wre he AU AID DR TALMAGE'S SERMON: Christ the Village Lad. “And the chila grew and waxed strong In spirit, filled with wisdom; and the grace of God wis upon him.’ Luke 2:40 About Christ as a village lad I speak. There is for the most part a Lice more than eighteen centuries long about Christ between infancy and manhood. What kind of a boy wat he? Was hea genuine boy at all, or did there settle upon Him from the start all the inten- sitios of martyrdom? We have on this subject only a little guessing, a few sur- mises, and here and there an unimpor- tant ‘pe rhaps.” Concerning what bounded that boyhood on both sides we have whole libraries of books and w hole galleries of canvas and sculpture. Be- fore the infant Christ in Mary's arms, or taking His first sleep in the rongh out- house, all the painters bow, and we have Paul Veronese's ‘‘Holy Family,” and Perugine's ** Nativity,” and Angelieo da Ficsole's “Infant Christ,” and Buben’s ss Adoration of the Magi,” and Tintor- otto’s “Adoration of the Magi,” and Chirlandojo’s **Adoration of the Magi,” and Raphael na's “Mado: na,’ and Madon * and Murille’s **Madon nas by all the schools of painting, in all lights and shades, and with all styles of attractive feature and 1m pre ssive surroundings, but pen and pencil and ehise 1 have with few excep- tions passed by Christ the village lad. Yet by three conjoined evidences 1 think we me to as accurate an idea of what Christ was as a boy as of what Christ was a man. First, the brief Bible account. hen we have the prolonged account of what Christ was at thirty years of age. Now you have nly to minify that account somewhat and yon find WHAT HE TEN YEARS OF Temperaments never change. A san- guine temperament never becomes a phlegmatic temperament. A nervous temperament never becomes alymphatic temperament. Religion changes one's affections and ambitions, but it is the same old temperament acting in a dif- forent direction. As Christ had no re- ligions change. He was as a lad what He was as a man, only on not so large a scale. When all tradition and all art and all history represent Him asa blonde I know he was in boyhood a blonde. We have. besides, an uninspired book that was for the first three or four cen turies after Christ's appearance received by many as inspired, and which gives prolonged ount of Christ's boyhood. ‘ f be true, most of 1t may »f it may be true. It may CARL C1 ns we have WAS AT AGF. 1 facts, © cut we believ tain mistakes. England LLED APOCBYPHAL ¢ in which the b upon I do not believe to be divinely Ir spired, and yet it may present worthy of consideration. Because represents the boy Christ as performing miracles some have overthrown tha whole apocryphal book. But right have you to say that Christ did not perform miracles at ten years of ag well as at thirty? He divine as in 1 Then while a lad He mnst have power to work miracles, whet ar did not work them. When, reached manhood, Christ turned into wine, that was said to be the begin ning iracles. Bnt that may mean that it was the beginning of that series of manhood miracles In a word, I thi that the all transcript of said. Indeed, ywwhood of Christ is facts what was 1 ® cortainiy of m the Bible declares thatif mother by the plain candle-light, which, removed wick put down on the candle- stick, beamed brightly through all the family sitting-room, as His mother was mending His garments, that had been torn during the day's wanderings among the rocks or bushes, and years after- ward IT CAME OUT IN THE SIMILE of the greatest sermon ever preached: «Neither do men light a candle and put it under a bushel, but in a candlestick, and it giveth light to all who are in the house. Let your light so shine.” Somme time, when His mother in the antumn took out the clothes that had been put away for the summer, he noticed how the moth miller flew out and the coat dropped apart, ruined and useless, and twenty years after, he enjoined: “Lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moss nor rustean corrupt.” His boyhood spent among birds and flowers, they caroled and bloomed again fifteen years after, as Ho “Behold the fowls of the Consider the lillies.” 