,p RE BANNEII, ADvocATE 13:1: r wr i a n ntr er9 te V .1 . 74V ". 2 . e. 24. 1 " ONE THING IS NEEDFUL:" "ONE THING HAVE I DESIRED OF THE LORD:" "THIS ONE THING I DO." WHOLE N '' ID McKINNEY, Editor and . , ; • •N •;•• fa; •pir he SPc et , . • , • lap - * I • • ve .4re ,;•4f , ; t , '• ;• • •• 1 :1 es: arc bible ow tr • od. 15 • • •• •• 4 E • E e th, J he 'k ,s ti let 1 I tu: 0. hrf 'e on, ghf ; r • ' ani 101 .at Ai( r , I al 3 th •'•;i : Y as :7 !j • d , • rg ,r, ( • 1 , I t McKINNEY, Editor and Proprietor. ID S.- IN ADVANCE, Original oetrg. What is there in Heaven 7 there in heaven, the home of the blest, in the wanderer, sad and distress'd ? •ospect so cheering to pilgrims below blessed in glory no sorrow e'er know ? in those regions each want is supplied, :e is the Sariour who once for us died; things possesses, and shall he refuse s to his ransom'd what there they shall Loose ? to them rest from their labors and cares, blessed freedom from dangers and snares; es in white raiment, without spot or him in glory enthroned they shall reign there, sweetest music e'er floats on the ear, s of blest union, melodious and clear; no jarring discords—but harmony sweet, ;Bed inhabitant ever shall greet. •owns of ineffable glory are worn, lems of victory ever are borne; nor sin can e'er reach that abode, he ransomed still live in the presence of pry's the sun that enlightens the place, e saints are still blest with the smiles of s face! language fails when we try to portray peakable joys of eternity's day! h we may know, that the presence of gh to make heaven a blissful abode! pward, press onward, the prize is before, L I. eternity's ages his love we 'II explore. Y. E. lesville, February, 1857. For the Presbyterian Banner and- Advocate Baptism.--No. 11. "ONE BAPTISM." ph. iv : 3-5, St. Paul writes thus : ideavoring to keep the unity of the in the bond of peace. There is one and one spirit, even as ye are called in hope of your calling; one Lord, one , one Laptism." Baptist brethren assume that the le is here speaking of water-baptism, hat his meaning is, "One Lord, one one dipping." But this is begging lestion. We have already shown that ire baptism does not at all imply dip " But," say they, "as there is one 118, then, if immersion is right, pour sprinkling is wrong, and is no 'bap ' I answer, so might the Dunker :en say, "'if we are right in dipping times, then dipping but once is wrong, is no aptism at all." So might ,Epis tans say, " there is but one Church of t, and if we are right in having dio bishops, floe who are without them and are no Church bf Christ." At the Roman Catholics say, " there ordinance of marriage, and if we are in using the Popish ceremony, all are wrong, and have no valid mar among them !" Baptist friends have a wonderful fa in finding water where we can find We see none in the passage under tration. The Apostle is discussing lime doctrine of the Christian uni id it were amazing if, while soaring such lofty themes, he should sudden down to the water. We think, ire, that it will agree better with the t to suppose that by the " one bap he means the baptism of the Spirit. view, his words may be paraphrased " One Lord Jesus Christ in whom (eve, one faith by which ye are saved, )rk of the Holy Spirit by which ye sized into one body."—See 1. Cor. HISTORY Or IMMERSION. At writers fondly assert that korner . practiced in the Church at a very kod. But the truth is, no anthem _ MIA 4ow g Ant can be produced of its existence the first two hundred years after On the other hand, there is a well- I case of baptism by effusion in the century. Islicephorus, in the gg Mag- Centuries," relates that a Jew, ag through a desert in company with Christians, was converted; and being sick, requested baptism. Having no they sprinkled him with sand, (con %) He unexpectedly recovered, and ,en to Alexandria, and his case laid the Greek bishop, who decided that Jew was baptized, provided only should anew be . perfused, or sprin ith water," aqua denuo perfundere -Cent. 11., a. 6, p. 110. milieu, who flourished during the of Severna and Camelia, in the be of the third century, is the' first :es any distinct mention of firmer .nd then it is found in very bad ; for it is associated with the doe- tat baptism cleanses from sin. To .tent immersion was practiced in mtury, we ham) not the means of Ag. At all events, it was far from being 'elusive node. We are told of Lau- baptiziOg a soldier, and having 3r of water brought for that purpose ; of five martyrs of Samosata sending the prison for a Presbyter, requesting to bring a vessel of water and baptize t.—( Wall's Hist. of Bapt. and. Ana . Act. Mart.) Even atter immersion become the prevailing practice bap ! by effusion were uniformly regarded as . On one occasion, Cyprian and the .sia bishops who were with him, were Ited on the question, whethbr those had been baptized on sick beds, by ton only, ought to be re-baptized if recovered. ai.His decision was, " that 'ater of aspersion is purification; from it appears that sprinkling is sufficient, d of immersion; and wbensoever it is if there be a sound faith on the part giver and receiver, it ie perfect and tete." This seems to have been the mous sentiment of the.ancient Church; t the Baptists of modern times are the body of Christians that ever existed, on the assumption that immersion is del to baptism, have excluded all oth. from their communion. The. Rev. 