REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINKE'S SUN- DAY SERMON, Bulject: “The Sword of Eleazar.' Text: “And His hand olave wnto the peord,” II Bamuel xxiii, 10. A great general of King David was Eleazar, the hero of the text, The Phillis tines opened battle against him, and his troops retreated. The cowards flsd. Eloazar and three of his comrades went into the battle and swept the fleld, for four men with God on their side are Srvujor than a whole battalion with God against them. “Fall back!" shouted the commander of the Philistine army. The ory ran along the host, “Fall back!” Eleazar having swept the fleld throws himself on the ground to rest, but the muscles and sinews of his hand had been so long bent around the hilt of the sword that the hilt was embeddied in the flesh, and the gold wire of the hilt had broken through the skin of the palm of the hand, and he could not drop his sword which he had so gallantly wielded. ‘‘His hand clave unto the sword.” That is what I call magnificent fighting for the Lord God of Israel, And we want more of it. | sropose to show you this morning how leazar took hold of the sword and how the sword took hold of Eleazar, 1 look at Eleazar's hand, and I come to the conclu- sion that he took the sword w.th a very tight grip. The cowards who fled had no trouble in dropping their swords. As they fly over the rocks | hear their swords clang- ing in every direction. It is easy enot gh for them to drop their swords. But Eleazar's hand clave unto the sword, Oh, my friends, in this Christian conflict wo want a tighter grip of the Gospal weap- ons, a tighter grasp of the two edged sword of the truth. It makes me sad to wee these Christian people who hold only a part of the truth and fot the rest of the truth go, so that the Philistines, seeing the loosened grasp, wrench the whole sword away from them. The only safe thing for us to dois to put our thumb on the book of Genesis and sweep our hand around the book antil the New Testament comes into the palm, and keep on sweeping our hand around the book until the tips of the fingers clutch at the words, created the heavens and the earth.” | like an infidel a great deal better than I do one | of these namby-pamby Christians who hold a part of the truth ar vd let the rest go miracle God preserved this Bible just as is, and it is a Damascus blade, test to which a sword can be put in a sword factory is to wind the blade around a gun barrel like a ribbon, and then when the sword is Jet looses it flies back to shape. So the sword of Go fully tested, and it is bent this way and that way, and wound this way and that way, but it to own shape Thi book written eighteen cen turies ago, always comes back nkofit! A ita this book 1s 1 fes every week, and copies a year. I say now that a which is divinely inspired and divine ly kept and divinely soattered Is a weapon worth holding a tight grip of, Bishop Colenso will come along and try to wrench out of your hand tne five books of Moses, and Straus will come to wrench out of your and Renan will come wrench out of your more than twenty thousand eop- more than a million along and try hand the miracles, along and try to band the entire life of the Lord Jesus Christ, and your associates in the store, or the shop, or the fact the banking house will try your band the entee strength of the Lord God of lsrsel and with Eleazar's grip, bold on to it You gi the Bible, you give up any partof it, and you give up pardon and peace and life and DEA Ven, 1 seo hundreds, perhaps thousands, young men in this audience ashamed, young man, to have the world know that you are a friend of the Bible This book is the friend of all that is good and it is the sworn enemy of all that is bad, An eloquent writer recently gives an inci dent of ux very bad man who stood in a owil of a western prison. This erimir through all styles of erime, and b waiting for the gallows. The con ing there at the window of the . writer says, ‘looked out and declared, * an infidel.’ He said that to all the men and women and children who happened to be there, ‘I am an infidel and the eloquent writer says, ‘Every man and woman ther believed him.” And the writer goes on to say “If he had stood there saying, ‘I am a Chris tian,’ every man and woman would bave said, ‘He is a liar™" This Bible is the sworn enemy of all this wrong, and it is the friend of all that is good a, hold on to it Donot take part of it and throw the rest away. Hold on to all of it There are $0 many people now who do not know, You ask them if the gout | s immortal, and they say, ‘I guess it ls, [don’t know; perhaps it is, perbaps it lst oo the Bible true’ “Well, perhaps it ig, 1 perhaps 1t jan't perhaps it may be figuratively, and perhaps it may be partly, and perhaps it may not be at all.” hey despise what they call the Apostolic creed; but if their own « 1 were written out it would read like this: “I be lieve in nothing, the Maker of heaven and earth, and in nothing which it hath sent, which nothing was born of nothing, and which nothing was dead and buried and descended into nothing, and arose from nothing, and ascended to nothing, and now sitteth at the right hand of nothing, from which it will come to judge noth