DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON. The Veil of Modesty. “The Queen Vashti refused to come.” Fs ther 1: 1 Ir you will accept my arm I will escort you into a throne-room. In this fifth sermon of the series of sermons there are certain womanly excellencies which I wish to commend, but instead of putting them in dry abstration, I present you their impersonation in one who seldom gets sermonic recognition. We stard amid TEE PALACES OF SHUSHAN, The pinnacles are aflame with the morning light. The columns rise fes- tooned and wreathed, the wealth of empires flashing from the grooves; the ceilings adorned with images of bird and beast, and scenes of prowess and conquest. The walls are hung with shields, and emblazoned until it seems that the whole round of splendors is exhausted. Each arch is a mighty leap of architectural achievement. Golden stars shining down on glowing arabes- que. Hangings of embroidered work, in which mingle the blueness of the sky, the greeness of the grass, and the whiteness of the sea-foam. Tapestries hung on silver rings, wedding together the pillars of marble. Pavilions reach- ing out in every direction. These for repose, filled with luxuriant couches, in which weary limbs sink until all fatigue is submerged. Amazing spec- tacle! It seems as if a billow of celes- tial glory had dashed clear over heaven’s battlements upon this metropolis of Persia. In connection with this palace there is a garden, where the mighty men of foreign iands are SEATED AT A BANQUET. Under the spread of oak and linden and acacia the tables are arranged. The breath of honey-suckle and frank. incense fills the air. The waters of Eulmus filling the urns, and sweating outside the rim in flashing beads amid the traceries, Wine from the royal vats of Ispahan and Shiraz, in bottles of tinged shell, and lily shaped cups of silver, and flagons and tankards of solid gold. The music rises higher, and the port, and the wine has flushed the cheek and touched the brain, and louder than all other voices are the hiccough of the inebriates, the gabble of fools, and the song ot the drunkards, In an- other part of the palace, QUEEN VASHTI is entertaining the princesses of Persia at » banquet. Drunken Ahasuerus says to his servants: “You go out and fetch Vashti from that banquet with the women, and bring her to this ban- quel with the men, and let me display her beauty.” The servants immediately start to obey the king's command; but there was a rule in Onental society that no woman might appear in public without having her face veiled, Yet here was a mandate that no one dare dispute, demanding that Vashti cove in unveiled before the multitude, However, there was in Vashti’s soul a principle more regal than Ahasuerus, more brilliant than the gold of Shushan, of more wealth than the realm of Persia, which commanded her to dis- obey this order of the king: and so all the righteousness, holiness and MODESTY OF HER NATURE rises up into one sublime refusal. She says: "I will not go into the banquet unveiled,” Of course Ahasuerus was infuriated; and Vashti, robbed of her in poverty and ruin, to suffer the scorn of a nation, and yet to receive the ap- plause of after generations who shall rise up to admire this martyr to kingly insolence, Well, the last vestige of that feast is gone; the last garland has faded; the last arch has fallen: the last tankard has been destroyed, and world stands there will be multitudes of men and women, familiar with the Bible, who will come into this picture. gallery of God, and admire the Divine portrait of Vashti the queen, Vashti the velled, Vashti the sacrifice, Vashti the silent, In the first place, I want you to look upon Vashi the queen. A blue ribbon rayed with white, drawn around her forehead, indicated HER QUEENLY POSITION, It was no small honor to be queen in such a realm as that. Hark to the rustle of her robes! See the blaze of her jewels! And yet, my friends, it is not necessary to have palace and regal robes in order to be queenly, When I see A woman with stout faith In God, putting hier foot upon all meanness and selfishness and godless display, going right forward to serve Christ up from the shanty on the commons or the mansion of .the fashionable square, I greet her with the shout: Queen Vashtil”” What glory was there on the brow of Mary of Scotland, or Elizabeth of England, or M et of France, or Catharine of R com. pared with the worth of some of our ‘hristian mothers, many of them under a sun for poor old, help- less Naomi?