The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 06, 1890, Image 2

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    HA
The Brooklyn Divine’s Sun-
day Sermon.
“Henry W. Grady, the Ed-
itor and Orator.”
Bubject 3
Texr: “Take thee a great voll, and wrils
nil wih a man's pe -isninh viii |
To Isaiah, with royal blood in his veins
and a habitant of palaces doas this divine
order come Ha is to take a roll, a large
roll, and write on it with a pen, not an an-
ol's pon, but a man's pea. y God honored
e pen and so He honored manuscript In
our day the mightiest roll is the religious and
the aditor’s pen, whether for good or evil
And God says now to every Rerary man
and sepecially to every journalist: ‘Take
thes a great roll, and write fnit witha man's
eT)
most vivid and most brilliant of those pens
was laid down on the editorial desk im Al.
lanta, never again to be resumed. I was far
away at the time. We had been sailing up
from the Mediterranean
ever saw for beauty,
go many picturesque things with islands
of our American St. Lawrence, but
like heaven
Patmos, the place from
id pis apocalyptic
stantinopls had seemed
reel for vour approach
ferent from « it
you approach thes i
city, with its glittering minarets
pinnacies, almost to step into the
water to greet you. But my landing there,
that would have been to mo an sxhilaration,
vas suddeniy stunned with the tidings of the
death of my intimate friend, Feary
Grady. I could hardly believe the tidings,
for I had left on my study table at home
letters and telegrams from bim, those
jatters and telegrams having a warmth
and geniality and a wit such as he
only could express. The departur {
no public man for many years has so affecte
me. For daysI walked about as in a dream,
and I resolved that, getting home, I would,
for tha sake of his bereaved househol
for the sake of his bereavad pro
for the sake of what he had been to me and
shall continues to be as long as memory lasts,
I would speak a word im appreciation of
him, the most promising of Americans, and
jearn some of the salient lessons of his de-
parture
I have no doubt that he had enemies, for
po man can live such sm active life as he
lived or be so far in advance of his time
withous waking enemies, somes because he
defeated their pro)
outshone them. (Jwls and bats never did
like the rising sun. Bat I shall tell you how
be appearad to me, and I am glad that I
told him while he was in full heaith what I
thought him, rial orati and
gravestons spitaphs are en Mean enCUZR,
for they say of a man after he is dead thar
which ought to have said ! him
living gariand
is worth more than
ain japonicas and cal
hsansd on a funeral casket, Byall
wolume of fifty pages containing
giums and poems uttered and written at the
temise of Clay and Webster and Calhoun
and Lincoln and Sumner, the world tried to
pay for the forty ysars of obloquy if teapal
upon those living giants. If I say nothing in
praise of a man while he lives I will keep =i
lent when he is dead. Myrtls and weeping
willow can what cught Ww Lave Deen
dons by amaranth and palm branca. No
amount of ‘Dead March in Saul” rumbling
from big organs at the obsequies can atone
for ndm-apprecistion of the man before he fell
on sleep Tne hearse cannot do what ought
to have been done by chariot. But thers are
important things that need to be said about
ur friend, who was a prophat in American
journalism and who ouly a few years ago
heard the command of my text: “Taka thes
a great roll, and write m 18 with a man's
pen
His father dead, Henry W. Grady, a boy
fourteen yearsof age, took up the battle of
life, It would require a long chapter to re
cord the nauses of orphans who have omimie
to the top. When God takes away the head
of the household He very often gives to soma
iad in that housshold a special qualification
Christ remembers how that His own father
lied early, lsaving Him to support Himself
and His mother and His brothers in
the carpenter's shop at Nazareth,
und o is in sympathy with
all bovs and all young men in the struggle
Yon say: “Oh, i my father bad only lived I
would have had a better education and I
would have had a more promising start, and
thers are some wrinkles on my brow that
would not have been thers” But I have no-
