ihr ,lourrican -?roblirri eir New Series,Von • -w • --, _ 26a. • 6t; Strictly in Advance $2.50, Otherwise $3. Postage 20cts, to be paid where delivered. j grintritan Ertzbijttrialt. THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1869 THE INNERSIONIST VERSION;* It is a singular and intense instance of bigotry, when it leads •men to dee;rY their own historic de nominational title, as not sufficiently distinctiie. And it is a strange piece of inconsistency and self-condemnation, for men to retain a t f erra in their denominational name, Which they 'have speat r tlfteen years, and, it is said a million• of dollars, in hunting down and effacing from every part of the Scriptures. We have not heard of any new sect of " Immersers." We , believe •Dr. ffi Conant and the other ocersof the so.called, and falsely called, " American Ilible;Union," consider themselves correctly named Baptists. And yet they are banded together in a life-effort to blot out of the Scripturei, every vestige of that word, and to put the Anglicized "Latin term. " immerse," in place of the Anglicized Greek word Baptized. - As our readers are doubtless aware, this Bible Union has translated and sent out a New Testa ment, of which many editions' hive been printed —the one before us, edition of 1866, claims to be of the thirty-fifth thousand—in which the ori ginal wo - ..d for baptize and its derivatives, are, in every possible instance, replaced by;" immerse" and its derivatives. John. the Baptist is.• John the Immerser." The people, Christ, came to the Jordan to be " immersed "hy him. He promises to "immerse" them with water, but He that cometh after _Film, will"immerse" them, with fire. The Pharisees in Mark 7 : 4, hold to. the " immersion " of pots, cups, brazen vessels and couches. Coming from the market, 'except they "immerse" themselves, they do not eat. The Pharisee, Luke 11; 38, wondered that Jesirs did not first "immerse" Himself before dinner. The fathers, 1 Cor. 10 : were a 1 1, ." immersed" unto Moses in the cloud and in tha sea. In one or two instances, the courage of the translators has not been equal to the task they had set before them. They cannot bring themselves to use the word immerse, where it would h e so very awk ward as even to offend their own ears,but sooner than use in such oases the, word baptize, when every consideration in rhetprio, in exegesis, and in truth calls for it, they shirk the duty of trans lating, and give us a paraphrase instead. We refer to the passages, Luke 12 : 50, and Mark 10 : 38; the first of which, rendered in the En glish version forcibly and accurately : "I have a baptism to be baptized with," they belittle and mutilate into : "I have an immersion to under go ;" the second of which, "Can ye be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with," they, not venturing to make ridiculous by translating, Can ye be immersed with the immersion' with which I am immersed, deliberately and disingen uously, not to say scandalously, misrepresent, by rendering : " Can ye undergo the immersion which I undergo ?" simply for the sake of avoid ing the odious and tabooed word, baptize. Else why should they not alter the , language in the similar instance of verbal fullness, Rev. 14: 2, and say, Harpere.playing on their - instruments, instead of following the received version,* they do, saying: "Harpers harping with theirharps"? Change in ono case isjust as needful as in the other. No! the reason and spirit of the whole thing is, made plain in those tery,passages. ,They ire so bitterly averse to the use , of a term which does' not involve their' exclusive notion and preach their shibboleth, that they will venture rather to tamper with the inspired form of statement, than to let it appear. Professing to be Scriptural par . excellence, they deliberately suppress Scripture in their unnatural zeal. The pamphlets to which we have directed the readers' attention, by no means ignore the claim of this " American Bible Union ".to higher and broader motives, and greater achievements, • than the promotion of denominational ends, or rather the ends of a clique or a faction. It is repre sented by the Union, that the substitution of "immerse " for baptize, is only one or number less instancesof improvement, and that the Union has given to Christendona the much needed and invaluable boon of a New and Improved English Version of the New Testament. It is true, that some very excellent Biblical scholars, as Hackett and Conant hiruself, , have been employed upon the work, and that to some exceedingly limited extent, different denominations, have also been engaged in it. It is" true, that Dr. Sohaf, in the * BAPTISM vs. llllMETisiorr,.—A geview of the New Testament of the Immersionists, by George B. Jewett. Published by request of the Essex South Association.. 