ing. I believe in the holy agnostic church and ia the communion of nothing arians, and in the forgiveness of nothing, and the resurrection of nothing, and in the life that never shall be. Amen” the creed of tens of thousands of people in this day. If you have a mind to adopt such a theory I will not. “I believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ, and in the eatholie church, and in the communion saints, and in the life everlasting. Amen ry. to wrench oat of but in Bible, the of Ob, when | soe Eleazar taking such a stout | grip of the sword in the battle against sin and for righteousness, 1 come to the conely- sion that we ought to take a stouter grip of God's eternal truth, the sword of righteous Dens, As I look at Zleazer's band 1 also notios his spirit of self forgetfulness, He did not notice that the hilt of the sword was eating through the palm of his haod. He did not know it hurt him. As he went out into the conflict he was so anxious for the victory he forgot himself, and that Lilt might go ever 80 Geeply into the pair of his hand it could | “His hand clave unto the | not disturb him sword.” Oh, my brothers and sisters, let us go into Christian conflict with the spirit of self abnegation. Who cares whether the world praises us or denounces us? What do | we care for misrepreseutation, or abuse or persecution jo a conflict like this? Let us orget ourselves, Toat man who i+ afraid of gutting his hand hurt will over kill a Phillis tine, Who cares whether you get hurt or not if you get the victory?! Oh, how many Christians thers are who are all the time ory ying about the way the world treats hey are so tired, and the abused, and they are so tem Flonzer did not think whether he a hand, or an arm or a foot, All he wanted was vie- tory. Wo see how men forget themselves in wardly achievement. We have often seen men who in order to achieve worldly suo. conn will forget ul a Vi steat fatigno tnd all ance and all obstacies. Just alter piayed some swt tune, “On, is it not strange that while the music of the Gospe! of Jesus Christ and with this grand march of the church militant on the way to be cone the church triumphant, we cannot forget ourselves and forget all pang and all sorrow and all persecution and all per- turbation? We know what men accomplish under wordly opposition. Men do not shrink back from antagonism or for hardship. You have admired Prescott's “Conquest of Mexico,” as brilliant and beautiful a history as was ever written; but some of you may not know un- der what disadvantages it was writtén—that “Conquest of Mexico’ '—for Prescott was to- tally blind, and he had two pieces of wood pasalil to each other fastened, and totally lind, with his pen between those pieces of wood he wrote, the stroke against one plece of wood telling how far the pen must go in one way, the stroké against the other plece of wood telling how far the pen must go the other way, Oh, how much men will endure | for worldly knowledge and for worldly suc cess, and vet how little we endure for Jesus Christ. How many Christians there are that go around saying, ‘Ob, my hand, my hand, my hurt hand; don't you ses thers is blood on the hand, and there is blood on the sword? while Eleazar, with the hs im- bedded in the flesh of his right hand, does not know it Must I be carried to the skies On flowery beds of ease White others fought to win the prize Or sailed through biocody seas’ What have we suffered in comparison with those who expired with suffocation, or | were burned, or were chopped to pieces for the truth’s sake? We of olden times. There is just as much perse- cution going on now in various ways, In 1840, in Madagascar, oi hl man were put to death for Christ's sa They wers to be hurled over the rocks, and before they were hurled over the rocks, in order to make their death the more dreadful in anticipation, they were put in beskets and swung to ani fro over the precipios that they might see how many hundred feet they would have to be dashed down, and while they were swing. ing in these baskels over tho rocks they sang: Jesus, lover of my sou let me to Thy bosom fiy While the billows near me While the terapost still is high. rou, “In the beginning God | its own | I's truth bas been | book | { there or | day ! Bh give up | ! apply our Indignation to of | Do not be | {| here | the sin the sword will adbers to | hand, | fow J | the sinews and muscles would relax That is | holy | Then they were dashed down to death! Oh, how much others have endured for Christ and bow little we endure for Christ! We want to ride to heaven in a Pullman sleop- ng-car, our feet on soft plush, the bed Eby up early so we can sleep all the way, the | black porter of death to wake us up only in By | it | The severest | time to enter the golden city We want all the surgeons to fix our hand up. Let them bring on all tne lint, and all the bandages, and all the salve, for dur band is hart, while Elsazer does not know his hand Is hurt. “His hand ciave unto the sword’ As I look at Eleazar's hand 1 come to conclusion that th the be has done a great deal of bard hitting. Iam not surprised when I soe that those four men -Eleazar and his three companions-—drove back the army of | Philistines