"ALMAGE'S DR. SERMON Heformation of Evil Habits, “When shall I swake, T will seek it yet again.” Prov. & : 3. Wirn an insight into human nature such as no other man ever reached, Solomon, In my text, sketches the men- tal operations of one who, having step- ped ASIDE FROM THE PATH of rectitude, desires to return, With a wish for something better, he says: “When shall I awake? when shall I come ont of this horrid nightmare of iniquity?” But seized upon by un- eradicated habit, and forced down-hill by his passions, he cries out: “I will seek it yet again, 1 will try it once more,’ Our libraries are adorned with an elegant literature addressed to young men, pointing out to them all the dan- gers and perils of life—complele maps of the voyage, showing all the rocks, the quicksands, the shoals. But sup- pose a man has already made ship- wreck; suppose he is already off the track; suppose already gone as- tray, he has HOW IS ILE TO GET BACK? hat is a fleld comparatively untouch- ed 1 propose Lo evening to such, There are those in this audience who, with every passion of their agonized soul, are ready to hear : They compare them- they were ten years from the bondage in incarcerated, Now, if house, come with vet feeling they are ristian sympathy, can hardly bé ex- then, at this discussion, ves with what and ery out hi they are be any in this bal dL whi ther an eamest purpose, beyoud the pale of Ch and that the sermon pected to address them, moment, I give them my right hand 1 call them brother. Look up. There ious and triumphant hope for you I sound the trumpet of Gospel de- rance. ‘The Church ready to | a banquet at your return, and erarchs of heaven to fall into line snpered procession at the news of emancipation. So far as God may e, I propose to show what are th y your return, and how to 1088 obstac es, ali is ws 1 st $1} Hi THE FIRST DIFFICULTY return 1s the for Just as vay of your i gravitation, law which brings which 3 is a corresp moral gravi In ot! : ve +8 ‘g is easier to go down than it the y Iw REC § Pi STOW no You wer words, it IR Lo gO up i fa AV § right, ( Your i» easier to do wrong than it is to do mind the « hood d 1¥5-—80Ime of them good W hicl to mind in some of them hem impure. Wh ly sticks to your memo} of your life you iin courses of condu them wil, some of which style-of habit did easil! 1? Ab! my 10 Some ¢ iad, : d them of 1 vi ] ield: frien to take but a moment of self-luspect that there is in ur wral gravitation. Dat may. be resisted. J y pick up from the earth and hold it in your hand toward neavel, 1 of God's grace, a soul fallen may be lifted t i peace, toward pardon, toward Force of moral gravitati of us, but power in io overcome that force of . 11 ii out ail On ist S01 ust so, by the power ons irs tha 1 GE way of cer of evil habit, are those who say it is ve up evil babits, w them. Here is a man ation. He knows it ; bis family, destroying them 0 gi 5 GQ his pre y ining him body, mind, and soul. If being aun intelligent man, his family, could ea iy ould he not do so? i not give iL up proves give itup. 1 a ver hing to sail down-stream, ing you with great for turn » J Ais 1 ¥ Ig if Ww abit, ve ’ he does 1 BLY v red io HE BOAT UP STREAM, is it 80 easy then to row it? Aslong as we yield to the evil inclinations in our hearts and our bad habits, we are sail ing downstream; but the moment we try to burn, we put our boat in the rapids just above Niagara, and try to row up stream. the habit of using tobacco, as most of vou do, and let him resolve to stop, and he finds it very dificult. Twenty-one years ago I quit that habit, and I would a8 soon dare to put my right hand in the fire as once to indulge in it, Why? Because it was such a terrible struggle to get over it. Now, physician to give up the use of tobacco, He goes around not knowing what to do with lnmself. Ie cannot add up a line of figures. Ile cannot sleep nights, It seems as if the world bad turned up- side down. He feels kis business 18 go- ing to ruin. Where he was kind and obliging he is scolding and fretful, The composure that characterized him has given way to fretful restlessness, and he bas become acomplete fidget, What power is it that has rolled a wave of woe over the earth and shaken a por- tent in the heavens ? Iie has tried to stop smoking! After a while he says, “I am going to do as I please. The doc- tor dossn’t understand my case. 1'm going back to the old habit.” And he returns, Everything assumes its usual composure, His business secs fo brighten, The world