altr :knirrirau 72reAgirrin N e w Series, - Vol. VI, No. 49. iohnAWeir Strictly in Advance $2.50, Otherwise $B. Postage 20ots, to be paid where delivered. THE BIBLE IN OUR COMMON SCHOOLS. it, is the general conviction of the people of these United States, that the seowrityand happi ness which we enjoy as a nation, sod the grand success of our experiment in free government thus far, result from the wide diffieion of the Protestant Bible, and the general aceeptance of its teachings. It is not believed that colonies emanating from heathen; or infidel, or Romish communities could ever have founded, or 'built up this great Republic. What .Romanists could do in that line is shown in South America, Mexico, and Canada. Only Puritans could have made a New England ; only Dutch and Scotch Presby terians and pious Friends' could have founded the Empire and the Keystone States; only their descendants could have' given us the teeming West, and developed the marvellous wealth of the placers, the Sierras,.and the Rocky Moun tains. The four million Roman Catholics, men, women, and children, who have mostly fled from starvation in Popish countries to this Protestant land, may pretend to disbelieve this; the few hundred thousand infidels, who are sitting under this thrifty and comforting growth of deep re ligious convictions,• may attempt to deny its origin, but full thirty millions of Americans to day are ready cordially to recognize the Bible and Protestantism as the sources of their great ness, and the breath of -their national life. The United States is the victorious embodiment of the true Protestant idea - of. freedom 'within the wholesome limits of the divine law. .We learfied our lessons of liberty, to quote Bancroft, from Luther and Calvin. The Protestantism of the Bade is, therefore, hound up in the very fibres of our country's be ing. We are _a free people, because our ,fore fathers and ourselves believe God alone to be Lord of the conscience; we are a law=abiding people, because we acknowledge the authority of the revealed will of God. Infidelity and Roman ism strike equally at the foundations of our hap piness. No one intelligently attached to our national institutions, can consent to allow the policy of our country to be directed by either. And yet that policy is not intolerattt,4lcApekaMtikk seal up the Bible, or those that wouikabolish it altogether. It constrains no one to be either Protestant or Christian. And why? Because it is both Protestant and Christian itself: Let it cease to be either, and it will cease to be tolerant of those who are neither. Let it become Papal; where would be its liberties ? Let it become unbelieving ; who that has read of the French Revolution doubts what would be the result? It bears with the opinions of Papists and un belevers, simply because it does not yield to them. And now we have come to the point where we ve certainly e tpecled to yield to them. The contest to shut the Bible out of our Public Schools is upon us. No better, no more suital le place for the Bible in America can be found, than the common schools. We speak not now of the in trinsic merits or supreme authority of the vol ume; or of the vast mischief involved in the very idea of education without religion. Butes a matter of national self-respect, the first lesson that we should impress upon our children, is the source from which our institutions and our na tional spirit are derived, and from which our his tory springs. As a nation, we should undertake to acquaint our ohildren with the Bible and 'to give the book currency and popularity. Wise statesmanship, looking to the perpetuity of our institutions, should fearlessly and unreservedly commit the nation to the Bible; and how better can this be done than by giving it an established place in the exercises of our public schools ? That will bring the entire mass of our youth un der the influence of its incomparable morality. Appointed by public authority, if not of the na tion, then of the State, it will form, in the mind of the pupil, an indissoluble association between Bible and country. Unless this is done, there will be a vacancy in the training of the young citizen, which no amount of domestic, or Sabbath school, or denominational instruction in the Bible can supply. Even should our mission schools reach every youth in the land with the Bible, it would be the Church and not the State that was doing it, and the full impression which every 3oung American should have about the Bible would never be made. For it is not the Bi ble as a religious book we plead for, but as the true manual of the citizen and the State. It is not forcing our religion upon Romanists awl infidels to make Bible-reading a part of the eserelscs of the schools which their children are likely to attend; Republicanism