Ad A , SER MON ’ The Brookiyn Divine's Sunday Sermon, 0 TALAGES “Subject: “The Stormy Passage.” (Preached at Capernaum, in the Holy Land.) TEXTE: VEulered inlo tt ship, and went over the sea toward Capernawm.”-John vi, 17, “dnd He arose and rebuked Wind and the seo.” Mark iv., 80. Here in this seashore village was the tem- porary home of that Christ who, for the site of, this village, now in ruins, and all around this lake, what scenes of kindness and Joven and glory and pathos when om Lord lived here! It has been the wish of my life—1 cannot say the hope, for I never ex pected the privilege-—to stand on the banks of Galilee. What a solemnity and what rapiure tobe here! I can now understand the feeling of the immortal Scotchman ( lobert McChayne, when sitting on the bank «of this lake, he wrote: It that the wild gazelle # down to drink thy tide, * tha! was plegcad to save from hail od by thy side around thee the mouninins mest, Mi CRIM repOosing soa. far mare, the beantiful fest Tesns walked o'er thee. +8 Bol Com Bot H Ot firacefy Ie now easily understand from the con. tour of the country that bounds this lake that storms were easily tempted to make thesy waters their playground. From the gentld way this lake treated our boat when wae safled on it yesterday, one would have thought it incapable of a paroxysm of rage | but it was quite different on both the occa sions spoken of in my two texts. [I closs my eyes, and the shore of Lake Galilee as it now! is, with but little signs of human life, disap- ake as it was in Christ's scone of great luxuriance: the surrounding hills, terraced, sloped, rooved, so many hanging gardens of beauty. On the shore were castles, armed towers | everything attractive and beautiful-—al} styles of vegetation in shorter space than in almost any other space in all the world, from the palm tree of the forest to the trees Figiiuus climate. t seemed as if the Lord had launched one wave of beauty on all the scene, and it hun and swung from rock and hill and oleander Roman gentlemt- in pleasure boats sailing this lake, and sountrymen in fish smacks coming down to drop their nets pass each other with nod and shout and laughter. swinging idly at their moorings, O, what a beautiful scene! It seems aww wo shall have a Not a leaf winked in the air: nota ripple dis; iurbed the face of Gennesaret: but there seams to be a little excitement up the beach and we hasten to see what it is, and we find it an embarkation : From the western shore a flotilla pushing out, not a squadron, or deadly armament not clipper with valuable merchandise, nor piratic vessel, ready to destroy ev erything they could seize, but a flotilla, “bearing mes sengers of light and life and peace. Chriss is in the front of the boat. His disciples are in a smaller boat. Jesus, weary h much speaking to large multitudes, put into somnolence by the rocking of the waves If there was any motion at all the ship was easily righted; 1 passed from star boa to larboard, or from Jarbeard to i the boat would rock. and the ies of the motion putting the Maste: And they extemporized a pillow made ont of a fisherman's coat. 1 think no sooner is Christ prostrate, and His head touched the pillow, than He is sound asleop The breezes of the lake run their finger through the locks of the worn siéoper, and the boat rises and falls like a sleeping child on the bosom of a sleeping mother Calm night, starry night, beautiful night Run up all the sails, ply all the oars, and let the larg: at and th IH boat glide over gentle Genegarst e sailors say there Isgoing to be a change of weather And wven the passengers can hear the moaning of the stot, a8 1 comes ou with great stride, and all the terrors of hurricane and dark. ness. The Jarge boat trembles like a deer at bay among the clangor of the hounds: great ate of foam are flung into the air: the ails of the vessel san, and the sharp winds i is: the analler hoats on the «lifes of the waves time. It lay ina or quiet night, she wit is if the win WRT " board by iy tik ile and vist vats ro Overboard go cargo, tackling and masts and the drenched disciples rush into the back part of the boat, and lay hold of Christ, and ay unto Him: “Master, cars! Thou not that we perish®™ That great perscnage lifts His head from the pill of the fisherman at " 3 {they and looks out + storm. All around Him are the boats, driven in the temptest and through it comes the ery of drowning en By the flash of the lightning [ see tise calm brow of Christ as thé spray dropped from His beard. He has one