80, erties ont: '" nr, avens and Perhaps, boyhood, blackened the he angered the i the do Tr watched it gathering louder and wilder, until two ceyvelones, one sweeping down rivers. Mount Carmel, met in the valley of Es draelon, and two A the fury, trinmphant stands the other, and He noticed that one had shifting sand for a foundation and the other an eternal rock for basis; and twenty after, He built the whole scene houses 3 OAr mton His audience and lifted them arms of pathos and terror. Yes, from the naturalness, the sim similes and metaphors in discourse, I know that he had been A BOY OF THE and had bathed in the streams, and heard the nightingale’seall, and broken through the flowery hedge, and looked ont of the « mbrasures of the and drank from the wells, and the butterflies, which travelers say have always been one of the flitting of that landscape , and strange people f and Sapj FIELDS chnss d beauties talke Damascns Kan i Sy ria, ¥ hi world would not contain the books. HIS MOUNTAIN BOME. Our Lord's boyhood Was passed in a neighborhood twelve hundred ed by mountains five sit hundred feet higher. Before it could shine in the village where this boy slept, the sun had to climb far enough up to look over hills that held their heads far aloft Or vallevs, and with another sweep took in the Mediterranean Sea; and you hear of the great waters in His matchless ser- monology. Ohe day I sce that divine boy, the wind flurrying His hair over His sun-browned forchead, standing on a hill.top looking off spon Lake Tiber- ins, on which at one time, according to profane history, arefour thousand nip. Anthors have taken pains to say that Christ was not affected by these sur- roundings, and that He from within Hved outward and independent of cir- cumstances. So far from that being true, He was the most sensitive being that ever walked the earth, and if a pale invalid’s weak finger could not touch His robe without strength going ont from Him, these mountains and seas could not have touched His eye without irradiating His entire nature with their magnificence. 1 warrant that he had mounted and explored all the fifteen hills around Nazareth, among them Hermon, with its crystal coronet of per- petual snow, and Carmeland Tabor and Gilbon, and they all had their sublime echo in after time from THE OLIVETIC PULPIT. Through studying the sky between the hills, Christ had noticed the weather signs, and thats crimson sky st night meant dry weather next day, and that a crimson sky in the morning meant wet weather before night. And how beau- tifully He made use of it in after years as Hn drove down npon the pestiferons Phat isce and Sadducee, by crying out: “When it is eveliing yo say it will be fair svoather, for the sky is red, and in the morsing it will be foul weather to- day. for the sky is red and lowering. O o hypocrites, yo can discern the face of the Sy Tush 0 ealno | discern the signs of the times?” day, as every boy has done, He walcpod the barnyard fowl at sight of overswinging hawk, clnck her ¢ ickens under wing, ahd n after ears He said: 0 Jetuss erusalem! Tow often would I have gathered thee ns a hen gather her chickens under her wing!” By He had His en vears of right hand, lifted to true age would pleas there would be eno WAVE A hands coronation 34 religious sense 1s TRUE IN A SECULAR SENSE, Themistocles amazed his school-fellows after ye [sane Newton, the by driving pegs in the side of mark the decline of the a disposition towards the SE afterwards showed the nations how the worlds swing. Robert Stephen gon, the boy, with his kite on the com- mons experime nted with electric eur rents and prophesied work which should yet make him immortal. my way!” said a rough man to a boy, “got out of my way! what are yon good for, anyhow?” The boy answered: “They make men out of such things as we are.” Hear it, fathers, mothers! hear it philanthropists and patriots: hear it, all the young! The temporal and eternal destiny of the most of the in- habitants of this earth is decided before fourteen years of age. Behold the Nazareth Christ, the country Christ, the boy Christ. But having shown you the divine lad in the fields, I must show yon Him in the mechanic's shop. Joseph, hisfather, died very early, immediately after the famous trip to the temple, and this lad had not only to support Himself, but support His mother, and what that is some of you know. There is A ROYAL BRACE OF BOYS boy stin, evidenced experiments on earth now doing the same thing, They wear no crown. They have no yarple robe adroop