becomes an attractive place to live in, His children, seeing the difference, hail the return of their father’s genial disposi- tion, What wave of color has dashed blue tito the sky, and greenness into the mountain foliage, and the glow of sapphire into the sunset? What en- chantment has lifted a world of beauty and joy ou his soul? Ile has gone back to smoking. Oh, the fact is, as we all kuow in our own experience, that HABIT I8 A TASK-MASTER; as as we obey it, it does not ¢l oi but let us resist, and we find wo are to be lashed with seorplon whips, and bound with ship cable, and throw into the track of ing ue: gernauts, During the war of 1812 there was 4 ship set on fire just above Niagara Falls, and then, cut loose from its moorings, it came on down through the night, and tossed over the alls, It was said to have been a scene brilliant beyond all description. Well, there are thousands of men on fire of evil habit, coming down through ihe rapids, and through the awful night of tempti- tion, toward the eternal plunge. Oh, how hard it is to arrest them! God only can arrest them, Suppose a man, after five or ten or twenty years of evil-dolng resolves to do right. Why, all the forces of dark- ness are allied against him, He cannot sleep nights, He gets down on his knees in the midnight and cries: ‘God help mel’? He bites his lip, He grinds his teeth. Hae clenches his fist 1n a de- termination to keep his purpose. He dare not look at the bottles in the win- dows of a wine store. It is one long, bitter, exhaustive, hand-to-hand fi: with an intlamed, tantalizing, and me: ciless habit, When he thinks he is en- upon him like a pack of hounds with their muzzles tearing away at the flanks of one poor reindeer, In Paris there is a sculptured representation of Dacchus, He is riding ona Oh, how sugges. who is speeding stand he is not rid- Let every one thirsty, going at a death leap. How many there are who resolve on a better life, and say: *“*When shall i it¥seized on by their old “I will try it once more; I will seek it yet agamni” XY ago, there were some Princeton who were skating, and the ice was very thin, and some warned pany back from the air-hole, and final. them entirely to leave the place, But one young man with brav- ado, after all the rest “One round more! and went down, brought out a My friends, are thousands and tens of tl habits, crv: Cars one He and swept was corpse, OuU- that It ve : is the one round more, LO say that if aman wan Ih I 1 from evil practices, REPULSES HIM, SN ow les, I} Desirin SAYS: will sl ff my old associ: wiil 31 hristian companionship And he church and the wit} tind p of with OOK 48 In i the ushergn } as to man | ever expected Come, take vy Y {» i discous and ire Z# i BOW Inu A IOW An 1 1% 4 I 8 YOu KNOW from evil €& runs against § $ (hy O return NNT REPU LSIONS lives a bl or wk balf a mile from the church, There are pesple in 1 cities who live a thousand Vast deserts of in- difference between them and the house of God. respectability, though thousands and thousands perish, Christ sat with publicans and sinners But if there come to the house of God a man with marks of dissipation upon him, people almost throw up their hands in horror, as much as to say: “‘Isn’t it shocking?” ous Christians in all our churches are going to get into heaven, I don't know, unless they have an especial train of cars, cushioned and upholstered, each one a car to himself, They cannot go with the great horde of publicans and sinners, Ohl ye who curl your lip of scorn at the fallen, 1 tell you plainly, if you had been surrounded by the same influences, instead of sitting to-day amid the cul- tian, you would have been a crouching wretch in stable or ditch, covered with filth and abomination. It is not be- cause you are naturally any better, but because the mercy of God has protect. ed you. Who are you that brought up in Cbhristian circles and watched by Christian parentage, you should be so hard on the fallen? I think men also are often hindered from return by the fact that churches are too anxious about their membership and too anxious about their denomina~ tion, and they rush out when they see a man about to give up his sin and re- turn to God, and ask him how he is going to be biptized, whether by sprinkling or immersion, and what kind of a church he is going to join, Oh, my friends, it is A POOR TIME TO TALK about Presbyterian catechisms, and Episcopal liturgies, and Methodist love. feasts, and baptisteries to a man that is como tm i 0 it reminds me