word for the sky and another for the waves, Looking upward He cries: “Peace” Looking downward He says “Be «till ™ The waves fall flat on their faces the foam melts, the extinguished stars relight their torches. . The tempest falls dead and Christ stands with His feet an the neck of the storm And while the sailors are bailing ott the boats, and while théy are trying to untangle. the cordage the disciples stand in amaze. ment, now looking into the calm sea, then into the calm sky, . then inte the calm Haviour's countenance, and they cry out “What manner of man is this, that even the Unds and the sea obey Him?” The subject in the first place impresses me ith the fact that it is very important to Wwe Christ in the ship; for all’ thosé boats ald have gone to the bottom of Gennesa ro ¢ if Christ bad not been present. Oh, what # lesson for you and for mie to learn! We pust always have Christ in the ship. What- er voyage we undertake, into whatever en- | erprise we start, lot us always have Christ in the ship. All you ean do with utmost ten sion of Body, dA and soul, you are bound to do. but obl hues Christ in avery enter- prise, Christ in svery vovage, Are IHen who ask GOH iia} at the » ing of great enterprises. He has been SH Tes fh the mast, no trouble can over pow them: the storms fight conte down the top of Mount Hermon, and lash then plun yd cpuld not hurt them. But hers is another, who starts out in worldly enterprise, wd he depends upon the uncertainties of this, 'e. He has no God to help him. After a shile the storm comes and tosis off the! masts of the ship, be puts out his lifeboat and: the | boat; the sheriff and the auctioneer; to help him off; they can’t help him off = paust go down--no Christ in the ship life will be made up of sunshine , There may be in it Arctic tornadoes; I know not what i : of trial dash clear over the hurricane 3, arid the decks are tia, 4 the ship? aks God for i Et wall fof he 2 da ey 0 IAD 08 ds + dopariurs, o%a men, tho disciples of Josus Christ, alifs’ SE James lost his head. St. Philip | as hung to death on a pillar, Ht. Matthew i pind his life dashed out with a halbert, St. Mark was od to death through the pireets. St. James the Less was beaten to | death with w fuller's club, St. Thomas wad struck through with a spear. They did not ad following Christ smooth sailing. Oh, ow they were all tossed in the tempest! John {uss in the fire, Hugh McKail in the hour of i | ! i { | i { the Scotely ip Covenanters--did they find smooth sailing? But why go into story when we can draw from our | pwn memory illustrations of the truth of | what I say? Some young man in a store try- | Ing toserve God, while his employer scoffs | At Christianity; the young men in the same store, antagonistic to the Christian religion, teasing him, tormenting him about his re i ligion, try to get him mad. They succeed in getting him mad, saying: ‘You're a pretty Christian” Does that young man Bnd it smooth sailing when he tries to follow Christ? Ur, you remember a Christian girl. father despises the Christian religion; hey mother despises the Christian religion; her brothers and sisters scoff ut the Christian re- {ligion; she can hardly find a quiet pines in which to say her 3 hor. i Did she find it smooth sailing | when she tried to follow Jesus Christ? Ob, juno! All wha would liye the life of the r: Ny —-— » v a { Christian fatigion ‘hist suller Persécution; i | you do not find it in one way, you will get it { in another way, The question was asked, i “Who are th nearest the throne And the answer came back “Thess are they who came up of great tribulation-—great flailing, as the original has it; great flailing, | great pounding and had thelr robes washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb." | Oh, do not be disheartened! Take courage. { You are in glorious companionship. God will seo you through all trials and He will geliver you. My subject also impresses me { with the fact that pac sometimes get | yery much frightened. ' In the these disciples as they rushed into the back part of the boat, 1 find | they are frightened almost to death They say: “Master, carest Thou not that we | perish?” They had no reason to be frightened, for Christ was in the boat I suppose if we had been there we would have been just as much affrighted. Perhaps more | gery good people get very much affrighted t is often so in our day, and men say: Sa yt LOO ' op tones of i i i | { { | rin he Adler’ clos Bad even nn the kilaas of garna ag the ship: the crew were entirely demoralized: vet Christ vise, and He p His foot on the storm, awd it crouches at Fis feet. Oh, yes! Christ can hush the tempest, You have had trouble. Perhaps it was the hittio child taken away from you--the sweet- ost child of the household, the one who asked most curious questions, and stood around sou with the greatest fondness, and the i e cut down through your bleeding heart, Perhaps it was au only son, and your heart has ever since been like a desolate castle, the owls of the night hooting among the fallen arches and the crumbling stairways. Per. haps it was an aged mother, You always went to her with your troubles. She was in your home to welcome your children into life, and when they died she was there to pity vou; that old hand will do you no more kind. yous; that white lock of hair you put away in she casket or in the locket didn't look as it usually did when she brushed it way from her wrinkled brow in the the country church. Or your property gone, you said: ‘I have so much bank stock. 1 have so many govern- iment securities, I have so many houses, I ave so many farms—all gone, all gone.” Why, sir, all the storms that ever trampled t 3 various errors going over the church down.” allright and think she P our fs going fh, how ol by to perish; many good iniquity in is going Opie ure day t worry, coin g to YUSIIOSS A Hor on into a cavern to sleep. He lies down with hid thaggy mane covering the paws. Meanwhile the spiders spin a web across the mouth of the i Ye have captured him rossamer thread after mer thread tl the whole {rout of CRAY is coverad with the = sob, and the ider “The lion is done; the Hon is fast.’ while the lion has got through ing: he rouses himself he shakes alks out into the sunlight aver friumph righte un wr SY After a, g soep his mane, ho w it: he 4 Test at 3 Wh avi ith his is captured forever, ii make any t among men.” But after a while the | the Judah will rouse Himself and come forth to shake mightily the nations What's a spider's web to the aroused Hon? tive truth and error a fal and truth will come off victor But there are a great who get affrighted in othe are affrighted in our They say: “Oh! thi gale: we are afral ing to be upset, and the many people bro are going to be aff righted w ing hold of churs As though n Captain, with five thousand bushels of for a cargo, should say some upon deck: ‘Throw overboa: go: and the “Why, Cs ron Throw ih Lg i it sAis re neve tribe of Ce how soe iva’ & Trev hes says the La hafl that has got into § {f wheat, and the only ff thechaff is to th ail the Now, that is a great deal wiser than the talk of a great many Christians who want to throw overboard al thousands and tens of thousands of souls who are the subjects of revivals. Throw all overboard because they are brought into the kingdom of God through great revivals, because there a peck of chaff, aquart of chaff, a pint of shall! Isay lef them stay until the last ithe Lord will divide the chaff from the wheat Do not be afraid of a great revival, Oh, that such gales from heaven might sweep through sll our churches! Oh, for such days as Rich ard Baxter saw in England. and Hobart Mo Cheyne saw in Dundes! Oh, for such dayy ss Jonathan Edwards saw in Northampton { have often heard my father toll of the fact that in the early part this century a revival broke out at Somerville N, J. and some people were very much agitated about it. They said: "Oh you | are going to bring too many people foto the | church at once: ” and they sent down to New | Brunswick to get John Livingston to stop the | revival, Well, there was no better soul in all the world than John Livingston Hae | went and looked at the revival, they wanted him to stop it. He stood in the pulpit on the Sabbath, and looked over the solethn audi. | tory, and he said: “This brethren, is io | five thousand way to get rid wheat over. bushels o board a6 of try to stop it." leaning heavily upon his aff —a very old man. And he fred that staff, and took | hold of the small end of the staff, and began, or and the thumb, and be sid: “Ob, thou impenitent, thou art falling now falling lite, falling away from peace and heaven, falling as certainly as the cane is ing througis m han nalting thoug haps falling slowly cane Rope on falling through John Liv. The religious emotion in | audience was overpowering, saw a type of their cane kept falling and falling until struck Mr Livingston's clasped it stoutly and said; you as | doom, as the ‘But the grace of God ean once and salvation. “Well” said the p e after the service, “I guesd you