—— "REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON. Subject: “Christ the Village Lad." TEXT: ‘And the child grew, and waxed strong in spirit, filled with wisdom: and the grace of God was upon Him," —Luke ii., 40, About Christ as a villago lad 1 speak, hero is for the most part a sifence more than eighteen centuries long about Christ between infancy and manhood. What kind of a boy was He? Was Ho a genuine boy at all. ordid there settle upon Him from tho start ail the intensities of martydom? We have on this subject unly a little guessing, n fow surmises, and here and there an unimportant “per haps.” Concerning what bounded that Hye suffered. Through studyi the sky between the hills Christ had noticed the weather signs, und that a crimson sky at night meant dry weather next day, aud that a erhmson sky in the morning meant wet weather before night. And how beautifully He made use of it in after years as He drove down upon the pestiferous Phariseo and Sadducee by erying out: “When it is evening yo say it” will bo fair weather, for the sky 18 red, and in the morning it will be foul ‘weather to-day, for | the sky is red and lowering. O, yo ew ver easy among the vast Jurong coming ma on golng to lose a child, o than two million people have been known to gufher at Jerusalem for that national feast. You must not think of those regions ns sparsely settlod. The ancient historian Josophus says there were in Galilee two hundred cities, the snallest of then containing fifteen thousand people. No wonder that amid the crowds at the time spoken of Jesus the hoy was lost, His parents, knowing that He was mature enough and agile enough to take care of erites, ye can discern the face of the sky, but can yo not discern tho signs of the times." By day, as every boy has done, He watched the barnyard fowl at sight of over-swinging hawk cluck her chickens under wing and in after years Ho said ; +O, Jerusalem, Jerusalem ! low often would 1 have gath- Himself, are on their way home without any anxiety, supposing thet their boy with some of the groups, thoy suspect He is lost and with flushed cheek and a terrorized look they rush this way and that, saying: ‘Have you soen anything of my boy? He is twelve years of age, of fair ered thee as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wing™ By night He had noticed | His mother by the plain candle light which, | as over and anon it was snuffed agd the re. | moved wick put down on the candlestick, beamed brightly through all the family | } hood on both sides we have whole libraries of books and whole galleries of canvas and | sculpture, | But pen and peacil and chisel have with | few exceptions passed by Christ the village | lad. Yet by three conjoined evidences I | think we can come to as accurate an idea of | what Christ was as a boy as we can of what | Christ was as a man. | First, wo have the brief Bible account. | Then we have the prolonged account of what Christ was at thirty years of age. Now you | have only to minify that account somewhat and you find what He was at ten years of age. Temperaments never change. guine temperament never matic tempermment. | A san | becomes a phleg- A nervous te mpers- | ment never becomes a lymphatic tempora- | ment. Religion changes one's affections and ambitions, but it is the same old tempern- | ment acting in a different direction. As Christ had no religious change, He was asa | lad what He was as a man, only on not so | large a scale. When all tradition and all art and all history represent Him as a blonde with golden hair I know He was in boyhood a blonde, p We have, beside, an uninspired book that | °F Esdraelon and two houses are caught in the | crumb of was for, the first three or four centuries Christ's appearance received by many as inspired and which gives longed account of Christ's hood. Some of it may be true, most of it may be true, none of it may be true. It may be partly built on facts, or by the passage of the ages, some real facts may have been distorted, But because a book is not divinely inspired we are not therefore to conclude that there are not true things in Prescott's “Conquest of Mexico” was ne t inspired, but we believe it although it may contain n is takes. Macaulay's “History of England” + not inspired, but we belleve it althou may have been marred with many The so-called apocryphal Gospel boyhood of Christ is dwelt | lieve to be divinely inspi yet present facts worthy of con m. Bec i it represents the Christ as miracles some have overthrown apocryphal book. But what right | to say that Christ did uot peform ten years of age ns well as at thirty? in boyhood as certainly divine as hood Then while a lad He must have bad the power to work miracles, whether | He did or not work them. When, hav. ing reached manhood. Christ turned water into wine that was said to be the beginning of miracles. But thas may mean that it was the beginning of that | series of manhood miracles. In a w wd, 1 think that the New Testament is only a small transcript of what Jesys did and said Indeed, the Bible declare positively that if all Christ did and said were written world would not contain the books. So we are at liberty to believe or reject those parts of the apocryphal Gospel which say that when the boy Christ with His mother passed a band of thieves He told His mother that