from their shoul 4 The plain chair on which they sit is as much unlike a throne as anything you can imagine. But God knows what they are doing and through what sacrifices they go, and through all eternity God will keep paying them for their filial behavior. wy shall get full measure of reward, the measure pressed down. shaken together and running over. They have their example in this boy Christ taking care of his mother. He had been taught the carpenter's trade by His father. Fortunate was it that the boy had learned the trade, for, when the head of the family dies, it is a grand thing to have the child able to take care of himself and help take care of others. Now that Joseph, His father, is dead and the responsibility of family support comes down on this boy, 1 hear : from morning to night His hammer pounding, His saw vacillating, His axe i So SR SR SR descending, His boring, and standing AMID THE DUST AND DEBRIS of the shop I find the perspiration gathering on His temples and notice the fatigue of His arms, and as He stops a moment to rest I see him panting, His hand on His side, from the exhaust ion. Now He goes forth in the morn- ing loaded with implements of work heavier than any modern kit of tools. Under the tropical sun He swelters. Lifting, pulling, adjusting, cleaving, splitting, all day long! At nightfall He goes home to the plain supper pros ided by His mother, and sits down too tired to talk. Work! work! work! You can- not tell Christ anything new about blis- tered hands or aching ankles or bruised fingers or stiff joints or rising in the morning as tired as when you lay down. While yet a boy He knew it all, He felt it all, He suffered it all. The boy oar penter! The wagon maker! The boy house builder! © Christ, we have seen Thee when full grown, in Pilate's police-conrt re we Thee when full grown Thou wert a O Christ, let gimlets boy yO IRE, have seen uid of on Golgoths, but, Weary mechanic while vet artisans and Thee enrth see and arms place in - HE HAVIDY BOY IN THE TEMPLE But, seen Christ the boy « xh marvelous smooth-browed lad bearded, haired, eoclesiastios thie Hundreds thousands of OW YOu amore Christ the the long whit of of After tival. the the eity to shelter immense throngs strangers, It was very easy, among vast throngs coming and going, to lo More than two million people national feast. You not think of those regions as sparsely settled. Th of them o« people, No wont ty crowdsat the tam cities, the smallest fifteen thousand that amid the © Spoke! jut after a wink st, and with flushed 1 LOGE LLOV rus s L¥fave 1) ¥: Hei ir epmplexi burn hal loft thi religi ists il more o young, He knew all ab roof they held THAT MOST WONDERFUL DISCTRRION of all history H: altar, of every sacrifice £ Knew the meamng of , Of every golden candlestick, of every « mbroider ed curtain, of every crumb bread, of every drop of oil in sacred edified He knew all abont God He knew all about man. He about heaven, for He eame from it knew all about this world, for He made He knew all worlds, for they were only the sparkling morning dewdrops on the lawn in front of His heavenly palace, a wreath of emphasis: “Both them and asking them questions.” 1 am not so much interested in the questions they asked Him as the ques- tions He asked them. He asked the questions not to get information from the doctors, for He knew it already, but to humble them by showing them the heights and depth and length and breadth of theit own fgeorance. The radient boy with ag§ oa of a hundred questions abont thedlogy, About philos- opy, about astronomy, about time, about eternity, may have batked them, discon: certed them. Behold the boy CHRIST ASKING QUESTIONS, and listen when your child asks ques- tions. He has the. ri to ask on The more He asks the ; the stupidity of the in of shrew quisitivencss! : questions. Answer th Po not say; “I can’t be bathe 1t is your place to be bof questions. If you are not able answer, surrender and confess your in- capneity, as I have no doubt did Rabbin Simeon, and Hillel, and Shammai, and the sons of Betirah when that splendid boy, sitting or standing there, with a garment Fenching from neck to ankle, and girdled at the waist, put them to their very wits’ end. Ib is no disgrace to say, ‘I don’t know,” The only being in the universe who never needs to say, “I do not know," is the Lord