eimsq*titutt. LETTERS TEA THE HOLY LAND. VIII BY REV. EDWARD PAYSON HAMMOND Al:tout noon, December Ist, we reached an emi nence north of Jerusalem, which commands a fine view of the city. We instinctively took off our hats. We sat upon our horses for some time iithout uttering a word. There, thought I, was where Jesus died for me. In yonder valley, at The foot of the Mount of Olives, He sweat drops of blood at the thought of the bitter cup He was soon to drink. We could well understand the feelings which filled the hearts of the Crusaders, as they gazed for the first time upon the city: “it first transported with the pleasing sight, E'ael Christian boson' glowed with full delight; - But deep contrition soon their joy suppressed, And holy sorrow saddened every breast. Scarce 'dare their eyes the city walls survey, Where clothed in flesh their dear Redeemer lay; Whose sacred earth did once their Lord enclose, And where triumphant from the grave Re rase. Each took the example, as their chieftain led, With naked feet, the hallowed soil they tread; To humble thoughts their lofty hearts they bend, And down their cheeks.thelpious tears descend.” After passing 'within the lofty Jaffa gate, `We were soon at a comfortable hotel, reading our letters and papers which had been awaiting us `from the United States. A little before sunset, we started out with our guide for the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. We entered from a narrow street through a low door into an open court, bounded, on one side, by 'the celebrated chili-eh, said to have been built over the i)lace where dux 'Lord was crucified. As in the temple of old, we SAW 'the money changers sitting, and many selling rosaries of mother of pearl and olive 'wood, and all kinds of memorials of Jerusalem and the Mount of Olives. We'had het expected to see so large an edifice. We were told'that we probably'saw little of the original structure; built by Constantine the Great at the request of his mother, the Empress Helena. As we entered the rotunda of the church, the find object, that attracted our attention was a building, 26 feet by 18, in the centre beneath the lofty dome. "There," said our guide, "is the HOLY SEPULCHRE." Crowds of pilgrims from all parts of the world were waiting their turn to enter. When our turn came, we entered the sepulchre. It is a quadrangular vault meas uring 6 feet by 7. The right side is elevated .some •three feet; on this elevation, it is claimed, the body of Jesus lay. It is now used for an altar: It was worn smooth with the kisses of the 'thousands who, from morn till night, year after year, press in to render this act of homage. Forty-two lamps of gold and silver hang over it and are kept burning continually. We saw no remains of the Solid rock in which the tomb is said to have been hewn. Marble, gold, and silver only appeared. The question, arose in my mind, If there is no deception about this, -why do they not let the real rock appear ? "If the brown lichen now were free to twine O'er the dark entrance of that rock-hewn .ell, ':Say, should we miss the gold-encrusted shrine? Or incense fumes' intoxicating spell? Would not the whispering breeze, as evening fell, Make deeper music in the palm trees'shade Than choral prayer of chanted ritual swell? 'Can the proud shafts of Helen's colonnade Match thy time-honored stones, Gethsemane's holy shade?" As we came out of the sepulchre, we went at once to that part which, it is claimed, was built over Golgotha. We were deeply impressed with the sights we there witnessed. One was that of a little boy engaged in prayer. All who ap proached that shrine appeared deeply solemn and 'impressed. Numerous writers, in speaking of their feelings within the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, have expressed themselves as thoroughly disgusted with all they saw. But, I must confess, it was not so with me. Not that I was more credulous as to these being the real places where our Lord was crucified and buried, but yet I could not re sist the tide of holy feeling which came over me. Men of sound judgment, and writers of eminence, have, with much learning and argument, at tempted to show that this church is built over the place of the crucifixion. With a full heart I might have sung the words of Joseph Swain, written three quarters of a een- tory ago : "On the wings of faith uprising Jesus crucified I see, While His love, my soul supriaing, Cries, 'I suffered all for thee.' Then beneath the cross , adoring, Sin cloth like itself appear, When