RA wegen { ———— a — THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON, Subject: “Our Departed Still Liv : ing.” o— bb TRXT: “And when he saw the wagons which Joseph had sen! to carry him, the Sprit of Jaco their father revived. And Israel said: ‘It is enough; Joseph, my son, 3 yet alive,’ "Genesis xlv., 27-95, The Egyptian capital was the focus of the World's wealth, In ships and barges there had been brought to it from India frankin. conse, cinnamon, and tvory, and diamonds: from the North, marble and fron: from Syria, purple and silk: from Greece some of the finest horses of the world, and some of the most | rilliant chariot: and from all the earth that which could best please the eve, and charm the car, and gratify the taste. Te were temples aflame with red ssnd- Stone entered by gateways that were guarded by pillars bewildering “with hiorogly phics, and wound with brazen serpents and adorned With winged creatures—their eyes, and be ks, and pinions glittering with precious stones, white flower-buds: there were sillars, at the top bursting into the shape of the lotus when in full bloom. Along the avenues, lined with sphinx, end fane and obelisk, there were princes who came in gorgeously upholstered palanquin, carried by servants in scarlet, or where drawn by velicles, the snow-white horses, golden-bitted, and six abreast dashing at full run. There were fountains from stone. wreathed vases climbing the ladders of the light. You would hear a bolt shove aud a docr of brass would open like a flash of the sun, The surrounding gardens were saturated with odors that mounted the terrace, and dripped from the arbors, and burned their incense in the 1 g¥ptian noon. On floors of mosaic the glories of Pharaoh were spelled ot in letters of porphyry, and beryl, and flame. There were ornaments twisted from the wood of the tamarisk, embossed with silver breaking into foam. stools made out of a single precious stone, There were beds fashioned out of crouched lion in bronze. There were chairs Spotted with the sleek hide of leop- ards. There were sofas footed with the claws of wild beasts, and armed with the beaks of birds. beach of the sea on a summer day, and look either way, and there are miles of breakers, white with the ocean foam, dashing shore- ward; so it seemed as if the sea of the world's pomp and wealth in the Egyptian capital for miles and miles flung itself up into white breakers of marble obelisk, This was the place where Jo eph. the herd boy, was called to stand next to Pharaoh in honor. What a contrast between this scene and bis humble starting, and the pit into which his brothers threw nim, shep The from house not ashamed of where ho came from. Bishop of Menta, descended a wheelwright, covered his with Spr, and hammers, whesls: and the King of Bic iy, in honor of his father, who was a potter, refused to drink out of anything but an earthen vessel, | Bo Joseph wa not ashamed of his early sur roundings, or of his old-time father, or of ] When they came up from the | from | instead | they | sent them i his brothers, famine stricken land King's corn 10 wet corn crib, Joseph, of chiding them for the way had maltreated and abused him, back with wagons, which Pharaoh farnished, Jaden with corn: and old Jacdh, the father, in the very same wagons, was brought back, that Joseph, the son, might see him, and ge him a comforatable home afl the rest of days. Well, I hear the wagons the King's wagons, rumbling down in front of the palace. On ah in royal robes: and £ off, stands Phar him Prime Minister Joseph, with a chain of gold around his neck, and on his | a ring given by Pharaoh to him, so | time he wanted to stamp the | document he could do 80. Wagon after wagon rolls on down | that any royal seal upon a from the palace, laden with corn and meat, and changes of raiment, and every thing that could help a famine struck people One day | see aged Jacob sented in ront of his house. of his absent boys ons, however old they Jen ary never to a father any more than ys); and whi dust arising, and he hears wagons rumbling, and he wonders what is coming now, for the whole land had been smitten with the famine, and wes in siience. But after a While the wagons have come nedr snough, and he sees his sons on the wagons, and before they come quite up, they shout “Joseph is yet alive!” away. Ido not wonder at it boys teil the story how that the boy, long-absent Joseph. has got to be the first man in the Egyptian paiace. While they unload wagons, the wan and waste! creatures in the neighborhood come up and ask for a handful of