16 fWhen skies are cold with wintry stars, and hills Are white with yester-even's snow, and lie £JL In ghostly 6tate beneath the ghostly sky; When many a gusty blast the darkness fills With ever lonely, homeless sound, and chills •Sgj The window panes with frost; when crackling fly The sparks about the hearth, and glow and die, While in the pause his note the cricket trills; Oh, then how dear is home! and what a sense Xg Of ruddy warmth and peace beguiles the mindl And what a charm in listening while the wind W Blows fierce outside, through winter's fctarry tents, fj iyfc And dies away around the window-pane, Xtfl Tf? And ever rises loud, and dies again! —Ernest Warburton Shurtleff. • j The Wewness of the Yearl tAPPY New Year!" The glad greeting rings out on every band. A neto twelve month has been ushered in with all its mystery of"the things which are to be." We need then for our selves and for others to put the emphasis upon the word "new" rather than upon the term "year." That another year has come is relatively unimpor tant. The stress is to be laid not on the quantity but on the quality of one's life. All that an earnest soul can do is to live each day of the new year by itself, as it comes in its turn, trying, if so it may be, to put a month's efTort in one day, and a day's victory into a single hour. The time is short, and it remaineth that all who know Christ and partake of his 112 gift of new life should be diligent al ways, watch unto prayer and boast not themselves of the morrow. Suffi cient unto each day Is the burden and blessing thereof. The newness of the new year is es ' eentially a newness of spirit. A new man will always enjoy the new year. When another January arrives it is distinctively the time to slough off the old and to put on the new. There is an old nature to be discarded, and a new spiritual manhood to be assumed. The trouble with many people, how ever, is that they try to remake and to reform themselves, forgetting that a few good resolutions, more or less loosely kept, can at best only touch the outside and possess no interior efficacy in the recesses of the spirit. The new man who is really worthy of the name is the new man in Christ Jesus. Where Jesus is there is always ; newness of experience, renovation of the moral nature, freshness of hope and a resiliency of elastic joy. It is not necessary to wait until the first of January in any approaching year to win the wisdom of such a heavenly faith or to experience the benefits of such a spiritual quickening. The promise of God is now, to every one that believeth. Each morning may be a resurrection day, each evening a time of golden promise fair, yet not as fading, as the sunset. The New Year joy is for all of life, all the time. It is stimulating and encouraging to feel that a brand new year is offered for happy employment, and that the old records with their motley pages, ® & A slrapr for tlje -Nnu frar |H H| P A CmifihlV Cjod. the unfailing source or light and mcrcv, J\ who hast brought us to the beginning of this year, tj| wand art sparing us to Sove Chee and to keep Chy uS P commandments, prepare us, we beseech Chee, for the coming * days. Cet Chy grace enlighten our darkness and strengthen our weakness, fielp us to forget the sins and sorrows of the u*) gj past, cherishing only the wisdom ar.d the humility they may have taught us. Inspire us with new purposes and new IK hopes. Deepen within our hearts the love of truth and good* ua gj ness. Renew in us the life of that which alone makes life <3 worth living. Enable us to discern the soiemu meaning of vju these earthly days, and the high and sacred purpose for which y*> gj they are given. Suffer us not to be unfaithful to Chee. Chou bast richly blessed us hitherto; still lead us by Chy % hand; still admonish and guide us by Chy spirit, and leave us t£> gj not to ourselves, Cbou oood Sbepberd of tbe fbeep. Cet not tbe sorrow and weariness of life rob us of our faith In Chee. % Whatever lig'ni may shine or shadow fall, keep us in tbe fel* U9 lowship and in tbe service of Jesus Christ our Cord, flmen! some still vacant and other marred, and, perhaps, here and there blotted with tears, may be put away, and fresh, unstained pages substituted in their place. It is helpful to remind one self that those broken resolutions of 1908 may be renewed in 1909, and, what is better, reinforced by more of that prayer and divine grace for want of which the idealizing resolves of the past year were soon forgotten or went so sadly unfulfilled. The new year means, accordingly, a new hope, a new song, a new endeavor, a new outlook, a new inspiration, a new determina tion and a new grace—every new thing that is good appears to bo possi ble in its gift. A hope like this makes any doubter optimistic,'and gives to existence the character of a life worth living. A wide chasm seems to Intervene between the old and the new. Into its depths should be cast every regret, every halting doubt, and every ham pering fear which belongs to the past period of our experience and which would burden and hinder our worthy efforts and spiritual progress in the new year. Let us take up our new duties and meet our fresh opportuni ties in free, gladsome and hopeful spirit, knowing that God, who has pur posed them for our uplift, will give us grace to carry us safely through. Happy New Year! The message la sent far and near. Let the glad greet ing be heard on all sides. There is a prophecy and a promise in the New Year. Even to those who are bent with grief, or lonely by reason of bitter bereavement it is possible and timely to say, though with lowered tone and softened accent: "Happy New Year!" Every year will be a happy, or, at least, a peaceful, one in which the presence of the Lord is realized— which is spent under the protection of his wings, while its duties are dis charged in his fear and its responsibil* ities are borne with the assistance of his grace. For the Christian every year should be an improvement on the past, and offer its additional oppor tunities for growing in grace and Christlikeness. The Christian is a convinced and convincing optimist for, having a heavenly hope which the world can never give or take away, he can in every condition of lifo find a basis for an assured happiness ex pressing itself in the oft-quoted dic tum: "The best of all is, 'God is with us!' 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