S————————A— aT WW oe REV. DR. TALMAGE, THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON. Subject: “Tough Things in Bible” the TEXT: “In which ars some things hard to be understoo 1.11 Peter iii., 18, The Bible is the most common sense book in all the world. But there are many things in it which require explanation. It all de- vends on the mood in which you come to this grand old book. You may take hold of the handle of the sword or its sharp edge. You may employ on its mysteries the rule of mul tiplication or subtraction. Thers are things, As my text suggests, hard to be understood, but '{ upon all honest-minded people the impression that if four or five of them can be explained, perhaps they may all be sxplained. Hard thing the first: The Bible says the world was created in six days, while geology | says it was hundreds of thousands of yours in process of building. “In ths beginning. God created the heaven and the earth.” “In the beginning." There you can roll in ten million years if you want There is no particular date given-—no contest between science and revels tion. Though the worid may have been in process of creation for millions of years, sudden'y and quickly, and in one week, It may have been fitted up for man's fesddence, Just as a great mansion may have been many years in building, and yet in one week it may be curtained and chandelisred and cushionei and upholstered for a bridle and groom. You are not com ipelied to believe that the world was made in mrsixdays, Itmay not have been a day of twenty-four ho Irs, the day spoken of in the first chapter; it may bave been God's day, and a thousand years with Him are as one day. “And the eveuing and the morning were the first day’ —God's day. “And the evening and the morning were the second day” ols day, * And the evening and the morn ng were the sixth day” —God's day. Youand | ng vanth day. the Satbath worl day o Gospel redemption, the grandest day of all the wees Wiaich each day may have made up of thousands of years. Can you tail me how a man can get his mind and so il into such a blasphemous twist as to scoff at that first chapter of Genesis, its verses i [ light surging up from sapphire seas of The Bible represents that light was on Monday, and the sun was not created until Thursday. Just think of it! a book declaring that light was created three day before sun shone Why don't vou know boat smd electricity emit light independent of the sun sides that, when the eart! ] ondensation, It was surrot ied by thick Vapors and the discharge Volcanoss in the ary period, and hscuration bindersd the light « we sun fr the earth until that Thursday Besides that, David Brawster and the astronomer, and all t their class, agree in the not light, that it is only the cand phosphorescent changing and changing, so it all wondered at that not unt day morning its light fell side that, the rocks in light. There is light faces, the alkalies, for ic bases omit history of the s of the the been the that no that the earth emis sr netal in the from at nstan " fers Was a time world when there ware thousands of miles quid granite flaming with light Beside that t has been found that there are burned out vol CRNOes in other worlds which when they Were In explosion and activity, must have cast forth an 1ffarabie th ng a glare all over fos that, thers are the Aurora and the Aurora An chalis | on 3 sien Captair of St. Lawrence on the | IN, was aroused by t in great aar fr It was a starlight nigh sky became overcast the hig and stantaneous and serubling the the itherto gi on the ww that was m0 int it lighted everything distinct] even to the masthead. The light spread over the whole sea between the two sh wes, and the waves, which before had been tranqui came agitated Captain Bonaycastle de scribes the scene as that of a blazing sheet of awiul and most brilliant Hight —a joa r and vivid ight that showed ths face of the h 1 frowning land abreast. The sky be came jowering and more intenssly “% Long, tortuous lines of immanse numbers of as if ia ns ur earth yw SAYS nmin th "mata In Rn anosual ®t when Seplerbe if toe wvewssl APpPsArance, suddenly the in the wm of of Cornwallis County an in intensely wivid aurora, sb wmy and dark lirsct wa brill ba line of light large fish dar consternation he as if gasiights had been burned low them, and until bal sre at { o'cioe most minute obs distinctly visible My hearer: ten thousand sources of light of the sun Another hard desage and Noah's grk the account there hundred feet of wate it might be fife cubits iis They say that the ark could not have bes n large enough to contain “two of ever sort,” for would have been h dreds of thousands and hundreds of ti sans Creatures, They say that ereatures would have come from all lands and all zones They say there was only Ot small window in the ark, and that would not have given fresh air tn keep the animals in side the ark from suffocation. They ay that the ark finslly landed on a mountain seventesn thousan | feet high, They say they do not believe the story. Neither do L There is no such story in the Bible. 