2d Edition. Pp. 38, Price 30 cents. A LETTER TO THE AmEILIA)AN Biel)/ UNION in an swer to a recent pamphlet, entitled ‘Essex South Association and the Revised Testament:?' covering also Rev. Dr. Conant's Letter to the Examiner and Chronicle, Dee. a, 1868. By the same. , 64 pages. Prioe 50 cents. critical part of his version of Lange on Matthew refers quite frequently to Dr. Conant's opinions upon the Greek text; but it is equally true, that the Christian world of England and America are too wise to be caught by the chaff of. such pre tenses. The new version of the . Bible Union may, pass as a Baptist or Immersion*, pamphlet, with out derogating from any one's honesty; but as a new and improved Etiglish versien, it is—not to put too fine a point on it—a humbug; and One of the greatest that Protestantism his ever pro duced. Poor Catholicianay be taken in by tho impos ture of the mass and the miracleS of St.,4-anua rius, but not a handful of Protestants will be de-: luded into acceit:lng an openly sectarian version of the New Testament as 'a Substitute for that version, which is one of the, brightest jewels of English literature, and the venerable andpre cious associations of which they share With - all the vast , family, of Christians who bear the Eng lish name. This petty clique -'of immersionists are, but holdinc , a candle to the sun and offering it to Christendom, instead of clapping it under its own denominational bushel, where it , just about fit to be. But Dir. .Te.wett in his two pamphle'te, carries the war into Africa ! and shoive, by an accumula tion of initannes, which would be tedioni if not done in the iuterest_, of, truth, that the Eng lish of- the new version, is varied from-the re ceived , version and modernized uccordig.to no settled, principles, the old forma :being retained or not, apparently only by caprice • that the new renderings are freßnently unintelligible, as where penny is substituted by a denary;" that "from hence" and similar . pleonasms. occur ; that the , English tenses, and moods, and particles of ,tine are used with inelegance, r and inaccuracy; as: "Jesus said to those Jews who haiebelieved on Him," "In those days comes ,John 'the Inimer-' ser." "Notthat I already attained!' He ShOws that the translation is open to the gravest critici,srn in factheing in.his own unreserved language : a disgrac * Oie the scholarship. of The day—a gross affront to the intelligence, liberality and Chris tian learning of the Church." The renderings, are often needlessly'ambiguous; as: Luke 3, 23,' " And Jesus was, when he began, about thirty years of age;" 9, 39, " And it [a spirit] tears him with foaming." 1 John 5;.19, " The whole world is lying in the, evil one." The Greek is followed in a school-boy's servile fashion; as, Matt. 19, 20: All these I kept; what lack I yet Mark 14, 30 : And Jesus says to him, Verily I say to thee, that thou this day, in this night, be fore a cock crows twice, will thrice deny me. Rev. 8, 5 : "And the angel has taken the censer and he filled it out of the fire of the altar, and cast it into the earth." John 6, 37: " Him that comes to me I will not [instead of " in no wise"] cast out." Here the translation of one of the most precious and effective passages in the whole Word of God is drained of its force by an actual failure in literalness, the original plainly demand ing the translation given in our Version. (See Robinson's Leg.) Infelicitous is also the ren dering of Acts 4, 16: " A notorious miracle," in stead of ' a ncitable miracle, as in the received version. Nor can the plea avail, that fidelity to the orig nal compels such a sacrifice of - English idiom, for in many parallel cases, without perceptible rea son, the translators , have, deviated . ad libitum from the Greek. In Mark 41-43, four' different tenses, of, the verb for " east," are rendered by the same tense. in English, without variation. They deny themselves of, or they take, the liber ties of, translators ; they . are servilely literal, or unconscionably lax., with a marvellous inconsis tency. And the accusation of downright incor ,rectness made by Mr.:Jewett, is in many instan ,ces clearly sustained, although it must be admit ted that in others, the decision cannot be dogmat ically pronounced. But the great lack of eon- Aipteney in their renderings, except where their i dgling, tenet is involved, must go far to prove that their paramount aim, steadily adhered to, was not , to produce a better English version, but under the cover of such a professed aim, and with sufficient scholarship to give it currency, to smuggle into the Christian Church a pitiful sec tarian pamphlet; to venture even to degrade the word of God to the base service of partizanship; to make it a gospel, not of a doctrine, nor of a sacrament, nor of a ceremony, but of an interest so infinitesimal,as the precise mode of perform ing a ceremony,—a mere Strand upon the outer most husk of Christianity. We can only say, in conclusion, that the Chris tian public is deeply indebted to Mr. Jewett whosenumerous citations we have searcely,more than alluded to,—for the industry