that Eleazar’s sword clave to his and some of it thousan is of years | ago, and yet in our tame the average sale of | hand, for every time he struck an enemy with one end of the sword the other end sword wounded him. When hold of the sword the sword took him, Oh, I'd Ih he took hold of we have found ao enemy who the | cannot be conquered by rose water and soft specches It straight thrast, there is fraud f= lust, must be sharp stroke There is intempsrance and there is gambling, and there are ten thousand battalions imiquity, armed FPhilistin iniquity How are they to be captured and overthrown’ Soft sermons in morocco cases laid down in front of an ex juisite audi ence will not do it. You have got to call things by their right names We have got to expel from our of Christians who eat the sacrament on Sun and devour widows houses all the wesk. We have got to stop our indignation against the Hittites and the Jebusites and the gishites, and let those poor wretches mud the modern trans pressions which need to be dragged out and slain. Ababs here Herods here. Jezabels be massacre of the infants bere Strike for God so hard that while you siay your own friends, we want a John Wesley the 2 The Christian on it until we stic word to iniquity we are ab it. And we must go with swor a silve chased and presented by the ladios, and we st ride ite palfrey under embroid using, putting the spurs only just enough to make the charger dance fully, £nd then we must soni a misiy ste as a wedding card, to nek the ok giant of sin if he will not sarrende Women saved by the grav of God and glorious mission sent, detains! [rom Sabbath classes because their new gat is not done Churches that shook our oit with great revivals sending around to ask some deo strative worshiper if he will not please to say “amen” and “hallelujah” a little softer, [1 seems as if in our churches we wanted a baptism of cologne and balm of a thousand flowers, when wo actually need a baptism of fire from the Lord God of Panteco Bat wo are 80 afraid somebody will eriticise « Sarmons, oF criticise our prayers or o mr religious wor (hat our anxiety world's redemption is lost in the fea: our hand hu . while Elsazsr went “And his hand and and anl ure Gage A I tall you, my hn Knoxes and Christian church dency stor Keep on refining > In whole wor ten We ine ~ ge mu ered ho wm wi on po nr Mticise for th we wil into ciave unto the got the conflict, sword.’ But I see in the next piace what a hard thing it was for Eliazar to get his hand and his sword parted. The muscles and the sin- ews had been so long grasped around the sword he could not drop it when he proposed | to drop it, and his three comrades, | suppos | came up and tried to heip him, and they bathed the back part of the hand, hoping Bas no “His band clave unto the sword" Then they tried to pull open the fingers and to pull back the thumb; but no-sooner were they pulled “and his hand clave unto the sword” Put after a while they were sucossful, then they noticed that the curve in the palm of the hand corresponded exactly with the curve of the hilt, “His hand clave unto the sword.” You end 1 bave seen it many a time There are in the United States today many aged ministers of the Gospel. They are too fesble now to preach. In the church records the word opposite their name i “emer. itu.” or the words are, “A minister without charge.” They were an hervic race. They bad small salaries and but lew books, and they swam spring freshets to meet their ap polntments, Bat they did in their day a mighty work for God. They took off more ol the heads of Philistine iniquity than you could count from noon to sundown, You put that old minister of the Gospel now Into a praver meeting, or occasional pulpit, or a sick | room where thers issome ons to be Somfort- | od, and it is the same old ring to his voi: i and the same old story of rh and Christ and heaven, in hand bas wo long elatehed tas sword in Christian oonfiiot | he cannot drop it. "Hie howd siave unto the sword,” i had in ny pasia in Philadelphia a very in lis earl Hts hag, boon the thi i Bo pi To was his When ba could not stand ardor for Christ, in the moeting row his arms 2 2 2 g i § HH £ 34 i : E ® : E talk of the persecution | back than they closed again, | on and pence i Joshua, Soldiers coms back from battle have the names of the battles on their flags, showing where they distinguishel them- solves, and It in a very appropriate inserip- tion, Jook at the flag of old General Joshua! On it Jericho, Gibson, Hazar, City of Al, and lnstead of ‘the stars sprinkled on the flag the sun and the moon which stood still. There he is, one hun irel and ten years old. Helis lying fiat on his back but he is preaching. Hix dying words are a battle charge against idolatry and a rallying ery for the Lord of Hosts as he says, “Boh: id, this day I go the way of all the earth, and God hath not failed to fulfill his promise concerning Israel.” His dying hand clave unto the sword. There is tho headless oly of Paul on the road to Ostea. His great brain and his great heart have been severad. The elmwood rods had stung him fearfully, When the corn ship broke up he swam ashore, coming up drenohed with the brine. Every day since | that