1 will tell You what the Bible story is 1 must say that i have changed my mind in regard to some matters which once were to me very mvs terions. They are no more mysterious. This is the key tothe facts This is the story of an aye witness, Koab, bis story incorporatsd afterward by Moses in the account. Noah described the scone just as it appeared to him. He saw the flood and he fathomel ta depth As far as eye could reach everything was coverel up, from bo rizon to horizon, or. as it says, '* under the wwile heaven * He did not refer to the Bierra Nevalas or to Mount Washington, for America had not been discovered, or, if it had been discovered, he could not have seen #0 far olf. He is giving the testimony of an aye witness. (Cod spencs after the manner of men when he says everything went under, and Noak speaks after the manner of men wine be says everything dd go under. An eye withoss, There is no need of thinking that the kangaroo leaped the ocean or that the pelar Lear came down from the ics Why did the deluge come! 1t came for the purpose of destroying the outrageous inhabit ants of the then thinly populated earth, nearly all the population, probably very near the ark befors it was launched hat would have beens the use of submerging North Just the Is ware there are ight besides the The They say that have rained eight lay thing story nnst each ler that een 4 above the there gv ' ine i] of A and South America, or Europe, or Africa, | when they were not inhabited! states it must bave rained ¥5) fect avery day, I reply, the Bible distinctly declares that most of the flo! rows instead of falling. Be. fore the soosunt where i says “the wine fain of heaven wore i loves in th (Et HL shall solve some of them, hoping to leave | to, | } scow, as some of these skeptics wou'd have | us understand, it was a magnificent ship, nearly as large as the Great Eastern, threes times the size of an ordinary man-of war, At the time in the world when ship. building was unknown, God hat this vessel constractsd, which turned out to be almost in the sams proportions as our stanchest modern veswls After thousands of years of exparimenting in naval architecture and in ship carpsntry, we have | at last got up to Noah's ark, that ship lewd. {ing all tha fests of the world ou all the oceans. Well, Noah saw the mnimal ores tion going into this ark. He gave the ao count of an eye wintoess. They wara the animals from the mgion wiers ha lived: for ths most part thev wars animals { useful to man, and if noxious insects or | polsonous raptiles went in, it was only to dis i eipline ths patiencs and to kesn alert the generations after the flond. He saw them | going in. There were a great number of them, and he gives the account of an aya witness. They went in two and two of all flesh, Tay, and | came to Perth, Scotland. | off, and I saw the most wonderful agricul tural show that I have aver witnsssed There nover sketched, and thers were dogs such as the loving pencil of Edwin Fandsver never portrayed, and thers were sheen nad fow! and creatures of all sorts that “two and two" of creatures of that agricultural were put upon the Tay steamer to transported to Dundee, and the next day 1 should be writing hom» to America and giv | ing an account of the occurrence, I would have used the sama raneral phrassology that Noah used in regard to the embarkation of the hrate creation In the ark—I would hava said that they went in two and two of avary sort, IT would not have maant six hundesd thousand. A common sense man myself. I would supposs that the people who read Wars coinmon sanse naopla, how could vou them into ast infidel scientists, “How cond lucal to into tha ark! Ha tid have to pick them out and dries them in, and coax them in! Could not the sam Gold who gs instinct to the animal that to seek iw shelter from stor However, n r more ordinary animal RAY Have voa when an Angrast all the rat tha ¥ be in go ve insnirs ingtin nave s of sh - and r imbi ng vl darkening eraatio » asama to he TB that ©} have been : sr w 1981 + on Kept } wld ha nave ww hous Ars muss n this Liverpool