ticed that God makes a special way for ore
phans. You would not have been bail the
man you ars if you had not been obliged
from your early days to fight your ows bat
gles. What other boys got of Yale or
Harvard you gotin fhe University of Hard
Knocks. Go among successful merchants
lawyers, physicians and men of all occupa-
tions and professions, and thers are many of
them who will tell you '"Atten, or twelve, or
fifteen years of age I started for myself;
father was sick, or father was dead”
But somehow they ot through and
got un. I secount for it by the fact that
there is = special dispensation of God for
orphans. All hail, the fatheriesa and the
motherioss The Lord Almighty will see
you through. Early obstacles for Mr, Grady
were only the means for devalopment of his
intellect and heart. And lo! when at thirty-
nine yenrs of ou he put down his and
close] his line for the perpeizal of bie
had done a work which many a man who
lives on to sixty and seventy and eighty
years never mecomplishes, There js a great
deal of senseless praise of longevity, aa
though it were a wonderful achisvement to
livea good while. Ab, my friends, itis not
how long we live, but how well we live and
how usefully we live. A man who lives to
sighty years and accomplishes nothing for
God or humanity might better have never
lived as all. Methusalsh lived nine hundred
and sixty-nine years, and what did it
amount fo! In all those more than nine
centuries he did not sccomplish anythin
which sesrned worth record Paul liv
only a little more than sixty, but how many
Methusalehs would it take tosnake one Paul?
Who would not rather have Pegpl's sixty
years than Methusaleh's nine bundred and
siaty-nine?, Robert MoCheyne dled at thirty
years of age aad John at
twenty-seven years of age,
nor heaven will ever hear
usefulness. Longevity! Why, an elephant
can beat you at that, for it lives a hundred
and fifty and two hundred years. Seay
bairs are the blossoms of the tres of life
found in the way of righteousness, byt the
frosts of the second death if found the
last
of sin,
on and sent it 0 many
Can
John
Con~
to
which
vision
to come out
Other cities as
y retire, but this
gaamns
of
.
Mem ns
Déen
wii le
brow
One
le black
the euio-
never do
out
yr.
'
of our able New York
spring printed a quest
people and among others to m gi
the editor of a secular jou be a Chris
tal? Bome of the nawspa
No. Jamswered: Yes, an
not understand rv Taay: Y
is samwarel}
ou ma
. a Sum
mer before last, riding with Mr. Grady from
! his departure withont any of the particu-
jurs, 1 concluded that he was ready to go.
warrant there was no fright in the last exi-
gence, but that he found what ie com-
monly called “the lust enemy” & good
fri and from his home on sarth he
went to a home in heaven, Yes, Mr,
Grady not only demonstrated that an editor
may be a Christian, but that a very great in-
tellect may be gospelized. His mental capa.
city was so wonderful it was almost start.
ling. I have been with him in active comver.
sation while at the same time he was dicta
ting Ww » stenographar his editorials for the
Atlante Constitution. But that intellect was
not ashamed to bow to Christ. Among his
last dying utterances Was a request for the
prayers of the churches iz his behalf.
There was that particular quality in him
that you do not find in more than one person
out of hundreds of thousands—namely, per
suomi tag aetisas, People have tried to de-
fine that quality, snd always failed, yet we
have all felt its power. There are some per-
sons who have only to enter a room or step
upon a platform or into a pulpit and you are
thrilled by their presence, and when they
k your nature responds and you cannot
help it. What is the peculiar influence with
which such a magnetic person takes hold of
social groups and audiences? Without at-
tempting to define this, which is inde.
finable, i will say it seems to correspond te
the waves of air set in motion by the voice or
the movements of the body. Just like that
ual vibration which rolls out frem the
soul of what we call a magnetic person,
As there may be a cord or rope binding bod-
jes together, there may be an invisible cord
binding souls, A magnetic man throws it
over others as a hunter throws a lasso. Mr.
