbtlltt. ERASMUS. A SIIETCH FROM THE HISTORY OF THE REFORMATION IN THE NETHERLANDS. BY N. S (Concluded.) The Testament of Erasmus was a prohibited book in Cambridge. But its light could not be hid. Priests and con fessors, who in vain undertook to quiet the consciences of true penitents by pre scribing fasts and watchings, could not restrain them from the volume that now openly told them of Jesus Christ, who came into the world to save sinners, even the chief. In private chambers, in the lecture-rooms and dining-halls, stu dents and masters were to be seen read ing the Greek and Latin Testament. Animated groups were discussing the principles of the Reformation. Some earnest souls took it into their closets, and there in its pages found the living word of grace, that brought peace to their souls. One Thomas Bilney, at Cambridge, thus owed his conversion to the labors of Erasmus. He never grew weary of reading the book. He gathered his friends around him, and read and commented upon it, in the glowing light of his own fresh.experi once. Tyndale in Oxford, too, read the cele brated book that was attracting the attention of all Christendom. The more he read, the more was he struck with its truth and strange energy. It spoke of God, of Christ, of regeneration, with a simplicity and .an authority which quite mastered him. He cried out, like the discoverer of long-sought treasures : I have found it; and soon, around him, too, was gathered a circle devotedly studying the Greek and Latin Testa ment of Erasmus. He came to Cam bridge and joined Bilney there, where, for many months, they kept up the young enthusiasm for sacred learning, and fed the earlier fires of the Reformation kin dled by the torch of Erasmus. Tyndale afterwards became the translator of the first Bible that was printed in the Eng lish tongue. The work of Erasmus in Latin and Greek was for the ' learned, but it prompted this great and iron-soaled English Reformer to give the same Divine treasure to the people. It was the work of his life, and it was done in exile, whither he had been driven by the priests, and by some of the very friends of Erasmus, who had not aban doned their connection with the Church of Rome. And yet Erasmus himself had loudly called for the translation of the Bible into the tongue of the people. " Perhaps it may be necessary to con ceal the secrets of kings," he said, " but we must publish the mysteries of Christ. . The Holy Scriptures, translated into all languages, should be read not only by the Scotch and Irish, but even by Turks and Saracens.* The husbandman should sing them as he holds the handle of his plough, the weaver repeat them as he plies his shuttle, and the wearied travel ler, halting on his journey, refresh him under some shady tree, by these godly narratives." Bat Erasmus had no heart for the heavy work of a Reformer. He had but a superficial view of the nature of the evils under which the Church and the world groaned. A revival of learn ing, a dissemination of knowledge, the mere power of intellectual light, seemed to him all that was needed for the refor mation of prevailing abuses. But when the hosts of darkness rose and raged against the work of the simple-minded, enthusiastic scholar, and when the Re formation began to assume the propor tions of a vast and world-wide struggle ; when fires began to kindle, and chains to clank, and dungeons to open, and Popes to fulminate and hosts to gather for the battle, the timid soul of the scholar began to flutter like a frightened bird. " Wretch that I am," he exclaim ed, " who could have foreseen this hor rible tempest I" It was not, by any means, the last time that men saw the pioneers of great reforms appalled and dismayed, when the unavoidable results of their doctrines appeared in fierce struggles for the mastery in the actual world. Erasmus furnishes a pattern of which our own times and our own great conflict have not wanted copies. The philosopher of Rotterd am thought the struggle would be Dot and brief. His vanity led him to repose confidence in the sagacity of his own plans. Pro tracted strife and tumult, heavy blows, blunt language, uncompromising and radi cal measures he regarded as unwise and needless. He loved personal ease and the selfish gratifications of a life of learned leisure too much, to be willing to make sacrifices for the general good. He wavered and seemed to change sides. His services for the cause of truth were indeed incalcnlabl greatoand sincerely rendered. Many a brave word did he utter for Luther in perilous times. " The last spark of Christian piety," he says, "is exting7ished, and it is this which has moved Luther's heart. He cares neither for money nor for honors." When the Elector Frederick ,consulted Eras mus upon the case of Luther, after the Pope had anathematized him, the philo- sopher said : The more virtuous a man is, the less is he opposed to Luther. Luther has only been condemned, not * The Arabic version of the Scriptures, now going through the'press of the American Sible Society, at length, after three centuries, fulfills this word of Erasmus: proved to be in the wrong. To imprison Luther would be a mournful commence ment of the Emperor Charles' reign. The world is thirsting for evangelical truth. Let us beware of setting up a blamable opposition." And yet, while the Elector was taking