day whan the horse reared "under him | inthe suburbs of Damascus, as the superna- tural light fell, down to this day when he is sixty-eight years of age and old and decrepit | from the prison cell of the Mamertine, ho has been outrageously treated, and he is waiting | to die. How does he spend his lagt hours! Felling the world how badly he feels, and de- scriblog the rheumatism that he got In prison, the rheumatism afflicting his limbs, { or the neuralgia plercing his temples, or the { thirst that fevers Lis tongue?! Oh, no. His f last words are the battle shout for Christen- | dom: “I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand; I have fought the good fight.” And so his dying | hand clave unto the sword It was in the front room on the second | floor that my father lay a-dying. It was Saturday morning, four o'clock. Just three years before that day my mother had left him for the skies, and he had been homesok to join her om muy. He was eighty-three years of inisters of the G spel came in to com TT him, but he comforted them, How wondertally the words sounded out from his dying pillow, *‘1 have been young and now am old, yet have I never seen the righteous forsaken, or his seed begging bread.” They bathed his brow, they bathed bis hands, and they bathed his "test and they | succeaded in stral ghtenir ag out the feet; but they did not sucosed in bathing open the hand so it would stay open. They bathed the hand open, but oame shut. They bathed it open again, but it came shut What was the matter with the taumb and the fingers of that old band? Ah! it had so long clutched the sword of Christian con- flict that *‘his hand clave unto the sword." I preach this sermon as a tonic. I want you to hold the truth with ineradicable grip, and I want you to strike so hard for God that it will react and while you take the sword, the sword will take you You noticed that the officers of the North. ern army a few years ago assembled at Deaver, and you noticed that the officers of the Southern army assembled at Lexington Soldiers coming together are very apt to re- wint thelr experiences and to show their soars. Hero is a soidler who pulls up his sleeve and says, “There I was wounded in that arm.” and shows the scar And an other soldier pulis down his collar, and mys, “There, 1 was wounded in the neck. And another soldier says, “Ihave had no us of that limb since the gun-abot fractare™ Ob, my friends, when the battle of life Is over and the resurrection has come and our bodies rise from the doad, will ne have on us any soars of bravery for God? Christ will be there all oversd with soars. Boars on the hrow, scars on the band, scars on the feet, soars all over the heart, won in the battle of redemp- And all heaven will sob aloud with 0 as they look on those soars. [gna tins will be there and he will point out the pisces where the tooth and paw of the lion ized him in the Coliseum: and John Huss will be there, and he will show where the first scorched the foot on that day when bis 8 9irit took wing of flame from Constance, M'Millan and Campbell and Freeman, American missioosriss in India, will be th the men who with thelr wives and children went down in the aw lal massacre at Cawnpore. and they will show where the daggers of the Nepovs struck them The Waldenses will be there, and they will show whare their bones were broken on that day when the Pleimontisse soldiery pitohed ver the rocks, And ther ho took care of the sick and who after the poor, and they will have wou of earthly exhaustion. And Christ, His scarred hand waving over the multitude, will say, Y ou suffered wm earth: now be glorified with Me in heaven And then the great organs of eternity will take up the chant and 8t. John play Thess are they who came out of great tribulation and had their robes washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb.” But what will your chagrin and mine if it shall be told that day on the streets of heaven that on earth we sh=aak back from all toll and sacrifice and hardstiip. No soars to show the heavenly soldiery Not go much as one ridge on the palm of the hand to show that Just onoe in the battle for God and the trath, we just once grasped the sword wo firmly, and struck so hard that the sword and the hand stuck together, and the hand clave to the sword. O my Lord Jesus, rouse us to Thy service Thy saints it I. a ere # will be those will un all congaer thoagh the fhis glorious war Shall vr die They see the triamph from afar, And seize it with the eye When that ligetrions day shall rise And all Thy armies shine In robes of victory through the skies, The glory shall be Thine Suicide Statisties. The grim subject of suicide is con- stantly being forced upon the attention of New Yorkers. The asaily papers fre. quently report as many as a dozen cases of suicide or attempted suicide within twenty-fours hours and the num- ber of reported cases by represent the number of occur, There is a law on the statute books which makes attempted suicide a felony. On referriog to statis. tics I find that the one suicide to every 3017 inhabitants, The minimum mtio was in 1864, when there was one suicide in every 28 827 | inhabitants, The largest number of suicides among males