EWwWo weals ve Dattensd some of you ware Kent month ie hatches down soms long storm. Len infidels say that the ark Jandel nountain wventen thousand feel Course, as »0on as the anim they would ail be frozen Ww geograpaical ignorance n merely the name for a mounta & hilly district, and it may have been a hii one hundred feet high, or five hundred. or a thousand feet high on which the ark alighted orl measured the depth of water above the 4 ars its. OF twenty eavan Ab! my friends, this story of ¢ more incredib an if you shou ‘Last summer | was among the hil England. a "™ storm | ever flooded and t river ar. Rr the aw Wihoie country was The waters came up over the hills ir lives we got in a boat on apd even the dumo creatures wad 5) ame inoaning and bhissting Gem in the same boa spandent pon the Bi wl. entire + ages ani | Hterataras Lave tradition en trad ions, indistinct traditions tradi tions The old of the ter the flood at the time Ahriman #0 polluted earth tha it had to wash] J x nm The traditions of the “BY that in the time when Xisut Wing there was a great ¥ nily and his frien is in sie of the were while the Linds went back and their mud. Lucian and ers, who had Wd She } SAVE O 1. e for out BATE an ahous ho os rrea & Chaldeans Aras was estroved forth and they claws ware tinged Ovid, erlabrated ever akadd fe described =» onl n the tims of calion He took his friends into a b at, the animals came ruaning ® him in pairs So all lands, and all ages, and all erature, seers to have a broken and indistinct tradi tion of a calamity which Moss, here incor porating Noah's account, so grandly. so beautifu’ly, so accurately, so solem re cords, : Deu and ny My prayer is that the God who created the workl may create us anew in Christ Jesus and that the God who made ight three days before the sun shone may kinds ia our hearts & light that will burn on long after the sun has expired; and tha: the Gol who or dered the ark built and kept pen mors than one hundred years that the ante diluvians might enter it for shelter, may graciously incline us to acospt the invitation which this morning ross in music from the Throne, saying house into the ark Another hard thing to be understood story that the son and moon stood still to slow Joshua to complete his victory. Infi del s'entista declare that an Impossibility Put if a man have brain and strength snotigh to make a clock, can 4» not start it and stop 6, and start it again and stop it again! If a machinist have strength and brain enough to make a corn thresher, can he not start it and stop it. amd start it again and stop it again! If God hav, | strength and wisdom 50 make the clock of the universs, the great machinery of the worlds, has He not strength enough and wisdom enough 5 start it and sap 8, and sert it again and stop It again! Cr stop one whesl, or stop twenty whesls, or stop all the wheels! Is toe clock Stronger than the look. maker! Doss the corn-turssher know more than the machinist! Is the universes mightier han its Gol! Bat prople ask how could the moon have been Sani £0 atop in tha daytime! Wall, if you have never seen the moon in the daytime, it is be cause you have not been a ver wrver of the heavens Beside not necessary for the world literally to stop, 0 on atraay is af the sun's rays the dav might have Monge. Ho that, while the earth lB ss on ita path in the heavens, it figuratively stopped. You must remember tha these Bible authors used the voraacular of their own day. just as you and I say the sun went down. wan nevar goss down, The Years azo I was on n steamer on the river | I got | wore horess and cattla sok as Rosa Bonheur | | | erioo was Suppose | show | history, ba | “Come thou and all thy | {| and | Holy | heaven or sarth or a tack of dupes, seoundrale Wo cannot afford to adjourn | | "hat question a week or a day or an hour, | say; | ight out there x | it | the shore, | don't know what anad its spesd or entirely stopped in its revo. lutions on its own axis. That is none of the business of Jupiter, or Mars, or Mercury, or baturn, or the Dipper, Beside that, within the memory of man there have besn worlds ~ that wore born mod thay diel. A few years ago RALrONOMErs telegraphed, through the Associated Press, to all the world-—the astronomers from the city of Washington that ano.ber world had been discovers! Within & comparatively short space of time astronomers tell us, thirtesn worlds have burnsd down, From their observatory they notice first that the worlds look itke other worlds, then they became a deep red, showing they were on fire: then they became ashen, showing