courage froz6 these words, and strengthening in the purpose to defend his subject from the plots of Pope and Emperor, Erasmus was writing the most submissive letters to the Pope. At times he put into a single paragraph his contradictory views of the. Reformer. " Almost all good men are for Luther. But I see that we are tending toward a revolt. - I would not have my name joined with his ' • that would injure me, without serving him." Erasmus could not but expect hos tility and mistrust from both sides.' The monks poured out all the fury which ig norance and superstition, jealous of learn ing and light, can manifest. They did not and could not read his works, but they heaped upon him every abusive title. Playing upon his name, they called him Errasmus for his errors ; Ar asmus for ploughing up sacred customs; Embalm, because he had written him self an ass ; they called him Behemoth, Devil, Enemy of Religion, Blasphemer of the Virgin Mary, Schismatic, Impostor, Forerunner of Antichrist, and Antichrist himself. Some said he was the original head of the Lutheran faction ; a worse heretic than Luther himself. Some said, Luther had gathered the fatal seed in Erasmus' garden ; others said, Eras mus had laid the egg of the Reformation and Luther had hitched it. On the other hand, the friends of the Reforma tion blamed him for not separating from the church of Rome. It was said that it was his fault only, that the Pope and papacy were not blown up at once. The Pope himself wrote him a letter, which Erasmus, with a touch of vanity, de scribes as full of kindness and honora ble testimonials. At length, in 1526, we find him fully identified with the enemies of the Re formation, drawn back by a . selfish and traitorous conservatism to the ranks, against which he had enthusiastically led the vanguard of Protestantism but a dozen years before. It was one of his inglorious declarations : "A disadvan tageous peace is better than the most righteous war." Again he said : "If the corrupt morals of the Court of Rome call for a prompt and vigorous remedy, that is no business of mine, nor of those who are like me." Most ignoble of all, and yet perhaps the most candid of all, is his confession in these words : " Let otheri aspire to martyrdom ; as for me, I do not think myself worthy of such an honor." The grand difficulty with .the Eras muses of that and of later times, is the nnsubdued selfishness of the carnal heart. They seek their own personal interest, ease and elevation, and not the interests of truth and the glory of God. They wish to run no risks, but to be found on the safe and the winning side at last. No doubt there are conserva tives, who maintain their principles, con sistently through every phase of a great struggle, and who deserve the praise of sincerity. But for the tortuous course of those who have boldly led the van in the commencement of such a struggle, and who afterward appear to be bitten by conservative fears, and who finally identify themselves with the worst foes of progress, and give their influence openly in gathering and organizing a powerful reaction, we know no better explanatiOn than utter heartlessness and selfishness, leading to the most execrable forms of hypocrisy. Sometimes a terrible punishment be fals these renegades, even in the midst of their schemes for selfish enjoyment. At least they can never hope for the pure pleasures and exalted consolations, with which th 9 toilsome life of the true soldier of Christ is sure to be gladdened. Bitter are the complaints of Erasmus of his own condition, reminding us of those uttered by the disconsolate Voltaire, while surrounded by the pleasures of the court of his royal patron, Frederic the Great of Prussia. Erasmus a Voltaire have been thought to resembi: each other in a number of points. Car lyle thus characterizes the correspon , deuce of Voltaire with his niece, during the outwardly magnificent period of his life in Berlin : "A series of utterances remarkahle for the misery driven into meanness that can be read in them. 111. health, discontent, vague terror, suspicion that dare not go to sleep ; a strange, vague terror, shapeless or taking all shapes; a body diseased and a mind diseased. It passes often (in these poor Letters) into transient malignity, into gusts of trem bling hatred. A man hunted by the little devils that dwell unchained within himself, like Acteon by his own dogs." Little different was the condition of Erasmus, as indicated by those bitter tears, those painful nights of broken sleep, that tasteless food, that loathing even for his literary studies, which once constituted the chief delight of his life ; those saddened features, that pale face, those sorrowful and downcast eyes, that hatred of existence which he calls a cruel life, and those longings after death whicn the philosopher of Rotterdam also describes in his letters to his friends. Poor Erasmus ! He forgot the Divine maxim which he himself had studied and brought afresh before his contempo raries in his Greek and Latin Testa ment: Whosever will save his life shall lose it, but whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. The influence of Erasmus was not by any -means so great in Holland, his THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 18, 1866. native country, as in England. In fact, he seems to have