Almighty. The fact that they did not know sent Keppler, and Cuvier, and Columbus, and Humboldt, and Herschel, and Morse, and Bir William Hamilton, and all the other of the world’s mightiest natures into their life-long explorations. Teles- cope and microscope and stethosco and electrio battery, and all the scientific anparatus of all the ages, are only ques- tions asked at the door of mystery. hold this Nazarene lad asking questions, griving dignity to earnest interrogation. But while I see the old theologians standing around the boy Christ Iam impressed as never before with the fact that WHAT THEOLOGY MOST WANTS is more of childish simplicity. The world and the Church have built up im- mense systems of theology. Half of them try to tell what God thought, what God planned, what God did five lmn- dred million years before the small star on which we live was created. I have had many a sonnd sleep under sermons about the decrees of God and the eternal generation of the Son, and discourses showing who Melchisedec wasn’t, and 1 give a fair warning ever begins a sermon on in my presence I will put my on the pew in front, and go into the slumber 1 ean reach Wicked ti , this trying to 1 ] le and fatl » thie y be told waste of tin i nnse nations o perple XX Our if God? Mind vo d God will t LO Care han about 1 occurred on eclipsed sun. that set us thing our whole heart pL Life accept the tremendous proffer. Do not Pre shyterian Church or Church or thie { hurches other evangelical time in > RYING TO PIX UP OLD CREEDS, them is imperfect or all the evangelical imperfect, as I nove a tendom, only three i, and no need if1 11 the consecrated pe ple of all d« carth on ud of any nar one great enone! Arian of inwrink lb nex yaad and the sons the Temple to ben Was, 1D of the to the by the bre ath WHY Judean hills and on the mechanic s shop bereaved mother, stopp enough to grapple with the vem rable Orient “both hear them questions loti ong dhialecticians of the + s+} 2 G & ¢ jug them and asking Fece Deus! schold the God, Others have exclaimed, Ecce homo! Behold the man But t reilany in conclusion of subj of 1 CTY, Fook my adolescons! - - oe w it’s Easy to Keep House in Japan. Life in Japan has it's compensations A young lady who recently married an tea merchant, writes home of her Oriental housekeeping: “We have five servants,” she says, ‘at the same cost of employing two in New York. I am looked upon as positively ornamental, and am not expected to even think about the daily Feaenald routine. I have had to get used to the amusing deference my retainers accord me. Invariably every night at bed- time the five appear and prostrate them- selves before me as a good night cere- mony. I had great difficulty to pre- serve my dignity on the initial perform. ance of this singular custom, but I have grown used to it now, and am as solemn as the occasion requires. The other day on one of my rare visits to the kitchen 1 dropped my handkerchief and left the room without discoveri my loss. A few moments later, seat in my own room, I heard a whispering outside the door, followed by the entrance of my maid and the waitress, the former bearing a small salver upon which rested the bit of cambrie. It was gravely presented, and then both withdrew. learned afterward from my maid that its presence on the kitchen floor created a great commo- tion below stairs. There was an ani- mated discussion as to whom belonged the great honor of restoring it to me, the cook claiming the privilege on the ground that it was found in his domain. inally a compromise was effected. The cook Berens picked it up and placed it on the salver, the waitress bore this to the door of my room and then con. signed it to maid, who, being my per- sonal servitor, was the only one who could rightfully rastore a Ftavuial be longing. Fancy all this about a handkerchief which most New York Bridgets o Susans would have quietly SUNDAY 3CA0D0L LESSON, BuspAY Jus 3, 155), SECOND QUARTERLY RE VIEW. TITLES AND GOLDEN TEXTS. Gorpes Texr vor ™e Quanren: [ Jive qlorific d thee on the carth, having accomplished the work which thou last given me (0 do,—John 17 : 4 I. THE TRIUMPHAL ENTRY. TT jolee ¢ reatly, O daughter of Zion; shout. O daughter of Jeru sloem: behold, thy King Zeoh g:9 cometh unto thee, Ii. THE REJECTED He came unto his own, Jolin i MANDMEN] received him not HE