they wers burned down; then they entirely disappeared, show. ing that even the ashes ware scattersd. Now, I say, if God can start a world, and swing a world, and destroy a world, he could stog one or two of them without a great deal of exertion, or he could by un usual refraction of the sun's rays continue the illumination, But infidel scientists say it would have been belittling for other worlds to stop on account of such a battle. Why, sire, what Yorktown was for revolutionary times, and what Gettysburg was in our civil contest, and what Sedan was in the Franco-Germun war, and what Wat in the Napoleonic destiny-—that was this battle of Joshur against allied armies of Gibson that changed the entire cours 1 was a battle t Joshua as important as though a battle now should ocour in which England and the Uni ted States and Frar and Italy and Turkey and Russia should fight for victory or annihilation. However much any other world, solar, lunar or stellar, migat ba hastened in it errand of light, it would ba excusable if it lingersd in the heaveas for a little while and put down its sheaf of beams end guzel on such an Armageddon, in the early part of this century there was waat was called the Dark Day. Hon these aged men may perhaps remember it. It known in history as the “Dark Day. Workmen at noon went to their h aes, and ourta Ml Jeginlatores adjourned No ast have ever bean able ¢ sxplain dark day sow, if God the night earlier than its hs not ra t night unti i «1 to hear my lathe . ig tank said it Was RAUZNLBOrT arogeed him | ¢ Beavenly bodies Feope thought our yO Rone that advance an A) Re ned 1 here ma 1 whale the whale at ap | have just may It as well r any kind Rong Says. in the monster wan sian Years destroved y this sea monster that t cares of Jonah may have wen by Eraatl ses monsters that vithd have sasily taken down and he uid have lived ther had kept in ng ren in ¢ 4 Q 1 OOCUPTatioe wear » th - of » § one o s - Hews en one worl wh It says If aship carpsater fF i8Xan tawves 10 legs Rl 1 DATS 8 Yas t arry ports, [| suppose it RD Arpenier vege] $4 ArTY passengers I Suppose it can carry and if the Lord prepared a fish ne passenger, I sup and ribern if a Tare a iverpool pRSn gery ES tL } AY he ventilation the B wish you heail the strange things in explained if you them explained And aem nto a beautifal and your hearth, or your can wi m put your immortal interests into agration. But you had better decide alx wo veracity of the Bible very soon. | wan Lais morning to caution you against putting off making up your mind about this book Ever since 1773 there has besn great Giscussion as fo who was the author of Junius's Letters, those letters full of sarcasm and vituperation and poe The whole English nation stirred up with it More than a bundred volumes written to discuss that question: “Cho was Junius?” “Who wrote, the letters of Junius Well, itis an intersting question to discuss but still, after all, it makes Lut little prac Heal differance to you and to who vunias was, whether Sir Philip Francis Lord Costham, or John Horne Fooke. or Horace Walpole, or Henry tirattan, or any ons of the forty-four men who were ser iously charged with the authorship Hat an alsorving question, it fs a practical question, It is an overwhelming question yon to me, the authorship this Bible—~waethsr the Lord of bo a] we itis tn of God or impostors the five | It was that battle | of | Germany and | i natives Any more thas a sea Captain can afford to | “Wall, this is a very dars have really lost my bearings; thers is a doa't know whether of a falsy Jight on It ws; bas ll just go to slesp and in the morning I'l find out.™ In the mornin: thy vesss! mizht De on the rocks and Liv beach strewn with the white faces of the desl craw. The time for that wea Captain to find nat about the lighthouse is before he goss to slesp. Oh, my friends, I want you to understand that in our deliberations shout this Bible wa Are not at calm anchorage, but we are ly coming toward the const, coming with all the furnaces ablaze, coming at the rate of seventy heart throbs a minute, and | must know whether it is going to be harbor or shipwreck, I was so fim to read in the pa of the fact that the steamship Edam had coms safely into harbor. A week before the ¥ its way toward night. 