resided almost •very where but there. We find him at Rome, in London, and above all in Basle, Switzerland, where he gained his living for a time by correcting proofs for the great printer, Trobenius, who afterward published his own and Luther's writings. When Luther's writings began to find their way into his native country, we find him at Louvain, near Brussels, taking a keen and, at that time, favora ble interest in their dissemination. The prior of the Augustinian monastery at Antwerp, who had studied at Witten berg, read these works of his brother monk, which Lather then was, with eagerness. We have the testimony of Erasmus that this prior was no blind adherent of the papacy, but a follower of the true primitive Christianity ; while other monks and priests of a different disposition, who were accustomed to. amuse the people with the absurd stories of the, saints, instead of preaching truth and duty, broke out into bitter and fa natical opposition. " I cannot describe to you," he wrote to Luther, "the emo tion, the truly tragic sensation, which your writings have occasioned." Returning to Basle, he made it his home, until, in 1529, it was reached by the Reformation, when he retreated to a neighboring canton in Switzerland. Howwer, having occasion to' return to Bashi,* business with his printer, he died there in a lamentable state of mind in 1536. But all this time the Head of the Church had been preparing and strength ening those chosen instruments, through whom he designed to accomplish, with out fail, the great work of Reformation for which the fulness of time had come. Not in Holland it was ordered, but in Germany, Switzerland and France the brave, unselfish, fervent, devoted souls were rising, who, by the grace of God, proved themselves capable of grasping the true meaning of the questions now pressing for settlement ; who found no room for compromise with errors so vital, with practices so atrocious and with a system so thoroughly corrupt as Roman ism; and who counted not their own ease, reputation, or life dear to them, if they could but serve the cause, of truth, and restore the kingdom of Christ in purity and power to the world. The preliminary work of Erasmus was of the highest value ; but it required the sturdy blows of the uncompromising and radi cal Luther, Zningle and Calvin to make the Great Reformation a fact in the face of an adverse world and a persecuting, bigoted and powerful organization, claim ing to be the only true Church of Christ. A NARRATIVE OF A WORK OF GRACE. It was during the summer of 1850, that the writer, for the first time, visited L., a beautiful, sequestered valley, exnbos omed among the mountains. Ancient farm-houses, which seemed the abodes of plenty, dotted the face of this fertile vale ; and the cabins of the poor were seen scattered along the base of the ad jacent mountains. Among, other things which attracted his attention, was a plain brick church. It had stood many years, and had evi dently been abandoned as a place of worship for some years. The windows were broken, the doors stood wide open, and as we approached, a drove of sheep, which seemed to have taken shelter there from the rays of the sun, ran out in great trepidation. A melancholy sight indeed was this old church ; its moss covered roof ; the enclosure of its burial ground broken down or overgrown with rank vegetation ; its mouldering tomb stones fallen and defaced. On enquiry I learned the history of this church. Deaths and removals had so weakened the flock, that they were no longer able to sustain a minister. Two elders and their families were all that remained of the original worship pers, and they had bee& attending dis tant churches. ' One of these elders had been present at a series of meetings, which were in rogress in a church in another direc tion. The Lord was pleased to pour out his Spirit there, and a powerful work of grace was going on. He begged Brother J. and myself to hold a pro tracted meeting in that old church. We consented. The meeting was to com mence on Saturday, and to be continued according to circumstances. We came at the time appointed, but we found that the Lord had been there before us. A colporteur had passed along the valley a few weeks previous, scattering books and tracts at every house. The good seed thus sown had sprang up and was bearing fruit al ready. Col. S., one of the elders mentioned, had a large family and many servants ; only one of his children was pious. Another became awakened by reading The Dairyman's Daughter. She spoke to some of her companions of her dis tress of soul ; they also became anxious. It seemed as if the faintest appeal had the effect of rousing the slumbering con science. On Sabbath morning the old dilapidated church was crowded to overflowing. During the communion services the Spirit seemed to move on every heart. After an interval of an hour, service was resumed. At the close, those who were anxious on the subject of their soul's salvation were requested to remain and be prayed with. . Miss S. and four others remained for conversation and prayer. On Monday morning, before the hour for commenc ing, the house was again crowded ; the services were continued, with only 'a short interval, till evening. I then went to the house of Col. S. to spend the night. His children were all now en quiring what they