liw"writ ii rgr-v*lpirrien New Series, "V,,1 John XWeir $3 00 By Mail. *3 50 By AJA.lller. 15 • juLIN C 9 • 50cts Additional after three Months. I gintritait grEstigtirialt. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1868 THE MEDICINE OF PRAYER. A celebrated surgeon of this city, of the gene ration just past, not a professor of religion, nor much like one, has been known to beg the earn est prayers of a minister of the gospel visiting one of his patients, who had just submitted to one of those heroic performances with the knife for which the surgeon was famous. " Give us," said the worldly, but anxious surgeon, " one of those effectual prayers of faith for the recovery of the sick, which have such promises of reward." The prayer was offered, but the patient died. Singular stories were told, some seven years ago, of Dorothea Trudel's Refuge, in Germany, for the sick, who were cured by her persevering prayers, and a book was published, detailing the circumstances, some of which were certainly re markable. Thus there is an uncertainty about the direct remedial efficacy of prayer, while, nevertheless, the promise, James v.: 15, does encourage us to use it as a means of recovery in connection with other and more ordinary means. Believing prayer for the sick has just as good a warrant for expecting an answer, as prayer for any other tem poral good. It must be offered in humble sub mission to the divine will, and with unshaken faith, although the answer may not be in the very line of our desires. "It cannot be taken," says Mr. Barnes, in commenting on the passage ".in the absolute and unconditional sense, for then, if these means were used, the sick person would al ways recover, no matter how often he might be sick, and he need never die. The design is to encourage . . to the use of these means, with a strong hope that it would be effectual." We may not be clear, therefore, on this point; but in the general position, that prayir deserves a place as a remedial agent, as truly as any fa mous herb or mineral, in the materia there ought to be the most unwavering confidence. The physician himaelf needs it to guide and clear his mind, and steady his nerves in critical cases; to guide him through the often profoundly ob scure region of experiments which the uncer tainty of his profession compels him to make; to give him that elevation and courage which his work, as a foe of the arch-enemy death, requires. At that Beene of languishing and pain, of uncer tainty and peril, that border-land of the grave, that vestibule of the house of mourning, that spectacle of human weakness and of the creature made subject to vanity,—the sick-bed,--what ex ercise so appropriate as that of ,humbly acknow+. ledging dependence on God, and .of pleading for His favor in restoration to health, in forgiveness of sins, in the sanctification of trials, in calming the mind, in preparation for death if it is to come ? The right sort of medical practice will always en courage the right' sort of prayer at the sick-bed, as part of its own instrumentality. For the secondary, reflex effects of believing prayer are incontestibly, of a character to relieve, , omfort, refresh and restore the sick:- Prayer ,alms the disturbed` mind' by rolling its burdens tpon God; prayer gives rise to a sense of the Di rine presence and sympathy; prayer is felt some tow to bring the Divine omnipotence and wis . upon the field where the powers of man are soon exhausted and baffled. If there be any sue, in the judgment of the physician, in a 1, composed, hopeful frame, of mind and des-. :y of feelings, and in the absence of vexation restlessness from the patient, then belieiring ir, as the great instrument in producing results, must be reckoned as holdinc , a high among real remedial agents. .n these periods of intense exertion of the ner energies, perhaps the type of disease most sly prevalent, is Nervous. Disorders at . that part of the bodily system which lies, as were, on the very borders of the mind. Disease in fact, very often almost a direct result of the of a praying,, i. e. trustful, spirit. It is be ) men forget God, forget their dependence him for wealth and worldly comfort, forget man does not live by bread alone, but by 7 word that proceedeth out of the mouth of 1, that they, so , Often tc breakdown." The ishicent of prayerlessness, the natural conse- Ice of prayerlessness, :runs ,in a dark line lugh a large part of the sickness of oar day. turn to prayers mist, therefore, be of the of a specific forjust : the prevalent type of ss. It is by returning to God that, the 18 ague and fever. will, most likely, be 1, the unwholesome ardor of the brain ~ and the whole brood of anxieties that are tg on the nervous system be put 'to_ are no advocates , of an anti-worldiyiunee. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1868. terprising style of piety, in or out of the Church. We ask not for any abatement of business ener gy. To pray well is to work well. But we veri ly believe that the quietism of the Quakers has not a little to do with the general superiority which they have hitherto enjoyed in health, in good development of body, and in longevity. We shall fare better, every way, for living in that daily, hourly trust in, and submission;to God's will and wisdom, which is called " prayer without ceasing.". We ask only for the abandonment of the godless eagerness with which men pursue worldly ends; we protest, in the interests of bodi ly health, against enterprise or pleasure which has not time to give one day in seven to prayer, which excuses itself from family worship from want of time, and which recklessly drives on the machinery of body and soul, without waiting to drop upon it that oil of prayer which. is to save it from grinding, and jarring and crushing upon itself until it becomes a hopeless ruin. THE CHURCH RE-ENTERING ON HER WORK. The heats of the summer are passing away, and returning autumn reminds us, laborers in Christ's kingdom, that the season of our more special concentrated efforts for the salvation of men has returned. Business men lay their plans early. At the headquarters of the fashicins, styles are decided upon and the manufacturers begin to prepare their goods for the season, months before they will be in the hands of consumers. Pub lishers of magazines and periodical literature have much of the matter for several issues on hand, before the first appears. Every one in creases his efficiency by wise forethought. The work of the church is a conflict; we must study the ground, lay our plans and make our disposi tions betimes, and not go at it "as the horse rusheth into the battle." The workers in the pulpit and out of it must consider their present capacities, their Fast fail ures, their increased experience. They must re gard the vast and varied, capabilities of the truth which is their instrument and while e,sret. loyal to the.grand.and faithful saying, which is the core of the Gospel, that Sesta Christ : came into the world to save sinners, they must, like well-in t structed scribes, bring for,th things new and old from their treasures. They must also study the ground they are to work upon, the peculiar result to be achieved, the difficulties in the way . . There are hard fields to be cultivated demanding fresh supplies of cour age, faith and .prayer,; there are old and decay ing churches to be nursed into vitality; there are distracted congregations to be harmonized and shamed out of,their antagonisms in the, face of a common foe; there are new and struggling en terprises •demanding toils and prayers and tears; there are individual cases of peculiar interest'ancl requiring varied applications of truth and forms of effort; there are the masses of our thickly pop ulated regions demanding the most thorough, ably conducted and powerful efforts , - for their evangelization 'To work friends ! for God and for the, soul, in the Sabbath, School,,in the pulpit, by the roadside, in the dwelling, and with versatility of means and courage of spirit, by all means, save 1. Do not be discouraged by the, excitements of the political campaign. We,doubt whether any one.who believes the Bible to be .the friend of justice and of equal rights, i smuch disturbed at the sort of influence Which an active canvass for and against these objects will bave upon the spirituality of the people. Do not be timorous at the prevalence of any such excitement. We doubt not you will find that the men who are engaged and animated on such themes, will make better listeners to a stirringGoaper sermon than those who are droning along in the old, beaten chan nels of common life. Do you be awake for the great objects of your calling, and you will have less difficulty than usualin keeping your hearers awake. But if you lo , e heart and show' no'excitement for their souls', sake and the Gospel, their apathy is likely enough to be uncommonly sad in/uch period. One of our most active and successful pastors gives it, as his experience, that a period of excite went about any thing worthy to employ men's minds, is more faVorable to ministerial success; and the statistics of the results of his labors prove his position. At all events, do not let any failure at such a season, be attributable to yourself. 