tw. Dumachus and Titus by name, would be the two thieves who afterward would expire on crosses beside Him. Was that more wonder- ful than some of Chiret’s manhood pro- phesies ? Ur the uninspired story that the boy Christ made a fountain ring from the roots of a & mmore tree 80 that His mother washed His n the stream ~was that more unbelievable than the man hood miracle that changed common water into a marriage beverage® Or the uninspired story that two sick children were recove by bathing in the water where Christ had washed? Was that more wonderful than manhood miracle by which woman twelve years a complete invalid ld have been made straight by touchi the fringe of Christ's coat? after | boy- boy > that who man. | the » of them, red the ti shou ng do not believe that any of the so-called apocryphal New Testa ment is inspired, I bel ich of Just as I believe a thousand books, none of which are divinely inspired. Much of it w Just like Christ. Just as certain as the man Christ was the most of the time getting men out of trouble, I think that the hoy Christ was the most of the time getting boys out of | trouble. I have declared to vou this day a boys’ Christ And the world wants such a one. He did not sit around moping over what was to be, or what Wa From the way in which patural objects enwreathed themselves nto his sermons after He had be come a man I conclude there was not a rock or a hill or a cavern or a tree for mile around that He was not familiar with in childhood. He had castiously felt His way down into the caves and had with lithe and agile limb gained a poise on many a high tree top. His boyhood was passed among grand scemery as most all the arnt natures have passed early life the mountains. They may live now the flats, but the passed the rocopiive days of Iadho among the hills Among the mountains of New Ha npshire, or the mountains of Virginia, or the moun- tains of Kentucky or the mountains of Swit werland, or Italy, or Austria, or Scotland, or | mountains as high and rugged as they, many | of the world's thrilling biographies began. | Our Lord's boyhood was passed in a neigh- borhood twelve hundred feet above the level of the sea and surrounded by mountains five i or six hundred feet still higher. Before it could shine on the village wheres this boy | ol the sun had to climb far enough up to | over hills that held their heads far aloft, | From yonder height Hisevo at one sweep took in the mighty scoop of the valleys and with | another sweep took in the Mediterranean Sea, ! and you hear the grandeur of the cliffs and | the surge of the great waters fn His match. | less sermon . One ay I woo that divine | boy, the wind furrying His heir over His sun browned standing on a hill top looking off upon Lake Ti on which at one time according to profano history are, not four hundred, four thousand ships. Au. thors have taken to say that Christ was not affected He from wi eve m it is true Wg i ont from Him, these mountains not have touched His oye with- ; i i : : | : {4 | then | certain | shavings 3 fin sitting room as His mother was mending His garments that had been torn during the day's | wanderings among the rocks or bushes, and years afterward it all came out in the! lmile of the greatest sermon ever preached **Neither do men, Mght a candle and put it} under a bushel but in a candlestick and it | Fiveth light to all who are in the house | At your light so shine,” Some time when | His mother in the autumn took out the clothes that bad been put away for the summer Ho | noticed how the moth miller flew out and the | cont dropped apart ruined and useless, and so | twenty years after He enjoined: “Lay up for | yourselves treasures (n heaven where neither moth nor rust can corrupt.” spent among birds and all carcled and bloomed again fifteen | years after as He cries out: “Behold the | fowls of theair.” “Consider the lilies.” A | great storm one day during Christ's boyhood blackened the heavens and angered the rivers, Perhaps standing in the door of the | His boyhood | flowers thoy | | carpenter's shop He watched it gathering | louder and wilder until two cyclones, one | sweeping down from Mount Tabor and the | other from Mount Carmel, met in the valley | fury and crash g« aris the es the one and triumphant other. and He noticed that one had shifting sand for a foundation and the an efernal rock for basis: and vears after Heo built the whole peroration of flood and whirlwind that seized is audience and texd them into the hedghts of sublimity with the two great arms of pa those and terror, which sublime words 1 nder, asking vou asf possible to for. | get that you ever heard ¢ 1 before: “Whe reth these sayings of Mine, a I will liken unt which hi nd the Jedd and blew, fell not: fi sonne a soever 1 built rain the and it i I CRIT, that wind iss not, shall man, which built his} he rain descended. and the #1 the winds blew, and be and it fell: and great tise upon the sand; ar ls Cal at upon that use: was the fall | Yes, from the naturalness, the simpli ity the freshness of His parables and dtm metaphors in manhood discourse I know He had been a boy of the fields and had bathed in the streams and heard the nightingale’s call, and broken through the flowery hedge and looked out of the embrasures of the for tress, and drank from the wells and chased the butterflies, which