REV. DR. TALMAGE. —— on s— THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON, Subject: “Kindness™ Text: “The barbarous people showed us no little kindness." —Acts xxviil,, 2. My text puts us on the island of Malta, another name for Melita, This island, which has always been an important commer. cial centre, belonging at different times to Phoenicia, to Greece, to Rome, to Arabia, to Spain, to France, now belongs to England, The area of the island is about one hundred square miles, It is in the Mediterranean sea, and of such clarity of atmosphere that Mount Etna, one hundred and thirty miles away, can be distinctly seen, The island is gloriously memorable, because the Knights of Malta for a long while ruled there, but most famous because of the apostolic ship- wreck, The bestormed vessel on which Paul sailed bad “laid to” on the starboard tack, and the wind was blowing east-northeast, and the vessel drifted probably a mile and a half an hour ere she struck at what is now called St. Paul's bay. Practical sailors have taken up the Bible account and decided beyond controversy the place of the shipwreck, But the island which has rough a coast is for the most part a garden. Richest fruit and a profusion of oney characterized it in Paul's time as well as now. The finest oranges, figs and olives grow there. When Paul and his comrades crawled up on the beach, saturated with salt water and hnngry from long abstinencs from food and chilled to the bone, the islanders, though called barbarians because they could not speak Greek, opened their doors to the shipwrecked unfortunates Everything bad gone to the bottom of the deep, and the barefooted, bareheaded apos tie and ship's crew were in a condition to appreciate hospitality, About twenty-five such men a few seasons ago I found in the life station near Easthampton, Long Island. They had got ashore in the nigl from the sea, and not a hat nor shoe ha they left. They found out, as Paul and his fellow voyagers found out, that the sea is the roughest of all robbers. My text finds the ship's crew ashore on Malta, and around a hot fire drying themselves, and with best provision the island offer the: And they » government quarters | three days to recuperate, Publius, the ruler, inviting them, although he had severe sick pess in the house at that time down with tery Yea, for three and watch Jisahld sO ut they en ¥ ®O it i the A's can go int dyse naj x to and rard to the me wmrous people Vhat a great word that It a reed as long a wt which tha apocal tic angel used to measure heaven to tell the length, the breadth, the height of that munificent word, It a favorite Bible word, and it is early launched in the book of Ger Au p in the be Joshua, embraced wk of sworn by in 3 crowned in the throned in many places in the New ment. Kindness A word no more than m y. 1 expect it will wres down before I get through with strong enough to throw an archs it will be well for u and warm and his fellow v on island of Malta wherat themselves immortal in my text by the way they treated these victims of the sea. “The barbarous showed us no little kind- ness Kindness Fy. potent word break is, yor te : +} i is ourseive ind the fire [altese made peopie | All definitions of that multi down half way. You say it is clemency, benignity, generosity; it is made up of good wishes, it is an expres sion of beneflcence, it is a contribution the happiness of others, Some “WwW by, lean g to NO ISS SRYS: of kind it is g grace, it ON PaRs- manliness definition ve woul, isthe cor sion, i and You have ma tion It all know ita pows H pf ef as Paul fel 1 through? def}. But all have of rock dead faliure in your cannot what woe MAY mat it none showed disposition, kind- f act, and there is impersomktion all of Kindness! You cannot affect it, cannot play it as a part, you cannot it, vou cannot dramatize it. By the { ou must have it inside you, summer, or rather a8 com we and October, the geniality of the one and the tonic of the other, It can- not dwell with arrogan ite or revenge or malevolence, Ati ADPAATaAn ail these Amal s and Gergishites ttit nd Jebusites must quit, and Lites ndness of 2 ywiness Christ, th AT of soe v riasthhg bination of June e in wishes everybody well every ry woman every child every bird well, every horse well, every cat well (ive this spirit you would have no jeties for prevention of cruelty no more need of pro woman's association, and it y sword until it would pot and unwhee! every battery till and make gunpowder of no rid except for rock blast. ceieliration. spirit divinely implanted, wer to prayer, and then to be until it fills all the perfume richer and more nette, and, as