corn, and they are satis. The the Jacob, the old father, is about to Joseph is not £0 to sw Y thing to transplant an old has bard work to steady w he, determined into the wagon, and de 1 his sons, n, eighty. WW herds and flocks, w aloud for t er The father, ink it in Why, of the -boy has become a robe t as the old man finds rt, ig soo the thin lip gum as he cries and acob, can hardly al | Joseph-Jesus sends us a message o pardon, | of life, of heaven; corn for our bunger, rai- ment for our nakedness. Joseph-Jesus is yet | alive! { As you stand on the level | { the kitchen, but I find no Jesus temple, mausoleum, and | | cemetery: Yet he | was not forgetful of his early home; he was | and | { will | world, the outside of the palace, to see the wagons | He is possibly thinking | | anticipations: and that was J Ie ho is seated there, he sees | | Shere | with all the pomp and paraphernalia of an The old man faints | | be no music thers: | est day known One day the wagons are brought up, for | | seph-Jesus' { for ten, or fifty, or the | { Wo throw our arms around Him | ing embrace, we will | through the sheep's back! Oh, T wish we could ses thro h every grain v by every sheep fold, under the trees of every orc , the King's wagons, They drive up three times a day = morning, noon, and night, They bring furs from the Arctic, they bring fruits from the tropic, they brin bread from the temperate zone, he King looks out, anil he says: “There are twelve hundred millions of people to be fed and clothed. Bo many pounds of meat, so many barrels of flour, so many yards of cloth, and linen und flannel, so many hats, 50 many socks, so many shoes” enough for all, save that we who are greedy get moro shoes than belong to us, and’ others go barefooted. None but a God could feed and clothe the world, None but a King's corn. erib could appease the world's famins, None but a King could tell how many wagons to send, and how heavily to load them.and when they are to start. They are over the frozen ground to-day. Do you not hear their rambling! They will stop at noon at your table. Oh, if fora little while they should conse, hunger would come into the nations, as to Utica when Hamilear besieged it, and as in Jerusalem when Vespasian sur- rounded it; and the nations would be hollow. eyed, and fall upon each other in universal cannibalism; and skeleton would drop upon | and there would be no one to | | City Hall strikes twelve. skeleton: bury the dead; and the earth would be a fleld of bleached skeletons; and the birds of | " le eol 4 { prey would fall dead, flock alter flock, with ere were marble columns blooming into | out any carcasses to devour; and the earth | in silence would wheel around, one great | black hearse! All life stopped because tho | King's wagons are stopped. Oh, thank God for bread-—for bread! I remark again, that like those that came | from the Egyptian palace, the King's wagons Jacob had not heard | bring us good news. from his boy for a great many years, He never thought of him but with a heart anche, There was in Jacob's heart a room where lay the corpse of his unburied the wagons came, the King's wagons. and told him that Joseph was yet alive, he faints dead away. Good news for Jacob! Joseph-Josus is yot that He has forgiven us becsuse ‘we the wagons that brought the tidings Our I go to hunt up Jesus. I go to the village of Bethany, and say: “Where does Mary live:" They say: “Yonder Mary lives” 1 EO in. 1 sec where she sat in the sitting. room. 1 go out where Martha worked in 1 go into find the judges prisoner's box, Arimathean Pilate's court-room, and | and the police and the but mo Jesus 1 go into the but the door is gone, and the shroud is gone, and Jesus Is gone By faith I look upto the King's palace. and behold 1 bave found him Joseph Jesus is still alive! Glorious religion,n religion made not out of death's heads, and cross bones and undertakers screwdriver, but ¥ bounding with life, and sympathy and glad ness. Joseph Is yet alive “1 know that my Neder fiver What comfort this sweet sentence He lives, He | He lives, my ever EE 1 gives! ce was dead, living lead! vor, who or “Hel He ! He ves lo grant me dally breath, ves, and [ shall conquer death, Ives my mansion to prepare, He lives 10 bring me safely there. * He lives, all glory to ITs name: He lives, my Jewus, till the same. Oh, the swee! joy this sentercs cives, I know that my Hedeemeor lives!” The King's wagons will after awhile un. | load, and they will turn around, and they will go back to the palace, aud I really think that you and I will go with