should do to he saved. After tea, other anxious souls dropped in, until the large parlor was filled. The writer has been through nearly a hundred revival scenes, but he never witnessed any to compare with what followed. The room seemed to be filled with the at mosphere of heaven. The Saviour was there in his divihe love. The Holy Spirit was moving on every heart. In the intervals between the prayers, no sound was heard except a deep sigh or a heart breaking sob from some troubled soul Observing that the distress of this daughter of Col. S.'s was overwhelm. ing, 1 stepped up to her, and said, " My dear child, can't you now submit to Christ ? He is able, and he is willing to save you." " 0," said she, "my heart is so hard, and I am such a sinner, I cannot do it." I then asked all to unite with me in prayer for her. We knelt, but scarcely was the prayer com menced when she sprang to her feet, and throwing herself into her mother's arms, exclaimed, "O, mother, I have found my Saviour, and what a Saviour he is. I feel that he has pardoned my sins." The mother, who bad been agonizing in prayer for this daughter, and withal a quiet Presbyterian, shouted " Glory to God !" and then swooned away for some minutes. When she had some what recovered, and the excitement abated, .her daughter-in-law, coming up with the most heavenly •expression on her face, and throwing her arms round Mrs. S., said, softly, " Dear mother, I, too, have found Jesus. I feel that he has pardoned my soul ; blessed be his holy name." Then this lady's husband (the oldest son of the family,) came to her, and embracing her said, "Mother, dear, your prayers are answered. I e o sta now give my heart to Jesus. I feel that he has blessed me, too." In less than five minutes, a niece, a gay, thoughtless wo man, an opposer of religion, so much so that her pious husband had seen much trouble on her account, came for ward, exclaiming, "0, dear aunt, the Lord has blessed my soul, too." At this juncture of affairs, Col. S., who had been absent, returned. As he entered the gate, some fifty feet in front of the house, his little daughter met him. "0, pa, Jesus has taken away my sins." In a moment all the converts were around the good old man, and telling him of what Christ had done for them. He knelt on the green sward, with all these happy souls about him, and returned thanks to God for his infi nite love in saving his children, and at the close of his prayer said, " And now let thy servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen thy salvation." The mothet of Col. S., now ninety years old, and who had been a member of the church upwards of seventy years, had all this time been walking the room, staff in hand, every little while (dela:truing, "Mr. C., are we in heaven? surely this is-like heaven ; my soul is full of glory, I can hold no more." Then she said, "Now won't you preach to the negroes ? Here they are, all in the dining-room. They have souls to save, too, and they are crying for mercy. 0, Mr. C., white and black are all alike to the Lord, and their souls are as precious in his sight as ours." I found the dining-room full of these sable sons and daughters of Africa, and as the room, though large, could not contain all, many had their heads stuck in through the windows. I stood in the door betwen the parlor and dining-room. The old lady held me by the arm to stay herself up. "Be hold I bring you glad tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people." This text I repeated two or three times, and then went on with the sermon, which I tried to make as appropriate : to my au dience as possible. This meeting lasted till nearly midnight; many of the color ed people professed conversion, and I trust that many of them really did pass from death unto life. The next day the congregation was still larger, many of the most hardened sinners in, the valley were present. During the afternoon services, the old churlh was literally a place of weeping. Two young men particularly attracted my attention. On enquiry, I learned that they were wealthy and highly edu cated, but gay and dissipated ; both ap peared to be deeply awakened. An in cident at this moment occurred, which seemed to be fatal to them. A man in the gallery uttered a fearful scream. The startled crowd rushed for the doors and windows. The man had fallen in a fit. He was carried out, and the scat tered audience in a few minutes re turned to their seats; but nothing could induce those two young men, to return ; their pious friends used every argument, but in vain. They said if they returned they must yield to the strivings of the Spirit, which they were' determined not to do for a while yet. They went to the tavern and got drunk that same eve ning, and, sad to tell, they went on from bad to worse, and both died of delirium, tremens within three years. .When ex postulated with on the folly and mad ness of their course, they were heard to say, " It is of no use now. We sealed our fate that day we left the church." We continued the meetings for a week ; many , were added to the church; so many that they set to work, renovated the old church, repaired the burial ground, called a pastor, and in a short time a flourishing church was in, opera tion. One of the converts became a minister of the Gospel. Seven years after the events recorded above, the