New Series, Vol. Vl_ John AWeir Strictly in Advance $2.50, Otherwise wis. Postage 20cts, to be paid where delivered. f AFTER RE-UNION, WRIT? In all probability record will be formally made and official notice given next November of the Union of two branches of the Presbyterian church. The veriest doubter must have tenacious grasp of his doubt, to hold it amidst such signs as we have to-day. Already the streams touch each other and are mingling. In sixty. days . their separate identity will be lost. What then ? The question for the entire Church is this. Every memmber of our communion is bound to give it thoughtful and prayerful heed. It is not a ques tion to be left to the clergy. Nor to the Fathers. Nor to Boards and Committees. The entire living membership of the body of Christ, consti tuting the churches that are to share in the ap proaching nuptials, must answer this question, and with some regard to the obligations assumed, the responsibilities imposed, and privileges vouch safed, if answer is to be given to the glory of God. Reunion accomplished, What then? It has been longed for and prayed for by good men. The heralding of its nearer and nearer approach has been received by thousands as .ti dings of great joy. The trumpetings of it have been big with prophecy and promise. It has been claimed to be the ushering in of a new era. Shall it be seen that we have been imitating the example of some authors, who thunder only in the index ? Is our apparent zeal for the glory of God to have "the lame and impotent conclu sion" of a great zeal for the glory of denomina tionalism 7, Or is there to issue out of re-union that which shall be a justification of our joy at its coming, and a fulfillment of the best prophe cy on record of its beneficent results? There is no' power in great ecclesiastical size. Bigness needs other qualities to make itself felt. Nor shall we get any such momentum from the mere junction of our forces as will carry us very far forward in the widening grooves of evangelis tic effort. Union alone will endow us with no projective force. Indeed, we shall lose somewhat by Union. We shall lose the spur and stimulus that came from a competing organization, mar shalled under the same banners and holding the same symbols. Doubtless something for Christ, by each branch of the Church, has been done, and something has been given, that would not have been done and would not have been gii6n, had it not been for the 'spirit of emulation, mov ing us to seek to surpass each other in Christian activity and benevolence. Doubtless we have stirred each other up to love and good works. Whatever may be said of the quality of the in spiration that has thus given impetus to our evanuelical activity, it has had its place and made itself felt. And we are to lose it. it will drop out of the list of incentives to toil when we are one again. On the other hand, there will doubtless be a gain. A gain in the economic use of funds—in the economic employment of agency—in the eco nomic distribution of our evangelistic force. But if this be all, it will be a most meagre thing and utterly beneath our privilege and our obligation. To be content with making just such record of increase and efficiency, of toil and triumph, uni ted, as we made apart, will not answer. Some thing better, and higher, and grander, is demand ed of us. The possibility is the call of God. It is ours to make the possible, actual. There never was a more glorious possibility. Church of Christ never had clearer divine call. We shall court the smiting of God to spiritual leanness and barrenness, if we do not heed it. We shall merit severe rebuke. We shall be chargeable with using great swelling words of promise, filled only with wind and vanity. The united Church must be what the two Branches of the Church never were, in life and labor and liberality. The old standards of Christian giving must be lifted away from their present altitude, and set furlongs higher in the scale of obligation. The old grooves of Christian effort must give way to others, in and through which there may be room for the play and sweep of greatly vitalized and enlarged activities. While our life—our spiritual life, with God and in God, must be more vivid and intensely real. It must be closer and deeper, in creasing the clearness of our conception, and the firmness, of our grasp, and the fervor of our love, of things spiritual. A mere blast of trumpets sounding a call to something great in the way of beneficence as a thank-offering, will only lead to a fitful and spas modic effort. And our last state will be worse than the first. First of all, therefore, paramount to every-other thing we have to do, vital in order to such fruit of Union as may be, and ought to be, brought forth to the glory of God—first of all, every where, throughout our entire borders, by the least and the , greatest, by every, individual member of our communion,. there should be re newed