travelers say have al- ways been one of the flitting beauties of that landscape, and talked with the strange pe ple from Damascus and Egypt and Sapphoris and Syria, who CAMAYRDS Or on foot passed thro: His neighborhood the dogs barking at their ap proach at sundown As afterward He wasa perfect man, in the time of which I speak He was a perfect boy foot, the sparkle of a boy of a boy's Jif 1 Just the juveniles who sit an 1 elastic, old men at ten. | warrant He wa able to take His own part and to take the part of others. In that Inge of Nazareth | am there was what & found in all the of the earth, that of who seems born to str to punch, to tee, to rpower the muscular a The Christ who ward in terms de erite and Pharis I warrant le villain upon os and that mn neighbor terror children, the ove fn ™ ows go unscathed and ars He was in sas He was at thirty and 1% no further insgd On 10 persuade me as rad boy, t ghitest 1x of all the ag Hi a boy's Che ih and Af ey ayn red ant m as veen ten ut ax the one 3 suited by | experience to help hoy navi i must show +R any Be fields, shon mn " 1 the divine lad in the you Him in the mechani Joseph, His father, died very carly, lately after the famous trip to the iple.and this lad net only to support Him elf but support His mother, and what that is me of you know. There is a roval race of boys on earth now doing the same thing T wear no crown. They bave no purple robe adroop from their shoulders. The plain chair on which they sit is as much unliks a throne as anythit § You can unagine But God knows wh wry are doing and through what sacrifices ay go, and through all eternity God will keep paying them for their filial behavior, They shall get full measure of reward, the measure pressed down, shaken together and running over They have their : { exasaple in this boy Christ taking care of His mother. He had been taught the peste rs trade by His father. The med done the plainer work at the Mis father had put on ing touches of the work The cleared away the chips and blocks Hoe helped hold the different leces of work while the father joined them nour day we have all kinds of mechanics and the work is divided up among them But to be a carpenter in Christ's boyhood days meant to make plows, vokes, shovels wagons, tables, chairs, sofas, houses, and al most everything that was made. Fortunato was It that the boy had learned the trade, for, when the head of the fanily dies, it Is a grand thing to have the child able to take care of himself and help take are of others, Now that Joseph, His father, is dead and the responsibility of family sup port comes down on this boy, | hear from | : | Rr. boy ah i the find boy als while and i on His side, we forth In the morning lomded with fm of work heavier than an tools. Under the tropics Lifting, all day to the 8 ef i i ii 4 complexion and has hiue eyes and auburn hair Have you seen Him sipoe we left the city? lack they go in hot hav®, in and out the pri vate houses and among the surrounding hills, For threo days they search and inquire, won dering if He has been trampled under foot of { some of the throngs or bas ventured on the Bend through i cliffs or fallen off & precipios, all the streots and lanes of the city dismal sound: “A lost child! And lo, after three days they discover Him in the great Temple, seated among the mightest roligionists of all the world. The walls of no other building ever looked down on such a scene. A child twelve years old surrounded by septusgenarians, He asking His own ques tions and answering theirs. Let me introduce you to some of these ecclesiastios. This ix the great Rabbin Simeon! This is the venerable is coming | But after a while | | | | | i cliffs by the wi Hillel! This isthe famous Shammei. These are | the sous of the distinguished Betirah can this twelve year lad teach them or what questions can He ask worthy their cogitation? Ab, the first time in all their lives those re. What | ligionists have found their match and more | than their match. Though so young, He knew all about the famous Temple under whose roof they held that most wonderful discussion of all history, He knew the meaning of every altar, of sgorifice, of every golden candlestick of every embroidered curtain, of every shew bread, of every dr p of oil in that sacred edifice. He knew all about God. He knew all about man. He knew all about heaven, for Hecame from it. He knew all about this world, for He made it. He knew all worlds, for they were only the sparkling n the lawn in fros he nly palace. Put thes wronth mph them and asking them questions morning dewdrops o words of « wis hearing t 80 much interested asked Him ss in the que He asked the que n from the doctors humble the snd wn Jueslions » naked tions no ' Know showing height sir o tl ' i ot asking questions and listen when your iid He has the right to nak them Alas for the stu hott Livenems! ask questions Answer “1 can't be hot bothered with AUEWer asics questions The more be asks the botter y of the child with i= Christlike to them if you can. Do not way ered now.” It is ve ir prince to be If you are not able to surrender and confess ¥ incapacity, as | have no doubt did Rabbin imeon and Hillel and Shammai and the sons of Betirah when that splendid boy or standing there with a g wnt react fromm neck to ankle, and gis the wal put them