Grady was surcharged with this influence,
Christianity and elevated purposes
Yon may not know why, in the conversa-
tion which I had with Mr. Gladstone a few
weeks ago, he uttered theso memorable
Christianity, some of which
were cabled to America, He was spsaking
in reply to this remark: I said, “Mr. Glad-
stone, we are told in America by some people
minded men and children in the infant class,
is not fit for stronger minded men
vou, of such largs in-
as being a pronounced friend
wo silence thelr Then
ida
wail
batteries
sladstons stopped
we exercising and
‘The alder I grow, the more ¢ nfirmed I am
“Sir.” sald he, with
on the hills
wars
That can
Do you have
Having told him we had, he went on
say: “I am profoundly thankful that
blasted by it. [am glad tosay that about all
men at ths Britain are
said, *'I have
top in Great
tion fift
rs in the i
VOATS,
wi of the
wring those forty
associated
# TT
af the century.
in pub i pos
it, and J
heen with
minds
he sixty wore Christians
ir leadin i
yr
ant
pon
added
My
ables {i
religion
n, Hanry W
af
the hi juaiitieon
They are all
friends, I think
the greatest
ingland is true of
2 all Christendon. The men
friends of God and believers
ies of religion, the
awyesrs, the most eminent
the most eminent of the
Americ
at the tog
in the sano.
eminent of the
of the dock
merchants, and
most
re.
some of
in editorial chairs
correspond with your
I am sorry that you
into bad company. In sn.
| swer question put last spring,
“Can a secular journalist be a Chiris
| tim?’ I pot only answer in the affirmative,
but [ assert that so great are the responsit il.
ities of that infinite and
| sternal the their obedisnce
or disobedience words of my text,
| “Take thee a great roll, and writs in it with
| a man's pen,” and so many are the surround.
| ing temptat that the menof n
| profession more desply nead the defenses and
| the re-enforosments of the grace of God
And then look at the opportunities of jour-
| malisn. I praise the pulps and magnify my
Mice but [ state a fact which you all know
| when [ say that where the pulpit touches one
| person the press touches five Run ired. The
| vast majority of people do not go 0 church,
| but all intelligent people read the newspa
W hile, thersfors, the responsibility
| the ministers is great, the responsibility of
| editors and reportersis greater. Come, broth.
| or journalists, and get your ordidation, not
| by the laying on of human hands but by the
| laying on of the hands of the Almighty. Toyou
is committed the precious reputation of men
| and the more pracious reputation of women.
| Spread before our children aa elevated lit-
| erature, Make sin appear disgusting and
| virtues admirable, Selieve good rather
than evil. While show wu the
hypocrisies of
pendous hypocrisies outside the charch.
not, as some of you are, the mere echoes of
public opinion; make public opinion.
the great roll on which you write with a
man's pen bea message of light and Hberty
and kindness and an awagening of moral
power, But who x sufficient for these things?
Not one of you without divine help. But get
that influence and the editors and reporters
can go up and take this world for God and
the truth. The mightest opportunity in all
the world for usefulness to-day is open bee
fore editors and reporters and publishers,
whether of knowledge on foot, asin the book,
or knowlsdge on the wing, as in the news
paper, 1 pray God, men of the newspaper
press, whether you hear or read this sermon,
that you may rise up to your full opportunity
and that you may be divinely helped and res-
cusd and blessed,
Some one might say to me: "How can you
talk thus of the newspaper press, when you
yourself have sometimes been unfairly treated
and misrepresented? I answer that in the
opportunity the newspaper press of this
country and other countries have given me
those who
{oes not
sit
fallen
to the
profsssion, =o
nsaquences of
i the
a other
| pers of
yi 24
nations, 1 am put under so much obligation
that I defy
world over to write anything that shail call
forth from me one word of bitter retort from
now till the day of my death, My opinion ie,
that all reformers religions teachers, In-
Sieaitot gpetid 0 wind tithe and energy
in denouneci better d
mors time 3 Thanking Shem for what they
have dong for the wer d's intelligence and de
aaring their magnificent appartoalt and
urging their employment of it all for: benef
ostt and righteous purposes.
ho. 1 remark that Henry W. Grady
for Christian patriotism irrespective of
tical Spoils, » declined all official re-
Polit a could have
Georgia, but refused it.