—or of Mis, Adoniram Judson, who kindled the lights of sal vation amid the darkness of Burmah? ~or of Mrs, H her holy soul in words which will for- ever be associated with hunter’s and captives Shain, and bridal and lute’s throb, curfew’ the d day?—and scores a oS ar this land. I put upon their brow the coronet. They are the sisters and the daughters of the towns and cities, se- lected out of a vast number of appli- cants, because of their especial intel- lectual and moral endowiaents, There are In none of your homes women more worthy. These persons, some of them, come out from affluent homes, choosing teaching as a useful profession; others, finding that father is older than he used to be, and that his eyesight and strength are not as good as once, go to teaching to lighten his load, But I tell you the history of the majority of the female teachers in the publie schools when I say: “Father is dead.’”’” After the estate was settled, the family, that were comfortable before, are thrown on their own resources, It is hard for men to earn a living in this day, but it is harder for women— their health not so rugged, their arms not so strong, their opportunities fewer, These persons, after tremblingly going through the ordeal of an examination as to their qualifications to teach, half- bewildered step over the sill of the pub- lic school to do two things—instruct the young and earn their own bread. HER WORK 18 WEARING to the last degree. The management of forty or fifty fidgety and intractable children, the suppression of their vices and the development of their excellenc- jes the management of rewards and punishments, the sending of so many bars of soap and fine-tooth combs on benignant ministry, the breaking of so many wild colts for the harness of life, sends her home at night weak, neural- gic, unstrung, so that of all the weary the week, there are none more weary than the public-school teachers, Now, for God’s sake, give them a fair chance. Throw no obstacles in the way, them, the male teachers; they can take up the cudgels for themselves, may be dead but there are enough brothers left to demand and see that they get justice, ing there died years ago one of the | principals of our public schools, She hud been twenty-five years at that post She Lud left the touch of refinement on a multitude of the young. She had, out of her slender purse, given literally thousands of dollars for the destitute schiool teacher. A deceased children were thrown upon her hands, and she took care of them, She was a kind mother to them, while she moth- ered a whole school. Worn out with nursing in the sick and dying room of one of the household, she herself came to die. She closed the sehool-book and at the same tinle the volume of her Christian fidelity, QUEENS ARE ALL SUCH, and whether the world acknowledges them or not, heaven acknowledges them. When Scarron the wit and ec- clesiastic, as poor as he was brilliant, was about to marry Madame de Main- tenon, he was asked by the notary what he proposed to settle upon Mademoi- selle. The reply was; *‘Immortality! | the names of the wives of kings die { with them; { Scarron will live always.” In a higher | and better sense, apon all women who | do their duty God will settle Immortal- ity! Not the immortality of earthly { fame, which is mortal, but the immor. | tality celestial, And they shall reign { for ever and ever! Oh, the opportun- ity which every woman has of being a queen! The longer I live the more I { admire good womanhood. And I have i come to form my opinion of the char. | non-appreciation of woman. If a man | have a depressed idea of womanly char- {acter he is a bad man, and there is no exception to the rule, The writings of Goethe can never { have any such attractions for me as | Shakespeare, because {man have some Kind of turpitude, stine