the wounds of Christ exploring I can read my pardon there, "Who can think without admiring? Who can he'ar and nothing feel? See the Lord of life expiring let retain a heart of steel ? "Angels here may gaze and wonder What'the God of love could mean, When He tore the heart asunder Never once defiled with sin," Ne lingered for a long time in the " Chapel of the Elevation of the Cross," part of the time watching the pilgrims as with bended knees they approached and kissed the altar, which is raised eighteen inches above the floor, and which, they claim, is directly over the place where the crosses of our Lord and the two thieves were erected. As with my wife I'left the church, I found that she had been as much affected at all she had seen as myself. In fact, I cannot understand how THE A. ERICAN PRE' any one, who loves the heid Jcsds,,c4. that • 0 . • church with an' iinfeelin head Thi nextirroininti. *a up "when- it yet dark," thinhinOf t "first day 6f tlielfeek' s when Jesus .triumphant over death and the grave. I Could not sleep. And as I saw the sun lighting up, little by little, the top of the Mount of Olives, I thought of how our Saviour there sperit whole nights in prayer. Sabbath morning we heard Rev. Dr. Barclay preach; after which we sat down at the Loriys . table on " Zion's hill," not ?ar from the spot: where, it is believed, our risen Lord instituted that sacred ordinance, saying to His disciples : "As often as ye eat this bread and drink 'this cup, ye do show the Lord's death till He come." A goodly company were assembled, and the whole service was most refreshing. Various denomina tions were represented. THE PAY OF THE MINISTER--HOW 'IT LOOKS A LITTLE WAY OFF. The preacher was presenting the cause of -Min isterial Relief, and showing why so many aged ministers were in need of aid. His text Was 1 Cor, ix. 14: " Even so hath the Lord ordained, that they which preach 'the Gospel should live of the Gospel." He carefully explained that a ing included not only a means of support while in the harness, but also the cost of his training or apprenticeship (taking it for granted that the parent should provide for his youth and for ac quiring the rudiments of a good education) but also a competence for himself and companion during the superannuated period of old age. He proved that by this rule not one minister in ten received a full living from the preaching of the Gospel; that the apprenticeship came either from charity, to the great injury of the independence of character of the ministry, or from their patri mony rarely adequate to their necessities, "and that during old age they were paupers, either on the bounty of their relatives, or the Church, or, in some 'eases the State,—it mattering little which, —and that in fine, if, upon receiving a call, any one entered upon the work without gold and sil ver and brass and scrip, from some source, so little was the church to be trusted, he would end in hopeless debt. In order to show the 'nature of the sacrifices coolly demanded of the ministry by the Church, he used the following illustration : " Suppose a church to be without a house of worship, and suppose it to be' necessary that a man should he called of the Lord to build church edifices, just as he is to build the spiritual house. Also suppose that it is required that one man should work alone, that it will take him twenty years to. build one, and that including the wages of that man, which Are to be the-bare cost of living, the whole expense i 5.520,000, or.slooo a year. Let the property of the church be taken at the fair average of a country congregation, which numbers ten men worth each $20,000, twenty worth each $lO,OOO, and enough in addition pos. sessed of smaller sums to make up, with the builder's $3,000, $lOO,OOO, in all $500,000. The builder says to the church, 'Come, let - us build the Lord's house. We will divide the bur den according to our ability: To raise '520,000 in twenty years, or $lOOO yearly, would require a tax of two dollars on a. thousand.' 'But they answer, 'No. We cannot give so much as that.' `But why not? Here is your neighbor who gives ten dollars on a thousand and supports his family, and yet he is a thriving man on a capital of 'two thousand. He will soon be worth twice as much.' But the people reply, 'Perhaps some might give at that rate, but we have all got i eur families to support, our debts to pay, and find that $17,000 is all that can be raised. We thought you would throw in your $3OOO to make up the full amount.' But how can you ask this of me, when you re; fuse to give two dollars on a thousand—much less than the annual increase?' But they ask, `Are you not called to build churches ?" No more than you are i.alled to give. Your-duty to Christ is no less than mine. If I 'should' die in. the midst of my work, who would support my family, or how am I to' be supported 'in old age .?'• " His representations make no change. They tell him that they can find other builders who will be glad to lay down their three thousand. He inquires far and near, and finds that all the small country churches require the same terms. He lays the case before the Lord, and asks if he is to submit to such an unjust arrangement. The Lord heeds not his question, but again, in louder tones, announces to him, `I have called thee to be a builder of churches.' He sees the people scattered for want of an earthly fold, and 'goes quietly and puts down his three thousand. " Do they thank him that he makes this sacri fice for them ? I trow not. They tell him that he is fortunate in getting his daily bread, which his experience of the dangers of being out, of em ployment tells him is too true. By-and-by, owing to advance in prices, they may fail to give him a full living, and he may become involved in debt, or compelled to make shifts or practice econo mies that are not flattering to their pride; then, if they do not conclude to turn -him off, they will make him a present, will replenish his library, or give him some furniture, or some clothing, or, mayhap, a couple of hundreds in money, and then blow their trumpet in the newspapers. It is so easy to be generous—so hard to be just. " The poor builder will be so reduced that he will receive this gift from his loving people with tears in his eyes. He labors on with a heart full RIAN, THURSDA I .T, MAY 9, 1867. • oan dos ofike 'ig Lord ; 0 He prays the may nev ••..1 a in, old ag 4ird comma iLe his family to i.Y'W nevt' leave tiotAitsidit. His gr*4 - i"expititi• ence or fear of pOverty, but that his example and teachiegs4asre - not borne better fruit on the part of the people of his charge. When he is taken hence, or becomes superannuated, that people will now and then take up a collection for Minis terial Relief, not every year, and the amount will 3bo :sometimes 440. sometimes 820, s sometimesslo.". • , f- 1 . s . '• - The preachefspoke as if lie "l ad *tonal et"- perience of the‘ - shortcomings of +the Church. He was not bitter 'nor misanthiopical. But , there came•such a sad and hopeless look from his eyes, and his voice was‘so tender and entailed, that it was eVident that he had no hope of any improve ment in his own. time. But it was with a different manner that his feelings rose in the peroration. "But in all our experience of the shortcoming,s of this age, we look away for consolation to the future glory of the Church, when there shall be no more selfishness nor worldliness in it, and when the love Of Christ shall 'be stronger than the love of gain. We know' that this Chinch of the living God shall be built up into a spiritual house, with solid foundations, strong walls, 'addrning of precious workmanship, and that it shall fill the whole earth. Within it shall he , erected that system of machinery which , shall 'communicate the power of the Church to every nation. What a magnificent sight will be its movement, when the vast cylinders shall 'be supplied with steam from millions of fires; when the huge piston shall lift the beam that, poised 'on a mountain, shall extend across the Continent; when the immense balance wheel shall reach above the clouds; when the shafting shall stretch across the ocean, from cliff to cliff, and distribute power by innumera ble belts to every people under heaven ! "In this great spiritual workshop there shall be perfect system and division of labor. Some will supply materials, 'some prepare them. Some will forge, some will smelt, some will roughly frame and put together, some carve and adorn, some inspect and add the finishing strokes. There will be facilities for repairing and renovat ing the machinery as it becomes 'worn out. In quiet rooms apart, thoughful and patient men will give their, 'lives to the work? of preparing new machines and designing patterns for the work , men. And there will be foremen, and superin tendents, and treasurers,' and paymasters, and agents to regulate the supply of all demands. There will be no waste of labor or of talent, but each will be constantly employed in that which he is best fitted for. r 404111ked the day when the best energies of 'the • Ohurch shall 'be fully devel oped, and all those 'energies shall ,hoe rightly di rected." A.11DITOlt• LETTER FROM BOSTON. DEAR BROTHER MEARS : We have a cold and backward season here, after a very snowy ,winter. The spring really looks gloomy. Rev. Dr. Kirk; who has been sick all winter, is now able to preach again. There has- been a grand contest ;between. the friends of prohibition and license before the Com mittee of our Legislature. Ex-Gov: Andrew led the License_ men, and Rev. Dr. Miner, a Univer salist minister, and President of Tuft's College, the Prohibitionists. There is a great struggle to get a new Jury law, that , will prevent liquor sellers from sitting on trials of those who are en gaged in that business. The bill has passed the House, but by the majority of a single vote. It is supposed the law on prohibition will not be .re pealed. Eighty-one'tnore men have been added to the State Constabulary,. so that matters look promising for temperance. Park Street Church;is still hearing candidates, and the 'last report is, that they are •about calling a Methodist from Brooklym, N. Y. Last evening went to hear Rev. E. E. Hale, at the Boston" neatre. -His text was, "The simplicity in Christ Jesus." He had three heads : Ist: Simplicity in , repentance; 2d. Simplicity in resolution; 3d. Simplicity in prayer. It was all very simple. He thought' people ought not to be sorry for past sins—ought not wear long faces— ought not paint Mary Magdalene, as tbe Romanists do, looking sorrowful. His sermon was as good as it could well have been, leaving out Christ Jesus. He did, however, call him Lord. You know, at their convention, last autumn, at Syra cuse, N. Y., they had a hard contest to decide whether or not Christ should be called Lord at all. The better, part of these men call him Lord; while the Humanitarians do not give him that title at all. There is a great difference among Unitari ans as to the Bible, and Jesus Christ, and all that pertains to religion. While none of them be lieve in His supreme Divinity, they assign , every grade of position to him, from the highest created intelligence down to a' mere peccable man, or "the illegitimate Son of Joseph and Mary," The Presbyterian Church (0. S.) in this , city is keeping pace with the Park Street Cliurch, in hearing candidates "from Dan to Beersheba." Last Sabbath, they heard Rev. Dr. McDonald, from Princeton. There is a grand chance to build up' a church here, and there are Presbyte rians enough in' Boston to crowd the house to overflowing, if they could, get the right man. It is supposed that the Boston Recorder is to BOSTON, April 22, 1867 +E . "' • • . b 0 „ 41410,10 k "fee gli: fice4l4o, thoug)i I hum beatdi pouch 4 1 00 , Obi - 11 4fff days. here PO someoA*llo 4 1 04*, aric.l4l - several fihuipbeit, but 40 YOU gmerai revivals. There is 'a good work going on in Quincy, in which Mr. Durant, a lawyer, riei& r and converted, has been laboring with the pastor, Rev. Mr. Thwing, and much good seems to have been done. The offices of the general Government in this eity,havo,at, last been filled by pretty good and loyal men. The political test here will be tem perance and anti-temperance, and it will be a great struggle. May it .be so in&Philadelphia. LETTER TROM 'TIENTSIN, CHINA, Dec. 1866. DEAR IMR. EDITOR :—The city from wbi,ch I Send you this letter, is one of the • ports which were opened to foreign residence and commerce by the treaty.of Tientsin, in 1858. Its popula tion is estimated to amount to ,nearly if not . quite half a million. It •is usually called the seaport of = Peking, though there is a river l on which small lighters , or cargo-boats can go to within 13 or 14 miles of the capital, i. e.-Tunehau. _This city is distant from Peking labout 72 English -miles, and is the head. of steamboat nav,igatieu of the North river on which it is situated. The celebrated' Imperial Canal of China Emits north ern terminus - here. ,This city is the centre of an immense trade in „native and foreign vessels. 'lt is closed to vessels of all kinds from abroad by ice in the river and in the Gulf of Pee:hile, into which the River enters, from about Ist of De cember to the Ist of March or .later, every •year. During this interval, our postal communication 'with the , outeravorld is via mule and cart, ,or mule and rider to Chefoo, around the southwest part of .the Gulf of Peohile, a distance of some 400 miles, receiving and sending letters and papers only about once =in four weeks. Some winters spapers are not reeeived.at all, on account of their bulk and weight, by the land :route from Chefoo. I give you some data for believing, that this is no "mean" or unimportant . eity, in a commer cial pointof view: During the -month. of November, just: closed, 27 foreign vessels entered at this port,.of which only 3 were. American, and during:the . same pe riod, 40 cleared of which only 2 were American. The imports principally consisted of :opium, piece-goods, tea, lead, wood; paper, sugar, matches, Sopan-wood, seaweed. The exports ,were cotton,. fruits, and the.various miscellaneous, articles,, de nominated in. the , customs' report ,as '"general." The export of cotton vras,'!over io r gaa piewo r ol. picul being'l33 English, pounds.) Thcimports of cotton, piece-goods of all ,kingis ; was, 0ver1.23,000 pieces; of woolens of all descriptions. over, 10,000 pieces; of opium more than 1450.pieals. Over 995,000 taels of treasure, i. e. silver in hullion, were taken away to four of the , more southern consular ports, (a Mel of silver being, equal, in value to.about one and one-third • Mexican dol lars.) The number of needles imported was over .34 millions ! ,This port never exports any tea or silk to for eign lands ; and none are produced in this part of northern China. Very little or no English or American broadcloth is imported, because broad cloth from Russia can be sold • here at prices which would not remunerate the English or American trader. There are many very exten sive fur stores here, at which excellent furs of various kinds can be procured ; at a much cheaper rate than, the same, eould be procured in western i. e. English and American markets. An immense quantity of Lucifer matches from Germany, sewing needles, sewing-thread, window glass, sheetings, and cotton goods, are introduced yearly from foreign _lands. A stranger cannot but be struck by the quantity, of matches and needles that are exposed to view in the streets and in the shops. I desire t•o call attention to some statistics and remarks relating to the importation and consump tion of opium at this port:-- The total amount of taels collected here at the Custom House in November for .tonnage axes, coast trade, exports, imports, of all- kinds, was 70,524, of which 43,233 was the revenue on opium :—.llfore than seven-tenths of the whole. The opium which arrived at Tientsin, accor ding to the Customs' official report, in November, 1864, was 374 piculs, in November, 1865, 1148 piculs, and in the same month this year, 1451 piculs, which does not include 744 piculs, which had reached the mouth of the river on four steamers but had not been duly reported at the Customs'. The amount of opium imported into this port during this year is officially reported t& be 7,831 piculs, which is declared to be "about an eighth, probably of all the opium imported into China during the same period." The price per picul varies from, about. 600 taels to 900 taels. A few days ago the, price was, 760 taels per picul or a trifle over 7 dollars per pound. From the above data your readers can estimate the costliness of the vice of opium -smoking here, and the .relative position which traffic in that drug holds, the business of foreign vessels, and foreignmerehants; but they can not ,estimate in figures the ruin, the misery which its consump tion brings; upon those who become addicted to its use. A few foreigners, born and educatefl in: Christian lands, derive imine.nse. pecuniary profit, from dealings in it, but at the expense of the health an,d the req.* or the tlogemokers of it. It enricho thp fin', but i littes as well as demoralize# • As far as .t 1 knowledge e 4 di* siter extends, there is but one or two foreigefirms in all the consular ports of China, who do not deal in the drug more or less extensively, or hold boxes of it on deposit as the representative of value, much as they would receive es socuritybonds or wort_ gages of real estate. Traffic in opium is declared a "necessity." It is "legalized," and so far as legality is concerned, it is as respectable as traf fic in cotton, or silk r or tea. ...Professing Chris tians, who deal in the drug, justify their course by Elite plea tbat if they did not friAeliq. others would, and bythe difficulty of conducting com mercial business profitably and expeditiously with out buying and selling it, or holding it for sale on commission. - w.M.O The consumption of opium is undoubtedly on the increase. Its use extends among all classes of society, male and female, rich and poor, the learned And the unlearned, officials and non-offi cials, all ranks and conditions are among its vie tires. The Chinese nation, through.it, is becom ing poorer * by so much as the people who use it Are therapy rendered incapable of productive labor, whether on account of lass of cherecter or sickness, or weakness of body, as well as by the .amount of, money actually paid outfor the drug. The,poskto the nation is not to be reckoned as simply the ,value of the opium represented by dollars and, cents. Many other things,must enter into the calculation in order to understand fully what a curse the use of opium is to the Chinese people, as individuals, and to Chinese nation as a whole. .God only foresees, and foreknows the re sult. The prospect appears , very dark. De structiVe and deplorable as the, present use of ,opium is, there appear to be no human means of averting still_ greater and worse consequences, socially, morally, and financially. It is no secret that some, not to ,say many, of the Chinese who have become memhers of Chris tian Churches, under the care of Ainerican and English Missionaries, are, proved from time to time to he o,pium-smpkers. This ,discovery of course leads to suspension or expulsion. Mis sionaries feel that habitual takers of opium can not be sincere lovers of and believers in Jesus Christ. Few, if any of those who have been suspended or expelled on account of opium -smok ing seem to have a deep sense of their sinful ,ness, or a sincere hatred of the vice. Its use en slaves the ,minds and bodies not only, but also blunts the,moral percePtiona Of its 'victims. We feel that the 'Gospel is the only . Antidote. Yours, very , sincerely, &c., JIISTUS DOOLITTLE.. hr ; the , : introductory .paragraph ; of the,artide in ,your last, nurnher = ",The , Brainerd. ,Memorial Sabbath-school" there are believed) one or two errors. Perhaps it is a matter of no conse quence, but what is not worth, stating ,correctly is hardly worth stating,at When the marvellous success,of the efforts to reclaim the lowest and most .wretched class of children in the cities of England. And , Scotland became known here, some persons were disposed to try,their hands at the same work. It ,could not be, denied, that multitudes of 'forlorn and al- Most naked,chiidren were uncared ,for, by exis ting schools. Their "ragged" condition was the most common apology,for non-attendance. It is the peculiarity of the "ragged school" that it admits children directly from the ,streets in their street condition and garb; takes .them "in the rough;"— cages them in their , wild state, and does not at tempt an organization into classes, nor their sub jection to the order and discipline , of a church school. This is postponed until the taming stage past. The exercises are. appropriate to the condition and character , of the pupils; singing being an essential and prominent feature. The proposition, here, was to take the second floor of one of the large ware-rooms on Broad St., which, will hold, perhaps, 3000 children—fitted up,roughly but comfortably; secure a select com pany of labour-loving, muscular teachers (and several were eager for it) and make the , place as attractive as possible by legitimate means. The idea was to have something like the famous Stockport school, and had the proposition been entertained, we should, have had in our city, du ring the last 15 or 20 years, a school , not less in teresting and valuable than the_Railroad Mission school in Chicago. Bit some prudent, economical gentleman thought not well of !inch a concentration of interest, and advocated the expenditure of the same amount of money and zeal, upon several 'localities; and accordingly ground was purchased and a building erected as the article states. It cost (it is be lieved) seven thousand dollars. It was within bow-shot of schools already established, and it is doubtful if ,twenty-five children were ever en rolled in it, who hail not convenient access to schools in this vicinity. No doubt a'good Sun day-school was kept there and nothing is farther from us than to disparage the enterprise or with hold full credit from those who -took part in it. What, we. regard as errors in the statement re ferred io, 'Ure— I. That the building on Christian below Sixth street was ever known as "the Robert Raikes Ragged-school." 2. That it was ever, proposed, po carry on a , .0. school, tAere npon the plan of the London Rab ged-school. 'And `' -• ' 3. That parents or Children refused to counte itance it because of the_naine. • NOT AXACTLY OORREOT. STICKLER.