of a man drewning rig fo sea, and a life-boat puts out for him, and the man in the boat says to the man out of the boat: “Now, if I get you astiore, are you going to live 02 my street?” First get him ashore, and then talk about the non-essentials of religion, Who cares what church he joins, if he only joins Christ and starts for heaven? Oh! you ought to have, my brother, an illumined face and hearty grip for every one that tries to turn from his evil way. remembering that ‘he that converteth a sinner from the error of his ways shall save a soul from death and Inde a mul- titude of sins.” Now, I have shown you these obsta- cles because I want you to understand I know all the difficulties in the way; but I am now to tell you how Hannibal may scale the Alps, and how THE SHACKLES MAY BE be regained, First of all, my brother, throw yourself on God. Go to him frankly and earnestly, and tell him these habits you have, and ask Him if there is any help in all the resources of omnipotent love, to give it to you. not go with a long rigmarole people prayer, and forever and ever, amen!” Go to God and ery for help ! help! help! and for help, just look I remember, in the late war, call man: “Where are made no answer, but you hurt?” He held up his arm, intered, I saw where he was hurt, The simple fact is, when has a wounded soul, all be has to hold it up before a sympa- tic Lord, and it healed, It does take any prayer. Just hold it is no small thing, nervous and weak and ng from his evil ways to feel that God puls two omnipot around him, and says: “Young an, I will stand by you. The mo Leki i i + rit PRL ed ong { Mi, ent arms ns may depart, and the hills but I will never fail as the soul thinks the news is cannot believe fy YOu, and looks up in God's face, God li $ right hand and takes an *“As I live, saith CRRLEl, ld the ih, ' said r there will no around for the s thi Bless from - A700 one pars of thar Oil HNO om this moan was f Mas achusetls, from New lier, nly ques. | rags the | ur troubles, I counsel you, back, to quit all UNHOLY INTIMACY moral hoe © 8 wit istemper, iirch there has nce where a man kept oe and was reformed. . Open your 2 il ages of it been an insta 1 associal } % ) 1 desk, tal stamp and envek ore lo-day wut letter paper, % ' pti 4 a 3 & a ietler somethnn ii this, Far hen sign your name, letter by the first post, i well and send th rive up your bad companions or give up heaven, It is nol ten bad companions that MER, HO? What ung man I three bad companions, but one, that y men with him, halting in front grog shop, urging him to sisting, violently resisting, of a go in, he re- | n? 1t was oxen, and i saw the Process, They held him fast, and they put the cup to his lips, and they forced down the strong | drink. What chance is there for such [I counsel vou also, seek advice, Every Christian man 1s bound | to help you. If you find no other human ear willing to listen to your story of struggle, come to me and I | will by every sympathy of my heart, and every prayer, and every toil of my | hand, stand beside you in the struggle for reformation ; and as I hope to have my own sins forgiven, and hope to be | acquitted at the Judgment seat of Christ, I will not betray you. First of all seek God, then SEEK CHRISTIAN COUNSEL, Gather up all the mind and soul, and appealing to God for success, declare this day, everlast- ing war against all drinking habits, all gaming practices, all houses of sin, Half-and-half work will amount to nothing: it must be a Waterloo, Shrink back now, and you are lost. Push on, and you are saved. A Spartan general fell at the very moment of victory, but he dipped his finger in his own blood and wrote on a rock near which he was dying; ‘Sparta has conquered.” Though your struggle to get rid of sin may seem to be almost a death strug- gle, you can dip your Snes in your own blood and write on the Rock of Ages : “Victory through our Lord Jesus Christ I”? Oh! what glorious news it would be for some of these young men to send home to their parents In the country, They go to the post-office every day or two to see if there are any letters from Christian energies of body, | How anxious they are to hear! Notuing would please them half so’ much as the news you might send home to-morrow that you had given your heart to God, I know how it is in the country, The night comes on. The sattle stand under the rack through which bursts the trusses of hay. The horses just having frisked up through the meadow at the night fall, stand knee-deep in the bright