scheming; and lis Mignon, of evil parentage, yet worse than herfn- cestors; and his Theresa, the brazen; and his Aurelia, of many intrigues; and his Philina, the termigant; and his Melina, the tarnished; and his baroness; and his Countess; and there is seldom a womanly character in all his volumin- ous writings that would be worthy of residence in a respectable coal cellar, yet pictured and dramatized, and em- blazoned till all the literary world is compelled to see. No! No! Give me William Shakespeare’s idea of woman; and I see it in Desdemona, and Corde- lia, and Rosalind, and Aihoges, and Helena, and Hermione, and Viola, and Isabella, and Sylvia, and Perdita, all of them with enough fauits to them human, but enough kindly characteris. tics to give us the author's idea of wo- BE our Ss Boe ar to out su- preme a of his other female characters, Again, I want you to consider VASHTI THE VEILED, Had she 3 : : £ g i il i E & g i is | ] : g ; i : if E je 3 ES EE would rather make a coat for Samuel; the Hebrew maid would rather givea prescription for Naaman’s leprosy; the woman of Sarepta would rather gather a few sticks to cook a meal for famish- ed Elijah; Phoebe would rather carry a lettle for the inspired Apostle; Mother Lois would rather educate Timothy in the Scriptures, When I see a woman going about ber daily duty-—with cheer- ful dignity presiding at the table; with kind and gentle, but firm, discipline presiding in the nursery; going out into the world without any blast of trum- pets, following in the footsteps of Him who went about doing good—I say: “This is Vashti with a veil on.”” But when 1 see WOMEN OF UNBLUSHING BOLDNESS, loud-voiced, with a tongue of infinite clitter-clatter, with arrogant look, pass. ing through the street with a masculine swing, gayly arrayed in a very hurri- cane of millinery, I cry out, *‘Vashti has lost her veil.’’ When I see a wo- man struggling for political preferment, and rejecting the duties of home as in- significant, and thinking the offices of wife, mother and daughter of no im- portance, and trying to force her way on up into conspicuity, I say: “Ah, what a pity: Vashti has lost her veil.” When I see a woman of comely feat ures, and of adroitness of intellect, and endowed with all that the schools can do for one, and of high social position, yet moving in society with supercilious- ness and hauteur, as though she would have people knew their place, and an un- defined combination of giggle and strut and rodomontade, endowed with allo- pathic quantities of talk, but only homeopathic infinitesimals of sense, the terror of dry-goods clerks and railrood conductors, discoverers of significant digies of badness and innuendo--I say: “Vashti has lost her veil.” But do not misinterpret what 1 say | into a depreciation of the work of those | glorious and DIVINELY CALLED WOMEN, | who will not be understood till after they are dead, women like Susan B, Anthony, who are giving their life for the betterment of the condition of their isex. Those of vou who think that women have, under the laws of this country, an equal chance with men, are ignorant of the laws. A gentleman writes me from Maryland, saying: “Take the laws of this State. A man and wife start out in life, full of hope | in every respect, by their joint efforts, and, as is frequently the case, through the economic ideas of the wife, succeed in accumulating a fortune, have no children ; they reach old age together, and then the husband dies What does the law of this State do then? It says to the widow, ‘Hands off i your late husband's property : do not { touch it ; the State will find others to i whom it will give that, but you, the | a8 will Keep life within your aged body, { that you may live to see those othery town.’ | ever heard of before or not, and trans | fers to them, singly or collectively, the | estate of the deceased husband and liv. { ing widow." Now, that is a specimen of unjust | laws in all the States concerning widow- hood. Instead of flving off to the dis | cussion as to whether or not the giving | of the right of voting to woman will cor- rect these laws, let me say to men, be | gallant enough, and fair enough, and | honest enough, and righteous enough, | and God-loving enough to correct these | wrongs against woman by your own masculine vote. Do not wait for | woman suffrage to come, if it ever does come, but, so far as you can touch bal ‘ot-boxes and legislatures, and | greases. begin the reformation. j until justice is done to your sex by the laws of all the States, and women of America take the platforms and the pul pits, no honorable man will charge Vashti with having lost her veil, Again: I want you this morning to | consider j VASHTI THE SACRIPICE. Who is this that I see coming out of | that palace-gate of Shushan? It seems { to me that I have seen her before. She {comes homeless, houseless, friendless, { trudging along with a broken heart. | Who is she? It is Vashti the sacrifie, Oh, what a change it was from regal position to a wayfarer’s crust | A little while ago approved and sought for; now none so poor as to acknowledge her acquaintanceship, Vashti the sacrifice, Ah, you and I have seen it many a tine, Here is a home empalaced with beauty, All that refinement and books and wealth can do for that home has been done; but Ahasuerus, the husband and the father, is taking bold on paths of sin. He is gradually going down. Af- ter a while he will flounder and struggle like a wild beast in the hunter’s net—fur- ther away from God, further away from right, § COL BREAKING UP THE MARRIAGE feast of Lapithae. The house full of igs EE 2 £2 | i fs > : , : 5 the bow of the boat to the shore till all were off, and he kept his promise, At his post, scorched and blackened, he perished, but he saved all the passen- gers. Two verses of pathetic poetry describe the scene, but the verses are a little rough, and so I change a word or two : “Through the hot, black breath of the burning Jima Bludso's voice was heard. And they all had trust in his stubbornness, And knew he would keep his word, And sure's your born they all got off Afore thesmokestacks fell, And Hludso'sghost went up above, In the smoke of he Prairie Helle, He weren't no mint, but at Judgment I'd run my chance with Jim. Longside sgme plous gentleman That would'tshuke hands with him, He'd seen his duty, s dead sure thing, And went for it there and then, And Crist isnot going to be too hard On a man that died for men.” Once more: I want you to look at Vashtt the silent, Y ou do not hear any outcry from this woman as she goes forth from the palace gate. Irom the very dignity of her nature you know there will be no vociferation, Some- times in life it is necessary to make a re- tort 5 sometimes in life it is necessary to resist ; but there are crises when the most triumphant thing to do is to keep silence. The philosopher, confident in his mewly discovered principle, waited for the coming of more intelligent gen- erations, willing that men should laugh at the lightning-rod and eotton-gin and stearn boat—waiting for long years through thescoffing of philosophical schools, in grand and MAGNIFICENT Gealdilel, condemnexd cians and monks and tured everywhere, SILENCE, by mathemati yet waiting the starsin their courses would fight for the Copernican systesn ; then sitting ness to wait for the coming of the gen- eratrons who would build his monument and bow at his grave. The reformer, under press, when the cylinders of the printing- purity of soul and heroism of and the plaudits of heaven, enduring without any sharpmess of the pang, and the violence and the darkness of the night until a divine hand shall be put forth to soothe the pang, and and release the captive. A wife abused, every earthly comfort [poor Vashi will ever be thrust out i from the palace gate. {and answering not a word, drinking the gall, Dearing the Cross, in prospect of | the rapturous consummation when "Angels thronged His chariot wheel, And bore Him to His throne Then swept their golden harps and sung. i glorious work is done. 2 Dr 7 { ing helplessly about among the feebergs, {captain was frozen af his logbook, and the helmsinan was frozen at the wheel, | and the men on the lookout were frozen {in their places, That was awful, but { magnificent. All the Arctic blasts and {all from their duty, Theirs was A SILENCE LOUDER THAN