occurred between | the ages of thirty-five and forty, and | among females between thirty and thirty. (five. About one-third of the whole “number of suicides wse poison,—New York Tlsgram. A Pading Race. The recently dom pleted census of the Sandwich Islands shows the same decline in the population that has been mani. | fested in the past, When the islands 1 wore first discovered, in 1778, by Cap. | tain Cook, be estimated the population | at 400, 000, The first official census was | taken more than fifty years afterward, and showed a po, then of 180, . In 1853 there were but 71,019; | and the present ngmber is 34,436. In Lr ————— ———— 5 be | no means | cases that | maximum rate of | suicides in New York during the last | eighty years was in 1808 when thero was | Ri A Curlous Missile, A curious missile was recently cut out of the limb of a prominent citizen of Mount Sterling, Ala., who wns wounded | in that member in the first battle of Ma- | nassas, The citizen, Major James Mor- rison, has sufferea from periodical break- ing out of the wound, which was situated | mm the calf, but, though probed for | several times, all attempts to find the ball | proved unsuccessful, On last Friday, how- ever, the doctors succeeded in discovering | and removing the irritating body, when it was found to be nc bullet, gold button, found to be inscribed with “E. to R. Mizpah,” lettering. the legend The button is perfectly round and | of a» buckshot. having a about the size small Jink attached, by which it was caught to a garment or watch chain, on which it was in all probability worn as a | hastily | charm. In all likelihood it was crammed into the owner's musket when | out of ammunition and in an emergency. Major Morrison naturally prizes this memento which he has carried for thirty- one years, but says he will return it to the man who fired it if he still lives and | ' : | ean relate the circumstances under which circumstances Major, and remained in he made use of it, which were such as to impress the cannot have failed to have the mind of his assailant. The button was in all probability the loving gift or faithful blue, of some fair young sweetheart wife to her bel boy in In glad to recover the , which is none the worse for tl Major's leg, thoug oved who will pretty trifle is 2 the removal, ong hiding in the ledly the rapidly intter is deci and is r healing since the operation Firing 3 Shells at Hix oh Angles, The tested Dew ann shells Hoo! 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RICHT AND DAY I Holds the worst rup- ture with ease un oF Ril CITT RIO, ABSUSTHENT Perfoet | {{oRIont, It is harmless in i it cleanses the cured me sound and well of Gao vered 1 was alll 5 88 COPYRIGHT 18 A sense of fullness and other troubles after eating? Then you need a “Pellet,” ot one of the ordinary, griping, tear ing pills—it’s a sickness in itself to take them. But one of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets—the original Liver Pill, the smallest and the easiest to take, The easiest in the way they work, too—they’re mild and gentle, ( but thorough and effective, Every part of the system fegls their health, ful influence. They ¢leanse and regulate the liver, stomach and bow- els. Regulate, mind ou. They revent disease as well as cure it I'hey’re purely vegetable and perfect ly harmless. Sick Headac) 1e, Bilious Headache, C onstipation, Indige stion, and all derange ments of the liver, stomach and bowels are promptly relieve d and permanent ly cured. They're the cheapest pill you can , for they're guaranteed to give faction, or Yo our mone y is re- turned. You fag | This is true onl y of Dr. Pierce's medicines, Blood Pure. wv J buy satis pay only for the good vou worth many pounds the liability ability to resist Look then to >.) y the most > every J 1« all poisons wealth. contagious Blood Polson. As licted with the disease } and in a few weeks | was perma Groner Srewant, Bheiby, Olio @ Atlanta Ga Hpecifie Or UNEXCELLED! APPLIED EXTERNALLY Pom Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Pains in ths Limbs, Back or Chast, Mumps, Sora Throat, Colds, Sprains, Bruises, Stings of Insects, Mosquito Bites. TAKEN INTERNALLY It mets Hike a charm lor Cholera Meorbas, Dianrrhen, Dysentery, Collis, Cramps, Naas sen, Sok Headache, doo, Warranted perfectly harmises. See sath sccompanying each bottle, nlse directions erase, lis SOCUTHING and PENETRAS TING gualities, re toll immediately. Try Mand be convince sd, Price 49 asd V0 conta, Sold by all drag. ghntn, PEFoOT, 40 MIRRAY ST, NEW YORK n———————— —— ———————— : Ww. L. DOUCLAS $3 SHOE cenf&fen. The BEST SHOE 1a the World for the Money, GENTLEMEN and LADIES, sve your dol irs by wearing WL. Douglas Shoms, Ther moe the wants of all classes, and are the most sconomionl foot wesr ever offered for the money, Neware of Goalers who offer other mak a being Jus a8 good, and be sare you have W WL Douglas “hoo, wilh nate and price stam jwed on bottom. Ww. LL Douglas, Brockton, Mass IF TAKE NO sUBSTITUTE. 0 Instat om Joh! sdvertisnd dealers supplying you. HOW TO SAVE 80 por ot. or more In CA IR Kn ra hot ap sh aluabie HAMMOND, KUmnEn YAR, i. UANSAS FARMS == = id ~ > .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers