REY. DR. TALMAGLE. CHE BROOKLYN DIVINIYS SUN DAY SKIRMON, fahjeot: “The Wonders of Athens? Texr: ‘While Paul waited for them ai dthens his spirit was stirred in him, when ie saw the city wholly given to idolatry.” — hots xvil,, 16. It seemed as if morning would never come, Fehad arrived after dark in Athens, Greeos, pe the night was sleepless with expecta. , and my watch slowly announced to me me apd two and three and four o'clock: and tt the first ray of dawn I called our party to pok out of the window upon that ity to vhich Paul said he was a debtor, and to rhich the whole earth is debtor for Greel frohitecturs, Greek sculpture, Greok try, sloquence, Greek prowess and Greek \istory. That morning in Athens we sauntered préh armed with most generous and lovely tters from the President of the Upnirad tates and his Secretary of State, and dur- all our stay in that city those letters mused every door and every gate and every emple and every palace to swing open be. pre us. Tho mightiest geographical name I earth to-day is America, The signature if an American President and Secretary of fate will take a man where an army could jot, Those pames brought us into the essence of a most gracious and beautiful veraign, the Queen of Greece, and her prdiality was more like that of a sister than ® occupant of a throne room. No formal w as when monarchs are approached, but 4 cordial shake of the hand, and earnest juestions about our personal welfare md our beloved country far away, But this morning we pass through wheres the Agora, the ancient market place, locality where philosopl ers used to mesg ir disciples, walking while they talked, md where Paul, the Christian logician, oz many a proud stole apd got the laugh many an impertinent Epicurean. The rket place was the center of social and plitical life, and it was the place where ple went to tell and hear the news Bn ani bazaars were set up for merchan- Hise of all kinds except meat, but everything ust be sold for cash, and there must be no ing about the values of commodities, and 8 Agoranomi who ruled the place couid flict ssvers punishment upon offenders, e different s hools of thinkers had dis ct places set apart for convocation. ‘The iatceans must meet at toe cheese market, B Decealians ab the barber shop, the sellers perfumes at the frankincense head. parters, The market place was a space threes hun. pred and fifty yards lonz and $wo hundred id fifty yaris wide, and it was given up to p and merchandise, and lounging and ilosophizing. All ths you peel to know pa order to understand thes Bible when it ays of Paul, “Theres/ore disputed he in ihe parket daily with tbemx toat me: him.” fou see it was the best place to get an au. fence, and il a man feels himself called to each he wants people to preach to, Bug ‘ore we make our chief visits of to-day wo pust take a tara at the Stadium. itis a tide way out but go we must. The Sta. Bum waf the place where the (oof races oc- mrred. Paul had been out there no doubt, for he Frequently uses the scenes of that place as igures when he tells us, “Let us run the race bat is set before us” and again, “They do } to obtain a corruptible garland, but we an heorruptible.® The marble and the gilding ave been removed, but the high mounds ainst which the seats were plied are still re. The Stadium is six hundred and ity feet long, one hundred and thirty feet de, and Leld forly thousand spectators. there is today the very tunnel through Yhich the defeated racer departed from the ltadium and from the hisses of the people, nd there are the stairs ap which the victor pent to the top ol the hill to be crowned with be laurel In this place coutests with wild beasts stimes took place and while Hadrian, the peror, sat on youder height one thousand were sinin in one cslebration, But ity ras chiefly for fool racing and so I proposed p my friend that day while we wera in the tadiuom that we try which of as could ran sooner from end to end of this historical! ound, and at the word given by the pokers on we started side by side, but before ; ut what Paul meant got through I found ¢ fhen be compares the spiritual race with ths “lar ~tadium. as wad Wr ace in this very be sa5e side every weight” i heavy oF md my Ir i's n ance showed | iface O YI We come 1 PCs n 2 e base an! a th poe at the top and it has been frehitecturs and n su GTi kind of Tof Its a reumlerence at feet in circum ler. iree ban zh crowded more elaborate sculpture than In any Sher place under whola heavens, | Friginally a fortress, afterward a congre- mtion of