THUNDER. | And this old ship of & world has many | at their posts in the awful chill of ne- | and their silence shall be the eulogy of | the skies and be rewarded long after this weather-beaten craft of a planet { shall have made its last voyage, THE PALACE GATE { You can endure the hardships and privations and the cruelties and misfor- | tunes of this life, if you can only gain | admission there, {the everlasting convenant, thromgh those gales, or never * OF HEAVEN you | word to them that she would betray her {city and surrender $2 to them, if they | would only give her those bracelets on | fer. and bynight this daughter of the | ruler of the city opesscd one of the | gates. The army entered, and, keeping their promis, threw all through the been repeatad, for the trinkets and and wotnen swing open the portals of surrender, and die under the shining submergement, Through the rich grace of our Lord Jesus Christ may yon be enabled to im- itate the example of Rachel and Hannah and Abigail and Deborah and Mary and Vashtl. Amen! a —— The Year ISSS8, SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON. Bunpay, Fen 2, 1958, The Rich Young Ruler. LESSON TEXT, (Matt, 10: 16.28. Memory verses, 25.20.) Toric o¥ THE QUARTER : Jesus the Xing tn Zion. GOLDEN TEXT FOR THE QUARTER: He is Lord of lords, and King of kings: and they that are with him are called, and chosen, and faithful. —Rev, 17 : 14. Lessox Toric: The King's Lessons on True Consecration, 1. Consecration Claimed, va 16.20, Lomon . $ Consecration Tested, v, 11. * (8, Consecration Possible, vs, 23.96, GoLbex TEXT: Ye cannot serve God and mammon,—Matt, 6 : 24, DAILY HoME READINGS: Matt, 19 : 16-26, true consecration. T.-—~Mark 10 : 17-27. allel narrative, W.—Luke 18 : 18.27. allel narrative, T.—Matt. 6 : 19-34. first. F.—ILuke 12 place treasure, S.~—Acts 4 31-37. consecrated, S.—Aets 5: 1-11. secration, Lessons on Mark’s par- Luke's par- What to seek 13-34. Where to Possessions Pretended con- LESSON ANALYSIS, I. CONBECRATION CLAIMED. I. Life Desired : What may have eternal What man is he Psa. 34 : 12.1 good thing shall I do. that I life? {16.) that desireth life? that 1 may inherit Mark 10: 17.) Vide aie eternal Luke 10 : 25.) Sirs, what must 1 do to (Acts 16 : 30.) IL Duty Defined : If thou wouldest enter into life. kes nal life? be saved? Hear, and 53: $1, vour soul shall live (Isa, Obey, ....i 38 : 20), nd thy 1 shall live (Jer. son . he shall live (Ezek. 33 : 19). thou shalt live (Luke 10 : 281, IIL Compliance Claimed : All these things have 1 what lack I vet? (20), All these t have I observed my youth (Mark 10 : 20). I thank thee, that I am 1 of men (Luke 18:11). As touching the righteousness the law, found blameless (Phil. 3 observed " hings from as the rest ot in 16). ceive ourselves { 1 John 1: 8), 1. “What good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?” (1) De- sire ; (2) Ignorance ; (3) Inquiry. {1} A desirable end ; (2) An un- known means; (3 2. “Keep the commandments.” (1) As a correct rule of life ; (2) As a sure revealer of sin ; (3) As a com- petent teacher of need, 3. “What lack I vet?” ficiency trusted ;: (2) felt; (3) Perplexity 4) Inquiry pressed. Il, CONSECRATION TESTFD, I. Sarrender the World : Sell that thou bast, and give to poor (21). Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon the earth (Matt, 6 : 19). Ome thing thou lackest : go, sell... Mark 10: 21). They sold their (1) Self-suf- Insufficiency experienced ; the give them to all (Acts 2 : 45 There is nothing too hard for thee (Jer. 32:17). I ean do all things in him that strength. eneth me (Phil, 4: 13). 1. “He went away sorrowful,’ Away from Jesus; (2) Away sorrow , (3) Away to ruin, 2. "It is hard for a rich man to enter into the kingdom.’’ (1) The rick man ; (2) The heavenly kingdom ; (3) The hard entrance.