itself might jest as well be charged with forcing it upon them. R epublicaals in itself is a-constant, ever-present, overwhelming testimony to the blessed results of a free Bible, in forming the national character. Shall we be asked to apologize for, or in fact, to abolish our Republica n institutions because - they undo, in so many thousands of instances, the teachings of Rome? Will 'our popish fellow citizens protest' against the very breath they draw ? Against the very oxygen which makes it life giving, and.which puts health in their cheeks and hope into toe , it hearts? Rather let.them ac cept the Biblein our public schools, as simply one of the many. facts, adverse to their own creed, under which they consent to place them selves, and their, children, in exchanging their own for a Protestant country. Thereare Protestant Christians who are ner vously anxious to be consistent and thorough going in their toleration. Mr. Beecher, the Independent, the Tribune, &e., believe that con sistency requires us to withdraw the Bible rather than offend our Romish citizens. But we sub mit that our inconsistency touches the form and not the reality of our tolerantprinciple; it saves the reality, while it trenches on the form only. Common sense demands a limit to toleration. It may not go so far as to undermine itself. For the sake of the very parties who dem'and of us, as a nation, the surrender of the Bible, we must refuse. Besides, there are others who stand ready with further demands upon our Christian and Protestant principles, when the ltomanists have got theirs. Behind the robed and mitred priests, we, see the Mormons thronging, with their spurious revelations and their chartered libertinism, ready to agitate for the abrogation of the laws on which our domestic institutions are founded; wasee the Jews clamoring for the removal of our inconvenient public observance of the first day of the week * as a day of rest; and still behind these, we descryart endless procession of Mongolian tribes, with their joss sticks and pagodas, and their whole sphere of thought, world-wide from our.ideas of the higher sanctions of law, and the meaning of an oath. Where, in conformity with the demands which such as these might make upon us, in the wide interpretation of the principle of toleration, would be the very essentials of our fabric of civilization? Down what Niagara and into what gulf of chaos shall we plunge, if once we consent to the proposition that we are not a Protestant and Christian .na- Volfr--**- AN EVENT AND ITS LESSONS. There was a melancholy murder in. New York city last week, and a sad, development connected with it. A name of distinguished eminence and honor in the world of journalism has been blur red; the lamp of a life once bright, brave, and enterprising in a remarkable degree, has gone out amid the clouds of a sickening domestic tragedy. The man who passed unharmed through war's perils, and survived the barbarities of a rebel im prisonment, who crossed and recrossed the conti nent in safety, always with a charming tale to tell of his adventures, now falls the victim of a well-grounded jealousy, and leaves his memory to the gossip of the' prurient crowd. Astound ing mistake ! , Grievous infatuation of a gifted man I Can it be traced to its source, and can so sad and bitter a fatality enter in any way into the valuable experience, of men, particularly young men ? One thing we know; the whole series of events, whose crisis is just reached, began in the theatre. Four years and a half ago a precious life was lost to the nation in a theatre. Two years after that warning, we read that Mr. Richardson frequently escorted Mrs. M'Farlandfrom the theatre where she was an actress. No one need be reminded in this age of the theatre, that its representations familiarize the spectator with every sort of crime and villainy. It is a high school of lust and murder. .Does any one wonder that a modern theatre should be the scene of a terrible assassina tion, and -that an actor should be the chief per former in the real tragedy ? Need any one be greatly surprised that out of an intimacy with an actress, proposals utterly at war with purity and domestic peace, should arise ? Are not such re sults too disgustingly common to be deemed worthy of remark, or to be dignified by the cracking of pistols and the shedding of blood ? We beg to be corrected if we overstate the mat tar. .4rWben that which is performed before the public gazdis so scandalous as to become indicta ble, we, at least, expect nothing better behind the scenes. Those who pass their whole lives within the circle of these poisonous influences, and those who become intimate with them, will find it morally impossible to escape personal con tamination, or, at the very least, to cherish those exalted views of the domestic , tie which are at the foundation of all social peace and welfare. Of the party who is gone we would speak gently. The act which sent him to his account was mur der. But, unpardonable as the act was, as a violent and bloody protest against the theatre, its warning should be most thoughtfully heeded. We read that the first stone theatre, built in ljan7o PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1869. Rome, B. C. 155, was pulled down, as injurious to the public morals. The institution hes not improved in 2,000 years. There is a disposition to make of the murder ed man a hero, or a martyr. We are getting ac customed to perverse freaks of public sentiment, and even to seeing ministers in good standing sail with and. justify the current. But, taking the murdered man's own declaration, written and printed two years ago, when a similar attempt had just been made on his life, by the, same per son, we ure compelled to say, that whilelybe;.may not have been guilty of technical crimingdify, he so conducted himself that all the mock, heroism and besmirched honor which society ascribes and bestows on such occasions, would more properly go to the murderer than to this victim. An in tercepted love-letter (" such a letter as one would naturally write to the woman he expeood to marry,") from one man to the wife of another; an engagement of marriage . with a woman legal ly the wife of another, and the mother of his children, years before she could be divorced, and whose divorce could be procured only in a remote Western State, are palpable and gross invasions of the sanctity of the holiest of human relations, wrongs which no amount of. wrong on the part of the husband to the wife, while she remained his could make right. And ministers who try to palliate or justify such conduct will suffer' more from the recoil of their own pleas, than the, pub lie whose Christian common sense and strong do mestic instincts, promptly and indignantly revolt against them. THE NEWSPAPER REVIVAL-OUR OWN COURSE. One gratifying result of the Re-uniotiis seen at once in the efforts made to put the.neWspaper press of the denomination upon a higher-Poting. It has by no means compared well, with' that' of other denominations, particularly Congregation alists and Baptists, in time past. We know of no Presbyterian journal that can rank With the Boston Watckinan and Reflector (Baptist), or The Congregationalist and Recorder. We might • Send the.list farther and tare no bettet; , Even the Methodist press of the country, as a whole, is superior to the Presbyterian. It now looks as if Presbyterians were about to take the eminent position in this important branch of service, which their standing in other respects hag long demanded. The Herald and The Presbyter of Cincinnati, have consolidated in a most honor able and satisfactory manner, and as we have already noted, and as we every week observe, the united paper is a most decided advance on either of the two alone. The march of improvement has now reached New York city, where The Evangelist has long shone with a mild and some what dry light. The wick is to be trimmed, and more oil, in the form of money expenditure is to be poured in. A new editor, Rev. C. K. Im brie, D.D., of Jersey City, formerly of the other branch, makes his salutatory in the last paper. Dr. F. F. Ellinwood will keep the readers posted up, and stirred up, too, on the causes of the Church, and Dr. John Hall is promised as a regular contributor. The paper will also be en larged at the commencement of the year. At Chicago, it is announced that we shall have a • , - paper representing 'tbe best elements of the united Church, at the beginning of the year. A happy exchange for The N. W. Presbyterian, and an auspicious omen for the whole Church. But nothing more clearly proves the power of this advance movement than the fact that it has stirred oar cotemporary, the old Presbyterian of this city. That paper announces that it has endeavored" to secure the services of Rev. Dr. Cuyler, of Brooklyn, as an editor (without suc cess, however), and that it will endeavor to com ply with the demands of the Presbyterian Church, as now constituted, upon the newspaper press. The large constituency of this paper, the influence it has hitherto wielded and probably will continue to wield, make its action among the most important that will be taken by the newspapers of the body. We trust it may be guided by -Divine wisdom in its future move ments. As for ourselves, our readers know well that we have always represented the progressive, wide-awake and soundly liberal spirit that is ex pected, and that is actually beginning, to char acterize the new era of Presbyterianism. We give our hearts to the Re-union, because we see in it, as it has finally