to their very wit's end I disgrace tosay I don't kn The ned doctors who gn questions Witting Peed at ti=n 2 i= more of § and the ehus t wr systems of theology 0 tell what God ih I, what God 4id five hundred milli years before the small star on which we live was created. | have had many a sound asleep under sermons about the decrees of God and the eternal generation « the Son and courses showing who Mel sodek wasn't and [give a fair warning that if any minister ever begins a sermon on such a subject in my presence I wi 1 ¥ head down on the pew in front and go into the deepest slumber | can reach Wicked waste of time, this trying to sonle the unscalable and fathom the une fathormable while the nations want the bread of life and to be told how they can got rid their sins and thelr sorrows, Why you and | perplex oursely it the « of G wi? Mir Your own will take care of His. In the cond universe I think He will manage to get along without us It you want to love and serve God. and be good and useful and get to heaven. | warrant that n ing which occurred eight hundred quintiliion of yewrs ago will hinder you a min ute. Ite nott lecrees of God that 4 any harm, it ur own decrees of sin and folly You need not go any further back in history than about 1550 years You soe this is the year 1 Christ died about thirty. three years of age. You subtract thirty-three from 1880 and that rakes it onl ING years That && as far bao as you ned to Something oo curred on that day under an eclipsed sun that sets us all forever free if with our whole heart and life we accept the tremen. dous proffer. Do not let the Presbyterian tr . Hannes die } reat pas es al business sored Ww » Us hey Lutheran Church or the Baptist Church or any of the other evangelical churches spend any time in trying to fix up old oreeds, all of them imperfect, as everyth man doe is imperfect. 1 move & new for all the evangelion] churches of Chris tendom, only three articles In the creed and no need of any more. If 1 had all the consecrated people of all desomina- tons of the earth on one great plain, aod | had voice lowd enongh to put it ton voto that crend of three articles would be adopted with a unanimous vote and a Jhundsring ays that would make the carth eo and the benvens ring with hosanna, is Is the creed | pro. pose for all Christendom : Article First | Church or the Methodist Church or the | i New and among all the surrounding hills that most | A lost child? | te chill you can in no wise enter the kingdom" and except you become as a little eblld yom cannot “understand the Christian religion, The best thing that Robbin Simeon and Hillel and Shammal and the sons of Betirah ever did was in the Temple, to bend over the lad, who first made rudd of chook by the breath of the Judean hil and on His way to the mechanic's shop where Ho was soon to be the support of His bereaved mother, Motped long enough to grapple with the venerable dialecticians of the Orient “both hearing them and asking | to Christ | them questions.” Some reforrin have exclaimed Ecce Deus! Behold the God. Others have exclaimed Feoe homo! Behold the man. Put to-day in concludon of tubject 1 cry, Kece adolescens! Boy. CAVE DWELLERS, Explorer Schwatka Among the Wild Tribes of Mexico, Lieutenant Schwatka arrived at Deming, Mexico. In Be Chihuahua his party found cliff and cave dwellers, wild as any of the Mexican tribes mithern that Cortez encoun- and New Moxico. Upon the approach of white men the people clitab to their caves or {ot notched sticks if the oliffs are too steep. They can, however, vertical stone faces if there are the crevices for their fingers and toes, The cliff dwellers are san worshippers They expose their pew-born children to the full rays of the sun, and show in many other ways their devotion to the great luminary, They are usually tall, lean and well formed. Thelr skin is of a black-red color, more like the African’s than the Indian's Lieutenant Schwatka say has heretofore been known about these ple execpt by the balf-Indians of the Mexi- cnn mount He estimates the cave and cliff dwellers to number from 3000 to 12,000 They are armed only with bows, arrows and hatchots M. FERRY INSULTED. A Wild Scene the French Cham. ber of Deputies ascend lightest that nothing peo EL) mn An exci Ig scene occurred in the f Deput o on the Edo the High Vorry 1 his erie he To of t} t and t) When ti mew hat fg The HE Order : Mr. Pre POO JUSTICE GRAY'S MARRIAGE, He Weods a Daughter of Justioe Matthews, pond the Late f the United States Supreme Mat) Justice Gray Court and Mis of Joanne ts wy daugh- ter Matihows, wery married § ag in Washington bus ; of bride, rated ox Upsle durine 1 thie devs bridal OPO hou via borately flower he performance of and the 1) ny, ood in airroundod a sen b 4 fo | $4 Laoonard of St. John Iw i smn iin of the 5 h til Were iva Matthews | L] : hs 2H “on i} } 3 THOUSANDS BUTCHERED, Western Abyssinia Made a Desert by the Conquering Mahdists, Missionary Jotters to the Anti-Slave say that the Mahdists have Western Abvwinia a desert Whale flocks thousands of Savery, ry Roriety ms and herds have been de heen others the 170) Christians have thrown thovsmnds of have boenn butchered an hundreds of poblest inhabitants have been talen Mecca as slaves in violation of treaties As Mus. 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