-—£1) Hard to drop visible riches; (2) Hard to grasp unseen wealth, 3. “With God all things are possible, *’ (1) All material things; (2) All spiritual things. —{1) Man’s emer- gencies ; (2) God’s opportunities, —————— LESSON BIBLE READING THE LOVE OF RICHES, A source of care (Eccl, 5 : 12, 18). Lali ces forgetfulness of God (Deut. #8 1-14). Leads men astray (2 Pet. 2 ; 15). Begets self-confidence (Psa. 30 : 6). Begets rebelliousness (Jer, 22 : 21; Ezek. 28 : 5). Begets sin (Prov, 28 : 22; 1 Tim, 6 : 10). Chokes piety (Mark 4 : 19). Led Lot to Bodom (Gen, 13 : 10-18), Led Demas to apostasy (2 Tim, 4 : 10). Imperils the soul (Matt, 19 : 28, 24; 1 Tim, 6:9), (1) in a — I LESSON SURROUNDINGS. The interval of time between the events of the last lesson and those of the present one, is undoubtedly long. probably extending over nearly six months. Matthew and Mark pass over this period in silence, only neting the journey from Galilee through Perea (Matt, 19:1; Mark 10:1). The ac- counts of Luke and John are, however, quite full; but, as there are no indica- tions of correspondence between them, the arrangement of events peculiar to these two narratives (Luke 9 : 51 to 18 - 14: Jolin 7 :1to 11 : 57), is one of the 3 Fors] gospel us some definite chrono- John gives constructed. During the Feast of 3 the LAP it lesson, our Lord visited Jeru- With this visit, or imme®ately of Dedication, it led to an attempt at (It is uncertain at which feast the blind man was healed; John 9. yond Jordan, and a return to Bethany, where Lazarus was raised from the dead, Our Lord then retired to Ephraim, shortly before the Passover, The final journey, with which the present lesson is connected, was from that place, probably through Perea, to Jericho, and thence to Jerusalem. At all events, three of the ac- become parallel when the inci. puted, introduced; that immediately precedes Hence, without at- of the intervening events, we may as- vear of Rome 783 A. D, 30; that of A. D. 29). The place was somewhere in the val- ¥ PAT from Jericho, on the way from Perea to 1 Tim. 6 Ii. Live for Heaven: Thou shalt have treasure {21). Lay up for heaven (Matt, 6: 1 cate inl, in yourselves treasures in 20). prize (Phil. 3 : 14). Set your mind on the things that are above (Col, 3 : 2) Lay hold on the life which is life in- deed (1 Tim, 6 : 19). il Follow the Lord: Come, follow me (21). He forsook all, and rose up and followed him {Luke 5 : 28). If any man serve me, let him follow me {John 12: 26). (Rev, 14: 4). 1 “If thou wouldest be perfect, go, sell,....give.,” (1) A desirable end ; (2) A threefold means, — Three steps toward perfect consecration : (1) Go: (2) Sell; (3) Give. 2. “Thou shalt have treasure in heaven.” The heavenly treasure: (1) Personal; (2) Pure; (3) Glor- ious; (4) Imperishable.—{1) Its quality ; (2) Its certainty; (3) Its Jocation. 3. “Come, follow me.” (1) Old ways abandoned ; (2) New ways ac cepted. (1) Called from whence? (2) Called to what? 11. CONSECRATION POSSIBLE, EL Not Attained : He went away sorrowful (22), His countenance fell at the saying, and ho Welle Away (Mark 10: 22), When he y+ «+ «ho became exceed ing sorrowful (Luke 18 : 23), Many. ... went back’ and walked more with hima (John 6 : 66), They went out from but were not of us (1 John 2: 10), oer IL Hardly Attainable: Who then can be saved? (25). No flesh would have been saved (Matt, XH: 2). : few that be saved? Parallel passages: Mark 10 : 17-27; Luke 18 : 18-27, Yow Death Rate in Tenements. It happens {never mind how) that I 3 knowledge of tenement life In New York, It relates to the worst tene- over a number of years and from my own observation, say that the death rate in the tenewnents, all things consid- ered, is singularly low. When the health authorities talk about it they lay special stress on the high mortality among children. I wonder if it ever occurred to those wise men that there is another reason than theirs why the pro- portion of deaths as between children and adults is so much higher in the ten- ements than in private houses? What is it, this other reason? Why, simply that the proportion of children to par- ents is much larger in the tenements than elsewhere, Childiess couples are never found, or hardly ever found, among the poor in the tenements, You find them by the doen, by the score, the hundred, in the higher circles, Among the well to do people who have some children the number is usually small—frequently, say, two or three, often only one or two. But not $0 in the tenements, where it is hand to mouth all the year round.