Senator of the United States, but declimed it.
He remained plain Mr. Grady. Nearly all
the other orators of the political arena, ay
soon as the elections are over, go to Wash.
mgton, or Albany, or Harrisburg er At.
ante. to get in Quy or tate af National
office reward for sorvices, and not get-
ung what they want the rest of the
ume of that administration in ting alout
or coursing
the great
of living
as onta ne
man for the last ten years was Henry w.
Grady.
Again, Mr, Grady stood for the new south
and was just what we want to meet three
other men, one to speak for the new north,
another for the new east and another for the
now west. The bravest speech made for the
last quarter of & century was that made by
Mr. Grady at the New England dinner in
New York about two or three years ago. 1
sat with him that evening and know some.
thing of his anxieties, for he was Lo tread on
dangerous ground and might by one mis.
spoken word have antagonized forever both
sections, His speech was a victory that
thrilled all ¢f us who heard him and all wk
read him. That speech, great for wisdom,
great for kindness, great for pacification,
great for bravery, will go down to the gene-
rations with Webster's spesch at Bunker
Hill, William Wirt's speech at the arraign-
ment of Aaron Burr, Edmund Burke's
spoech on Warren Hastings, Robert Emmet's
speech for his own vindication
Who will in conspicuous action represent
the new north as he did the new south? Who
shall come forth for the new east and who
for the new west? Let old political issues be
Fotied, let old grudges die. Let new theories
ve launched. ith the coming in of a new
nation at the gates of Castle Garden every
year, and the wheat bin and corn erib of our
Jand enlarged with every harvest, and a vast
multitude of our population still plunged in
illiteracy to be educated, and moral ques
tions abroad involving the very existence of
our Republic, let the old political platforms
that are worm-caten be dropped and plat
forms that shall be made of two planks, the
one the Ten Commandmentsand ot her the
Sermon on the Mount, lifted for all of us to
stand on, But thers is a lot of old politi
clans grumbling all around the sky who don’t
want a new south, a new north, a new east or
They have somes old war
that in
They growl
and further and the
to the front. But
from
& Dew American nas
tion shall take the a of the old, and
{ (od and
bapti for
and psace and morality
further
fenry W, Gradys come
of God that
naw has been
and justice
And now our much
Suddenly
laid down and the «
i What? Ist
guard against fatal diseass? Ti ¥
it health was Mr, Grady,
¢ ques] What raid
ent
magne
of power
CRING, } Inn
ox When God
done with your pen
wealilh or you »
tisfactory
ng all these
and stings an
iT poisonous
a wit
weanks | soe
to be better thar
: * * ™N v Tn # Hh Tes »
lay of our arraignment before the Judge
wk and dead that will be the most beauti-
win, whether gold or
wrote a profane
or which from
the «
stan] or quill, whi
ASAIN OF
WR ORS
OT
crus
{ day it vd
oped from it
gement and help and
God and benediction [or man
rt uthern
intry and
geet
kas
ala
and the victims of
wousand | Ba
war of §
the
ts point
May God ¢ that torn up 8
all
world
paz mm»
eh
a
which are
who
Air." |
5 ir re
meni
air of
ten
Constantino
usand pecple die
ne
Lair
destroy h of
ities and wider understanding «
jaws and the greater skill of physicians these
Avolivonic assaults upon the human race are
wetilential abmosg
shere is
still abroad. Hardiy a family bere but bas
itz lighter or heavier touch me of
best of my flock fall i
and man homes here
have been crushed The
in the universe
f there be no heaven beyond
ths
QO tearful eres
morn! That reunion kiss will more than
ranks up for the parting kis, and the wel.
come will obliterate ths good-bye. “The
Lamb which is in the midst of
shall lead them to living fountains of
and God shall wipes away all tears
their eyes” Till then, O departed
loved comes, promise us that you will
remem ber Us, As We pr nis to remem ber
you. And some of you gone up from this
city by the sea and others from under
southern skies, and others from the homes of
the more rigorous north and some from the
cabins on the great western farms, we shall
mest again w
word and our arm hss done its Inet day's
work and our lips have spoken the last adiea
wales
ira
of editor and orator! under brighter skies
we shall meet again. From God thou camest,
and to God thou hast returned. Not broken
down, but ascended. Not collapsed, but irra-
diated. Enthroned one! Coronsted one!