commitment and consecration_ to Christ. As a basis for anything like permanence in Roar- ity and eontinuance . .in liberality, this is essential. The whole Church must needs get closer to God: The currents of our spiritual life must go deeper than they do. If our Union is to make its im press on the world, compelling men to believe that God is in it, answering tc) this extent at least his Son's intercessory prayers,.it must be a union signalized, most of all, alike as a product and aspromotive of spirituality and Christ-like ness. Let this be the burden of our prayer and the substance of our talk in all the gatherings held to consider the great measUre.. Let , the current of desire bear resistlessly in this diree • tion in, all our approaching Presbyterial meetings. Let the • potent religious press sound the pall to this higher spiritual life. Let pastors and peo ple be urged to eldset themselves with God, so that we nOt'only be kept from the pride of Babel or Babylon builders, but brought into such close alliance with the Master and into 'such close sympathy with his out-reaching .and world-em bracing spirit as our Church has never known. And let us have a day for this—a 'day of special, consecration by appointment 'of the Assemblies about to meet in Pittsburgh, when our four thousand pulpits shall seek simultaneously to in terpret God's voice in this matter, preaching to our four thousand congregations on the one great theme, pressing home the responbibilities impos ed upon them, and summoning them with whole hearted and unreserved surrender to take a new departure, and in the name of the Lord of hosts to "go through the gates " and possess the land for Christ. And then, if it be thought hest, let that day be a gift day as 'well : when we shall give of our substance as well as give`our hearts : when the generous largeness of our contributions to the treasury, of, the. Church shall prove the affluence of our lova for Christ : when some good round millions shall testify to' our enlarged con ception of the importance of the great evangelism, and our deepened interest in its prosecution. I CONSCIENTIOUS POLITICIAN. Those who have faith that the American peo pie are yet sound at the core and mean to do jus tice in - spite of the corrnpting arts of politicians, find elitering.confirmation of their views tothe late letter of Generalßosecrans to the Democratic leaders of Ohio. These leMiers have fallen into the not uncommon error of base men ; that of overestimating the strength of the base passions of their fellow-men, and of taking altogether too little account of the power of conscience in a sub stantially Christian people. Downright villains deny the existence of virtue in others. Corrupt politicians believe the apeople also to be corrupt. And they consider it a shrewd artifice, a wise po litical move, to pander to this public corruption, by the more or less open advocacy of some course which would be highly convenient, it' it wet e not wrong. General Rosecrans'Jetter is' the revolt of the sound American heart against such dis graceful propbsals. A member of the Demo= cratic party, and hiving been nominated as the candidate of that party for Governor of the State of Ohio, he frankly and unsparingly proclaims the antagonism of their platform to the princi ples of justice and right. lie insists upon the principle of political equality of the different races as one to be accepted all around, and as the only genuine Democratic principle; and he in sists upon fidelity to the national obligations in the fullest sense, and upon a return to specie payments, that the whole debt may be paid, in coin or its equivalent. Stich brave and whole some words were needed in the din of a political strife, which has threatened to involve and endat;t ger the plainest principles of morality. They are Ineeded to bring Democrats antißepublicans to their senses. They are a voice from the inner depths of the public conscience. In reading them, politicians will see that there is a limit to their bids for the rascal-sympathies of our na tune; and that they cannot carry a governing mass of their fellOw men in the maintenance of a creed, which has _wholesale robbery, oppression and retrogression for its leading articles. Meanwhile Democrats like General Roseerans —and may his tribe increase—and honest men of all parties behold, with inexpressible:satisfaction, the steady and rapid course of the government in, lessening the public debt, its policy of retrench ment and its demand for competence.and fidelity among all its subordinate officers. This illus trious example in behalf of the eighth command ment must, have a highly re-assuring effect, and must be promotive of fair , dealing between man and man ever'ywhere. A purer air will breathe through all the avenues of commerce. The pub lic conscience will -be reinforced. But if the men . against whom Gen. Rosecrans . writes, get into' power, it' carry us no short stride to wards. anarchy and barbarism. - PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1869. INTEREST . AND STUDY. Our U. P. brethren, who edit The-Evang e ll_ cat Repository, have .a review of ,Prof. . Hodge's " Commentary im.tlie , Westminster Confession." They say : r ' The 'author, in his preface, says, "At the present time, two great denominations, having discarded, .all defining clauses, seem likely to, unite on Vie basis . or thesq 'standards pure and simple" We hail this with pleasure and grate fully anticipate a largely increased interest [in] and study'of these standards on every'sidei It will certainly rejoice us should we find,that the epectations of the respected' author, are not groundless ; but we.,utterly fail to perceive that these anticipations rest ill:ion any solid 'ground. 'We venture to affirm-that there is not a New School man who looks -upon the phrase ' pure and simple,' of which so much seems to be made, as amounting to anything more than an ,approval of the Confession as containing a systeria of doc trines taught in the Scriptures; and has there been, for the last thirty [two] years a single Presbytery in the New School Presbyterian Church that did not demand, such a declaration of approval on the pail of all those whom it or dained to the office- of the ministry and the -el dership ? If these anticipations of the author are well 'founded, they must rest upon some other ground than the Agreement, on their part, to receive the Confession as pure and simple."' 1. The above is rather severe upon our 0. S. brethren. No 0. S. Presbytery has ever deman ded acknowledgment of the standards more ex plicit than the N. S. one here condemned as too lax. The constitutional question in regard, to the standards is the same in the two Churches, and is couched in these very terms. This ques tion, therefore, according to The Repository gives us no security that the standards command any great degree of " interest and study " in the ministry and eldership of the O. S. body. How ungenerous to strike 0. S. brethren in . Israel over the heads of N. S. Samaritans-in this•style. ; ! 2'. The Repository's comment shows how con sonant to the practice and constitution of the Presbyterian Church of America, is the tolera- tion and forbearance of the New:School in mat ters of doctrine. Here is an impartial and unbi assed critical, opinion. 'This U. P. editor singles out= as distinctively New School. the doctrinal formulasof the undivided Church, and of _both branibei; 'since the division—as .it will be of the United Church. We -rejoice at this new light that has come to these brethren, as it will obviate the necessity for any farther solemn warnings to our 0. S. brethren from that quar- ter. Since the 0. S. Church has nothing to lose doctrinallY by Re-union, and since her own form ulas provide for all the liberty asked by N. S• Presbyterians, the movement will effect no doc trinal disaster. 3. HOW do our brethren of The Repository propose to excite that degree of "study and in terest" hich Presbyterians ought to evince ? Is it by adopting the U. P. method ? Is it by set ting up a modern Testimony along side the old Confession, around which the doctrinal life and interest of the Church shall cluster ? Is it by stereotyping the shibboleths and, narrcw tradi tions of a small sect, and binding upon men's shoulders burdens which they are unable to bear, until they cry out against all Creeds and Confes sions as an unchristian innovation on the Church's freedom? These methods have been exemplified in our minor Presbyterian bodies, and we cannot forget that The Repository sus tained its own denomination in condemning and driving from its ministry a worthy servant of Christ,—Rev. W. bl'eune—because he held (against the U. P. Testimony,) the doctrine of the Westminster Confession on the subject of Christian Communion. This fact is worth re membering, when the organs of that branch (or twig) bewail Presbyterian neglect of the West minster Standards. A UN TIIROUGH . NEW ENGLAND.--11. At Keene, N. H., the Congregational Associa tion of the State was in session. It is composed of clerical and lay delegates from the local con. ferences, and numbers about fifty members. A new constitution was adopted during, the sessions, providing for a larger ratio of, representation,,as well as for a more thorough and satisfactory col lection of" statistics, and for measures adapted t o increase the interest of the meetings. The, children of the churches of Keene were assembled when we arrived, and some hours. of the crowded . session were cheerfully given to ex ercises for their profit and entertainment. The pastor of the First church in Keene, Rev. Win. Karr, is in morainal connection with the New School body, - having but a few years ago been pastor in one of the Brooklyn churches. He is a workman of whom his former associates need not be ashamed, and he seemed to be com pletely at home in his' ew ecclesiastical surround- lugs. .His impromptu part of - the Sunday-school exercises was, in our judgment, the best. An important part of the preceedirigs was the Anniversary,-of the New Hampshir:e.Flome Mis sionary. Society,, hich 7 with reading of Secre tary's and Treasurer's reports, and addresses, occupied a large 'part of one of the morning ses sions.: The repoit showed that a greater sum bad beCn contributed thelast thin in any previous year... There was. a sad picture drain of home destitutions,'and of the - Culpable lack of practical proofs of interest in maintaining the institutions of the Gospel in rural districts and old chiirchi, from which the strength has been dratirnby etni gration. The course of en)igration in the farm ing regions is deseribed as first carrying the yourigpeople outiVest; and then, the old people feeling lonely, sell out the farm, or make arrange ments by Which they can move into the nearest and most thriving settlement , in the neighbor hood. Thus the churches in the ontskirtsa4 the county die, or languish, and sometimes-tzilled fields are abandoned to the encroachments of the forest;`and the built up towns gain strength at the loss . of the small district& And yet it is difficult to stir up a due degree of interest in these larger towns, in behalf of the parishes which are transferring their strength to the towns. The growing town of Keene, with its two churches, wasiently excoriated by one of the speakers for giving less than $lOO last. year fOr State eyangelization. Much of the money acknowledged by the New Hampshire`Society, it should be , stated, is'given for the general work of the American Home Missionary Sciciety. An extremely neglected out-of-the-world sort of popu lation, on the narrow strip of sea coast belonging to' New Hampshire; had lately been reached through the 'zeal of a young soldier who had been converted in the 'Union army, - and who came home, as so many of our disbanded soldiers did, not to curse but to bless the country which their arms had helped to save. The'degraded, igno rant people of this coast, who, within a few hoUrs ride from -Boston and Salem, were, like some on the Atlantic coast near Philadelphia.and New York, practically heathen, have been perceptibly raised in-morals and th'rift through the labors-of this young self denying missionary. , has been ordained for the work among them, on the advice of the Missionary Society and the Coun cil, without going through a-course of theologi cal study. He, has stirred them up, with assist ance from abroad, to build a Church, in the rear ing of which the people labored :with their min hands. • The question of the maintenance of the New England type of character in thrift, in contented struggles with the hard, grudging soil, in morals, and in strong religious convictions, is too large to be considered here. Emigration to the remote and fertile regions of the West has already; in no small degree, transferred that type of characte'r to those Teg,ions, 4 arid the whole policy of the na tion feels to day the tremendous power of -New England in the Northwest. And the original New England, depleted year byyear of its best native elements, beholds - its great manufacturing centres and its large cities thronged with foreign ers, who already threaten =to take political control of these centres of population and influence. As yet, we believe, quite enough of the old stock remains =to give character to the whole. That little territory may still remain, sublime in its rug gedness, the nurse of heroic colonists, the mother of statesmen, the motto " Dirigo," " I direct," of the n orthernmost State, a truth for the future as for the past of the nation; provided its present in habitants courageously maintain its institutions, and provided the prosperous churches of its towns and cities watch and cherish the feebly burning sparks of life in the regions'around. The power of a living Christianity, which preserves the old elements, will also be effective to assimilate the new. Such societies as this of New Hampshire are instrumentalities of the highest importance in maintaining the New-England character. The visit of the Delegate from the General charged with the Christian salutations _of the body to the .Association,, was most cor dially received, especially as the sending of such a delegate was among the last of the acts of the distinctively New. School Church. It was an illustration 'of love, to the end. The New School Graneb, in agreeing to terms p.f,Union with the Old, thus -forestalled the suggestion of a loss or ,decline of her traditional, attachment to New England. Her admiration-for the best theology, the Christian enterprise,.the virtues, the thrift, the cultivated intelligence and the great names of the Church of. Ney England was thus known to be unabated. Her 'hope of the continuance of this intercourse under ; the new circumstances would be gratified by news of the appointment