if you put ynatic beauty bebind the the mantel in some corner body can ses it, you find people r room lookifig this way and that yu ask them What are you looking for And they answer: “Where js that flower?” So if one has in his soul this wall, eve well, well, every more u py uni |X 5 a and an tein iy « nat pung atu { clock on wiere titivated with a nt than mign that ar or walking about vy andy Let us all pray for this spicit of kin Ines, Ib will settle a thousand questions, It will change tho phase of everything. It will mel low through and through our entire nature, It will transform a lifetime, It is not a feeling gotton up for occasions, but peren- nial, That is the reason 1 like petunias better than morning glories. They look very much alike, RF it I should put in your hand a petunia and a morning glory you could hardly tell which is the petunia and which the morning glory; but the morning glory blooms only a few hours and then shuts up for the day, while the petunia is in as widespread a glow at twelve o'clock at noon and six o'clock in the ovening as at sunrise, And the grace of kindness is not spasmodic, is not intermittent, is not for a little while, but it irradiates the whole na: ture, all through and clear oa till the sunset of our eartuly existence. Kindness! I am resolved to get it, Are you resolved to get it? It does not come by haphazard, but through culture under the divine help, Thistles grow without ture. Rocky mountain sage grass grows without culture. Mullen stalks grow without culture, But that great red rose in the conservatory, its leaves packed on leaves, deep dyed as though it had besn obliged to fight for Ita beauty and it were still reeking with the carnage of the battle, that rose needed to be cultured, and through culs | long years its floral ancestors were cultured O God, implant kindness in all our souls, and | then give us grace to watch it, to earich it, infinite sweetness of disposition its perfume will walm « verything But if you ars waiting and hoping for some one to be bankrupted or exposed or dis comfited, or in any way overthrown, then kindness has not taken possamion of your pature. You are wrecked on a Malta where there are no oranges, You are entertain. ing a guest so unlike kindness that kindness will not come and dwell under the same roof. The most exhausting aod unhealthy and ruinous feeling on earth is a revengeful spirit or retaliating spirit, asl know by experiance, for I or ten minutes at a time, thing has been done me have feit “I will pay him in his will show him up. The ingratel tor! The liar! villain!" But five or ten minutes of the feeling has been so unnerving and exhausting that 1 have abandoned it, and I cannot understand how people can go about torturing them seives five or ten or twenty years trying to get even with somebody. only way you will ever triumph over your enemies is by forgiving them and wishing them all good and no evil. As malevolence is the most uneasy and profitiess and dan- arous feeih, , kindosss (s the most health. ul and delightful, And this is not an abe straction, As I have tried a little of the Ketaiintion, #0 I have tried a little of the for- I do not want to leave this world until I have taken vengeance upon every man that ever did me a w by dofng Diana When some mean or said about me | own coin, 1 The | have tried it five The tra to develop it! The king of Prussia had presented to him by the empress of Russia the root of a rare flower, and it was put in the royal garden on an island, and the heal gardener, Herr Fintelmann, was told to waten it. And ous day it put forth its glory. Three days of every week the peoples were admitted to these gardens and a young man, probably not realizing what a wrong thing was doing, plucking this Hower and put it in his buttonhole, and gare dener arrestel him as he was crossing at the ferry, and asksd the king to throw open no more his gardens to the public. Toe king replied: “Stall 1 deay the thousands o good people of my country the privilege of seeing this garden because one visitor ha done wrong? No, let them coms and ses the beautiful grounds.’ And when the gardener wished to give ths king the name of the off sader who had take the royal flo he sa “No, my mem is very tenaci 11 in my mind the name is tae iim a favor soma you uid hinder me granting time Now, | want that Kindness is blessed , Im When ¥ wanded many Ivo surr 80 ATS, jaw, more ars the tw sion and arrest, these {our impris many take no hint in regard to the danger ous power of the toague, and the results and laceration, sacrification and damnation There are th ry know a good thing about you and a bad thing, will meation the bad thing 1 though they had never beard the good Now there are sides to almost have the choice of We w as they « y Hips wits and notwithstan mments or lin we it hi tw) aracter, and we hauling the virtue or CAND § Paul and the ship's WI wach of Malta with the ‘What rry looking set you are How little of gation you must to run on thes rock Dida't you better than to put 0 the Mediterr was not everyone's the vice or nav this wintry mon ship anyhow, or piec want? We lbave a living { ! on us two hundred and seventy-six muffin Not maid said: “Come in! warm Y off with ves home, You i Oma sOi} Ones In 8 your vovage bandage on your forehead for ugly gash you got from the floating tim bers, and here is a man witha brosen ar We will have a doctor coms to attend to t fracture.” And though for thres mont the kindness went on, we have Hist more than this brisf record, “The barbarou people showed us no little kindaess ” Oh! say the cordial thing! Say the usefu thing! Say the hospitable thing! “ay the helpful thing! Bay the Christiike thing Bay the kind thir I admit that this is easier for some tamperaments than for ot ers. Some are born pessimists, and some are born optimists, and that demonstrates itanlf all through everything it a cloudy morning You mest a possi and you say, “What woather to-day wnswars, “It's going to storm.” and rella under arm and a watarproof mt show that he is honest in that utis On the same block, a minute after, you meet an optimist, and you say, “Waat veather today” “Good weather, this is miy a fog and will soon scatter.” The ibsencs of umbrelia and absence of water proof overcoat show it is an honest utter ance On your way at noon to lancheon yon meet an optimistic merchant and you say “What do you think of the commercia prospects? and he says: “Glorious. Great crops must bring great business. Weare going to have such an autumn and winter of prosparity as wo bave never seen.” On your way back to your store you meet a pessimistic merchant. “What FA you think of the commercial prospects” you ask. And he answers: “Well, | don't know So much grain will surfeit thecountry., Farm. ors have more bushels but less prices, and | the grain gamblers will got their fist in. There Is toe McKinley bill, and the bay | crop ls short in some places, and in t' southern part of Wisconsin they had a hail. | storm, and our business is as dull as it ever was” You will find the same difference in judgment of character. A man of gool yatation is assailed and charge with some evil dead, At the first story the pessimist will believe in gulls, “The papers sald so, and that's enough, Down with him." The mist will may: “I don't believe a wordof it. [don't think a man that has been as useful and seemingly honest for twenty years could have got off the track lke that. There are two sides to this story, and I will walt to hear the other side before I condemn him.” My hearer, if Ja ary by nature a pessimist, make a special effort by the grace of God to extirpate the dolorous and the hypsreritioal from your disposition. Believe nothing ngsina anybody until the wrong is established by at least two wit. nesses of integrity, And if guilt bs proved, find out the extenuating circuastanows if thers are any, And then commit to amory - Jans = oan quots for raolf and quota for others ry chapter of First that it wo a8 80 SOON as that hard snoug ith wr elves w the Maltese, I Sit d 80, think th ywin by the fire and Glad that v Make to tht a Here, all we sume let me that buat noe. sulfers blie and in private, says all the hn ink o Ae han of ten shain ond of your tongue, and ths upper Jaw on u wightly | orator, six weoks after his desth. pe up. What a place Brookiyn would hs to liveln, and all the other cities ana neighborhoods to live in, if charity dominatad! What if all the young and o Aguniipers were dead! The Lord hasten thelr funerals! What if tictle tattle and whispering were out of fashion! What if in cipering out the value of other people's character, in our moral arithmefic, we stuck to addition instead of substraction Kindness! Let us morning, noon and n ght pray for it until wo get it. When you can speak a good word for some ons spank it. I you ean conscisntiously give letter of come mendation, give It, Watch for opportuni ties for doing good fifty years after you are dead, All my lifes has bean affacteld by the Int of introduction that the Rev, Dr, Van Vrean- ken, of New Brunswick Theological Bemi- nary, wrote for me, a boy under him, when I was seeking a settlement in which to preach the Gospel, The lptter gave ms my first pulpit. Dr. Van Vranken has been | | | coming. The gardens bloomed, and the orchards