Sceptered ome! Emparadised one!
and farewaeil!
Fs -—— =
Iris only the good in a good man
an example. Yet how
working example simply because he is,
in onrrent Erase, “a good man!”
Somehow, the good in him seems to ex-
couse, or toatone for, or to justify, the
bad in him, especially if his wrong or
doubtful doing is in the line of the
doubtful doing that we should like to
justify for our own indulgence. But
the moment laxity or defection enters
consciously into our standard, that mo-
ment does our ideal fall from duty to
indulgence, from service to personal
tifleation, from Christ to self, from
jod to man, Is that a Christian's
ideal?
Larrue annoyances annoy the little
least. In proportion as a man’s work
is of an elevated or refined nature,
whether physical or mental, ~will so.
called petty sunoyances lose to him
their pettiness, and become serious
interferences. A cloud of midges will
not interfere with the nighitiiveg of a
plowman’s furrow, but a single midge
may prove a serions obitruction to an
artist's progress in ring the plow-
man's landscape. hat we ght to
do, or refrain from doing in the pres
ence of another, depends not so much
on our estimate of the intrinme import.
ance of the doing as upon the occupa
tion and temperament of him who is to
be affected by it
A MAN is never so much & master of
himself as when he has given himself
THE HOME TABLE.
New Devices in Decorations.
Spanish pottery is taking the place
of the Japanese china fad which went
ont with the Mikado. It is sold exclu-
sively by a fow New York dealers. The
coloring is good and the shapes of
various articles unique 1m the extreme.
The blue and white ware is found in
huge cups and saucers—very
bread and milk, water bottles,
and vases, Terra Cotta colored
are finding their way to the fashionable
breakfast tables in the form of setalfor
oatmeal and other cereals. Charming
basins and covers of an aesthetic green
yellow bowls, jugs, water coolers, deco-
rated in quaint designs are very effec-
tive, and some of the hanging bottles
which come in flat shapes—ornamented
with hllies in arabesques prove
susceptibilities of this new fancy
a new style for the Home
Table,
In flower decorations,
and lillies of the valley and other spr
3 ing
place of berry
1-eorations, thoug!
Pink orchids
and
anquet conceit 1s
In the centre
f
Ol
I'he lntest b
weed dinner
arrangement
of
11
Blin, witl
shading of pink in whicl
arri d, i
side
in ecards
8 Were
» better time,
loor, afi
is free as
twenty-f
(va As sho phe ROH
wt, healthy pila
i nonths the
all the m
IeTe
y evening that
a box k the paps rs
is the baby, who 1¢
intervals all through
rning
mending to d
ahe
is
aver
quires
teachers are enjoying quiet
Then there are the badly coc
and one worries that vex a woman's
On the Sabbath we still have to
dine and dress, and the patient
mother stands at her post
er, assistant.
Perhaps in the evening, if some sym-
and
traduced mother-in-law happens in and
soul.
house
Not often
vice. But does she go?
she is “too tired.” If she
finds herself nodding through the ser-
So-and-So has,
This is a picture of thousands of wo-
How much it would cheer
society as truly as the class who have
three-fourths of their time to be idle,
and yet get so much sympathy from
the opposite sex.
True, school teachers belong to no-
body in particular; but I think the
overworked and underpaid mothers
would be glad to sink into obsourity, if
théy could have freedom from anxions
thought and care for just two months of
the year. Of course 1 have touched
upon a very few of the house mother’s
d scomforta. say notifng of the disap.
pointments in her sons, the disobed.
tence of the danghters, selfishness and
neglect of husbands, the starved con-
dition of her mind, the nerves and
brain irritable for want of recreation.