temples and statues and pillars ir ruins an enchantment from which no! sbserver reaks away. No wonder! bat Aristides tix it the centre of all biogs—Greece, ine eantre of the world. irad fest h oF er is the cen- 5» of Athens. Earthquakes have shaken it erres plundered it Lord Elgin, the English Embassador at Ponstantioupie, got permission of the Hul- Bn to remove from the Acropolis fallen of the building. but he took from the ilding to England the finest statues, re poving them at an expense of sight hundred bousand doliars. A storm overthrew many the statues of the Acropolis. Morosind, General, atienptod to remove from a diment the scuiptared car and horses of ictory, but the clumsy machinery dropped and all was Lost The Turks turned the pullding into a wder magazine where the Venetian guns opr a fire that by $aplaion sent the winmns Aylog in the afr and falling cracked sod splintered, But after all thas time and, form and war and iconociasm have effected, fhe Acropolis is the monarch of all ruine, ind befors it bow the learning, the genius, the poetry, the art, the history of the ages. { gmw it ae it war thousands of years ago. | wd read so much about it and dreamed =o suck about it that {| nesded no magicians wand to restore it At one wave of my hand on that clear norping in 15859 it rose before me in the glory motre of Attica, and the A panned it and Phidias chiseled it and Pro. ogines painted is and Fausanias described &, Ita gates, which were carefully guarded by the ancients, open to led you la sad you woend by sixty marbles steps the provyies, which Epaminoodas wanted to transfer to Thebes, hut permission, 1 am glad to say, wald uot be granted for the removal of this wehiteotural miracle. In the days when a cents would do more than a dollar now be building cost two million g' bree handred bousand dollars, Sea its five ornamental ates, the keys intrusted to an offi po for omly one day, lest the temp ation to go in and selsapp te the reasures be too groat for him; its ceiling a ningling of biue and scarlet and green, and De Ay lor og onder is temple hought eolorin » bp a goddess ier “Victory Without Vv " Bo many of the triumphs of the bad been followsd by deleat that the Soamry for Athens bad coma, Aver Again $0 or ann come, never a away, and hence this temple to “ietory ithout Wings =n temple Bol marie, mi ps, twenty-seven fest high ngures or norses and men and women and pode, oxen on tae way to sacriflos, statues of | the deities Lhonysius, Prometheus, Hermes | Demeter, Z-us, Hera, Poseidon; in one (riess tvielve divinities; crataurs in battie; wea ponary from Marathon; chariot of night; eoariot of the morning; horses of the sun, the ines tne fur.es, status of Jupiter holds ine in his right hand tha thender volt; sliver footed chair in which Xerzes watched the bait a of Salamis only a few miles away, i Here is the colossal statute of Minerva in full armor, eves of gray colored stone, figure of a Sphinx on her head, griffins by her side (which are lions with eagle's beak), spear in one hand, statue of liberty in the other, a | shield carved wita the battle scenes, and | even the slippers sculptured and tied on with | thongs of Xi Far out at sea the sailors saw this statue of Minerva rising high above | all the temples, glitt ring in the sun. Here | are statutes of equesirians, statue of a lion- | ness, and there are the Liracea, and yonder a | horse in bronze, | There is a statue sald in the time ot | Augustus to have of its own accord turned wound from east to west and spit blood; statues made out of shields conquered in | battle; status of Apollo, the expsiler of | locusts; statue of Aaacreon, drunk and | loging; statue of Olympodorus, a Greek, | memorable for the fact that he was cheerful | when others were cast down, a trait worthy i of sou. pture. But walk on and around the Acropoifs and yonler you see a status of i i { i Hygeia, and the statue of the Theseus tight. ng the Minotaur and ths statue of Hercules laying serpents. No wonder that Petronius aid it wus easier to find a gol than a man in Athens, On, the Acropolis! Ths most ol ts temples and statues made from ths mar. dle quarries of Mount Peatelioum, a little way {rom the oily. 1 bave hers on my tabls a block of the Parthenon made out of this marble, ani on 6 is the sculptures of Paidias, I brought is rom the Acropolis, This specimen bas on | & the dust of ages and the marks of explo- | ton and battie, but you can get from it iyme daa of the dalicate luster of the Acro- polis when it was covered with a mountain { of