'rt Hall, the greatest light that Church produced, says of his close communion \ren, a that they have violated' more maxims of antiquity, and receded farther from the example of the : Apostles than any class of Christians on record."—Hall on COMM. ) p. 74, 75. ORIGIN OF IMMERSION. "But how came immersion into use at so early a period, if it was not the Apostolic ?" The answer is not difficult. A very large proportion of the first converts to Christianity were Jews, many of whom re tained a strong attachment to the Mosaic ritual.—See Acts xv. That ritual compre hended " divers washings," which seem to be referred to in Heb. vi : 2, where the sa cred writer specifies "the doctrine of bap tisms," as one of the subjects. of dispute among the Hebrew converts. They were, moreover, familiar with the custom of the Jewish Church, to require the proselytes from • Paganism to be thoroughly washed, previously to being circumcised. With all their violent . prejudiee in favor of the an cient ritual, it is not surprising that in some ohurches, where their influence was para mount, they should insist that the converts from heathenism should be cleansed from all filthiness of the flesh, previously to bap tism. An addition, not important in,itseV, thus made to the simple rite administered by the Apostles, easily gained ground in an age of ; Anperstitious formalism. When in after-times the doctrine was inculcated that baptism cleansed from sin, this preparatory bathing acquired immense importance, and during the dark ages gained an almost uni versal prevalence. At first the bathing, styled by Justin Martin a " washing," (loutron,) was kept separate and , distinct from the baptism, which was by pouring. But in process of time the two were, to -a great extent, confounded ;.and then we read of three , immersions, (kataduses) with the further addition of exorcisms—two anoint.. ings—the use of salt, milk, and honey, clothing the •newly baptized in white rai ment, and other ceremonies. DIPPING OF PERSONS NAKED. But the preparatory immersion WaS• never administered to any one in his clothing; that is a novelty of more modern times. The ancient immersionists never dreamed of washing the body of the candidate through two or three thicknesses of clothing. They would no more attempt such a thing, than we would set about washing bands or feet without removing gloves, shoes, or stockings. The truth in regard to this matter, though for a while denied or cbncealed, is now generally admitted.' The Baptist historian, Robinson, who wrote by request'of the Baptist minis ters of 'London, says expressly : " The primitive Christians baptized naked. Nothing is easier 'than to give proof of this, - by quo tations from the authentic' writings of the men who administered baptism, and who certainly knew in what way they themselves performed it. There is no ancient historical fact better authenticated than this. The P. S.—l beg leave to offer corrected evidence dees-net , go-ofrlthe meaning of the •-,.statementterespecting-the-usmof.the.preposi single Word nnk,edi for then a reader Might tier; ape, by St. Matthew. He employs•the suspect allegory; but on many facts 're- Word Just onnhundred and nineteen times, ported, and many reasons assigned for the of which it is translated from, sixty-three practice. Chrysostom ariminates Theophilus times, and out of, only ten times. Of these because be had raised , a disturbance without, ten times, there are six , in which 4is pre which so frightened the women in the bap- fixed' to the verb, apparently :giving to apo tistery, who - had just stripped themselves in the - force of a' double ek. In 'one instance, order to bebaptized, that they fled naked out alsb, meta is prefixed, with a similar effect. of the room, without having time to consult The three remaining passages are, Chap ; the modesty of their sex." xiv : 1.3—" followed him out of the cities;" Wall, in his History of Baptism, states verse 29, "Peter was come doWn out of the positively that " the ancient Christians, ship;" and Chap 16—" went up (anebe) when they were baptized by immersion, straightway out of the water," There is no were all baptized naked, whether they were ; other instance in Matthew of anabaino fol men, women, or children." lowed by apo ; but there is one in Songs viii : s—an abainousa ape creniou; ." com eth up 'from the Wilderness." ' IMMERSION AND BAPTISM DIFFERENT RITES These Writers might have stated an,addi tionul fact of great importance. The Chris tian females of that period were =not so ut terly regardless of common 'decency, ,a 0 to appear disrobed in• the , presence of men. Many of them, as we know, carried their no tions of modesty , to such an extreme, as not even to allow their faces to be seen by any of the other sex, out of their own families. Can any one imagine, then, that they would suffer the priests to come near them while in a state of perfect nudity 2 Let those believe it who can I It is quite plain that the candidates could not have been seen by the minister officiating till the ceremony of bathing was over. This is 'made to appear from the testimony of Epiphanius, bishop of Constantia, who wrote in the fourth century. " There are," says he, "also deaconesses in the Church; but this office was not instituted as a priestly 'function, nor has it any interference with priestly administrations; s hut it was insti tuted for the purpose of preserving a due regard to the modesty of the female sac,' especially at the time of baptismal washing, and while the person of the woman is naked; that she may not be seen by the men performing the sacred service, but by her only who is appointed to take charge of the : woman - during the- time.