ripened, ani the wheat flolds turned their silver into gold, and health clapped its hands, and joy shouted from the bill tops, and the nations lifted their foreheads into ths light, and the earth had a doxology for the sky, and the sky an an them for the earth, and the warmth and the | sparkle, anl the gladress, and the follage, | and the | beauty, and the life, were the only | towering | | our Lord from dead mors than thirty Jour yot 1 feel the ' old professor, when I re- Rev, Thomas Mothodist By way o’ the eternal world? Oh, no, by way of this world, I did not meet the friend to whom he gave the message until nearly two months after Thomas Guard had ascended Ro you oan start a word about some one that will be on its travels and vigorous long after the funeral psalm has basen sung at your obsequies, Kindness! Way, if fifty men all aglow wich it should walk through the lost world, abolish perdition. : Farthermore, there is kindness of action, That is what Joseph showed to his out rageous brothers. That is what David showed to Mephibosheth for his [father Jonathan's sake, That is what Onesiphorus showed to Paul in the Roman peaiteatiary That is what William Cowper recognizel when he said he would not trast a maa who would with his foot nesdlessly crush a worm That is what our assassinated Presi dent Lincoln demonstratel when his private secretary found him in the Capitol grounds trying to got n bird back to tho nest from which i had fallen, and which quality the illu ious man exhibited years before, when baving with jomo lawyers in the carriage on tae way court passed on the road a f i Pror awhile cried to his hor Wine ast In to ths gen jen, "4 touch of that maguificent Strange sensation was 1b coived a kind message from Guard, of Baltimore, ths groat 4 mire, and said and help that | lid most unint was the wu wz and j§ sresting BO De lepart Ntephens, H. 3 comang WE indies call as chearfully and as first oall, Suppose all this assemblage, all to whom these words shall come by printer's type, should resolve to make kindness an over: arching, uadergirding and all pervadiog princip's of their life, and then carry out the resciution-—-why, ia six months the whole earth would feal it People would say; “What is the matter? [tt sesns to me that the world is getting to be a betler place to live ia Why, life after all is worth liv. Why, ther Saylock, my neighbor, ithdrawn lawsuit of f ure at and becanse he has had wi in his family be is go fing to have the hous for year rent free. There is an old lawyer in that young lawyer's office, and do you know what he has gone in there for! Why, be is help ing fix up a case which is too big for the yougg man to handia and the white haired atioraey minting up previous decisions and making out a brief for the boy Down atthe bank | heard yesterday a note was and the young ant A moat ft. and the oid mer went in and got for him three months’ ex- tensiom, which r the young merchant is tween bankraptey and business. And ia « wroat who had a fine picture of Niagara,’ and he could not family were suffering, and themselves in the rapids: and a lady heard it and said, ‘lI do not pesd th picture, but for ths encouragement of art and helping you out of your distress [ will take it’ and on the drawing room wall are the ‘Rapids of Niagara.’ “Do you know that a strange thing has taken place in the pulpit and all the old ministers are helping the young ministers, and all the dootors are helping the young doctors, and the farmers are assisting each other in gathering the harvest, and for that farmer who is sick the neighbors have made a ‘bee,’ as they call it, and they have all turoed in to belp him get his crops into the garner, And they tell me that the older and more skiliful reporters who have permanent positions on papers are helping the young fellows who are just be ginning to try and don't know exactly how todo it. An after a fow erasures and inter. polations on the reporter's pad they say: ‘Now here is a readable agoount of that tragedy; hand it in and [ am sure the man aging editor will take it’ “And | heard this morning of a poor old man whose thres children were in hot debate as to who should take care of him in his de- clining days. The oldest son declared it was his right because he was the oldest, and the youngest son said i was his right beoauss he was the youngest, snd Mary sald it was her right becaase she etter understood father's vertigo and rheumatism and poor spalls and knew better how to nurse him, and the only way the difficulty conld be settied was by the old man's promise that he would divide the ear into three parts, and spend a third of is timo with each one of them “And neighboring stores in the same line of goods on the same block are acting kindly to each other, and when one fa a little short of a certain kind of goods his neighbor says, ‘I will help you until you can replenish your sholves' It seems to me that those words of Isaiah are being fulfilled when he says, ‘The carpenter encouraged the goldsmith, and he that smooths with the hammer, him that smote the anvil, saying it is ready for the soldering.’ What is the matter? It soma to me our old world is piloking up Why, the milleanium must be coming in Kindness has gotten the viotory.” My hearers, you know and 1 know we are far from that state of things. But why not inaugurate a new dispensation of ality, If we cannot yet have a millennium on a bangs scale, let us have it on a small sonle, and under our own investments, Kindness! If this world is ever brought to God that is the thing that will do it. You cannot fret the world up although you may fret the world down. You cannot scold it into ex onllence or reformation or gollines, The east wind and the west wind were one day talking with each other, and the sast wind said to the west wind: “Don't yon wish Why, when I start tenderly as at the has KZRIN i rec man, rEDeee + th 80 muah ane = i mar Han success in an artist Rapids of 3 and his wy thas were of and the answer insolence of the flowers and the fruits te west wind made to the east wind's interrogation Kindness to all! it not to bo a difficult grace to cultures when wo seo above the centuries such an ex- ample that one glimpse ought to melt and transform all nations. Kindness brought heaven, Kindness to mis creants, kindness to persscutors, kindness to the crippled and the blind, and the cat aleptic and the leprous, and the dropsical, and the demcniacal characterized Him all the way, and on the cross, kindness to the bandits suffering on the side of Him, and kindness to the executioners while yet they pushed the spear, and hammered the spikes, Burely ought { and howled the blasphemies All the stories of the John Howards and the Florence Nightingales and the Grace Darlings and the Ida Lowises pale before this transcendant example of Him whose birth | and life and death are the greatest story that methinks they would almost | the world ever heard, and the theme of ths mightiest hosanna that heaven ever lifted Yea, the very kindness that allowed both hands to bo nailed to the horizontal timber of the cross with that cruel thump! thump! now stretches down from the skies same hands filled with balm for all wounds, forgi we for all our crimes, cue for all our serfdoms, And while we takes this matchless kindness from God, may it be found that we have ut tered our last Litter word, written our last cutting paragraph, done our last retaliatory felt our last reve igefal heart throb 1d it would not be a bad epitaph for any if by the f God from this time forth we lived such beneficont lives that the tombs wuld appropriately cut us marks our grave a suggestion from the xt: “He showed us no little kindnes our row action, ones « n the plain he last child of God has got s earthly storm that drove Mediterranean KE the tar } f Euro heaven all the conquerors and tru jet ) An jubliant shall f HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS, " thr “i & Tomato three ©an (quart size Hor int aem in with one : pint sit, two tablespoot | teaspoonful of or three h« hrough ; uly for use Tomato F ont poun is or three peck of f pounds ol brown sug’ let them seald with a ladle, wm dishes he ne with a spoon, a yd add some of the syrap Do this until all the conrumed tomatoes nN piten (hem todry. syrup has are to them. been and te thorouzhiy well dried. ben pack them in A Jar box thus to matoes. thea a layer of granulated sugar, or One layer of is fu Cover With ome persons tht2 1s a lavorite conserve. If the pieces | uatil the receptacie cloaniy, an i ay a weight on them. Cuca nber Pickle cucumbers are large, an thick, and pack them in a jar—i layer of fruit and a layer of Io gallons of cucumbers allow five pounds of sugar you prefer conuinely sour pickle, when the sweet ening may be omitted two onnces ol allspice, “two ounces of cloves, two oxnces of nutme gs, two ounces of mace, four ounces of celery seed, two ounces of black pepper, one quart of onions peeled and slices When the jar is pearly full, pour in enough vinegar to cover the cucumbers, Set the jar in a kottle of water, and let the pickle cook long enough for the cucumbers to be well done. To test this, see whether you can stick a straw through the fruit. This pickle is ready for use at once. 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