this marble cut into all the exquisite shapes that genius could eontrive and nriped with sliver and aflams with gold, {be Acropolis in the morning light of thow incients must have shone as though it wers wn aerolite cast olf fron the nooudey sun. [he temples must have looked like petrified ‘loam, ‘The whole Acropolis must have { earned like the waite breagers of the great | won of time, Bat we cannot stop longer here, for thers 8a hill near oy of more interest, though i ma pot one cnipol marble tO suggest a tutus or & templs, We hasten down the Acropolis 10 a-cead tae Arsopagus, or Mars His, as 18 is calis’, It took only about three pioutes to waik the destance, and tas two uiltops are #80 near that what [ said in re ieious discourse on Mars Hill was beard dis unoly by so ue Eaziish gentlemen on ths Acropolis, This Mars Hill » a rough piie of 00s fity feet hizh, It was famous long bee or. New Testainent times, ‘The Persmos easi.y and terribly assaultel the Acropods from ths hilltop, Here as wnbiad tas cours to try criminals, It was weld in toe night Sunes» that the inom of the iniges could nod be seen, nor the faces of tn awyers wao made the plea, and so, ins a of the trial being ous of emol on, 18 wuss rave been one of cool justioa, Bus tacre was ue occasion on this alli memorable above ul others. A little man, physically weak, and his thetorio descrioed by himself as contem obi. de, had by his sermoos rucked Athens with ommotion, and he was summoned eitasr by writ of law or hearty invitation to come ipon that pu.pit of rock and give a speo. ren of bis theo ogy. All the wiseaores of Athens turned out and turned up to bear tim, The more venerable of them sas in an umphitheater, the granite seats of which we still Msible, but the other people warmed & all sides of the Lill and at the saso of jt to hear this man, whom some | milled a fanatic, and others called a mad- mp, and others a bilasphemer, and others tyled contemptuously ‘this fellow.” Paul arrived in answer to the writ or in- ritation, and con roated them and gave them the biggest dose that mortals ever took. He was so built that nothing could scare yim, and as for Jupiter and Athenis, the rod and the goddess, whose Images wore in ‘ull sight on the adjoining hill, he had not so nuch regard for them as he had for the ant that was crawiing in the sand under his wot. In that audience wers the firs orators of the world, and they bad voices like Gates when thoy were passiva, and like trumpets when they were arouse] and { think they sect in She sleeves of their gowas as tha man ros £0 speak, inn ware i x guificoant In that an Hoeholladts, who (ow aver ins, or thought they did, and rom th reus hair on the top sf their cranium so the sal of the nail on he longest tog, Shay were with ryperoritician, and they leansd back with a mpere Asx in 1880 | itood on that rock where Paul stool, and a tab of which 1 brought from Athens by sonsent of the queen, through Mr. Tricoupia, ihe prime minister, and bal plod in yon iar Memorial Wall, I read the whole story, Bible in band. What I have so far said in this discourse | was necesseary in order that you may un- { Jerstand the boldness, the deflance, the boly | recklessness, the magnificence of Paul's | speach. The first thunderbolt he launched waite hill-the Acropolis—that agiitter with idols and temples “God who made the world.” sai ol ths On sdufad ious |} to listen. {at the | moment a ! He cries out. { Why, they thought that Prometheus made it, | that Mercury made it, that Apolio made it, | that Poseidon made it, that s made it, {that Pandrocus made it that Boreas made it, that it took all the gods of { the Parthenon, yea, all the gods and god. | dowmox of the Acropolis to make it, and | here stands a man without any scclesiastionl | title, neither a DU. D., nor even a reverend, | declarin that the world was made by the | Lord of heaven and earth, and hence in- | {erence thas all the splendid covering of the | Acropolis, 50 near that the people standing | on the steps of the Parthenon could hear it, | was a deceit, a falsehood, a sham, a blasphe- { my. Look atthe faces of his auditors; they are turning snd then red and then wrathlal. had been several earth. | quakes in that region, but that was the se | verest shock theses men had ever fait. Toe Persians had bombarded the Acro > terrific. “What” sald his bearers, ‘have | we been hauling with many yok of oxsa for | centuries thess blocks from the quarries of | Mount Peptelicum, and have we had our | arobitects putting up these structures of