-, that she is naked."—( Taylor's .Apost. Bapt, p. 168.) This quotation proves that so late as the fourth • century, the baptism proper, by the priest, did not take place till after the cere mony of immersion, from which it was sep arate and distinct. EXISTING TRACES OF THE DISTINCTION. Deylingius, as quoted by Mr. Booth, •in his "Pedobaptiam Examined," writes: "So long as the Apostles lived, as many believe, immersion only was used; to -which 'after wards, perhaps, they added a kind of effu sion, such as the Greeks practice at this day, after having performed the trine immersion." The fact that the Greeks do practice a kind of effusion 'after immersion, is quite to our purpose. Whether the pouring or the im mersion is the human Addition, 'we have a right to decide for ourselves. 1 From a detailed view of the rites of the Greek Church, drawn up by an Archbishop of their own, and published by Kromayer, (Scrut. /?ctig.,) it appears that they . fre quently dip' their infants only to the breast, and then pour water ou the head; thus clear ly showing, that the immersion andlhe bap tism are not regarded as the same thing : Mr. Daniel Huber, of Kentucky, in a letter to the editor of The Pedobaptisypub lished at Danville, writes : "I resided up wards of three years in the capital of the Grand Seignior's dominions, in a •Greek fam ily of the first respectability. During that time, I was present at four baptisms—two in ,thelamily, and two in the immediate neigh borhood. The company were all seated on the ; sofas around the room. A table stood in ; the middle, with a basin of water on'it. The kapa, or Priest, 'was then sent for,, who, upon entering the roOm, was re- MatebllMj.tUltE2.4.UiWlMOikftNl4ll4‘o:ll.lolDoilffluliLlkitiltoolD3Omimm:iiv,t):oo FOR THE WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, APRIL 1151857. ceived by the father of the child, and led to the baptismal water, which he consecrated with a short prayer and the sign of the cross; then the mother presented her babe, which he laid on his left arm ; and in the name of the Father, Son and. Holy Ghost ) . he thrice dipped his hand into the •'water, and drop ped some of it On the child's forehead, giv ing it a name. I may here remark, that I never heard, daring my stay in Constanti nople, of adult baptisms, • nor of the ordi nance being performed by immersion in a single instance. ' The ' Greeks of 'Constantinople do cer tainly pra'otidel immersion ; and -yet Mr. Huber was honest in his statement. He witnessed only the baptism proper, and was not aware that a preparatory washing, or immersion, had taken place in another apart ment, before the , arrival of the priest. BAPTISM IN ABYSSINIA. But the practice of the Abyssinian Church places the question beyond dispute. That people were converted to Christianity, and received their 'ritual from the jndaizing Church of .Egypt, about the middle of, the fourth century.' They still receive their Bishop from Alexandria. 'They retain cir cumcision, and other Jewish obserianees, in connexion with Christianity; and owing =to their entire seclusion -from) the Teat of the world, have, in all probability;, preserved their religions rites unchanged for fifteen centuries. Mr. Salt, an English conSul t who visited that country, has furnished a minute account of the baptism ;of a'Mohammedan boy, at which he-was present. He tells' us that they first stripped the lad of all his clothing, and " washed him all over very carefully in a large basin of water," which , Stood' outside of the church. He' was then taken to another place,. , wherei was a smaller font. Here ." the head priest laidlold of him, dipping his own hand in, the water, Etna crossed him over the forehead, pro nouncing at the same moment, George, I baptize thee in the name of the Father,' Son and Holy Ghost! -Themhole company then knelt down, and joined in reciting the Lord's Prayer;" p._152. Here in all probability is the precise 1 mode of baptism which existed in the Church of Alexandria, in the fourth century. It is seen -at once, that the Jewish 'ablution was a mere , preparation for the baptism, which was administered by a different person, from a different font, and with different words. Mx. C. Taylor, to whom the writer of this i.article is indebted for some valuable sugges- Wong, concludes his investigation of the subject as follows: " Therefore, whoever adopts immersion without pouring, may cer tainly - claim; all the'credit due to the revival of an ancient Jewish ceremony, signifying [ death; but Christian baptism, signifying : life, they do not practice.'' p. 186. L. 