and• ability which , he has shown in, exposing ;the character of this enterprise, and which, have compelled Dr. Couant,. in, spite of his declared contempt for the PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1869. pamphlet and its author, to come forward and at tempt a reply. - We do not think the laurels of the conflict have been carried off by the.veteran. THE CHURCH AND PUBLIC EDUCATION. ". The hope, of the • republic is the education of the people." This sounds well in a stump speech or , a fourth of July oration. Butis it all sound ? or dome, the American people, toelieve it is true We have, been used .to talk akont the general intelligence . of our country. , edu cation of what we are, pleased to call the '`masses,". has been a theme of gratulation. But it is ques tionable•and whether we see clearly how radical an sianificant is this matter of public or popular education. We have been. quite too willing to trust, to systems and public .authorities . .for the training of the children, without respect to - the ehareeter or,qaalityof i it ,The perpetn4y, and progresspf.a.government, like .ours, cle'llend, in great measure, .on a :Protcatu i nt e ducation;, Rome has always been, and now more than ever is . the foep i liberty t and ‘hence ,to ~ popular education. Says .Michel4t, ." Rome, loves , .liberty so ~much, that in a holy seal,forit, they .. want to hmin by stifling, it,inr the highest, places ~of instrnetionrl There.pan be..no questiOu,;that in every., opuptry where Rotnanism: is dominant, ,:the millions are grossly, ignorant, p,n4 liberty is but a Aar,: And Protestant , CAristtauspuglit, by. this tiers to un derstand, that civilization and education., of the higher type , are to, prevail in this or any other land, it must be undcr,the,influenee of kr 9 test- Aq t. Christianity—the religion of -the Christian Church. ,The early-settlers . of this country, un dersOld,„thia; ,and they laid the foundations broad, and;.deep for,: the, religions ~cultups and. Christian ,education of, the people. But in the ',rush and ,hurry,, the , strife for place, and the insatiate, greed gain in • these later, fifties, the Churph.,is in . danger qf forgetting the. Important part she is to, act. - - The. American Protestant idea of the ghureh is, pot fthat the State is„„to: Patronize ,an ,'\ take care of it, b„nte that tke church' is to. rniEiktor to' t)aisk,,weifaro.of the Slop. .Christian .petage are to study the, highest interests of. the nation, nd withithe most generous : .views 'of public justice, they are to secure the -greatest, good of the great est number. There is 'nothing selfish, clannish • iior covert in the•religionef the :gospel., ,"This' thing was not done in, a corner."., Government that is worthy of the name, has no, reason to fear it. The State can trust it. The Protestant Church has always been, the friend of intelligence, law and free gov,ernment. ,t , Our own record as a denomination, in all these respects, has been very clear and worthy. We have always been' among the foremost in every effort to popularize education. And,-never, in the history.of our, country, ha.s, there been so wide a, field nor so loud, a call for us to show our true spirit as rimy.' Are ; .our . people,fuily awake to this fact r Millions have been- •brought to our doors in a day,and demand of us the means' of popular, instruction and Christian training. We are not so ..much in danger, of neglecting the colleges and _higher institutions of learning, as we are of forgetting the vast., work of primary education. Here the thousands, yea millions, get their first--their only principles of instruc tion. They, pass from the public school to the work shop, the counting-house,.andthe : various avoca tions of active life. Are our Christian people, our churches, watchful of the progress of this mighty power operative daily in our public schools? , How few of our ministers and educa ted members of our, churches have any practical interest in the free schools of our cities and pop ulous towns ! How rarely, ski we hear, anything of this subject from the pulpit! How few of our people are ever inerested enough to visit these numerous, stately buildings, dedicated to the work of educating the future generations! How, too frequently, is this whole businesss left by default to fall into the hands of ignorant and scheming politicians! There are,,in this single , city, over one hundred and fifty thousand chil dren, between the ages of six, and eighteen years, attending the public,: schools, while the whole number in private and ,denominational schools is less thsn twenty-five thousand ! Is it difficult to see where the voting power of the city, and so of the nation, is being, educated ? And who, if not the Christian Church, holding the„free and generous principles of a 'Protestant Christianity, should be interested in this vital matter of pri mary popular education Is it .not high time to awake, out of our long sleep I', ,While the jesuiti-, cal ingenuity of , papacy is intent upon gaining possession of every element orpower in popular instruction, is•it not a fatal mistake educate neg lect our Christian commission to educate the multitude in the direction of the gogpel and free republican government ? It is not long since, by the wise forecast. and prompt action of one of our own ministers in a neighboring , city, the machinations of papist priests to get possession of the school funds, were defeated. Let every Christian minister showa like wisdom. And let the Church see to it, that the cause of public education have a full share'of her interest. Visit the schools; stand fast by those who have the iminediate Management of them. Watch every movement that has to do with the system. En courage' the most liberal policy of popular 'in struction, and in this way will the Protestant Chriitian Church Make itself felt for good throughout the nation: G. F. W. THE LATE NATIONAL SABBATH' SCHOOL CONVENTION. It.aeerne , difficult for those not present at this great gathering in Newark,? two 'weeks ago; to enter into:the sacred:enthusiasm of the partici- pants: The universal report is that even in this age of Conventions it: Was pre,eminently delight ful and successful. The picked • men, the elite of:a body of Christian Workers, who are them selves the ehoice spirits of the Christian brother hood,,were there, :exalted by a consciousness of the .nebleriess'and usefulness of their calling, by the Multiplied evidence of its advancement, and by,the, glow , of , Christian sympathy which per vaded the entire body. Many distinguished men were, present, not • however., including; as was hoped would be the case, Vice •President Colfax, (whose 'absence was apologized for in an admirable 'letter) but such. men . ;; as Senator Frelinghuysen of New Jersey, George _H.. Stuart of this city,:who ;presided in his wonted busi ness-libe,' sittisfactory, manner; and who was called away for a season by President Grant, to .counsel with him arid. others, on Indian. affairs ; Judge Otilveri :Ralph 'Wells, the. two, Tyngs, Rev. John , .Hall, D.A., Henry Ward. Beecher, the , blind H. Thane _Miller and a host of ,others. Of Southerti, States, North , Carolina, Florida, Texas, Kentucky; Were represented,, and there were, delegates from Canada, England, Scotland, and even Egypt and South Africa. There , was much:admirable speaking of a kind to, warm; stimulate, Cheer ,and instruct the .delegates. ,This, of• itself, would probably be !worth all the trouble and expense of the gather ing. But in the, ten years that have , elapsed ,since the; Convention met' in Jayne's 'Hall, in this city, great progress has been made both in the methods! and spirit of the Sunday-school enterprise. Hence„ closer .attention was given to the details of the work; and the Convention divided" itself into six sections, after the Man ;ler of Scientific associations, to each one of which some branch of the subject was 'allotted. . The results of the whole were afterwards embodied in resolutions, reported to, and passed by the en tire body. This; . excellept arrangement ' both showed and will secure great advance in the work of Sabbath-school instruction. It seems, iiiaCed; a thing not unlikely, that a complete s s tem of lay eduoation in Bible knowledge will grow out of the present Sunday-school move inent, a result which is to be devoutly wished. Never were teachers of secular branches so de voted to their work, so keen for improving their methods, so constrained and quickened by'high spiritual motives as the Sabhath-schoOl teachers of our day. As the proceedings have been phono,graphi cally reported, and will soon be published by Messrs. J. C. GARRIGUES and Co., 608 Arch St., it is needlesi to attempt here anything further in this respect. Persons desirous of securing copies - sh'ould' make 'early appli'cation;' addressing the office of the Sunday School tintes. We will at present say nothing mire, except to suggest an inquiry why the honored National Institution, the AMERICAN SUNDAY-SCHOOL UNION, has had apparently no connection whatever with a Convention, whose objects are identical with its own high and Catholic aims and work ? SUNDAY IN POLITICS; A odrrespondent of the N: Ti-ibune, who thinks the Republican party in danger, advises them, as a measure of policy, to giver the Ger mans of the irreligidus class free lag'er on . Sun day. To'which the' , Tribuite answers, after con trasting the inherited traditions and , customs of America and Germany about Sunday observance, as follows : " Now it seems tows-and we mean to be very moderate and guarded in our statement—that our Teutonic friebds ought .not to hurry us. They ought to consider how they would be apt to deal with,a like demand if they were living at home in 'GerMany, and we had recently migrated thither, and' were demanding that they 'should alter their immemorial-lit*s into conformity with our , convictions. Will they be so good as to Genesee Evangelist, No. 1199. I Home & Foreign Miss. $2.00. Address :-1334 Chestnut Street look at the matter in this light? Are we utter ing the, dictates of bigotry ? of fanaticism ? or those of philosophy and common sense ? Do let us be reasonable all 'round I "We protest against our correspondent's as sumption that the Germans are precluded from drinking their lager on Sunday. We know bet ter; and, if he does not, he may easily learn. We venture to assert that they have averaged six glasses each per 'Sunday ever since they landed on our shores. - There is no law here that forbids their drinking themselves full up to the chin on Sunday or any other day. Our laws do forbid- the sale, and exposure for sale, of lager on Sunday, as of almost everything else. Their general idea is. that we should do our trading, like our work, on the other six days of the week, and only the most indispensable mini mum of either on the day regarded by most of us as the Christian. Sabbath. Perhaps this is all wrong,.and Sunday ought to' be a day of labor and traffic just like any other day. Convince us of this, if you can ; we are open to reason ; but don% undertake to bully us.. " In our judgment, a large majority of the people of this State - are satisfied with our laws respecting. Sunday,.believing that there is quite as much drinking and dancing, fishing and hunt ing, fiddling and frolic, on that day as is good for us,,or as a reasonable man could ask for. If those laws are now upset, it. will - be because the few bully the many out of adherence to their convictions of what is proper and beneficent, by threatening to vote the Democratic ticket. We don't truckle to this sort of dictation." THE VOTE . ON REUNION—WHAT NEXT? Revising our list of last week, we find that Minnesota Presbytery should be classed with those voting , for the Committee's amendments; while lowa City, by a recent vote, changed from the unamended to the amended Basis, expressing readiness for any plan the Assembly may adopt. On the , same' platform with lowa City are Grand River, Ohio, and Otsego New York, Presbyte ries. So also may be reckoned Knox, 111., and Watertown, N. Y., although. their preference is distinctly ,stated for the Basis of 1868. N. Missouri prefers the amended. Basis, but gives some discretionary powers. Alton, 111., took no new action, but was ready last fall for union on the Standards. On the other hand, the Presbyteries of Athens, 0.; Fort Wayne, Ind.; Saginaw and Washtenaw, Mich.; Cedar• Rapids, Iowa; Kansas, Dacotah, and San - Francisco voted for. the amended Basis. Nevada. (formed from Sierra Nevada and Washoe) voted for the Basis unameuded last fall. 'Washtenaw calls for the repeal of the Ex chiding acts. Thirty-two Presbyteries, so far as heard from, show more or less ; willingness for union without a specific understanding; and sixty-four have voted for express terms, all but lour or five adopting the Basis as amended by the Committee. Zealous reunion men are now planning for a new Basis to be adopted by the coming Assem blies and - to be sent down to the Presbyteries with a request that. they call special meetings for immediate action upon it; it being part of the plan that the Assemblies adjourn to meet in the First church in'this; city, next October, there to consummate the work. •If the principles em bodied in the Reunion Basis of 1868 as amended by our , Committee and assented to by the late Pittsburg Circular, can be secured, our Church is, ready for union to-morrow. • Let us have a sound reunion without delay, but no marrying in haste to, repent at leisure. THE PACIFIC RAIL ROAD. The union of the Eastern and Western por tions of this road at a central point near Salt Lake, City, was announced on Monday, May 10th. We believe that the day will be memorable in all the annals of time, as marking another stride .towards a commanding position of our own _among the civilized nations of the earth. Such will be its influence upon commerce and upon national life, that' we may well , pray for a pecu liar blessing upon the wonderful 'triumph of en terprise, capital and skill. The wild enthusiasm with which the event has been celebrated in Cal ifornia, is an intimation of one of the main utili ties of the Pacific rail road, , the strengthening of the bond of union between remote sections of our vast country. • We - have taken it more calm ly on this side of the continent, but the result at such an early, day—nearly two months earlier than was predicted by the most sanguine a year ago—years'earlierthan was expected long after the work had been fairly started—the result we say, fills us with admiration, amazement and joy. .Let us do our part towards making it a highway for our God. Newcastle, ; Pa.—Rev. Wm. T. Wylie in a bu siness note to this office, mentions that he has " just closed with our communion a series of schopl-hpuse meetings, by which twenty-six were added to our own church and, nine- to other.- branches."