DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON. The Gospel of Health. “Til! & dari strike through his liver.” I'rov, o> SoroMon’s anatomical and physiolog- ical discoveries were 20 very great that he was nearly three thousand years ahead of the scientists of his day. He, more than one thousand years before Christ, seemed to know about the circu- ation of the blood, which Harvey dis- sovered sixteen hundred and nineteen rears after Christ, for when Solomon in Ecclesmstes, describing the human body, speaks of the pitcher at the foun- tain, he evidently means the three can- als leading from the heart that receive he blood like pitchers, When he speaks clesiastes of the silver cord of life, we evidently means the spinal marrow, 1bout which in. our day doctors Mayo ud Carpenter and Dalton and Ilint ind Brown-Sequard have experimented, \ind Soloman recorded in the Bible ousands of years before scientists dis- vered it, that in his time the spinal ! relaxed old age, producing the remors of hand and head: “Or the silver cord be loosed.” In the text he reveals the fact that nad studied that largest gland of the man system, the liver, not by the Jecirie light of the modern dissecting room, but by the dim light of a com- paratively dark age, and yet had seen ts important function in n E 11 i THE GOD-BUILT CAS pf the human body, its secreting power, its curious cells, elongated branching tubes, a workmanship in central and aft lobe, and the hepatic artery th which God conducts ti Ob, this vital organ i tod In that it never knew of it, and had noticed vivisection or postmortem wh attacks: i dissipation 1 fiat of Almighty God St parate, and 0 crimson Li 3 like the eye sleeps. Solomon ithot iLAIUE at i BETAve, ali gment, A not glancing but j sands to Jud ) With wound to sid« waking a slight from sido throngh the liver.’ pocrates ascribe to world's moral d +. } ‘OEY t he ep nmean YOu word melat | preach to rospel of Liealth, f the diseases of the As if to recognize ie bowek of New written by a physician, tor, and he discourses much of th ical effects, and he tells of the good Samaritan’s medication of the wound by pouring in oil and wine, and recog- as a hindrance to hearing the five tho i r 1 3 060 Barse dist a pal { 10 nizes hunge: the Gospel, sot vere fed; and records t he prodigal away from hole, ar izuished eyesight of the bege ¢ wayside, and lets us know of rrhage of the wounds of the dying rist and the muraculous postmo iscitation. And any estimate o n that d t col Liat pvt FHS spiritual condit 8 No tha ahve it 31 tha doar-keenor ~ : i Pei lead froin excessive irgoyne had surrendered at 8 ifth of Spa n ! at the neva of his country’s defy attle, and Cardinal Wolsey expired is a result of Henry the Eighth's an- ithema, it was demonstrated hody and soul are Siamese twins, when vou thrill the one with joy or w you thrill the other. We ight a well recognize the tremendous fact that there are two mighty fortresses in the human body, the heart and the ver; the heart ti graces, the liver THE FORTRESS OF 1 Y cu may have the head niellectualities, and the all musical appreciation, and mouth with all eloquence, and the hand with industries, and the heart with .generosities, and yet *‘a dart strike through the liver." First, ist Christian people avoi uistake that they are all wrong because they suffer from of spirits, Many a consecrated man has found his spiritual sky befog- reed and his hope of lieaven blotted out iimself plunged chin deep in the dough of despond, and has said: “My heart is not right with God, and 1 think I must have ead of being a child of light I am a id of darkness, No one can feel as gioomy as I feel and be a Christian.” And he has gone to his minister for onsolation, and he has collected Flav- el's books and Cecil's books and Bax- ter's books, and read and read and read, and praved and prayed and pray- ed, and wept and wept and wept, and My the Philip the ¥ and $OT = i yg tr ti 16 fortre w i HE Fi RIES, filled with all with tha ear ali 1 the with {yori sion ah groaned and groaned and groaned, brother, your trouble is not with heart, it is a gastric disorder or A REBELLION OF THE LIVER, You need a physician more than you do a clergyman, It is not sin that blots out your hope of heaven, but bile. It not only yellows your eéye-ball, and furs your tongue, and makes your head ache, but awoops upon your soul in de. jections and forebodings, The devil is after you, He has failed to despoil your character, and he does the next best thing for him-—he ruffles your peace of mind, When he says that you are not a forgiven soul, when he says you are not right with God, when he says that vou will never get to heaven, he lies, You are just as sure of heaven as though you were there already, But Satan finding that he cannot keep you out of the promised land of Canaan, has determined that the spies shall not bring you any of the Eschol grapes be- forehand, and that you shall have noth- ing but prickly pear and crab-apple. You are fust as good now under the cloud as you were when you were ac- customed to rise in the morning at five o'clock to pray and ting **Hallelujab, ‘tis done!"’ My friend, Rev, Dr. Joseph 11, Jones, of Philadelphia, a translated spirit now wrote & book entitled: ‘Man, Moral and Physical,” in which he shows how different the same things may appear to different people, He says: “After the great battle on the Mincio in 1830, between the French and Sardinians on the one side and the Austrians on the other, so disastrous to the latter, the defeated army retreated followed by the victors. A description of the march of each army is given by TWO CORRESPONDENTS of the London Times, one of whom travelled with the successful host, the other with the defeated. The differ- ence in views and statements of the same place, scenes and events is remark- able, ing through a beautiful and luxuriant country during the day, and at night encamping where they are supplied with an abundance of the best provi- sions, and all sorts of rural dainties, There is nothing of war about the pro- ceeding except its stimulous and excite- ment, On the side of the poor Austrians it is just the reverse, In his letter of the same date, describing the same places and a march over the same road, the writer can scarcely find words to set forth the suffering, impatience and dis- gust existing around him, W pleasant to the former was intolerable to the latter. terence? asks the author, ‘One condi tion only: The French are victorious, the Austrians have been defeated,” hat (EFL N travelling is the same you have been travelling a long while, but the DIFFERENCE IN YOUR PHYSICA DITIONS + Yond makes it look different, and therefore the two reports you have different ports in th HOundon as the re- Timee, from Edward Payson on the Mount $ % petal the force hymn begim come of melan that it was only driver who t tend oO ism, and f{ latsyrintl ge or mane, 15 miles i As face said chil- - BS saw him ent he house, | pronounce «d a beatitude before a word, He welcomed all of dren into life, and ol» iis he us h he closed the old red the last what Christ they ents alse 5 kre slumber, nk I kuow ) I thi said to h tl W hen Laie old work. I ) withh the w rds; in, I was sick and he visited me!” number of Chris. multiplying, and f the medical col- bail you, ait doctor K he yg ne Wn 43 ¥s 3} }. la ‘4 i iirougn Dis “IDK greeted doctor, Hans is ssl # stiien ¢ haat tian physi 5 03 } 1 al nder, leges, are here to-day, a n to the ¢ BEAUTIFUL, HEAVEN-DESCENDED WORK of a Christian physician, and when vou take your diplowa from the Long Island able body, be sure also to get a diploma able soul, Let all Christian physicians that it sometimes feel depressed, but because of their diseased body, I suppose David, the psalmist, was no more pious, when he called on everything human and angelic, animate and inanimate, and from snow flake to hurricane, to praise God, than when he said: **Out of the depths of hell have 1 cried unto HEE Alexander Cruden, and like ten thou. | sand other invalids, be playing a Dead March on the same organ with which| now you play a Toccata. My object at this point is not only to emolliate the criticisms of the well against those in poor health, but toshow Christian people who are atrabilous what is the matter with them. Do not charge against the heart the crimes of another portion of your organism. Do not conclude that because the path to heaven is not absorbed with as fine a foliage, or the banks beautifully snowed under with exquisite chrysanthemums as once, that therefore you are on the wrong road. The road will bring you out at the same gate whether you walk with the stride of an athlete or come up on crutches, Thousands of Christians morbid about their experiences, and morbid about their business, and mor- bid about the present, and morbid about the future, need the sermon 1 am now preaching, WILD tical use of this subject ing, The theory is abroad must first sow their wild oats, Michigan wheat, let OATS GROW, Another prac is for the vou that they afterwards | me break the delusion. | generally sown in the liver, and they can never be pulled up. They so preocccupy You y erect, {ow mplantation of a righteous crop. ged men about us at eighty old men, I Douglas gave the vereignty’’ to th est and took posse + rh t 4 Maps {1 irrection body go limping thro ef the liver thoro stav 1 glay «da A DIS SIPATED EARLY pecking clawing away at the liver year out, and Death cules who can break the powes or unclench its claw Homer wrote ferocity S80. fables the whon de, but a terrific reality. That young man smoking and smoking cigars has no idea is getting for himself smoked That voung man has no idea that he by early dissipation so depleted his ener re are those here with ¢ batth only half armed. Napoleon lost Waterloo days before it was fought, Had he