'N. D. For the Presbyterian Benner and advocate Religion: , , OR, LETTERS TO A plump ON , rgE DOCTRINES AND DUTIES OF THE BIBLE , Letter 1111—Necessity of I?egeneration,. Ye must be born again.—Jonil ur.: 7. MY DEAR FarEND:-- 1 -My last •letter in troduoed the necessity of regeneration. In this, I promised to give some of the reasons of this necessity. One of them'hae already been hinted ;, and , it is given by the Saviour himself, in his conversation with Nicodemus, as recorded in John iii-: 1-12 It is be cause' we are by nature, or- the first birth, sinners; that which is born of the flesh-is flesh'; and that •which is bora of the Spirit is spirit. Marvel not that I said unto thee, ye must be born again.—John iii : 6, 7. To be born of 'the Spirit, is to be born-again, regenerated; and this is necessary, because that which is born of the flesh, or according to nature, is flesh, is depraved, sinful. Hence, it is written, They that are in the flesh, unrenewed, cannot please God, be cause the carnal mind is enmity against God.—Rom. viii : 5-8. Our natural birth is of the flesh, for we are conceived in.sin, and shapers in iniquity.--Ps. li :5. Hence; we. go astray , as soon as we are born : and 'hence, the whole - race' is corrupt; - and all 'need' the washing of regeneration. This is expressively taught- in the 14th Psalm, where it is, written,They are corrupt; they have done abominale works- there is none that doeth good. The Lord looked down from heaven upon the children of men, to see if there 'were -any that did understand, and seek God. They are all gone aside ; they are all together , become filthy; there is none that death good, no, not one.—Ps. xiv : 1-3. ObserVe here the scrutiny, The Lord looked down to see. Observe the general , survey, The Lord-looked upon the children of men, to see if any did under stand. And observe the result; he found none ; they are all gone aside ; 'there is none that doeth good, no, not one All are sinners ; and this general corruption is a proof of native depravity—of a nature de praved ; and hence the necessity of the ren ovation of our nature by Divine grace. Ye must be born again ! Look around you Though not sparent, you. have seen many children:; and low, soon depravity manifests itself in the child!, That little innocent, as the fond mother calls the babe upon her bosom, how soon it ex hibits its' temper, and shows that it , has lunruly passions in its heart I You have seen many children ; did you ever see a child which did not in some way begin to act out its depravity about as soon as it began to act at all ? How is this, and'why is it, but be ! cause all' children are partakers of a fallen nature ; beetinse all are corrupt,' and all have depraved'hearts ? So we all'-=-,for we werec all children oncewe all=` `began. to sin as 1 coon'as we did' any thing; andrwe allure sinners by nature, and hence, needs'neui Jej••t' • 'r tures. Ye must be born again.-4ohn iii: 7. There are, as you , know,several concur rent witnesses to the depravity of man—wit nesses that testify to his corrupt and fallen nature, and which,, therefore, prove the necessity of regeneration. ' There is the. testimony of Your -. own experience. You cannot recollect 4 period in . your whole existence when. you were not sin ful ; and you have „seen, and felt, and ex perienced enough if the workings of ,your own heart to know.that you are fallen and deiiiived. Your own 'experience witnesses to the dePravity of Your nature. And, then, this, J view of. yourself is con firmed by your obseryation of others, around you.. You have seen enough of men every day of your life ap e deacitsueceeding day's 'observation deepene•yobr conviction on this point—you witness enough:daily•to convince you that .the hum race is a sintnl f ram; that all alike have c' - , r. :a, 4*(1. 1 g, are possessed of a . re.:l3iiifis fiwza,Flr have hearts full of y taption. t t And what yoria ~,thus taught by experi ence and observatiola, :is confirmed by the testimony, of -history. The history of -Matt is the history of a .sinner. The, historic page is crowded with the description of bloody and stied`with the"records of the darkest oritnes. 3 "t'Tracethettrinals of the 'nee' from: the: falltiif the first pair in Eden :down to the:Treats*, day ; and with the ex ception of here an there a bright spot, like a green island in in ocean of 'sand, all is, dark and gloomyz-a record, not of noble deeds and self-ascrifteineefforteto bless the world, 'but a record of orimes,ef, cruelties, and pppressions, , a44 blood. , , And with perf i ent accordance to this-his- I toric testimony, is the "record of the news of every day. Notle paper comes to yorir )hands but contai some-record - of human, or inhuman crimes, all , confirming - this one point—man is a siltner, acting out in his life the deep depravity of his nature, just as the serpent, or the 141 beast of the - forest, acts out its nature. 