had better send Livingston home: he is making the revival worse.” Oh for fais from heaven to sweep all thacontinenis! The dan ger of the church of God is not in revivals Again, my subject impressed me with the fact that Jesus was God and man in the same being, Here He is in the back. part of the boat. Oh, how tired He looks; what sad dreams He must have' Look at His countes nance; He a ihinking of the cro e coms. look at H a is a flesh of our flesh. (ng yA atieup: els a man. Bat then I find Christ at prow of the boat; I hear Him say, nets, bo stil) and 1 jee the Moti Xhsel at vot, and olding ts His ilies bod ' , and want rari, Leo and, kaon deo St he ck ] ay: ! wenry of : thize with all m kot beep worse than this to you. Yet you overthrown, Why" ‘brist gays: “I have that g one in My coping. 1 can cafe for him as well you can, better than you can, bereaved mother Hushing the tempest. When your property went away, God said: “"Therd are treasures in heaven, in banks that never break.” Jesus hushing the tempest. There is one storm into which we ‘will all have to run. The moment when we letgo of this world and try to take hold of the next, we will want all the grace possible +x onder 1 seo a Christian soul rocking on the surges of death; all the dark ness seen let out against the pwirling wave, the thunder of the sky, ghe shriek of the wind, all seem to muite together: but that soul is pot troubled: there is no sighing, there are no tears: plenty of tears in the room at the departure, but he ‘weeps no tears—calm, satisfied and peaceful; all is well. By the flash of the storm you the harbor just ahead, and you are making for that harbor, All shall be well, Jesus bee fing our guide Into the harbor of heaven pow we glide We're home at last, home at iss! Softly we drift on the bright, sliv'ry tide, We're home at last "e i ywers of that soul Bee Glory to God | all our dangers are o'er, We stand secure on the glorified shores; Glory to God! we will shout evermore We're home at last ——— Home-Made Selfishness. Why 18 it necessary for so many people not only to make a virtue of their pa and aches, but to everybody around them uncomfortable “Don't do that, I have s headache” “Stop that clatter, you make m nous.” “I eannot have the least to-night.” How often we hear like t them haps. Do we ly selfish i to be rendered ma " 108 hese, and mak« I TOeRIIEA becanse one Is there ar husban ia Ls homes, than to find wi with a piece of linen bound ead, and the atm To hear the to see the frown which pain has caused. 15 and 4 i fo and me about her wphere full of cam. whining voice and bt. the LLL phor, . no dou be cheerful under these to sit down placidly evening in company with such a dismal hely Look time you have what we regular gick head ache,’ vision is inspiring A says: “Next to the Bible the looking glass has done the most to civilize the world.” 1 think if we eounld ghmpse of ourselves, in some moods we would feel ashamed It is quite possible to hide pain, vousness, irritability, sorrow, Worry and eare. That is, to be serene and cheerful in spite of them. We have known one such haps when she died, we a saint” It was bes moment allowed troubles to troubl If this 18 possible, complish it. “Bat.” I hear you sav, “shall 1 endure silently, while those about me are constantly talking of their own troubles, and groaning over their pains.’ Yes, certainly, why not? Your own duty is clear, and you ean do it if circumstances, §¥Y mete men know as ‘a noted ner ie tA said, ‘she wa g, { never perso ah her 1 id PARA one BOY One « you and 1 can so fortunate that you never suffer Never mind; you know you are mak- ing the path of life a little easier tor those about you, and that is all you must expect. Be cheerful in spite of wind and weather, try to be merry with an ulcerated tooth and to joke when the servant gives an hours notice on Mon- day morning. Smile when you make a mistake in entting which involvesa new yard of material, be sunny when yon come home with wet feet and ruined shoes, “Impossible!” you say. Try it. ————————— Tax Shuttie famuly had gathered about the fireside after the Christmas “Well, children,” said Job, with his best smile on, “Yon have all had a good Christmas?” “Yes, sir,” from the lusty throats, “And there won't be another Christ. mas for a year, thank Heaven.” “Christmas ought to come twice a year,” said the oldest. “Once a month,” said the next, ‘Every week,” chimed in the third. “Chrithmath onght to be every day,” lisped the youngest. A Wite, ” id oy “let's have Chrisi- mas all