developed, the overthrow of ultra-conservatism, high-churchism, and hyper orthodoxy, and the ushering in of an era of youthful vigor, hopefulness, elasticity and sound liberality. Our services, such as they are, we wish to render to the promotion of such a result. A truly evangelical paper is needed, which shall cherish the best traditions of our great national conflict; which shall utter no un- certain sound on the great public questions of the day, which involve high moral considera tions ; which shall not be afraid of free discus sion on matters in which brethren differ; which shall be prejudiced against nothing new because it is new, or in favor of nothing old because it is old; which shall give a wholesome moral im pulse to every circle where it is known. We ask our friends everywhere to aid us, by ef f orts common at this season of the year espe ciaily, in holding up the new standard of Pres byterianism—not an iron pillar, but a banner for the truth. Let us pledge one another to do a great deal more for the interests represented by this paper, in the Re-union than out of it, and let us see such lists of new subscribers as harp not yet rallied to our columns. Let your prayers come with your names, that the power of God, the Spirit of truth and the treasures of the Gospel may shine in every issue of the paper, in the coming year. GROWTH SINCE THE DIVISION. In 1837 the Presbyterian Church in the United States comprised twenty-three Synods, one hundred and thirty-five Presbyteries, 2,140 min isters, 2,865 churches, and 220,557 communicants. The statistics of the reunited Church show fifty one Synods, two hundred and fifty-six Presby teries, 4,371 churches, 4,229 ministers, and 431,563 members. Add to the figures the sta tistics of the Southern Church, and we have a total of 33 Synods, 304 Presbyteries, over 5,000 ministers, 5,700 churches, and 520,000 mem bers. There has, therefore, been a growth of one hundred and twenty-five per cent. in mem bership in thirty-two years, the growth in other respects being proportionate. The population of the country at the time of the division was some what less than sixteen millions: Last spring, when these statistics of the Churches were •fresh, the population was :probably forty millions. This — cannot, however, be even approximately ascer tained until the census for 1870 appears. It points, however, to a rate of growth in the popu lation exceeding by twenty-fivp- per cent. the grow& of Presbyterianism in thesabranches, In other words, its 4 iinited strength, North and South, should be forty thonsand greater than it now is ; to have kept pace with the growth of the country in the past thirty-two years. A fact worth serious pondering in these days of jubilee. OXFORD CHURCH. "THE FEAST OF DEDICATION." This church will be dedicated to the service of Almighty God, on Sunday next, the 12th inst. The sermon in the morning at 10 , 3- o'clock, will be preached by Rev. Albert Barnes. In the afternoon at 3, there will be addresses by Rev. Drs. Humphrey, Adams, Mears, Stryker, and Wiswell ; in the evening at 71, a sermon by the ,pastor, Rev. Frank L. Robbins. SERVICES during the week : Monday night at 7i-, sermon by Bishop Simpson ; Tuesday night, sermon by Rev. R. S. Storrs, D. D., of Brooklyn; Wednesday night, a grand Sacred Concert; Thursday night at 7i, Sermon by Dr. John Hall, of New York; Friday night, social reunion of the congregation and their friends ; tickets $l. Saturday, at 4, P. M., a Union Prayer meeting, of all denominations in the North western part of the city. Subject: Prayer for a blessing on our common work in entering upon our *inter campaign. Sunday evening at 71, the 19th, Rev. Dr. Richard Newton will preach a sermon to the child ren. OUR ROCHESTER CORRESPONDENT. HAMILTON COLLEGE The Catalogue of Hamilton College has come to hand, a neatly printed pamphlet of forty-two pages. It contains the names of eleven instruc tors, able and experienced men, and 166 students, lin Law, 41 Seniors, 36 Juniors, 46 Sopho mors, and 39 Freshmen. There are still two vacancies in the list of its Professors, two good and wise men wanted, one for Intellectual and Moral Science, and one for Natural Philosophy. There are now sixteen permanent scholarships, of $l,OOO each, the benefit of which may be realized by deserving students. There is also another fund of $lOO,OOO, the interest of which will be annually distributed to needy students of Christian character and good scholarship. The Catalogue contains the list of degrees conferred and prizes awarded at the last Com mencement, also the •necrology of the year, to gether with themes and prizes proposed for 1870. The Catalogue indicates that work is intended. Hamilton College is a poor place for a lazy man. We have before spoken of the fact, that this College has furnished more ministers than any other we know of, in proportion to the whole number of its graduates. We - have • recently Genesee Evangelist, No. 1229. learned that of these no less than sixteen have been Foreign Missionaries, among whom the names of H. G. 0. Dwight, D. D., Sheldon Dibble, H. B. Morgan, A. W. Loomis and Jus tus Doolittle are conspicuous. They maintain a live one in Buffalo. It em biaces the Presbyterians, Baptists; Free Will Baptists, and Methodists. They meet at 4 o'clock on Monday afternoon, and 'adjourn at seven, after taking tea together. At the gather ing which we attended last week, brief reports Of Sabbath services were first rendered; then a sermon read for criticism; and the remainder of the time was devoted to the discussion of a prac tical question in which all were deeply interested. It was a delightful meeting, and must be one'of great profit to those who participate in its week ly exercises. Sixteen ministers, representing the different denominations named, were present, and the'best feeling of love and harmony seemed to prevail. We remember with much interest the visit of Mr. Moody and Judge. Smith, some two years ago, to our city. Much that was said on that occasion was calculated to stir up Christianity to greater activity in the religious life. The words of Mr. Moody especially moved all hearts. Many, we do not doubt, were more encouraged and strengthened by his addresses than they would have been by the same things from the lips of a clergyman, simply because, he was a brother lay man. We think such conventions do good; and we know several laymen in our own State quite com petent, in our estimation, to conduct them. Such meetings might be particularly helpful to young. Christians. The voice of strangers might arrest their attention. Suggestions, from those of ripe experience in Christian usefulness, might help them to avoid mistakes, and go to work successfully for the Master. We know that pastors would sometimes welcome such help. If any, in some of our larger villages, de sire to make arrangements for such meetinga, we can put them in communication with sonle" able and ,admirable brethren, who would - take pleaiure in aiding them. Rev. Dr. Niles, of Corning; preached an ear nest, practical .sermon upon the above subject, on the 28th ult., in the First Presbyterian church of Elmira, which is' published entire in the Elmira Advertiser. Dr. Campbell preached upon the same subject in his own pulpit, in our city, at the same time. Both take the ground that the removal of the Bible from the schools, while it would be a great injury in many ways, would not at all satisfy Catholics. What they want is not so much the removal of the Bible as the destruction of the schools. Surely we can not allow our common schools to be broken down. We have seen too much of their benefits to give them up, and go back where Spain and Italy have so long been with church schools alone. Bevy Charles H. Taylor is called to the Pres byterian church of Le Roy. Re accepts, and is to enter at once upon his charge. Rev. R. E. Willson, late of Clyde, is invited to take charge of the Presbyterian church at Havanna. We think he will accept the invita tion. Dr. Lord, of Buffalo, has been preaching a series of Sunday evening services to his people on the coming of Christ. Dr. Clarke has been reviewing Lecky on Rationalism. Dr. Chester is supplying the Presbyterian church of Batavia. Rev. E. P. Hammond and wife were in our city last week, on their way to Cincinnati. They stopped to hold a meeting one evening in Lock port, coming around this way for that express purpose, by grateful desire of the people of that city, where his labors last spring were so exceed- ingly blest. Rochester, Dec, 4th, 1869 —The allusion to the efforts of Rome for the proselytizing of the freedmen, in Dr. Dickey's communication on the next page, reminds us -of a discovery made by Mr. Mitchell, Agent of the Home Missionary Committee, and reported to us in Pittsburgh. He was looking about the streets of that city, on a recent Sabbath evening, when his attention was drawn to a building around which a number of, colored persons were gather ed. On inquiry, lie learned that they were assem bling for Roman Catholic worship, and on enter ing the building, he found from one hundred and fifty to two htindred colored persons engaged, with apparent devotion, in the usual services of the Rotnish Church. Further inquiry may have modified the effect of the first impression, which was certainly startling, and well calculated to disturb the indifference with which we have hitherto regarded the designs of Rome upon the colored people. Home & Foreign Kiss. $2OO. I Address :-1334 ChePtrint Street. MINISTERS' MEETING CHRISTIAN CONVENTIONS THE BIBLE IN SCHOOLS CALLS, GENESEE