4 - -: ;- And what is thus taught-by experience, and observation, and, history, is confirmed by the inspired mord. The Bible speaks of men as sinners nature, having wicked hearts, born of tht flesh, carnal, , sold under sin ; and it askeli Who can bring a clean thing out of an tinclean ? iAdani was made in the likeness 0f404.; he fell, and then it is said he begat a son in his. own likeness, after his image, fallen 'lind' &prayed like himself. —Gen. i:26 ; dud' v:1, 2: He .repre sented the nee yiin his fall, all fell"; end as the guilt of his sic , is imputed, all inherit from him a corrupt nature; , for by this one man's disobedience,. many were made sin ners--accountedrid treated as sinners, and in .consequeneex'they" inherit corrupt na tures .;- they , aresmioners—they have sin in herent as w,ellip,s imputed. Hence the names given, th iwielled in the Bible—they are enemies= of' ' ; hate of dody-without God, or atheists in. the world; wicked, un righteous, unjust, - unholy, unclean, filthy dreamers ; because :the carnal mind is en mity, against ,God ; . for it is not subject:to the law of God, neither indeed can be.— Rom. viii : 5-6. Hence the natural man, the unrenewed - man, ae he is born and: lives in the world, receiveth not the'things ofthe Spirit of .God; for they are foolishness unto hint ; neither can he. know them, because they • are, spiritually discerned.-1. Car. ii : 14. He is blinded by sin - his understand ing is'darkened;' he "is - alienated from the iife.of God, through the ignorance that is rin 'him. His , Will is .enslaved; he, is the servant of sin, acting out in,his life his in-, herent, his inborn and inbred eorruption.—, Sec Rom.; Chips. i. to ii. ; and vi : 20, 21., Also, Eph. ii : 1-3; Jer. xvii : 9; John iii : 1-8 ; Rorn. - -vii :- 13, 14 ; Job xiv : 4; Gen. i : 26, and v : 12; -Rom. .i : 28- , - - .32, and viii: 7; Eph. 2 : 11--13; 2. Cor. iv: 3,4; Eph. iv : 18; and Jude, verses 7-23. Such is thelestimony of tirod's Word in 'regard'to man's nature ; and this teitimony is corroborated by your own experience and observation, by history and by, facts ; and it all. goes to show, the;: absolute necessity of the new - birth. There is no hOliness in man's nature; this - want of holiness is sin; there is also'aleridency or disposition to sin; yea, he is , corrript i , depraved, sinful, as is manifestin his life.;;and as without holiness no.man shall see the ! Lord, he must be cre ated anew, or remain for ever an enemy of God, and be for ever an heir of hell. Ye must. be born again.—John iii: 7; .Heb. xii : 14. • This, my chiltl, as God's,Word is true, this is your condition; by nature a child of wrath, born of , the flesh, corrupt, sinfg; and you must be born again, or perish I Yes, this change is fleeces:try ; you;mnst be born again. Ye must. , be .born again,!--- John iii 7. ,Read John iii. ,; Psalm tiv.; Row. ; and also Hymn 44 of the Presbyteriim' Psalms and Hymns. r'Fuither -reasons mai my neat. In the meantime, look up to the Saviour, and trust in, him. He will eustain you in your weak ness. He is our life, our light, and our joy; yea, he is our salvatiow ant our all. Trust in him. Farewell ! From our London:Correspondent. China, and its Population—Sii J. Botoring's Report to the Registrar General—Waste of Population— Infanticide a Systern—Vommissioner Ye. 5., and his • Crueltgralmerston; .and 'his Prospects—Popu larity with the . Country—His Bnemies—Pre,scrip lion for Nur' Hea' lth—Latest from Claina—Gpin 'ioni of :Missionaries as to the Quarrez_:-The Irish Unitariani.and Creeds—lnconsistency andits Con trast—The Great Tobacco Controversy--The Lan cat, and the Ladies—Bagged 'School Union, and Prizes to Servants—A Clergyman filavrying Him self—The Baptist Controversy—An. _Exclusive Spirit—.Postecript. ' LONDON , March 13,1857. An interesting document, with regard tol CfrrNA AND us - -POPULATION , addressed I, nearly two yeara ago, by, Sir J. Bowring, to the British. Registrar,,General, has just ap peared. He estimates the population at from three hundred. 'and fifty millions to four hundred millions. The population is divided into four classes, in Government no menclature : 1. Scholars; 2. Husbandinen; 3. Mechanics ; 4. Merchants. There is a numerous class considered almost as social outcasts, such as stage players, and proles-. sional gamblers, beggars, convicts, and out laws. To ,every, ,deeade of life, a special designation, is ,applied„ , sThe .agp., of, ten la, called "the,opening degree ;" 'of twenty ":youth expired ; '.' of thirty, '" strength any? marriage ; of. forty, "officially apt ;" of, fifty, " error-knowing ;" of sixty, " cycle closing ;" of seventy, "rare bird of age;" of eighty, " rusty-visaged ;" of ninety, " delayed;" of one. hundred, "age's ex tremity "—all most• expressive and applica ble to every country. Severe punishments are' decreed for those who will not assist the aged poor. The excess of 'population has driven the Chinese, to cultivate- almost every inch of ground; .and very-many of them live on the water, because they can find no standing room Ott-Shore. . The:ihaste' cif-population, lowever,- is ter .-rible,';by .faminet4 I mundations,' hurricanes, and rcivil _ws,rs, , which last, alone cost -millions of lives.