2. Consider your present enootragements to work Our church growth in the past is Most cheer ing. True, when compared with the needs of the world and the high mission of Christians, it is far from exhilarating. But compared with our own history, in the past, it shows decided progress. Our net gain, last year, was over seven ihonsansi; that of the raF before was eleven thousand,,snd that of 18C-6, six thousand seven hundred. The gain for three years is far greater than for any three of our existence, and is over three times as great as for the three years immediately preced ing. Compared with the other branch, our per centage of gain for last year has been as 4 to 3, and for the last two years has been almost as 2 to 1. In this city, our pulpits are manned with zealous, able, evangelical preachers, commanding the confidence and attracting the regards of the people, whose preaching has been and doubtless will again be in demonstration of the Spirit and with power. Let us do our part to evangelize this great city. 3. We cannot overlook the singular illustra tion of the power of the Gospel, in one of the worst neighborhosds of the ,city of New York. The keeper of a vile house of entertainment on Water Street near Roosvelt, known as "the Wa ter Street dance house king," some weeks ago, allowed the enterprising ageUts of a city mission, who fefr not to go anywhere, to hold a prayer meet ing iutis saloon. Some of the abandoned inmates were deeply affected and exressed a desire' to live a new life. Soon it was whispered abroad that the proprietor himself ' as so far influenced by the truth, as to purpose ti e abandonment of a. his vile business. On the 1 t Saturday in Au gust his house was closed as a' place of business and opened as a place of blic daily prayer. Great numbers of the lowes sort of the ,popu lation have attended. The sti et has been blocked tip by the• crowd who could n t get inside. The windows of neighboring housea of the same sort are thrown open and filled with faces of listeners. Long before the hour for °peal i ng, the rooms have been thronged. The prayer r ineeting seems to. have been conducted with as•iinuch judgment and propriety as the ' sudden and 'unusual' exigeitcy allows. `Sailors haie related God's dealings with their souls in their'own quaint 'way. Wall St. Christian men have been the e, to intimate their practical interest in any plan for the permanent renovation of the place. An a powerful impres sion has Been made on the urrounding neigh , bprhood. Whatever moistureof human weakness Way be in all this, the.fingeslpf God seems to be in it alsci. 'May it prove thiharbinger of a great movement among the hitherto lost masses of 'our . city population. Let us take it as a hint in the shaping of our evangelizing efforts during the coming fall and winter. MORE CIRCULARS. Our brethren of the, other branch, including leading men in the majority at Albany last May, have been apparently uncomfortable about the adoption of the Retinion' ; Committee's - Report by the Asembly evQr , since it was done,. Imme= diately after adopting the report by a heavy vote, that Assembly declared its dissatisfaction with its Own, act;•and< voted that it Preferred something different in the first' or 'principal article of the Basis. After attempting in vain to to bring bur Assembly to a, airuilar r expressiou of opinion, they allowed their. action in adopting the Joint Com mittee's report to stand, and 'confirmed it, in important particular's, by the Answer to the Pro test. • , But they were still uneasy at the boldness and, unwonted liberality of their 'fiction. They had. scarcely 'got well *at home before a Circular ab peared; dated at Pittsburg, fugned by Reunion men end, others not, believed so favorable, pre senting the issue which had bben defeated in the Assembly to the Presbyteries'and urging them in both bodies, to express a preference, if they felt it, to the Confession "pure and simple," as a doctrinal basis, above the doctrinal article 1)f the Assemblies' basis. 'Naturally enough,this`was viewed by many as . . an unwarrantable attempt• to alter the actual issue of the Joint Committee's plan, which, by vote of both .A:Ssemblies, is alone properly before the Presbyteries. The Confession of Faith is already proMinent in the joilt CoMmittee's Basis, and the mode subSeription to it, not the Confes aim!, itself, is the real and needful matter of the Committee's clauses. Pressed by objections on every side, the friends of, this movement- have foun,d,it„needful to issue, another supplementary circular,which we believe pates from Cincinnati, where the air is popularly supposed to be clearer than .in Pittsburg. In this last circular, further dfreetions ire given, as, to 'how the Presbyteries of the other hraneh who do not like all parts, •of- the Joint Committee's plan may express that dislike, without putting themselves on record against thn plan as a Whole. It is proposed that they; vote on each article of the Basis' separately, and then that they vote on. two Resolutions, which ;are a request that the Old School Assembly of 1869 renew its efforts to get our bOdy'to erase the Eiplanatori Clauses the first article. In all this struggle we are calm lookers-on We shall adopt the Joint Committee's plan,' - as handed down by both Assemblies to the Presqteries. If our 0. S. brethren, even the Reunion Men, repudiate their own adopted plan, on which thei r agreed solemnly to go into the struggle with uS; and if they encourage this scattering and squa.u dering of interest, to -please _an impracticable minority, and so contribute to the defeat of the plan, our own people, with the patience charac teristic of them, may consent, and for the sake of Reunion, take whatever amended plan the other branch finally concludes to offer,—but if we do not, then the world will know on whom the responsibility lies; viz.: on the great majority at Albany, that had not the courage to stick to their principles, and that flinched at last before the small but able minority that has so long swayed the body. • FROM OUR ROCHESTER CORRESPONDENT. • OBITUARY.—Another of the good and true men of our State—Simeon Bgnjamin—has gone to his rest. He died on the Ist instant, at River Head, Long Island, where he had been spend ing a few weeks among the scenes and friends of his childhood. His remains reached Elmira on Thursday, and his funeral was to be attended this day from the Ist Presbyterian church in which he has long been a pillar and an office bearer. Mr. Benjamin settled in Elmira in 1833. He had previously been a merchant in New York, where he bad accumulated considerable property. On coming to Elmira he invested largely in real estate, which added much to his fortune ; and in that city; and bran Western New York, he has ever since been known as one of the most earn est, 'active, and useful of men. He, was a man of public •spirit, doing much for the- welfare of the chosen place of his residence, and for every cause of benevolence. He was Corporate Mem ber of the American Board, and gave much to the cause of Missions. But, that to which in later years'- he has given special attention, was the Elmira Female College Hetmay be.called, we believe, the ifoun der and chief support of that admirable institu-. tion. To that he gave his thoughts, his time, his money, almost without limit. For years, we are told, he supplied all deficiencies in its annual re ceipts. He watched over it, as though it had been one of his own children.. His gifts to, it are supposed to be, in the aggregate, about $30,000. He was also an upright man, a sincere Chris tian, and died in peace at the Mature age of seventy-two years. He had been for some time feeble, evidently failing, and his friends feared to have him undertake„ his annual visit to his birth-place; and yet he was so anxious to go, that the journey was finally made, but proved to be his last. His pilgrimage thus ended where it began. He had completed the circle, and a little more, of three score and ten years, His death was so peaceful that the attendants did not for some minutes-perceive that he was gone. "So He giveth his.beloved sleep." • • . ,Death has also been' busY in Canandaigua. Hon. 'Francis' Granger,• fortnerly'one of the fore moat men of this,region, well known also in all the political world, died on then 28th ult., at 80 years of , his age. i.Vle was formerly the rival' of Wm. H. Seward as leader of •the,Whig party in• the State, and. their:nominee •fore' Governor: In more , recent years he had been: associated with the Democratsj His' son, Gideon Giyinger, a most genial, use ftirChistiah Man; of about forty-five years; 'was lying dangerously ill at the same time, and died On 'Thursday of this week. He was a man of wealth, of Culture, of leisure, and of gre'at.be nevolence; universally beloved and universally lamented. Even in the Episcopal_ and Catholic churches prayers were offered for his recovery; while in the Congregational ,church, where he was, a member and an ornament, he is mourned as a brother beloveA. The poor loved,amLhonored him. He was the friend of MORE ADMIRABLE READING.--We had• some thing to say of one'good book last week, and we now feel inclined to speak' of another. " Ten Years upon the Diphrates, by C. H. Wheeler, MisSionarY of the American Board." This seems. to 'us, iu,Some respects at least ; the most important Missionary book yet issued. It cer tainly. is one of . the most readable - and' most sat-, isfactory, even though it bears of bcing, prepared in great haste. ,It is from the ,pen, however,,of a man, who' does everything with all his mig'ht. Whateverileisure he might have had would prOba.bli have 'Made no difference . in the style of the book.•' Its 'pages glow with furn4ce heat. An 4 yet it took tea years of bar 3 , untiri ng Genesee Evangelist. No. 1164. J Ministers $2.50 H. Miss. $2.00 Address:-1334 Chestnut Street and successful work to gather the materials. It is a succinct, graphic, touching story of devoted Missionary labors. The book ought to be read by every lover of the cause of Missions. and much more by those who care nothing for it. It is instructive, encouraging, and inspiring. It shOws how the knowledge of the Lord may cover the earth much sooner than many have dared to suppose it would. PERSONAL. Rev Amer D.D., of Ithaca, now, we believe, in the 86, t year of his age, has been passing a few days city. He is still re markably vigorons. ite .s settled in this city as pastor of the Second ch4eh—now the Brick —in 1831. •He had previously preached for fifteen years in Ithaca, where he commenced his labors in 1816. , His ministry thus extends over a period of fifty-two years. He still. preaches occasionally, and will be remembered as having spoken often and vigorously at the meeting of the American Board last fall in Buffalo. Prof. Upson, of Hamilton College, preached, most acceptably to the Central Church of this city last Sabbath, in the absence of the pastor. His morning sermon was especially spoken of, as instructive and inspiring in thought, beautiful in arrangement, language, and imagery, as well as charming in delivery. He is a welcome preacher in our city. Rev. Dwight W. Marsh, after preaching for a year in Illinois, returns to oar city to take charge of the Rochester Seminary for Young Ladies, with which he was connected before going West. He and his wife are admirable instructors, and will make their school one of a high order. Rev. Dr. Knox, of Rome, has had substantial evidence of the good feeling and kindly care of his people. The parsonage has been nicely re modelled in part, and refitted, greatly to the comfort of the occupants. His study is especially admirable in arrangement and furnishing. Rev. E. L. Boing, formerly of Angelica,, has been appointed District Secretary of the Church Erection Cdnamittee for Western New York, to reside in this city. Rev. G. P. -Hamilton, whose call to the Pitts ford church we mentioned last week, has accepted the invitation given him, and is to enter at once upon pastoral labors in the new field. There are two Beadle's—Hon. and Rev. J. T. and Rev. P. C. The former is 'the most famous' writer; author of Napoleon and his Marshals; Washington and his Generals; ,Saered Moun tains, and other works. The latter is a younger, brother, a worthy minister of the Gospel, writer of the Life of Josephine and other small books. It is the latter also who .has recently pu'alished The Court. and Camp of David, in imitation of Napoleon and his Marshals by J. T.,, the older brother. see that the book notices some times confound the two, and seem to think that all the books that bear the Headley name are from one prolific :pen, that which so glowingly eulogized the "Little Captain!' We happen to know that J. T. prefers credit for his own worki,, and no others; and .we . presume P. C. does. not relish being ignored altogether.. Rochester, Sept., ` 5, 1868 NEW CITY: POSTAL ARRANGEMENT. As .a result of recent explanatory legislation upon the: Post Office 'laws in , Conness;' procured by the personal' efforts' and . correipondence of a few persons Connected with -the religious - press in this city, we are now able to use the Post Office for the ..City distribUtion 'of our papers, thus les sening,the expense to a large class, of our subscri, bers. From and .after the' Ist of , October, the fifty cents additional, hitherto charged in the city, will be abolished, and the 'papers will be served• by-letter-carriers in all,parts of the city at five cents per quarter; ox may be had free of charge, by calling at the Post Office. Subscribers hay- In any preferences in, the matter will please give us due,notice; - , War The new Epificopalian Church: of the Holy Apostles," which has been worshipping for some months past in the lecture room' of Tabor Church, has secured `a lot at' Twenty-first and Christian streets.. Mr. ,John Rice has erected for theM, at his own expense, a temporary wooden house of worship (or, in Philadelihia parlane " a framebuilding,") to accommodate 300 or 400 people. The vestry will, erect and furnish a school building in the rear. The chapel was opened last Sabbath with appropriate services by Rev. Chas. D. Cooper, the rector. There is no other churoh of the denomination west of Thir 'teenth and south of Lombard. Se• Phillips Brooks is not going to Boston.. GiIESEE