un- | paralleled splendor, and have we had the | greatest of all scuiptors, Phidias, with his | mén chissling away at those wondrous pedi. | ments and cutting away at these friezs and | have wo taxed the nation's resources to the utmost, now Lo be told that those statues see | nothing, bear nothing, know nothing? Oh, Paul, stop for a moment and give | these st and overwhelmed suditors | time to catoh their breath! Make a rhetorical ; pause! Take a look around you at the inter wting landscape, and give your hearers time to recover! No, he not makes even s d, or so much as a colon or semicolgn, t launches the seeond shanderbolt right and in ths same breath goes “dwalleth not in temples Oa, Paul! ls not deity | more in the Parthenon, or more in the The INA Urano ani Sophooles and EuripiQes ani Eschyius an | Pericles aad Phitias and Mil inden bool just like the Persians like tie Lurks, like the Eovptiang like tne eommiog herd of humanity? “Yes” says Paul, “o pne blood all nations.” Surely that must be the closing para-rany pf the sermon, Hiwesw {tors wuss let uo from the nervous straill, Paul has smashed the Acropolis and smashed the national prids pf the Greets and what rore ean he sav! Those Grecian orators, standing on toat ace, always closed their addresses with omething sublime and climacterio—a peror tion—and Paul is going to give them a peroration which will eclipse in power and majesty all that he has yet said, Hereto. fore he has huried one thunderbolt at a time; now he will close by hurling two once. The little old man, under the bis speech, has straightened his shoulders, and looks about three feet taller than when he began: and his eves, which were quiet. became two in the introduction, wind of emotion ashe ties the two thunder. bolts together with a cord of incousumsldy sourage and hurls them at the crowd now derbolts of Resurrection and Last Judge mont. His closing words were, “Because He bath appointed a day in the wach He will judze the world in righteonsusss by thas man whom He hath ordainsd, hath given assurances unto all men in He bath raised him from the dead, Remember those thoughts wers to them soval and provooutive: tnat Christ. the de ipised Nazarena, would come to be their judge, and they shoud have to get up out of their cometeries to stand before Him and ake their sternal doom, Migatiest burst of viocutionary power ever heard, Tae ance lors of soms of those Greeks bad heard Demosthenes in bis oration on the crow, that jor immortaidty =f heard Socrates on bis death. in hand, leave great too bear; Dionysins, at the {the ruins and the meen macted toe tragedios of Hachyius and Sopao- ties, but neither hal the ancestors of thew he soul, had tin hearers in smotion too theater of of the Acropolis its piled up amphbitoenter loot 4 At those two thoughts of re 1 their [eel Some moved they adjoura to oa tas same heme, but ostiers would have torn the sacred As in Athens, that evening in 1850, we down the pile of slippery rocks, hall way betwesn the in the gataering watows of eventide, I see ned 10 hear those ng vm chiefly of the past” said toe Acropolis the iuture:” replies Mars Tho Acropolis sai; “My orators are My poris My architecss are deal, My am a roonunens of I shall never again hear a I will never again see 8 co.umn fitted, 1 will never azain vebhold a goides wowned.™ Mars Hill responded: *“L too, have a his ory. I had on my heights warriors who paver arain unsheath the sword, ani ire dead, ea. But my influence is to be more in the lutare than it ever was in the past words that missionary, Paul, uttered that nen and the populace on my rocky shoulders mve only begun their majestic role; the swrotherbood of man, and the Christ of God, tion of resurrection and last Tarrian orator wowd shall yet revolutionize the planet, Oh, Seropolis! have stood heres long enough your gods are no Your vas couid not con Your Neptune counid not Y our Apolio never evoked y muscsl note. Your gol Ceres never grow Your goddess of wislom, Min. wva, never knew the Greek alphabet. Your aol the winds But the (God whom [ proclaimed on the day ssemblage on my rough heights is the Gol wisdom, the Gol of the God of lova dod of storms, the God of sunshine, the of the land and the God of the ma, the forever.” #1 he { ike and anid, as My Plato argued the soul, and my and my Mi'tiades Marathon drove beck the Persian op “Yoo said Mars Hill, “your Then the Acropolis Ge ans the soul but my Pilato, divinely in ipired, declared it as a fact straight from Your Bocrates praised virtue, but ex. sired as a