straw that lovites them to lie down and rest, The porch of the hovel is full of fowl, their feet warm under the feathers, In THE OLD FARM HOUSE AT NIGH] clap and and mother no candle is lighted, for the flames about the great backlog, and wall. Father ing. of. sllence After a while the father breaks the and says: “Well, I wonder And the mother answers: “In no bad he has been away there have so many prayers offered for him we can still.” Then at eight o'clock for they retire early in the country ight o'clock they kneel down and com- mend you to that God who town, Ol watches in in ou the sea, Grecian soldier : of thought a moment, some one said to the He a proudest ment moment your life?” TH DEST MOMENT PROT nt wow 144 ol my life was when I sent word parents that I ' And the proudest when LO my brillant m the moment have conquered your evil ha ace of Go Ob! ds 1, and become « iy piseé not paren x 11 ¥ wl ¥ e¢ will come when } » +5 i Her nor moiher, an the place where the) find them from the neigl loud for forgiveness as the mound in the gong chur wer, DEAT And then lock of b mother's will take out ths at was cut i just before will take LO sir tl brow Rer, and you Of they | the cane walk, anu 1 nw, and wisi just as they wants you will think and thi you had done to, and would gi had never thrust dear old hearts. man who has brought father’s name, God o has bre ken liz wm { he bad never been first hour of h In sng laid against maternal tenderness, he and seq edd I'h powerful enough to who has brought grave, 3 i thier! horn life, ins ses, 1 tha % § 8 WALID ha is 1 i el hes of one 3 O a sorrowd BEATING ROTHSCHILD, A Porcelain Service That Was Cheap at Any Price, CAreworn 4 {ot pre- 1.1 apparentiy nierview & Krave, 8.2 d ‘ we famous aged visitor took from his bag a beautiful plate, so splendidly wi admired IL exo and became greatly 4 «Nir," said the p buy this of nd it has struc beautiful cannot $1 mer? = of financiers.’ “It is indeed very fine” “How much do you said the old man with many years, and have not long to live. 1 am poor, my days in compara- Will, you in exchange for of porcelain, give me life of 10) francs a “Look you, sir,” income for month?" The baron looked at the poor man, “Well, be it so; here 1s the Send me the service, and give me your name.’ a month afterward while he was seated in his counting house, a man entered and asked for the second payment of But the was young, scarcely 30 years of age, of would live for a hundred years, “But yon are not the man!” exclaim. od the astonished banker, “Excuse me, baron,’ said be, "1 am indeed the man,*’ “But you appeared at least 80 years old,” said the baron, “I have wonderfully recovered,’ ob gsorved the man, “thanks to your gen- erosity.” The baron laughed heartily, and gave orders for the payment of the money, exclaiming: “Ah, you are an excellent comedian, and have taken me in thoroughly.’ “1 am lotably the first who has done 80," replied the Jew, politely bowing to the millionaire. Tnene are some fond, foolish, trust. ing men who will read over a recipe for mince ple and then thunk they really know what it is made of, ¢ SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON, Buspay, Arnrr 15, 1888, Christian Watchfuluess, LESSON TEXT. Matt. 24: £2.51. Memory verses, 42-44.) LESSON PLAN, Toric or THE QUARTER: King in Zion. Jesus the GOLDEN TEXT FOR THE QUARTER: But we belwld him who hath been made a { Little lower than the angels, even Jesus, | beeaus: of the suffe ring of death erowned with glory and honor. —Heb, 2 : 9. Lesson Toru s A Message Enjoying Watchfulne iH, + Obligation to Walchlulness, ’s. 4-41. The Rewards of Watchifultess, va Outline ; ¢ 5 erils of Heediessness, VE, GOLD] | undo nd what [I ay you dt, Watch. Mark 13 : 3; DAILY \ 1 IES Hos Matt, £21154 Pe id i i HEIL The Nex 3 2 » fal Watching I'NE BEWALD 1. Commendation The {faithful and We i rs (Matt, will the he wt hi hiu servant.’ al; {G (3) Honored, The way to advancement (1) Faithfulness; (2) Wisdom. rg 2, “Blessed is that servant.” his personal character; (2) In his official standing: In his pective honors, “He will set him hath,’ 1} Enlarged honor, ii. THE PERILS OF I. Heedlossness : Shall say. .... My Lord tarrieth : shall begin to beat (48, 49). | Jehu took no heed to walk . “That fait if 1} Faiti {1) In i 3 i pros- over Recognized ability; usefulness; (3) Deserved fey Le HEEDL ESSN ESS, and inthe law of the Lord (2 Kings 10 : 31), | My people doth not consider (Isa. 1 : 3). As a horse that rusheth headlong in the battle (Jer, 8 : 6). They made hight of it (Matt, 22 ; 5) IL Surprise: Shall come in a day when he expect. eth not (50). Trembling hath surprised the godless ones (Isa. 33 : 14). How is... .the praise of the whole earth surprised (Jer, 51 : 41), At Iidmght there is a ory (Matt, 25 : 6). Ina oat in the twinkling of an eye {1 Cor. 15 : 62). 