— Nothipg is ;said ahOut .. epidemic diseases 'Ent Infanticide is. feerfitlly preva . lent, and that on system. Initeadof -Found -. ling. fiospitals, as in: Christianianda, we are told 91. there . are' towers _ofi-hrick and.stene, h where, I.Bothysel--ei * fenelft---0011- ...c.,... t . h t , dreiwt,etaretorp. A. , _ 'if MiViVeltiftie Jr i tte rr il . ' ' Sir Johii Bowring, *hose recent: conduct ,has been so vehemently condemned by the Derbyites, and others, in Parliament, betrays in :this ,document no bitter ,feeling toward the Chinese. On the contrary, he writes in his natural_ characters of •ar scholar; and an :antiquary: Thee only do strong expres sions escape him—once in reference to the mortality of Chinese emigrants, and, again when, speaking of military., executions, of which, in the provinee of Kwang Tung alone, "it is believed from four hundred to five hundred fall daily by the hand of the•heads man." This province is that of which Can ton is the capital.; and. the " headsman " does this work under the orders of Commis sioner 'Yeh, *hose moderation has been so eloquently contrasted by Cobden and his backers, with that of the British officials. Every'day, the PARTY CHARACTER Of the 'vote Which lid Palmerston to resign, is more and .more impressed on the minds of the people, ,was. a grand coup,. and well put by the coalition;"but it will, in the end, damage them seriously." Lord ' Palmerston has been asked to Stand for the City of London; and",while==he .declinesciiiifavor of his " old loye," at Tiverton, yet the moral certainty of his election, coupled with the fact that Lord John Russel retires from the representation of the City, is very great. He seems, politically, to bear gg a charmed .The Despots of Europe hate and fear him; the Tractarians abhor him, be cause thew!. party, (of whom Lords Derby and Gladstone promoted eight to the Bench in' less than two years !) is discouraged and frowned upon. The " Peace-at-any-price" men necessarily oppose him ; but still, elas tic, and, scatheless as a life-boat in the furious breakers, he survives the elemental war. Punch!s carricature for the week repreSents John Bull and .Palmerston—the latter seated rather sickly in a chair. The kindly John taw him,he has been , sitting up too late:with the ,Cobdenites; and now he (John) is about to send him down "to the country?' to recruit; and no doubt that will completely mire him ! "To the country" Palmerston " goes," with great confidence. • The Nnws MOM CHINA tells of `the de struction, by the , British, in the way of re prisals, of the Western .suburbs of Canton. Ahead baker, and nine others,, were, under arrest, for .attempting to poison the English HOng Kong. The Bishop of Victoria, as well as the Missionarieslo China generally, seem all to think, , whiladeploring recent events, and the interruption to their work,.:that a rapture with ; Canton. was . inevitable; and indicate that on acdount of their hatred to foreigners, and their• pride, there has been hitherto no real missionary access to thamassess. What earnest. prayer should now ascend,, that 14 1,hese ,things that have happened so unex pectedly, may prepare the way of the great Conqueror and King." The hum INITARIAfie have held an ad journed special meeting of Synod, in order to .consider the Revision" of • the Code of ` Dr. Montgomery, as I indicated in one off my letters, had , previously pro posed that ~definite questions should be ad dressed to candidates for ordination, with a view to ascertain their recognition ,of the inspiration of the Scriptures, and their faith in "the DiVine mission and authority of the proposition; that Jesus Christ is the Son of .God, and the Saviour of the world;'; their„ ",obligation ",obligation faithfully to understand themselves, and to expound to others the principles of the religion of Jesus ;" and, finally, their-belief " in the aiding and sanc tifying Influences of God's Holy Spirit." :since 'the last, meeting, •a strong feeling of opposition to the apparent stringency of these inquiries has shown itself, and has 'found expression in the London Inquirer, a Unitarian' publication, as well as •in a,pub lished sermon of the Rev. Mr.,Magennis, of Belfast. Doctor Montgomery was charged with gross incensistency . in, that while in the the. Synod of niter, in his youth, he Vad been a leader of the opposition against Dr. Cook's policy' of Tests and Creeds;• now:in his old age, he had :actually turned round .upon his former opinions., That gentleman delivered, last week, a lengthened explana tion and defence. It seems to me, that while he carried the votes of the majority with him, he was, and is, happily incon sistent with his former position; and that he. virtually . recants, (even while , he denies it,) his original opinions as to Creeds and Confessions., The truth is, he is a high Arian; believing in the pre-existence- of Christ, and in the ipersonality of. the Holy Spirit;"while the English, Unitarians, (to .a man, I believe,) deny both. The younger ministers of the , Irish Remonstrant Synod spmpathize with the latter, and are thor- oughly tainted with those false " religions liberty" 'notions which will leave a man to teach almost any thing he pleases. True, they, too, are iuconsistent with themselves; for in their "amendment," they propose that the candidate should "adopt the Scrip tures as a written revelation of God's holy will, and - profess themselves disCiples of Jesus Christ." - Both parties are unsound; but the one has reached well nigh the bottom of the precipice, in the proclivity which error always brings 'with it. Neither recog nize the