suicide. Your Miltiades was brave sgainst earthly foes, vet ha died froma wound miniously gotten in after defeat, But my Paul challenged all earth and all bell with this battles shout, "We wrestle not igainst flesh and blood, but nt principal . the ralers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places, and then on the given one keen stroke, took the crown of After a moment's silence by both hills i= moanad out in the darkness, “Alas! Alas!” and Mars Hill responded, “Hosanoah! Hossnoah™ Theu the voloes of both hills became discs ahd ar 1 passed on and away in the twilight 1 seam 0 hear only Te sounds fragment Pentalioon marble trom ne arg Aras of the A in on ne . Sha otaer sound sesmaod io coms from the rock on Mare Hill, from which we had just descended. But we werd by this time so far off that the fragments of wntences were unaller when dropping from Mars Hills than were the! ts of fallen marble on the Acropolis, 1 occald only boar ta of disconnected sentences waited am es night air—"God who made the world” -* one blood all nations” “ap pointed a day in which He will judge the world” —"raised from the dead.” As that night in Athens I put my tired head onmy pillow, and the pincer soon ‘passed throughymy mind, though* on the same subject on which, as a 1 made my Sommnesaamnt SCIEN TIF LU, i A torpedo costs £1670, | lft tome will be | hited Ly electricity. There are ubout sixly species of shai ks, On a still dav the report of & rifle can be heard at 6300 yards, ———— It has been discovered In England shat smokeless powder is unsafe for smal arms, The barking of dogs on the earth can oe heard in a balloon at an elevation of four miles. The Government is about to bagin the | work of preparing hydrographic survey of the Great Lakes, i The salmon placed in the fliver by the {ish commission pleasing very rapidly. ——— AP ———— Dr. Higgins, the celebrated English sstronomner, says the starsure red, waite and blue, secording to their age, the frst being ule oldest, Sst — The human voice, speaking in ths open air when it is calm, can be heard at a iIstance of 460 feet; the ieports of a nuthet 16,000, and many guns 479, - LOO feet, Hudson | are Iin- s————— Among recent invent ons we notice Mut elec city 18 now in use for heat- ing flatirons used by tailors, and its employment in therapeutics is con- stanily on the increase, if lf—— improvements Penn, ’ ine is Owing to the recent at the steel works at Braddock, the output has been so greatly creased that a n-w scale of wages shout to be es abli-he tf, an ——— In building a sewer between Ponty. pridd and Y tradyfodwe, Wales, it was found necessary 10 cross the Tall liver seven times, To do this, ine verted sypbons of cast lion wee used, Farmers should be cireful in #kine. ping dead asnuuals about alsnbiuyg virus shirough sores or cuts on the hand, A pli sician in receutly di=d of b ood po soniug resulting {row fissectiug a cow, Conpg-clicut In dry alr st ninety-two dezress or about 775 miles per hour; In water, 40 0 fect per second; in iron, 17,500 feet; in copper, 10,573 feet, aud wood from 12,000 to 16,000 feel per sec- ond. In the hippoptamus the eyes, ears and nostrils areall set on the sume plane, which enables the animal to sink 1ts body entirely below the suriace keep thorougnly —— John C. Hulston, of Huls'on Mills, Mo., recently killel a pelican that inches across the wings and was five feet six juches tall. Its bill was 15 Inches long. Dat large as the bind was, 1t weighed only 26 pounds, sco —— The French have panned works at flavre for utilizing t b and dow of the tide to work Tarbize wheels Lo ge 2» grate power fur the dynamo to supply Paris with light, ——— ia ab Blood travels from the heart through the arteries, ordinarily, at the rate of about tse ve inches par sscobu; is speed through the capillaries is at the rate of thres one-hundredihs of au ineh per second. a - Sir William Tanner, who has made that one of eighty feet in leagih, in an hour, would have to exercise a pro- AM A system of photo rraphing in colors, | following that of M. Lippman, pro coeds on the theory that there are four | primary colors—green, red, blue and violet. Four pictures are taken simul. | taneously by means of four different. lenses, in front of which Is a screen of the color originally used. Pictures are produced which include the colors of the original. ml A— The earth travels on its orbit around nineteen miles a second, Owing to the | revolution around its own axis a point | on the surface of the earth al the equa- | tor travels at the rate of