1 a lighthouse cause hs eould not give complete rescue to that lost ship, i wm glad that afterward another vessel saw her and brought her into safety. But when [ saw the story of that steamsnip Edam, drifting, drifting, drifting, I do not know where, but with no rudder, no lighthouss, no harbor, no help, Isaid: “That is a skeptic, that is an in- fidel, drifting, dritting, drifting, not knowing where he deifta.” And then, when [ thought of the Persian Monarch anchored in harbor, | sald: “That is a Christian, that is a man who does all he can on the way, crossing the sea to help others, coming parhaps through a very rough voyage into the harbor, there safe and safe forever.” Would tiod that there might be some one to-day who would go forth and bring in thess souls that are drifting. In this assemblage, how many a score shall 1 say, or a hunlre I, or a thousand f--not quite certain about ths truth of the Bible, not certain about anything Drifting, drifting, drifting Oh, how | would like to tow them in. 1 throw you this cable, Lay hold of that cable of the Gospel. Lay hold of it. [invite you all in. The harbor is wide enough, large enough for all the shipping. Come in, O you wanderers on the desp. Drift no more, drift no more, Come into the barbor, Bes the glorious lighthouse of the Gospel “Peace on earth, good will to men.” Come info the harbor, God grant that it may be said of | all of you who are now drifting in your une belief as it might have been said of the pas- sengers of the steamship Edam, and as it was | sald centuries ago of the wrecked corn shi of Alexandria, ‘It cams to pass that they al escape! sale to land’ SIFTINGS, The tarpon is the king of game fish. The first incineration has just cecurred Paris, SELEC We Iding used by the ancients, rings were An official of Tombstone, Arizona, is | Sheriff Slaughter, | Six different patents were secured on chewing-gum last year, The bullet for the English magazine rille is to be nickel plated. nickel-in-the-slot handkerchief, The latest device f peri mes one’ s leader of an “‘ethns and he nation is PAYS 80, a Glad 1 KLOW, rman rubs his body The Key West fishe ( r the with kerosene oil and BUATKS 11 » SWims a i , America in 18 mbled in shape ti ith * nil sriar mMmAanGanan. Louis taxidermist who recently reserved a |! bald eagie, says great size sth of the } bresst were of arly or yd formed ne eight of the enti Als . New " re bi st anything iocior. f for York « mad got nto P mwilollice you can be called insane wpe te tamp, An international exhibition of postage stamps is to be opened at Amsterdam. | To give additional interest to the show sketches of the various by postmen in different let the there wi be costumes worn countries, I lished . : ny, : iia newsboy ' home, ] found that the boys used it for a loafing place, and that four-fifths of its lodgers were boys whe ran away from home and had real need for its conven ne no ences, scent pencils, composed of solified perfume are a nove ty. They are fitted have a tiny ring at tached to them for fastening to the watch or chatelain, and when rubbed or the hands or any part the dress emits icate odor in silver holders, chain of de vast « fair to be than i hundred being examined, all prove to be « Fax C olery in reater ir rtan ipposed. Over on broad or round type, and not ne the long dolicho There arts and industries in the graves which or cephalic sort are enable scientists to reconstruct quite fairly the state of civilization of the of that tory was in use, of all, those Washington to aid Mr. Cushing have discovered that in the jaw there is in variably a peculiarity almost unknown our rae. The problem of the an- cient population of our Southwest now land when the ceme But most who were sent important on from fo — seems near solution, ss 55. Tur Russian various statements according to which the Russian branch of the English | family Lesley has recently inherited | in England a legacy of some £10,000, | 000 sterling. | over, quested to become British subjects | Tho legatees are, how- socording to the papers, before the amount is paid to them. One of them, General Lesley, who only a short time ago was appointed chief of a brigade at Veni, in Axia, has just arrived at Kieff. He has told some friends thet it wonld not be con- venient for him as a Russian military officer to become a British subject, but that there is a fair hope that about 27,000,000 rubles will be paid without the obligation being enforoed. w "U1 POYTEIN yvep jo puwy opwd ony puw wy oops Lypmieapy jo (ud song OL JOLM OM JOP LBORTIY S53 JO oud spupuer ore ‘(Mo Sapwnow v ol vo ery up wud eleape ogame, uw vo oon¥vepo0 ¥ of pestejes Ljyueoe: fragments and remains of | papers are publishing | Makes the Weak Stro If you are ran down, or Lave that ¥red feeling 86 8 rest of overwork or the effect of the chang. 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