Atonement of Jesus Christ, nor the' Deity of ?the" Spirit; and , thus they make: fatal omissions; Dr. Montgomery, in his old, age, begins to see the• need, of " the, aids" of Grod's,Holy Spirit. But, then, e. l repeat', - heir ineonsiitent are all men of tiis clue, - in' `lively' part of the ivorld Hof •I;Carriokfergusp aiddreisedi 'name Yarns, &C twenty-five years ago, letters to Henry Montgomery, the Arian leader, on "Creeds and Confessions," which, with trenchant logic, cut to pieces all the declamation about the tyranny of imposing tests, showing that a creed was the• expression and exposition, of a mutual agreement s and absolutely neces sary for Church organization. Now, Dr. M., while declaring that "he mould not, impose human creeds," yetsays it is "neces sary they should have something to, believe; and he seeks to frame a creed in Scripture language, and containing Scriptural doc trines, in order to preserve the laity from being over-ridden by, men who preached false doctrines; from infidels—frommen, in fact, who preached any thing." But may,we not modestly ask those who, like Dr. Montgomery, call Christ "the Son of God and the Saviour of the world," 'what do you mean by. His Sonship ? Is it Irn MAtai4e,..erctd the „,40 r . :10cb'Ag.Or himself . equal With .ftftie Ood ; and ihe Sa hedrim light, in declaring that, (in their recognition of him not as the Messiah, but an,impostor s ) when he said He was the Son of God, he .was • guilty of the death, ad judged -to the.blasphemer? And, again, we ask, In what sense do you consider Christ aa "the Saviour of the world?" Is it only as the medium of blessings; or as bringing , life and immortality to light, and furnishing, motives for acceptable obedience; or as a, substitute for the guilty .0 The Synod. affirmed Dr,. M.'s proposals, with an -important'omission ; namely, the recognition-of the personality of the Spirit, which he did not press, although he declared it was a doctrine which all must believe, if they took , the Scriptures at all. They next resolved to give power to a congrega tion to turn out their minister, (if his`doe trinal teachingehanged after his ordination,) by : a vete embraeing.two thirds of the male and female, members. The length of this notice will be justified by* the light which it throws on the melan choly= condition of Greediest 'churches ; on the absurdity of indefinite proposals, or bastard _creeds;.on the wisdom of that policy which in the old Synod of Ulster made the position of concealed Arians " too hot" to be maintained; and on the duty and privilege, as well as thi Christian honesty, of holding fast .to our , own amble Confes sional 'Tests and Standards. Turning., away to social, matters, an -eager discussion has been : going forward in the _Lancet, a Medical Journal, on the SMOKING QUESTION, or as . it is .eallect, The ,Question of the Day. In other words, the pro's and con's have been urged, week after week, in answer 'to the inquiry,. if Is. s mo ki ng I n _ juriens ?" On the: affirmative side of •the q,upstion, tae writer—who, from his standing and reputation as well as the, fullness of his reasons, is'the most weightyis Dr. Roily, physician to the London and Bt. Thomas Hospitali, and in extensive' Practice. In a lecture to, students on paralysis, he adduced the ease .of 4 man•who had tried to make up for the waste of mind and body, created by the hard working of both; by taking a large quantity of wine. Mental activity, he maintained, thus =stained, was, sure :to be broken down. "Country gentlemen of the old. school" (the ". Bucolor ' gentlemen, as the Times calls the Tory. Squires,) " might drink their wine, their brandy, and their heer,- with comparative impunity, for their brains were dormant," (I) " and these •were the only stimulants .their brains • received; but w,oe,to the man of intellect, who has to live by 'the sweat of his brain, if he at tempts to supply,.by fermented liquors, the loss occasioned by mental' labor." He then goes. on;to tell how his patienthad been als I a great smoker, and ,says he.knows of "no single vice which does so much, harm. It is a snare and a delusion. It soothes the excited nervous system at the time, to ren der it more feeble and , irritable , ultimately. * * can always distinguish, by , his complexion,. a man who • smokes much,, and the appearances which the fences present is' an unerring guide to the habits of such a man. I believe that cases of general •paralysis are more frequent in England than they used to be, and I suspect that smoking tobacco is one of the causes of that increase." Then comes the following remarks in reply, which I give in full : Stu :—I was much pleased with :a. lecture -by Mr. golly on " Paralysis," reported in . The Lancet, but I was a little surprised at the frightful pic ture which he drew of the evil effect's of smoking. Ile says, "he knows of no single -rice which does so much harm as smoking." Without wish - ing to advocate the practice, I think it is a de batable subject whether the effects of smoking are so very bad. I have spent some time in Tur key, where tobacco is used far more extensively than in this country, and I never saw anywhere a greater number of haleold men than amongst the Turks—men who had been