the year in our hearts,” and the scheme would have worked first rate only the furnace fire went out before morning. Wobls—Did you get your poem into The Seribblers’ Magazine? Cobbs No, the editor was aitogetiier too matical, “Two grammatical? How is that?” “Why, he went right to work and declined it." One Sunday the rector had been abe sent, and on his return naturally asked his clerk how he had liked his substi. tute on the previous Sunday, * Well, sir,” was the unequivocal re ply, savin your Honor, not very well; he was a little to pline I. r me, likes A preacher us joombles the r'ason and confoonds the joodgment; and of ull the born preachers 1've heerd there's none EE No man who understands the dary business ever sells his best 0 ws at any prica, The better the dalrymun the more ious the 8 should be of iocwhowaniatonall, : Tapestry Painting, It will be noticed the eolours lo much darker when wet than when dry, and due allowance must be made for this. Don't be frightened of putting on the colours of sufficient depth at once, providing you are sure the sol our you are using is the right one. It is useless painting three or four times over the same tint to obtain depth when it might have been got in one painting. I believe in finishing off the painting ns far as possible in one sitting, as when your frat tint is laid and is getting o Little dry any colours painted on this | sink in very agreeably and give a char- | mingly soft effect. Not that this soft- | ness is always the most desirable qual- ity to get in your work, for a certain vigour and crispness are necessary in | order to counteract the softening effect | the tissue has upon the colours. Tape .- try punting is not a difficult art, for | unlike oil and water colour painting, the worker has not to trouble about! “texture,” that is working his colours | until they look finished, this being ob- | tained for him by the tissue itself. All | you have to do is to put the right tints | on in aliquid manner, so that the whole | of that part of the canvas 18 covered without showing the marks of the | brush, and the rest 18 done for you by | the tissue, which, owing to the way it is woven, gives a charming efleot to the painting. I have scen copies of some of tie pictures in the National Gallery | exencted on this woolen tissue, and most excellent is the effect, for all the depth of colour and tone of the original can be obtained with a certain softness which only a dyed material has, Mr. | Coleman, whose christmas ecards ot little semi-nude children are so well known, has painted some tapestry | panels, enlargements of some of his Christmas ecard and very charming they are. He allowed a good deal of the plain tissue to show through- out the painting {the colour of the tissue isa warm cream), and this not only economised his labour, but had a most excellent effect Much of the effect he obtained with the outline, which was done in a warm brown, and his introduction of turquoise blues and greens (colours be is particularly fond may be seen in tins with warm yell pr most harmonious and delicate offi In painting flesh the be put in. Neutral Yonicrns designs, hi { OWE duced ts shadow i I yd the shadows 8 i : #3: Liiin with th mes $ the ook brash ini 3 For si cond pad i t of sky blue wet nee bright pind When dry Italian earth and pink s I don't much nth ast rales, but it may be useful in good flesh ting may be gh I would not advise my y tie themselves down to { other formula. Don't try too difficult an eff imple study of foliage and mild do ss a beginning, Tapestry painting can be used | junction with embroidery Fo border, for instance, the carried ont in the fixed a few stitches of d and there to i lioy © (5 3 3 this % A w dyes, nnd silk MM ere groundwork can quickly by psinting vwork nb ition - £0 ele work may NOT & un i. o in iresses might we , if one wish nique, and the effect mi better than embroidery be patted with these dyes nd velvet must of course be ght: white is best, as all the dyes are transparent, and consequently th lights must be loft, for if once destroyed they cannot be restored. The worker must be certain of his touch, and have a clear idea of what has to be done, or Ox n tint is laid upon the tissue it cannot be removed or even lightened. There is no getting the colors out so the only thing is not to make mistakes. Care- fully plan your work and think out Your } sori) before commencing your work, and then yon will have little chance of going wrong. It is because | Borders t * Vis fut i plans are matured