at- tacked the English army before it was reinforced, and taken it division by divi sion, he might have won the dav, but he waited until he had only one hundred thousand men against two hundred thousand. And here i8 a young man who, if he put all his forces against the his Lamenta- Job was any better he wrote that than when tions,”’ or when he said: deemer liveth,” covered than when when all these massed tions, and forces are combined scabs off with a broken piece of pottery; or that Alexander Cruden, the con- cordist, was any better man when he compiled the book that has helped ten thousand students of the Bible, than when under the power of physical dis- order he was handcuffed and strait. walstcoated in Bethnal Green Insane Asylum, “Oh,” says some Christian man, “no one ought to allow physical disorder to depress his soul. He ought to live so near to God as to be always in the sun- shine,” Yes, that is good advice; but I warrant that you, the man who gives the advice, has a sound liver, Thank God for HEALTHFUL HEPATIC CONDITION. for, just as certainly as you losa it, you will sometimes, like David snd lke Jeremiah, and like Cowper, and lke . mortal defeat can await him? Oh, my young brother, do not make in opening THE BATTLE AGAINST SIN the world to come, too late, What brings that express train from St. Louis into Jersey City three hours late? They lost fifteen minutes early on the route and that offected them all the way ; and they had to be switched off here and switched of there, and detained here and detained there ; and the man who loses time and strength in the earlier part of the journey of life, will suffer for it all the way through--the first twenty years of life damaging the following fifty years, Some years ago a scientific lecturer went through the country exhibiting on great canvas different parts of the human body when healthy and the same parts when diseased, And what the world wants now is some eloquent scien. tist to go through the country, showing to our young people on blazing canvas the drunkard’s liver, the idler’s liver, the libertine’s liver, the gambler’s liver, Perhaps the spectacle might stop some young man before he comes to the catas- trophe, and the dart strike through his liver, My hearer, this is the first sermon you have heard on the Gospel of Health, and it may be the last vou will ever hear on that subject, and I charge you, in the name of God, and Christ, and usefulness, and eternal destiny, take better care of your health, When some of you die, if your friends put on your tombstone A TRUTHFUL EPITAPH, it will read : “Here lies the Victim of late suppers” or it will be: ‘Behold what chicken salad at midnight will do for a man ;’’ or it will be: “Ten cigars a day closed my earthly existence ;”’ or it will be: “Thought I eould do at seventy what I did at twenty, and I am here ;’? or it will be: “Here is the con- sequence of sitting a hall day with wet feet 1” or it will be; **This is where I have stacked my harvest of wild oats ;"’ or, instead of words, the stone-cutler will chisel for an epitaph on the tomb a dart and namely, a liver. There is; irom on for rod, or one's I have NDS wot After the ba 1 L on hi train to go i lic service he died 11 hacked up we, they list for h-mett valry 1 spurred into many a cay mmping bit and flami +} i 5 ih ii CA $ . ith « I Kk clothed with thunder, is worn 1 spavined and ring-boned and walt, he rides up to the great Cag our Salvation on the white horse f | When such Ty nan Oilers his Services might tir A life th ough they are spend’ i axe tl in dsc ussing breaking up their indigestion, and quieting their jangling nerves, rousing their lag- gard appetite, and trying to extract the dart from their outraged liver, converted late than never! Oh, ves; for they will get to heaven. ut they will go afoot when they might have wheeled up the steep hills of the sky in Elijah's chariot. There is an old hymn that we used to sing in the country meet. ing-house when I wasa boy, and 1 re. and bled with emotion while they sang it. those lines are the peroration of my sermon “Twill save us from a thousand snares To mind religion young.” IY AI AA An Irish gentleman Invited an Eng- lish nobleman to shoot on his place on The Eng- lishman was placed in charge of the | gamekeeper, an old servant, who saw to it that the Saxon should be favorably | impressed with the game on the estate, so far 08 words could impress him, There was nothing that ever ran or | flew that the nobleman inquired about but the gamekeeper asserted conld be found on the place by hundreds and thousands, The nobleman was amused, and asked scores of questions about beasts and birds, whose homes were in Asia and Africa, But of everyone the game- | keeper asserted that it could be found in abundance somewhere on the place, At last the nobleman asked, ‘‘Are there any paradoxes here?’ The keeper scratched his head at this poser, and after a moment's hesitation, answered, *Bedad, then, your lordship may find two or three of them some- times on the sand when the tide's out. *’ SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON. compe The Parable of the Tares. LESSON TEXT. (Mutt, 13: 24-30. Memory vorses, 27390) i LESSON PLAN, Toric or THE QUARTER: Jesus the King tn Zion. GOLDEN TEXT YOR THE QUARTER: Thine, O Lord, ia the greatness, and the power, ond the glory, and the victory, 13 oh earth (s thine; thine is the kingdom, O Lord, and thou art exalted as head above all.—1 Chron, 20 : 11, Lesson Toric: The King's Decla- rations Concerning His Enemy, (1. The Enemy’s Autagonism, ve, 24, 25. <1. The Enemy's Detection va. 26 2s, Le (4. The Bunemy's Defeat, va. 28, i, c.-%0 Lesson Outitne : (*OLDEN 1EX1 The harvest 1s the end of the world; and the reapers are the | angels. — Matt, 13 : 39 DALY A Home READINGS: Matt. 13: 24-30. ec] ng his en $4) i I I Malignant 11. THE } IL. The Manifestation £3 NEMY'S DETES of Evil © Lares a Jas, 3: 15. Il. The Mystery of Evil: W hence old thee that 3 i 4 yr then bath it tares? (2 4 { thou wast naked? The Source of An enemy hath dor Ie Wolnan ix {1 Tim, 3: I.ust, sin (Jas, 1: 1. “Then appeared the tares 1) Temporary concealment : Final manifestation. 9 “Wnpen then hath it tares?” The evident existence of il: The perplexing origin of e The ultimated fate of evil, 3. “An enemy hath done this, ”’ Lord's enemy : 2) His perversity : (3) His powers ; 4) His limitations ; (5) His doom. THE ENEMY'S DEFEAT, I. Evil Tolerated : Wilt thon then that we gather them up? But he saith, Nay (28, 29). If 1 find in Sodom fifty righteous, I will spare (Gen. 18: 26), Lord, let it alone this year 13: 8). The Lord... .is longsuffering, . not wishing that any should prrish (2 Pet. 3:9. How long, O Master, dost thou not avenge our blood (Rev, 6: 10), 11. Evil Restricted : 1.4t both grow together until the har vest (30), The day of their calamity is at hand { Deut. 32 : 35). He seeth that his day is coming (Psa. 37: 13). i He... .shall suddenly be broken, and that without resnedy (Prov, 29: 1), He hath appointed a day, in which he will judge the world (Acts 17: 81), 11 Evil Doomed : Bind them in bundles to burn them (30). As for transgressors, they shall be de. stroved (Psa, 37 : 38), The chaff he will burn up with un auenchable fire (Matt, 3: 12), } 14 14). it hath co 15). when also {Luke They. ...cast them into the they are burned (John 15: 6). And the devil, . . . was cast into the lake of fire (Rev. 20 : 10). 1. “Wilt thou then that we go and gather them up?” (1) A seeming good ; (2) Aprofiered service ; (5) A premature zeal, “let both grow together until the harvest.” (1) A permission ; (2) A limitation ; (3) An application.—(1) The growing-time ; (2) The harvest. time. {1} Permitied now ; (2) Pro- hibited then, 8, “Bum them ; but gather the wheat into my barn,” (1) The tares and their burning ; (2) The wheat and ILS garnering, fire, and 0 LESSON BIBLE READING BEATAR ARND HIS WORKS, . Titles of Satan : ga. 27:1: Matt. 4:3 11 : 15: John 8 4: Eph, 2:9: 1 2:9 10, Works of Satan : Matt. 13 : 38, 89). {John ; 13: 38, 80; Luke 44:14: 30,2 Cor. 4 : Pet. 5: 8; Rev. 9 : 11; a « Toward Satan £ Went Va and Dida't Take ww He Advice nderbilr 1 It 1O ¥3 er some ¢ 2 as LYPYy inswered and demand- he young ith, Boston. I myst see thw utmost sad ht £5 } Liat out to retire, ir had servant disappeared, only to re- turn with the message froma the Com- th the business was of the ance, ulmost import. The Bostonian followed the ser- ani A 1d room, where stood the Commodore wrapped in a fannel garment of the night, He got out of bed to receive up ie dressing ** ‘Well, young man, what do you was the Commodore's impatient question, “Commodore Vanderbilt, I have recently come into possession of $20,000, and have come on 10 New York to ask you for information about the slock markets,’ * ‘What the blank-blank do you come me about the stock market for? Why don’t you go to some stock bro- ker?’ ** ¢ Because you are the stock market yourself, Commodore,’ “Look bere, Mr, Smith,’ said the mollified Commodore, I sdmire your cheek, I think it deserves encourage- ment, Go down to Wall street to-mor- row morning early. Put your $20,000 and as much more as you can raise into the New York Central. Don’t ask me why, but go and do it. Its a sickly thing now, but it ain't going to ba long. Lock up your stock and jet it alone; never mind what anybody tells you, Now get out.’ “That young man came back to Dos. ton and narrated his experience, “Did be follow the Commodore's ad- vice? Neo. He said he wasn't going to let Vanderbilt gobble up his $30,000, He put it into mining stocks and Jost every cent of it.” Feem a mining report of the colony of Victoria it appsars that the quan of gold ralsed last was ounces as agains 380 in the year nexs heecading, ® dala shalt is deepest in the 1t i# sunk 2,400 feet, and 1 is near Siawell,