of a delegate. from %the New Hampshire body, to the General Assembly of, the united Church Genesee Evangelist, No. 1217. f Home & Foreign Miss. $2.00. Address :-13341 Chestnut Street. to meet in 1870; an appointment which had been made among the earlier. proceedings of the body. It may turn out that in this question of main taining official intercourse with the Congrega tional bodies of New England, a pretty certain test of the sympathies and tendencies of - the unit ed body will be found. We shall remember with interest the cordiality of these brethren towards a:representative of the New School Church; the fine devotional spirit of their prayer:meeting ; the single-hearted earnestness' of the' sea-coast missionary ; the venerable form of father Barstow, who for half a century had been pastor of the first church of Keene, who not long ago celebrated his golden wedding, and who took a vigorous part in all the business of the Sessions ; and it was witti real regret we took leave of them to enter upon our homeward journey. Down the valley of one of the rapid tributaries of the ''Conneeticut—the Ashuelot—lay our route; a streamlet made to pay toll to the genius of industry that had seized the available points on its banks, before it went to join the main stream in rendering similar but greater services. We soon debouched into the beautiful broad valley of the Connecticut, green, fair and fertile, brightened by the flashing waters of the crystal clear river, and blirdered on either hand by a range of bills of picturesque outline. There was no lack of moisture here. The landscape shone fair and glorious. Health and good. ,spirits were" afted oil the .charmed air. Towns ,famous in the Indian Wars of the Colony were announced by the conductor, blending a sad and softened romance with the harsh tones and dis sonant roarlof the modern railway. At Mt. Tom Station, we took a little steamer of , eight horse power and 231 , inches draft. Certainly, we had touched the two extremes; we had coins from -Brobdignag to Lilliput. From 2800 horse power on the Sound to 8 horse power on the Connecticut river; from an engine as huge.as a church, to one which we could have carried tMder our arm = this was no trifling transitions- We enjoyed ourselves quite as well onone, - as on tte otker. Landed at the foot of Mt. Holyoke, we were driven as far towards the summit as was practicable for carriages, and then took a railway car which: was drawn by means of an endless rope and horse power to the top, one thousand feet in all from the Connecticut river. Wliat a spectacle was that which burst upon our sight! _We stood at the centre of a circle of vision nearly - seventy miles in diameter, and had the poprilcus.heart - of New England at our feet._ Right before us lay Northampton; to the North was Amherst, to the South Springfield ; near by in the - South-east was South Hadley and the Seminary; Wachusetts Mountain shimmered faintly on the East, Greylock and the Green mountains _rimmed the West; and ever present Monadnoc lay sleeping upon the summits of the Northern circle of hills. Amid all, wound the bright Connecticut,. its, many graceful curves suggesting a reluctance too soon to quit the charming region.. We gazed and wondered and tried to find room for the novel and delightful sensations that crowded into the mind. We asked the-question then, andask it now, whether another sfot so privileged, and so well worth the sight-seer's visit-is to be found in America; a spot raised a thousand feet high, in the midst of a region, which, on all accounts, one would so much covet,to ye at such an advantage in posi tion. A few hours afterwards we stood on top of Springfield Arsenal. The view from that point, so-famous -and so eally beautiful, seemed tame in the comparison. An unpleasant feature in the agriculture of Connecti:mt River Valley to our eye was the ex tensive culture of the tobacco plant. For miles, a patch of tobacco would alternate regularly with the Totato•patcla and the corn field. It is an evil omen. We do not believe the material in terests of the community will be promoted by the raising of such kcrop. Its broad, heavy leaves have a weedy look which contrasts it at once with the wlaolesomer crops which it is beginning to rival. We fully sympathize with the strong resolution of the New Hampshire Association dissuading the people from the culture of tobacco.. —Mr. Mitchell,. General Agent for Freedmen of our Committee of Home Missions, is in this city calling for immediate aid *to3he empty treasury of this department. The 'Freedmen's Bureau has ceased to furnish transportation, and a very superior class of teachers is now offering for the Committee's work. -Thirty students from Lin coin University have been kept employed during the vacation by the Committee, in preaching and teaching. Mr. Mitchell calls for immediate con.- tributions from. Sugda.,y-schoolsx_churches and. in, di_viau4s. MT. HOLYOKE.