School teachers ought to be happy and
content, Their money belongs to
thom. Does not the wife and mether
earn her living? Does she get it?
Sometimes,
A
Little Three-year-old u{whe has put
her hand out of the window while it
was snowing) Oh, maming, mamma,
1 ketehod a snow!
if, darling?
ing at her
AWAY.
SUNDAY, MARCH 8 139),
The Great Physician.
LESSON TEXT.
33-44,
{Luke 4 Memory verses, 558-99.)
LESSON PLAN.
Toric oF THE (QUARTER :
Saviour of Men.
Govprs Texr vor tHE QUARTER:
| Glory to God in the highest, and on
Jesus Lhe
| earth peace, good will toward men. —
Luke 2 : 14.
L.essox Tovie : Healing the SNitek.
¢ 1. Healing a Demoniac, v8.
| 53
| 2 Healing a Friend, vs.
SLI N
1.y OUTLINE
1 4 »! a
| 2 Healing a Multitude, vs
i 4044
He
GoLpen Text: cast out the
that were giclk. Matt. 8 : 16,
READINGS ©
§ : 33-44.
Darny Houe
M. Luke
sek,
Mark 1 ; 21-89.
lel narrative.
Ww Isn, D3
BOTITOWSE
Matt, 8 : b-
ork
Healin
Mark's
LESSON ANALY
DEMONIA
Nis
HEALING A
11. HEALING A
Praver forthe Siok:
I $34 5
Only say the wi rd, and my servant sl all
be healed (Matt. 8: 5).
:
Straightway they tell him «
for her 138,
besought him
f her (Mark
y that he :.
4:47
3
1
1 shall
woul
gave him that
11. Commandment from the Lord
He
Be thou made clean
As thou hast
unto thee (Matt. B
Even the winds and the
Matt, a 27 .
Arise, take up thy bed, and walk (J«
r {30
: 35
rebuked the feve
Matt
i
Su 1
befievedd, 80 be it d
1%
i
son obey
¥ ~
111. Healing from Disease:
She rose up and miuistered unto
them (39
Straightway his leprosy
(Matt. 8:3
The servant was healed
(Matt. 8: 13).
The fever left her, and she ministe red
unto them (Mark 1: 31
Straightway the man was
(John 5: 9
1. “He rose up from the synagogue,
snd entered into the house of
Simon.” (1) Jesus in the syna-
gogue; (2) Jesus in the home
“They besought him for her.” (1)
The afflicted woman; (2) The great
Physician; (3) The importunate in-
tercessors, —{ 1) Sickness; (2) Pray-
er; (3) Healing.
“Jt left her she rose up and
ministered.” (1) Healing; (2) Help-
fulness. —{1) Sickness gone;
Activity resumed; (3) Ministry ren-
dered.
was cleansed
in that hour
made whole
14)
fil. MEALING A MULTITUDE,
: I. Multitudes Brought:
The Spirit and the bride
Rev. 22: 17).
1. “They that had sny =»
brought them unto him.” (1)
fering humanity; (2) Wise helpful.
pess; (3) Bure relief.
He laid his hands on every one of
them, and healed them.” (1)
Brought; 195 Touched: (3) Healed.
(1) The Lord's helping hands; (2)
The sinmer's perfoct healing
Therefore was IT sent.” (1) The
design of Christ's coming; (2) The
fidelity of Christ's toil,
eK
fe i
1) Buf-
LESSON BIBLE BEADING,
DEMORIACAL POSSESSIONS,
Common in Christ's day (Matt, 4
kK: 16).
24;
28 : Luke B : 27-29),
Demoniacs were brought
(Mark 1 : 32).
Many demons were cast out {Luke 4 ;
41 ; 18 : 32).
Some plead with Jesus (Matt. 8 : 31
Mark bh 123.