writer, travelling in a stage 'coach, passed near this place. The driver stopped to water his horses at a stream ; near by two men were at work. As I looked out, one of. the men seeing me smiled, and coming up, extended his hand, saying, " Mr. C., I suppose you do not know me, but I recollect you well. I was converted at that meeting you and Mr. J. held at the L. B. Church." Then the other man came up, using almost the same words. How delighted they seemed to be, and so thankful to - God for his mercies, in thus calling them from darkness into light. Some time after, while on a journey in another direction, I met a lady who re cognized me, and with a joyful smile said, " I was led to embrace the Saviour at L. B. Church, during that delightful meeting which you held there." The results of this meeting could be traced much further, showing how marvelous are God's works of grace in , bringing out great results from very small causes. THE REFUGEE'S COFFIN, A STORY OF KANSAS.. BY ELLEN DEREY In a number of the Art Journal, I think, I once saw an engraving of a piece of American sculpture, a group of Southern refugees. It touched me much. The sorrowful attitude and ex pression were just what one would imagine in the case of a father and his family driven from their home, and made destitute wanderers on the face of the earth. But I have since seen that which went to my heart as no piece of sculp ture or master-piece of the engraver's art could. It had been no uncommon thing, for months, to see here long Gov ernment trains passing my school-room windows, filled with downcast, despair ing refugees, black and white, and our hearts and purses have, again and again, been taxed for sympathy and material aid for them. But one day as I had dismissed my school, and wag' preparing to take up the lighter occupa tions of the day, I was called upon to witness a new development of this fea ture of our institutions. The young ladies and little misses, lovely, delicate girls, who would be ornaments to any Eastern school, and whose young hearts have by no means been made callous by the triple baptism of blood and fire through which this martyr city of their adoption has passed, came 'locking back into the schoobroom, with pity and horror in their face. "0, Miss B—, there is a little coffin right out on the prairie. Do come and look." I went, and saw the little black coffin upon the ground, and round it a group of women and children, sitting on some lumber or on the ground. Two of the elder girls were at once deputed, according to their own earnest desire, to ascertain whether it would be expedient to offer a shelter for the little coffin in one of the back school-rooms, until a place could be found for it in the earth. They came back with the report that the child had died of no contagious disease, and so, while we hurried the little ones out of the way lest they should be frightened, the young ladies went back, and told the man he might bring the coffin into the house. I stood in the door, wondering a little 'whether they would consider the offer a kindness or an officious interference, and whether their sensibilities were as much shocked as mine would have been to have found myself so situated, with the cqrpse of one whom I held dear. Pre sently I saw one of the party coming, with the little coffin in his arms. He was a tall man, and, in looks and bearing, strikingly reminded me of the principal figure in the sculptured group I hitve mentioned. He told me, • with a strange mingling of piide, humility, and sorrow, that the child had died in their flight, that some one in the last town where they had stopped had, made the coffin, put the child into it, and told them to bring it along. So they had brought it thus far, and, now the mother had gone to find some one to bury it. "We're much obliged to ye for your accommodation," concluded he, and went back to the group of wanderers on the prairie. Presently the city undertaker came, and, I am glad to say, with as, tender and reverential an air as he would have shown 'at -any funeral, placed the little coffin in a light wagon, and carried it away to its nameless grave. I could not help thinking that he, as well as my pupils, had shown far more sympathy and tenderness, more deep and earnest feeling, than I should have seen in the community in New York, where my home was before I came West. And yet, in that place, there was no lack of kind hearts and noble deeds of charity. The difference lay in that tenderness of heart which makes the suffering of another its own, and literally " weeps with those that weep." I had noticed that before in the people of this city. Shortly after my arrival here, while yet a stranger in a strange land, two of my brothers, on two con secutive days, had fallen into soldiers' graves. The feeling manifested by the people of the city toward us caused my father to remark, that they had suffered so much themselves, that they had grown very sympathizing toward any who were similarly afflicted. Six months later, he followed his sons into the everlasting rest, and many a time since, have those of the sadly broken family who were left, had occa- sion to remember his words concerning the people of Lawrence. I thought of them again, as I reviewed the group of fair young faces, whose owners had shown so much interest in the little re