thet they have to rub out and botch and bungle. Every touch should have a meaning and be put on with intention and precision. Go the readiest way to work for their 18 no merit in spending a month over a painting if it could be equally well done in three weeks. Tapestry painting is much more effective when painted laboured. The P Some amusement may be obtained among young people by writing, with common ink, a variety of questions, on different bits of paper, and adding » pertinent reply to each, written with nitro-muriate of gold. The collection should be suffered to dry, and put aside, until an opportunity offers for using them. When produced the ans- wers will be invisible. Desire different persons to select such questions as they may fancy and take them home with them: then promise that if they are placed near fire during the night, answers will ppeat written beneath the questions in the morning: and such will be the fact, if the paper put in any dry, warm situation. — Plain Talk, aper Oracle, AS. 3 In theses days when the use of cose metics has reached such an extreme nnt when a tace which is thoroughly ulifal in itself is rare, and powder snd rouge cover, or, seek to hide, pirciirnp pm ia Wg on Oly or be in order. With neither a know 1 » of, nor wish for these outward additions which render the face beanti- ful, she & cosmetic whieh should show a pure and beautiful soul. For the lips, truth; for the voice, Jravet; for the eves, ays for the nd chai i foe the , upright f will doubt thet she was in her. recommendation SUNDAY DECEMuEn 20, 145), QUARTERLY REVIEW. TITLES AND GOLDEN TEXTS. Gouren Texr vou Tue Quanren: As long as he sought the Lord, God made him to Prosper, «2 Chron, 26: 5. 1. THE TRIBES UNITED UNDER DAVID, Behold, how good and how plessant it ia for brethren to dwell together m unity! Psa, 138 : 1. 11, THE ARK BROUGHT TO ZION, The Lord loveth the gates of Zion Fea. 87 + 2. 1, DAVID'S THANKSGIVING PRAYER In every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus con- cerning you.~1 Thess. b : 18, IV, RIN, FORGIVENERS, AND PEACE. we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. — Rom. 5 - 1. V. DAVID'S REBELLIOUS SOX Honor thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the land “which the Lon thy God giveth thee. « Erod. 20 +12. VI. DAVID'S GRIEF FOR ABSALOM A foolish Lo] and bitterness Prov, 17 + 25. ather, 1. is a grief to his { to her that bare } VIL. DAVID'S LAST WORDS everlast- things “ with me an , ordered in all Nets, 93 + wt? He hath made ing and sure “yt art COVenani } viii OIOMONX 8 101% Wisdom 11 IX. Lord isin earth kee Pp 21). WikE C} Prov, is better than rubies THE TEMPLE DEDICATED The all the Hab. 2 his holy temple: let silence before him THE QUEREN 0} HERA s uttermost parts of wi of Solo- a greater than Solo- don Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth tak j fall 1 Cor. 10 : 12 Ail IE Then to David ing, Be and thy fl In was King over leddest out and brought and the Lord said to thee, Thou sl i feed Israc], 1 Israel (2 Seh lars ple axant 1 1s gether in unity (Pas. 13% leachers: Walk worthils ing wherewith Ing i Spirit an the aperintendent of Israel wpenk, i KAY 7 bone San esh my pe ple prince over HIgenc: Superintendent 2rd remaind in t) (iittite tl the house of Obed.-edom. and all that pertaineth unto him, because of the ark of God And David went and brought up the ark of God from the hots Obed-edlom into the city of David with joy (2 Sam. 6:11, 12 The Lord loveth the than all the of Scholars of Zion mors Jacob (Psa. 87 : 2 Teachers: Cry aloud and shout, thou inhabitant of Zion: for great is the iioly One of Israel in the midst of thee (1sa. 12 : 6). All: Blessed be the Lord out of Zion, Who dwelleth at Jerusalem. Praise ve the Lord (Psa. 135 : 21). Lesson 3. Superintendent: Andnow O Lord God, thou art God, and thy words are truth, and thou hast prom- ised this good thing unto thy servant: now therefore let it please thee to bless the house of thy servant, that it may continue for ever before thee: for thou, O Lord God, hast spoken it: and with thy blessing let the house of thy serv. ant be blessed for ever (2 Sam. 7 : 28 29). Scholars: In every thing give thanks: for this is the wili of God in Jesus concerning you (1 Thess. 5 : 18). Teachers: It is good to sing praises unto our God; For it is pleasant, and praise is comely (Psa. 147 : 1), All: Whale 1 live will I praise the Lord: 1 will sing praises unto my God while I have any being (Psa. 148 : 2), Lesson 4. Superintendent: Blessed grates whose sin is covered. Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity, And in whose spirit there is oo guile (Psa. 82 : 1, 2, Scholars: Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ ( Rom. b: 1) Teachers: Seek ye the Lord while Le may be found, eall ye upon him while he 13 near (Isa. 55 : 8), : 2 Ali: Thy face, Lord, will 1seck (Psa. a7 1 8) Lesson, --Buaperintendent: But Ab. salom sent t all the tribes of 1 #O0N as ye. hear the sound of the trumpet, then ye shall say, the Galenite, David's couusollor, hin city, even from Giloh, while he offered the sacrifices. And the conspir. rege mesos herd 10, 12). eas Houons the father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God givets: thee (Exod. 21:12), Teachers: Children, obey your pme- ents in the Lord: for this is right (Eph. 6:1). All: A wise son taketh a glad father (Prov. 10; 15. Lesson 6. —8nperintendent: And the Cushite answered, The enemies of my lord the king, and all that rise np agrinst thee to do thee hurt, be as that Young man is. And the king was much moved, and wont up to the chamber over the gate, and wept: and as he wont, thus he said, O my son Absalom. ms son, my son Absalom! would God 1 had died for thee, O Absalom, my BOD, my son! (2 Sam, 18: 32, 88), Scholars: A foolish son is a grief to his father, and bitterness to her that bare him (Prov, 17: 25). Teachers: My son, hear the instruct ion of thy father, and forsake not the law of thy mother (Prov. 1: 8). All: A wise son heareth his father's Le HET 2. Superintendent: The Bock One that raleth ig without clouds: When the clear shiningafter ra’n (2 8; yw y gh $10 He hath made with covenant, « { me an wdered in all Bn. 23: 5). Four ear, and coms | make an eve; You, even the ef of David (Isa. 55 a Let thy mercy, O Lord, be npor as we have h ped in th ure {y il =i Lesson R superintendent: Give therefore an understanding heart to judge thy people, that I n #Y discern between g ] il, for who is able to judge this thy great people? And the speech pleased the Lord, thst Sol had asked this thing (1 Kine 3:9 10; Scholars Prov. Teachers theref ood and ev amon Wisdom is B: 11). Wisdom re get better rubies the wisdom principal {Prov. 4 ULE: All: So teach That we may us 0 num ber our days, get us an hesrt of wisdos w tendent: heard of fame of Solomon eoncerning the na of the Lord, she came to prove him with hard questions. And she came toJeru with a (reat trad, with that bare spices. and very much and precious stones: and when sbi ome to Solome communed with hi was in her | And Solomon told her all her questions ther $ hid from the of (1 Kings 1 in 3 the salons Saatiil camel gold, WHE ¢ yery n he n, she m of all that we from the utter. earth to hear the won; and, behold, a greater s here (Matt. 12: 42 l'emchers: Christ Jesus was made un us wisdom {1 Cor. 1 Su) All: He that gloriet} in the Lord (1 Cor. 1 lesson 11.—Buperintendent came to pass, when Solomon was that his wives turned away his heart after other gods: and his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God, as was the heart of David his father (1 Kings 11: 4; Scholars WK from God I il Wheretore let him ti & ial fall (1 Cor. 10; 12). Teachers: Let us fear therefore, | ox rest, any one of you should seem to have come short of it (Heb. 4 1. All: How shall we escape, if ne neg: lesson 12. —Buperintendent: Now the And the time that Solomon reigned in Jerusalem over all Israel was forty years. And Solomon slept with his fathers, and was buried in the city of David his father: and Rehoboam his son reigned in his stead (1 Kings 11; 41-43. Scholars: Let ns hear the conclusion of the whole matter, Fear God, and whole duty of man (Eeel. 12: 13). Teachers: For God shall bring every work to judgment, with every hidden thing, whether it be good or whether it be evil (Eeol. 12: 14). All: We must all be made manifest be. fore the judgment-seat of Christ; that each one may receive the thi done in the body, according to what he hath done, whether it be good or bad (2 Cor. 5: 10% = - - Remarkable Numbers. Let the Jays all put their names on a slip of paper and’s famous number on the back of it. For example, num. ber twelve; there were twelve the slips of paper into a hat, sh up, and let each person draw one and tell the reason why the number upon it is remarkable. If there is doubt wheth- the reason, t and not unprofitable van- this game fs to restrict the of nam to years only This narrows the and ada to “1776” and a few obvious dates hs Rome » in the shape of & hold a In ation of ow aiter-dinner coffee cups are ih