them. The K ing not leave us in this famine-stricken The King bas ordered that we be lifted into the wagons, aml that we RO over into Goshen where there shall be pas turage for our largest flock of joy, and then wo will drive up to the palace, where there are glories awaiting us which will melt all the snow of Egyptian marble into forgetiul new, I think that the King's wagons will take US up to see our Jost frienda. Jacob's « hie anticipation was not sewing the Nile, nor of seeing the long colonnades of architectural beauty, nor of seeing the throne room. There was a focus to all his journey ings, to all his osephh Well my friends, 1 do not think heaven woukl be worth much if our brother Jesus was not If there were two heas ens, the ove eternal monarchy, but no Christ, and toe | Other were a plain heaven, humbly thatohad. | with a few daisies in the yard, | Were there | would say “let the King's wagons take me up to the old farm house If Jesus were not in heaven. there would there would be but few people there; they would be off io king for the Jost Christ, erying through the universe “Where is Jesus! where Is Jesus™ and after they had found him, with loving | Yiolence they would take hin and bear him through the gates: and it would be the great- in heaven within the memory of the oldest inhab tant. Jesus never went {Off from heaven but once, and He was so in the Egyptian palace. You know it ! | never Jet Him go again. badly treaisd on that excursion they will Uh, the joy of meeting our brother. Jo After we have talked about Him with Him, and to ng as underlings in wo and Joseph, hag On earth we call Him Saviour, or Redeemer, or friend: but when in everiast- want some new name of I can think of what we shall do ages of eternity. but what we shall do the first minute | cannot In the first fash of His countenance, endearment, w | fi the first rush of our emotions, what we | | shall do I cannot imagine, Mehelming lory of the ven! sthinks we will t stand, look, and look, and look, os a "aul The King's Sagons took Jacob up to see his lost boy, and so really think that the King's wagons will take us up to see our lost kin- dred. How long is it since Joseph went out of your household Hew many years is it now last Christmas, or the fourteenth of next month! It was a dark night when be died, and a Stormy day it was at the I: and the clouds wi the winds sighed for the dend. Greonwood's gate rang onl but your heart has heen since, Oh, the over. The bell at a few moments, ig put of the family Bite, od. Jowph is yet statisticians world, there King's y ions will of them dead, and the Like coming | | and the hounds Joseph; and when | Good | nows for us! The King's wagons come down | | and tell us that our | alive; | threw Him into the pit of suffering and the | dungeon of shame. He has risen from thence to There were foot- | Stand ina palace The Bethlehem shepherds | were awakened at midnight by the rattling of ret sixty seconds in | pt with you, and | ling, tolling, ever | lor n% de the children staid at home, but father and mother always went to church: that was a habit they had. On thos stormy Sabbaths when we staid at home, the absence of our wrents seemed very much protracted, OF the romds were very bad, and they coull not get on very fast Ho would go to the window at o'clock to ses if they wera coming, and then we would go at nlf -past twelve to soo if they were coming, and at quarter to one, and then at one o'clock, After a while, Mary, or David, or DeWitt would shout: “The wagon's coming! and then we would soo it winding out of the woods, and over the brook, and the lane, and up in the old rush out, leaving the doors wide open, with many things to tell them, asking them many questions, Well, my dear breth ren, I think we are many of us in the King's wagons, and we are on the way home, The front the woods, and through the brook of denth, and up in front of the old heavenly home- stead; and our departed kindred, been waiting and watching for us, will rach out through the doors and over the lawn, wagons are coming!” Twelve o'clock on earth, and likewiss it is high noon in heaven. Does not the subject of to day take the | gloom out of the thoughts that would other wise be struck through with midnight! We use! to think that when we died we would have to go afoot, sagging down in the mire, of terror might get after us, and if we got through into Heaven at all, we would coms in torn, and wounded, and bleed Ing. ° 1 remember whem my teeth chattered and my knees knocked together when I heard anybody talk about death: but I