fugee coffin. Their fathers, most of them, had come West for the express purpose of helping to settle the disputed question, whether freedom or slavery should bear rule in Kansas ; and had been hunted like wild beasts, because of their determination that Kansas should be free. Three times had some of those children seen their homes reduced to ashes by the followers of slavery and of .treason. More than one martyr had been stretched upon their hearthstones; and the grass had scarcely yet begun to grow on the long and terrible trench where lie one hundred and fifty victims of the Quantrell raid. There was one fair-haired little girl, busy as a bee among her school-mates, whose father, a distinguished Senator, had escaped death at the hands of the ruf fians by hiding in a corn-field, and had afterward ridden away at the head of a band of men in pursuit of the gang, leaving his family shelterless in the yard, to console themselves as best they might by the light of their burning home. A MISSIONAIIY There was another, blacked-haired and rosy-cheeked, whose sister laugh ingly tells how the poor child, left with out a suit of clothing, failed to realize the desolation that had come upon them, until, among the ruins of their home, she found her broken china dolls. Then the magnitude of the whole thing burst upon her, and she wept aloud ; but she understands the matter now. There is another, slender and fair ; who lost two brothers in the Quantrell raid, and whose mother, in the earlier history of the territory, was frequently obliged to defend her home from bands of ruffians searching for her husband—a marked man—by the use of scalding water, and such other weapons as will naturally come to the band of a strong minded, courageous woman, fighting for those she loves. And, allow me to add, she generally found the rascals cowardly enough to retreat before her. But I cannot stop to particularize further here. Not one of all that lovely group but has seen and suffered enough to leave deep wounds in the young heart, which bled anew and freely at every touch of grief or call for sympathy. Lively and happy as they were, the very suggestion of the possibility that Quantrell was coming again,%puld blanch their cheeks and lips, antrifile terrible " long roll," sounding from the block-house, would cause their hearts to sink with an ap preciation of the danger utterly unknown to the children of the East. But the graces of sympathy and chari ty, and the keen Sasceptibility to fear, are not the only traits developed by the scenes through which this people have passed. I have beard many a group of New York children sing, John Brown's body lies mouldering in the grave," etc., but never with such a thrill as is given by the emphasis with which these Kansas chil dren sing, " We'll hang Jeff Davis on a sour apple tree." They know what it means. Carelessly ask one of their fathers, or elder brothers, what would be done if Quantrell or any-of his gang could be caught by the Lawrence people, and for reply, you will get an ominous shake of the head, and a look that will make your - very blood run cold. The bare mention of the thing will bring silence into any circle. And yet, we hope the chastening hand of the Lord will not again be needed, in an exhibi tion of fire and blood, to punish the peo ple for this deep feeling of revenge. Even while I write, there is a constant watchfulness pervading the city, (April, 1866,) and a great deal of still but stern preparation to resist a threatened invasion. of bushwackers, who, it is rumored, will take this city in their way to escape to the wilds of Mexico. God grant that we may be left to practise in peace the gentler lessons taught by the terrible scenes through which we have passed 1 THE CONDEMNATION OF THE LAW. Sinners, you that groan under the heavy load of your crimes, who feel your misery and perceive the cords of that damnation in which the law entangles you, come to the cross of Christ, and you shall find rest to your souls. Your consciences accuse you, and compel you to subscribe your own con demnation, acknowledging the justice there of. But, however just it may be, the cross of Jesus frees you from it; inasmuch as it has fully satisfied for you. Beware of the error of both the ancient and the modern Pharisees, who pretend ability to pay what they owe, and even more than they owe, and to justify themselves by their works, that is, by the law. The law is the instru ment of our condemnation and the minis tration of our death ; and a man who would le justified by the law commits no less an extravagance than he who, to prove that he owes nothing, should produce in judg ment the bills and bonds he has given to his creditors. Confess your debts, divest yourselves of all confidence in your own righteousness, declare that, of yourselves, you are bound over to eternal malediction, that you have deserved it, and present yourselves naked before God, who justifies the ungodly, and he will clothe you with the righteousness of his Sot:L.—Dail/es Exposition of the Colossians. THE real design of education is to give children resources that will endure as long as life endures;. habits that time will not ameliorate nor destroy; occupation that will render sickness tolerable, solitude plea sant, age venerable; life more dignified and useful, and death less terrible.