seventeen miles | a minute and In our latitudes about | eleven miles a minute, i An Italian engineer has originated » | system by which he proposes to utilize | the power of trains running down grade. | He perfected a machine for com- | pressing air as the train goes down | grade, which can be used to actuate # | motor at the will of the engineer, and be used to assist the locomotives on uy | grades, For measuring coal ofl and gelatine there has been recently invented a faucet that measures each quart that | passes through the cylinder of which the apparatus is made. A lever is attachad to the eylinder, ad by one movement of it the oll Is ischarged, the cylinder refilled and the quantity registered on a toothed disk. The honey of the Malta bees has long peen noted for Its purity and for ibs delicious flavor, A writer in the Med: iterransan Naturalist says the flavor SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON, | FUNDAY, DECEMBER 13. 1431. Christ Risen. LESSON TEXT, (John 20 : 1.18, Memory verses, 14.14.) LESSON PLAN, Toric or THE JUARTER: Son of God, Jesus the Gorpex Texr vor tHE QUARTERS: 1 hese are written, that ye might be. liewe that Jesus is the Christ, ihe Son name, —J ohn through his : 31. Lesson Tovic: The Son Triumph. r 1. The Empty Tomb, vs 1-10 The Angelic Vision, ve 113 The iiving Lovd, vs 14-18 Govoes Texr: It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again. —Rom KX : 34. And they rehearsed the things that happened (Lmke 24 : 85) other disciples ,.. mil... . We huve seen che Lord (John 20 : 25). Verse 1.—*On the first day of the week cometh Mary Maglulene early.” (1) The first day; (2) The first hours; (%) The first visitor; (4) The first_re- wards, Verse 2 —1hey have taken sway the Lord ont of the tomb.” (0) The ab sent Lord; (2) The misjadged facts; (3) The pungent grief. Verse 4.—*“And they ran both to- gether.” (1) An nrgent call; (2) An earnest response, Verse 8,— “He saw, and believed.” ~(1) ¥unets beheld ; (2) Couvietion pro- dueed, Verse 10.—*Bo the disciples went away again unto their own home,” (1) The discouraged disciyls; (2) The dis- couraging facts; (3; The despondent departure, Verse 11.—**As she wept. she stooped and looked into the tomb,”—(1} Weep- | ing; (2) Blooping: 8) Looking, —(1) Tearful; (2) Humble: (3) Eager. Verse 18. T} ey have taken away my Lord, snd | know not where they have laid him. (1) An empty tomb; (2) A yearning love, (4) A erushing un eeriainty" Darmny Hove READINGS: M.-John risen T.— Mait narrative W. Mark rative To—Liuke TRiive F.—1 Cor. 15 Lary 8,1 the resarrection. S.—rhil 3:1-2] resurrection. 2 : 1-18 Matthew's Mark's nar- Imke's nar- Paal's sum- q8 ar et Cor. 10 15-08, LESSON ANALYSIS, I. THE EMPTY TOME. I. The Furiasl- Place: The tomb (1). «l 1 In 59, 60 i is ar wd Joseph { Mat, They made ing the stone Matt, 27 He laid Lim in a tomb hewn 10 stun (Lake 23 : 53) I. ThaStons Mary scoth the stone taken awsy rom the tomb (1). An angel came and rolled away the stone (M sft, 2% 51, Who shall roil (Mark 16 : 3. They found the (Luke 24 : 2 27 : 63. Removed: us away the stone? stone rolled away Carrving the Nows She ranneth therefore, and cometh to Simon Peter (2 Go quickly, and tell his disciples ( Matt, 28 : 7 fo bring his disciples i # - 2 Oo ran word (Matt Certain women of our company smazed us (Lake 21 : 22 iv Peter Naw Witness os went forth, and the other toward the tomb (3). Peter arose, and unto the tomb (Loke 24 : 12 They ran both together (John 20 : 4). Then entered io the other, and be saw, and believed (Joha 20 : 8 V Important i Slooping and looking in, he seeth the 1 x gk v] bs iinen coll ran isCoveries: ying Looking in, he sereth the linen cloths by themselves (Luke 24 : 12 The papkin, that was upon his head, by itsclf John 20 : 7 beboldets two sngels 10 20 : 12). f5. white She (John Vi. ignorance of the Scriptures: For as yet they knew not the serip- Ye do err, not knowing the scriptures { Matt. 22 : 20). not the Christ to suffer these things? (Luke 24 : 26). been raised... . according to the scriptures (1 Cor. 15 : 4). IL. THE ANGELIC VISION. She beholdeth two angels in white in a white robe (Mark 16: 5) Behold, two men stood by them in daz zling apparel (Lake 24 : 4). They bad also scen a vision of angels {Lake 24 : 23). They say unto her, Woman, why weepest thon? (13, Fear not ve : for 1 know that ye seek Jesus (Matt. 28: 5). He is not here : behold, the place where they laid him! (Mark 15: 8). Why seek ye the living among the dead? (Linke 24 : 5). ifi, THE LIVING LORD I. Josus Sean. She turned herself back, and behold- eth Jesus standing (14). Jesus came to them and spake unto them (Mats, 28: IR). He was manifested in another form unto two of them (Mark 16: 12). He himself stood in the midst of them {Lake 21 : 26). He appeared to above five hundred brethren at once (1 Cor. 15: 6. 