Seven devils cast out of Mary Magdalen
(Luke 8 : 2).
to Jesus
'
{
tontof a man (Luke 8:
Te
Hi
brethren
Andrews ma
iT pr Re
ner ana
Pr.
were
ikd position
pon he sh
the great int
h opportum
ling and mterconurse
low-men as Lhe more
Nazareth, among the h
offer h From
readily visit all parts of Gal
} had ready ac-
1 he east, and to
Jordan valley both north
He could easily make cir-
» Galilee on the west, Trach-
} orth, and Decapolis and
east and south. The
it a little way from Beth-
f Philip,
1448,
3 ry . 4 ’
r him. this center Le C
. en and }
06, Ana
sen he als
f 4%
means «
and wes it~
of Simon and Andrew
ApH r has long |
of lispute The (Gospels de-
OTE
s of ( naum ween
clare that it was on the Sea of Galilee;
but the is as to the exact
place, as has previously been stated.
Neither the evangelists nor Josephus
finite enough to make the de-
the particular spot an
easy task. Modern students of facts
who have examined carefully the pre
along the differ in
their conclusions.
[he last verse refers to a circuit in
Galilee, though very many ancient an-
thorities read *“Judea” (Rev. Ver,
margin). This reading 1s the only hint
given of an early ministry in Judea by
any of the three synoptists (Matthew,
Mark, and Luke).
Five Immediately after the re-
moval to Capernaum. If the Galilean
ministry began before the second pass-
over. this occurrence took place a few
weeks. at most, before that feast, —
probably in March, 781 (A. D. 28).
Andrews places it about six weeks later,
in April The length of time cover-
ed by the lesson is not stated. The
withdrawal occurred the day after the
Sabbath.
Parsons, —Our Lord and & demoniac
with the assembly, in the synagogue;
the mother-in-law of Simon, with the
four fishermen disciples (Mark); the
multitudes of Capernaum, with their
mock: the multitudes that sought him
when he withdrew, Peter being the
spokesman (Mark).
[xcipusTs. ~The healing of the de-
monise in the synagogue; the wonder
of the people; the healing of Simon's
iscussion
are de
Wrmining
be
b
able sites seashore,
evening; the withdrawal, and the search
for Jesus: his answer; the ¢firet) circuit
Pararrun Passaons. — Matthew 4: 23,
| them (40).
{ They brought unto
sick (Matt. 4: 24).
1'hey brought unto him many possess
od with devils (Matt. 8: 16).
Having with them the lame, blind,
dumb, maimed (Matt, 15: 30).
Great multitudes came. . . . to be healed
{Linke 5: 16).
11. Multitudes Healed:
He laid his hands on every one of
them, and healed them (40).
Healing a'l manner of disease and, ...
of sickness (Matt. 4: 23).
healed all that were sick (Matt.
8: 16).
They cast them down at his feet; and
he healed them (Matt. 15: 30),
By aOR stripes ye were healed (1 Pet.
2: M4).
111. Multitudes Welcomed:
1 must preach the good tidings. . .. to
the other cities (43).
Ho, every one that tharsteth, come
(isa. 551).
Cote ute me, all ye that labour {Matt
3 28).
I man thirst, let him come (John
him all that were
Tur experiences of many observing
persons have satisfied them that the
chief sources of family friction are, on
the part of the husband, a domiseering
disposition; on the t of the wife,
frivolity; and of both together, selfish-
ness or want of eonmderation. All are
the faults of undeveloped natures and
not of marriage, though close associa
tion may intensify them. Sometimes
these faults are reversed-—it is the hus-
band who lacks Qepith and character
and the wife who with a rod of
iron.
Brrxo tired of fife is always a selfish
fooling; for no man is tired of Living on
the ground that there is to be
done by him for others. He who lives
wholly for himself may, indeed, foe
that he oan no longer please himself
but he who lives for others is sure to
see 80 much yet to be dono in the line
of his life-work, that Lie is not ready to
stop living by his own choijon.
tried
her hey 7
others as others to please
LA