11. Destruction : Cut him asunder, and appoint his portion (51). Th, wa o the wicked shall perish sa 1:9). me, . + .8hall suddenly be broken (Prov. 20: 1). The chaff he will burn with quenchable fire (Matt, 319), These shail Zo away into eternal pun. ishment (Mata. 25 : 48). 1. “But if that evil servant shall in his beat.” (1) Evil nature; Evil surmisings; (3) Evil deeds, (1) An ewil heart; (2) An evil thought; (8) An evil man, , “"Bhall eut him asander.” Crime detected: (2) ended: (3 1 v “The testh,’ iY (2} (1) Opportunity Penalty enforeed, weeping and gnashing f 1) The weeping of re. 2) The gnashing of despair, --— - BIBLE READING. WATCHYULNESE, A universal duty (Mark 13 : 37). A constant duty (2 Tim. 4 : 5). Against Satan (Eph, 6 Against temptations f. ¢.). Because of | arr piy i, Ose; LESSON 1 (Matt, 26 Because of 26 : 41. 1. c. i To atta 1 4 propery | 36:1 Thess, 5 : i To attain | BI persor iid steadlias with Pet, 4 observers blessed s{1 Cor, 16 : ended { Matt, e.;] Its } Luke }2.: 34 --— LESSON SURROUNDINGS, After the denund and Pharisees trast, another incident, Lrrale i by Mark (Mark 12 Came, :41-44) and Lu} | {Luke : 1-4), the praise bestowed « { one poor widow who cast ber mit | the tr asury. Most harmonists this was followed by ever John 12 } Oh), in lies that our Lor pu teachings, 1 to ses hi to which wlds some reflections of oridiinge {he 4 4 thin its and sayi EX hl sed ! Greeks bic in; nis the evange his own final public ulleran: Hie ive: wi Riveii, nt lesson is taken Matt, 24 destruction of Jerusale: { and the second coming of our Lord. was occasioned by a prediction of total destruction of the temple (Malt 4:1, 2), called forth directly by ques- 1 5 as to time, ete, (Maik, 24 : 3). place was the mownt of Olive i ie, probably in view of ; Tuesday evening, or begianing of the y Jewish reckoning —A. D. 30. were the “four $%. The earlier refers to the de- Terusalem: the central par g,’” and the Iatter part to * Where the sections irom § Or JUrse ana &o if ies tail s general mos ws other $41 The Ginger Vics ATE AWare f diagis Oi Gisaiik aine., In Mijurion course of RiLger essence r cent, aleohe per cent, wice as intoxica reason why } Lie id topers w capable of intoxicating from whisk: need {| powerful agency puie exira told me he had tn AW + tHiry no long stimulation the mor alcohol a] ory 1" He tomers, rer regular cas. had igh employing the ginger: casions for stomachic pains { The relief it affosded her was so grate- { ful that she took to it upon any recur ence of her trouble. She found, too, ! i ration of the alco- depression. In ; to using ® regularly, ily to such excess that she was ly intoxicated. Large doses additional doses | produce a profound lethargre slumber, | which lasts in some cases for twenty- | four hours. His other customer was a | peddler, who came ul & certain hour { every morning, brought a four ounce | bottle, and drank its contents LY noon. | The man craved the stuff so ardently that he was unable to pe about his business until he had set the machinery } of his stomach in operation, and starie i ed the circulation of the blood by means {of the flety draught. He says that { the habit is well known to the drug | trade. & Ho contracted * | § the an | Of BEVEeral on she got | produce a quiet stupor; —_— He Started. A rmag-peddler, who was driving up Gratiot avenne recently, had reached Hastings street when his horse balked, The usual number of smart Alecks were soon on hand with their advise, and one suggestion after another was tried in vain, The horse could neither be pulled nor pushed, and as he was block- ading traffic, the crowd began to grow very rapidly. “What is i*” inquired a boy of twelve, who pushed his way into the circle, “Balky horse,’’ answerad some one, “Where's the owner? Here, you man, can’t you start this horse?"’ *‘No, he doan’ start oop.”’ “Wait a minute,” The lad ran up the street hall a block and pulled a handful eof hay out of a bale at a feed store. and when he re. turned be cleared a space in front of the horse, stood off about five extended his hand, The horse up his ears, his eyes glistenad once adv and followed the boy around the corner, “It’s according as the