1 Jesus Heard: Jesus saith unto ber, Mary (16), a8 : 9). He said |. O foolish men, and slow of heart (Luke 24 : 25). He maith... Simon, son of John, lovest thou me (John 21 : 17), Josus saith... What is that to thee? foliow thou me (John 21 : 22). fii. Jerus Honorad: Mary cometh and telleth, ..1 have soon the Lord (18), And they. . ran to bring the dised word Matt. 28 : 8). Pies Verse 15. — “Woman, why thou?” (1) The Questioner: questioned; (3) The question, Verse 17.—**Tonch not; for I am not vel ascended.” Mary's effort; (2) The Lord's prohibition 3) The grand explanation. Verse 18 seen the Lord.” The Lord seen (1) By 1atural vision: (2) By mental vision; 3) By spiritnal vision weepest (2 The ied 5% i Lave i — LESSON BIBLE READING MARY MAGDALENR. One whom Jesus B32; | A witness of the erncifixion (Mark 15 : 40 : John A wit ess of tre burial (Matt 27: 61 ; Mark 15:47. | Resdy to anoint the body (Mark 18 : 1; Luge 24: 13. | Early at the tomb (Vatt. 28:1 ; John 20 : 1). {Baw t e vision of angels (Matt. 23 : 5: Mark 16 : 5). { Carried the news to 20 : 2). | Baw the risen Lord (John 20 : 14-17). | Declared his resurrection (John 20 : 23 had healed (Luke 1G “or cris} others (John | . -— | LESSON SURROUNDINGS. IxTERvEXING EVENTS. —A number of | rem«rkable evens atteusded the death of Jesus; namely, the rending of the vuil of the temple, the quaking of the | earth, tue rending of the rocks, and { the opening of the tombe. All three { synoptists iell of the efleet upon the ; centurion, and also refer to the Galile- an women who witnessed the end. Luke mentions the grief of the multitudes. | John alone tells of the request made to { Pilate by the Jews, that the bodies be | taken down from tue cross, of the | breaking of the legs of the two robbers, i and of the piereing of the side of Jesus. | The request of Joseph of Arimathea for the body, and the burial, are nar- rated by all four evangehsis; but John mentions ius, and gives some i additional details about the sepulcher The watching of the two Marys followed the bs nd siso the placing of a | Roms rd at t etomb. During the i Jewish Sabbath the women rested, but | prepared spices for a more complete | en ming of the boly. On the early {| morning of Sunday the women come tc | the sepuicher, probably in two different j companies. In any cise, Mary Mag- { dalene was one of the earhest The | earthquake and the appearance of the angel to the guards preceded her oom- ing. Praoce. ~The garden in which the tomb was sitasted; the home of Peter and Jobn in Jerusalem; the tomb it self, and some spot ontside, but near the entrance fo it. Trius. Karly on Sunday morning, the 17th of Nisan, A. UU. C. 783; that is, April 8, A.D, 30, Prnsows, — Mary Magdelene (not to be confounded with Mary the sister of Lazarus, or with the woman who was a sinner); Simon Peter John: two angels; the risen Lord himself Incinesys, May, coming to the tomb, sees the stone taken away. She rans to tell Simon Peter and John, and they run to the tomb and find it empty; both go home. Mary stands without, weeping; then sees, first, two angels, and then Jesns, whom she recognizes by his voice. He forbids her to touch him; sends her with a message to the disciples, announcing his ascension. Mary returns, and tells the disciples. Paravimr Passaaes (but with many different details). Matthew 28 : 1-10: Mark 16 : 1.31; Lake 24 : 1-12. § COURAGE. Though the day be aark and dreary Freres the storm snd rough the way | The' thy feet be worn and weary, And thy heart no longer gay; Thouoh the flowers, pale and dying Fall beneath the tempost's might, And the wild slouds, madly flying, Vell the sky and shroud Hight Faint not thoweh rode wind aeail ve, Doubt not in the Binding rain; Truth and courage still avail ye For the sun will shine again Hope In this dark world of ours 1s the light tant makes its day, Pointing to the budding flowers, Like an angel on our way, The! the storms of dondt assaiiing, And the clouds of Tn and fears, Bweep Tite's shy, fie { Like the rain, with blinding SHI, mm darkest hours of sorrow Love shall songn g s ith a ni Lhee to to-morrow, When The an shall shine again. The fronvn of a friend Is batter than the smile of a fool. Toar which 1» good to be not be done too . one Sen looted