TWO GREAT COM ESUS BETRAYED Betravest thou the Bon « Luke 22 : 48 US HEVOR) T1 in THE In4 JESUS BEFORE VILAT y them, John 18 : IFIED d himself, and RUB CRY becam« Phil. 2:8 i REVIEW BIBLE LIGHTS Syren npern i i Lord our God, you shalt love all thy heart, and witha all strength. soul, and with thy mind, and The thy neighbor as 20-31). Love is the fulfilling 13: 10 Herein 1s , not that we that he loved ns, and Son to be the propitiatu our sins (1 John 4 : 10 All: If God loved us to low another he md Scholars Bom Teachers of the Ove (od, but ay we also one {1 John Lesson 4. —Superint ndent : One of what manner of what manner of buildings! And Jesus said unto him, Seest thou these great buildings? there shall not be left here one stone upon another, which shall not be thrown Rowen {Mark 13 : 1, 2). Scholars : But 1 say unto yon, That in this place is one greater than the temple (Matt. 12 : 6) Teachers : him: and without him was ... . anything made that hath been made (John 1 : 3). All : Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my weaknesses, that the strength of Christ may rest upon me {2 Cor. 13 : 9). 1essom 5.—Superintendent: And then shall they see the Son of ‘nan coming in clouds with great power and glory. And then shall he send forth the angels, and shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from the uttermost part of the earth to the uttermost part of heaven (Mark 13 : 28, 27). Scholars: Take ye heed, watch and pray: for ye know not when the time is {Mark 13 : 83). Teachers: Watch therefore: for ye know not when the lord of the house cometh, whether at even, or at mid. night, or at ocockerowing, or in the morning; lest coming suddenly he find you sleeping (Mark 13 35, 36). All: Let us not sleep, as do the rest, but let us watch (1 Thess, 5 : 6). Lesson 6. — Superintendent: Jesus said, Lot her alone; why trouble yo her? she hath wrought an good work on me. For ye have the poor always with you, and whensoever yo will ye can do So oll, bat yo have not always (Mark 4 : 6-8), Scholars: 8hoe hath done what she could (Mark 14 : 8). Teachers: If the readiness is there, it is acceptable according as a man not scoording as he hath not (2 Cor. stones and Thy vows are upon me, 0 God: SAG IAIBAPIRR POET" 47 i ¢ { will render thank of rings ms (Pea. 06 : ¥2y. And os bread, and had ble Ad. he brake it; and gave to them, and said, Take ye this 1 And he took a enp, and wi Lesson 7. they Superintendent were cating, he took 3 : wien he my body he had rive uw thanks, ke oave to t and they all drank of nnto them, This 2:19 Ax and drink Lord's death till Teac ‘ Cachoers bread, the amazed which hath he 1s not 3 they laid m, Be not the Nazarene, saith unto the is risen he place where 5, 68) Now is Christ risen fr become the firstfruits of (1 Cor 15 20 When this corruptible shall an he dead, and m that slept Teachers is swallowed up in vie- O death, were is thy victory? O is thy sting? (1 Cor, tory death, where 15 0, 5H. All: Thanks be to God, which giveth ns the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ 31 Cor. 15 : -- I i —— Teach Girls to Think. Said a mother to meone day: “What I answered: “It her study everything which her how to think. Good comes from » mind that has been not merely crammed with knowledge, but developed, are the qualities most high- ly prized, and unfortunately most diffi- enlt to find not only in woman, but in men. This, doubtless, is due in great measure to our imperfect system of education.” Teachers of stenography find this the greatest difficulty to contend with in preparing their pupils for pRitions, While there are very few who cannot learn how to write shorthand, two. tliirds of those who take up this stady are obliged to abandon it because their reasoning powers, and consequently judgment, have not been sufficiently trained to enable them to read their notes intelligently. This same lack of judgment is met with in every depart- ment of business. So much is this the same, people have sometimes been led to the fallacious conclusion that men will sncceed better in business if they start life with little or no education. The trouble is, that people have not been educated too much for business, but that they have been edueated in the wrong way.—Many F. Seysova. French cooks have a mania for the introduction of ham flavor into ordinary tomato sous