bave come | to think that the grave will be the softest bed I ever slept in, and the bottom of my foot will not be wet with the Jordan. *“Them that sieop in Jesus will God bring with ie was reading of Robert Southey, who said he wished he could die far away from his friends—~like a dog, crawling into a corner and dying unobderved, Thess were his words. He it ours to die on a couch sur rounded by loved ones, so that they with us may hear the glad, sweet, jubilant Rnnounce- ment: “The King's wagons are coming.” Hark! I bear them now, Are they coming for you or me! — Hoardings of Years Go Up In Smoke, Mr. and Mrs. Grube arrived in this country many years ago, and by their in dustry and econéhy saved $900, all of which on Saturday went up in smoke through the stovepipe in their home at 1037 West Twenty-second street, Grube is employed at the malleable iron works. His wife on Saturday con cluded to do some exten washing for the children, so that they could appear in a better shape at Sunday-school next day. After lighting ab KB. hot fire in the stove she rummaged through the closets for little fineries which she thought would not be needed for the rest of the vear, but which the spell of Indian summer urged her to reproduce for a day or two. In her search among the closets she came across a little bag in the bottom of which were the whole hoardings of the | industrious years of herself and has. band, amounting to $500 in greenbacks. The roll of bills she held for a moment in her hands, thrust it into a stocking, | and threw the stocking under a bed, where she thought it would be safest while she was doing her washing, But worse than burglars were in the house while she was working Two of her little children, a boy and 8 girl, were playing and rummaging around and of course crawled under the | bed, Then they found the stocking, and in their glee, after thumping each other with it for a while, threw it into the stove to sce what a nice blaze the nice jictared pieces of paper would make, 10 stocking was soon ablaze, and sd were the greenbacks, and when Mrs Grube found out what they had done there was but a little speck of ashes to mark where all the fortune and the finan. cial hopes of herself and husband had vanished. — Chicago Times. — - Japanese Home Life, The home life of the Japanese is such that fires can hardly be avoided. Instead of using matches for lighting their cigars, they have little bowls of charcoal called hibachis, and these are kept on the floor, which is usually covered with straw mat- ting. The Kitchen stove is merely a stone box, and the partitions of the houses are of thin paper or of boards, which will spring into flame at 8 touch. There is no such thing as gas in the or- dinary Japanese house, and the candle and the cosloil lamp are the illuminat- ing powers. The lanterns are the or. dinrry paper lanterns, which you see at American lawn fetes, or square boxes of oiled paper stretched over a wooden frame, in which a lamp or candle burns. The lamps and lanterns are placed on the floor, and about them the children | play and the family sprawl. Itis a won- | der indeed, that there are not more fires, and when it is remembered that there is i not a chimney on any of the houses of Japan, and that the fuel of the country is to a large extent charcoal, the danger from fire is appreciated. The ordinary | Japanese smokes a pipe, and the fact | that his pipe must be refilled about two | times a minute adds to the danger of fire. The bowl of a Japanese pipe is not bigger than the bottom of a thimble. If | holds about two puffs of smoke, and it is usually made of brass or metal — | Courier Journal, A Goldbeater's Marvelous Skill, It is said that a single Cincinnati | establishment each year beat out 2 | gold dollars into gold leaf, and as each | dollar can be made into a sheet that will carpet two rooms sixteen and a half feet square, some ides may be formed of its | extreme tonuity, It requires 1400 thick- newes of gold to equal a sheet of thin paper, and 250,000 to form an inch, The metal, which must be twenty-three carats fine, is first ran into bars one inch wide and about seven inckes long, and then rolled to the thickness of letter per, It is then cut into inch ) of which are interleaved wi inch »q ER — through | of | farm house; and then we would | road is very bad, and we get on slowly: but | after a while we will come winding out of | who have | erying: “The wagons are coming! the King's | Hark! the bell of the | passage of the | Om io Sa Hin ! 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