smoking from their childhood ; and in' greater quantities daily I C= lilt Willa'. here. -It is true, Turkish -tobacco is milder and purer than the _tobacco used ,in England, and one is inclined to ask—Are the evil effects of smoking caused by to tobacco, or by the adulteration-of that plant ? J. A. hi'Dosaou,"l4.R.C.S. Albert Street,•Regent's Park. . It is-curious enough that a friend of mine, an officer who not long since .returned from Turkey, had expressed, previously, the same opinions; and while disclaiming, from his own obEervation, the necessarily bad effects of 'the ;use of tobacco in a pure state, main tains that the evil rises from adulteration and from excess. He Imes horror, also, of the, common "Pigtail," " Cavendish," and other strong tobaccosi ,has even abandoned almost altogether the use of Havana cigars, and• confines himself either' •to . cigarettes, 'with pure .Turkish tobacco, (very mild;) or an occasional .use of .the Turkish water ie As to intemperance and smoking being necessarily unitedithat also is denied, not only from the aobriety of the Turks, but from the experience of many pemons. Last year I had frequent intercourse -with two young Russian gentlemen here, and they, were remarkably sober. Indeed, 'smoking • frequentlyiand Iwould say to excess, they drank water after the use of the cigar. The: discussion, :boweveryllAti: embraced many writers on botl,eides. , One,saYa.that Dr. Webster declares dolt in the post mor tem 'examinations of ' inveterate smokers, cretinism is always present. He also thinks heStzkds in this -thatrne „cause of,,consump don, and asks, " Is not the habit becoming in. tike ;United States , small „by degrees, and ; beautifully less I' and ends in declaring , that "it is suicide to the . sedentary.'n Whereupon • a -writer comes- forth, , signing :himself "Sedentary ~ Suicide,".- and vex= Philadelphia, 27 South Tenth Street, below Chestnut By Xail, or at the Office, SLSO ,pqr I SEE :PROSPECTUS. Delivered in the City, 1.75 " presses his surprise at the charge that "for the last forty years he has been committing a series of murderous attempts upon his own existence I" He grants,that the im moderate use must be :injurious; but to "attack smoking in tote," is another matter. He also denies that drunkenneis is the off spring of the pipe or, the cigar. And what will your clergy and literary men ay to this ? How stands the ease as to America? The Lancet • has at length-closed •.the• con test, as I am. informed, by „pronouncing in favor of the moderate use of tobacco. Some say the tobacconists of London paid medical, men to write on their side, and they will probably say that the Laacet is bribed also. Meantime, much has been elicited as to the extensive adulteration of tobacco, the bad quality of what is common ly used, and the temptations to, young peo ple,-from vanity and selteonceit,.to acquire vthabitl mayolead Ahem Astor 0 evil in a second letter, mentions that after- ten years' moderate use of tobacco, he has aban doned it altogether, and that Lord Raglan and Sir C. Napier, taking the com mand, the one of the Crimean army and the other of the Baltic fleet, gave up smoking. may` be mistaken, but I believe that all our greatest men, I mean intellectually, statesmen, law yers, warriors, physicians, and surgeons, have either not been smokers, or, if smokers, that they have died prematurely." I may add that the chewing of .tobacco is little practiced, and is held by our medical men to be more injurious than smoking. Will that be admitted by the authorities on your side of the Atlantic ? Your lady readers will be amused by the following,, and may guess the source whence it comes : "Is SMOKING INJURIOUS?" - (The, Answers of a' few Ladies to the above Question.) Mrs, grown (of Bloomsbury. Squam)- 0 Most decidedly. ! Does ni it injure the curtains !" - Mrs. Jones (Sea-Shell Cottage, Brighton.) " There can't be a question about it, ; and I am only surprised how persons can be 80 foolish as to put_ one ,!. Doesn't stick in the gentlemen's hair ? and get imbedded in their, whiskers ? and hangubotit their clothes for hours and;hours, and sometimes;days afterwards ? So mach so, that any one can tell a mile off' whether 'the ,nasty things have been smoking or not: I'm sure it is downright terrible , to bashut up in a railway car riage with a party of confirmed smokers—for though they may not be sinoking at the time, still the unpleasant smell of - their garments is such as to make one.regret that Lord Palmerston will not bring in an act of Parliament ,to make every filthy smoker consume his 'own smoke." Mrs. ;Bobinson (1002, Old Gower Street.)—" It . not s t illy injures the complexions, but the carpets also. Why, you have only to look at the 'carpet of a .room in which the . gentlemen have been smoking over,-night, and your own eyes wig tell you, whether it is injurious _or not: I have seen carpets (beautiful carpets,- that must have cost ss. 2d. a .yard, if they cost a penny,) in such a disgraceful state that a black beetle, I'm sure, would eat himself 'rather than walk over them r' - Mrs. Blue,Stooken (Minerva Hall, Bath.)-4 , 11 it is not injurious, perhaps you would have the kindness to inform.= the - reason why we ladies are not allowed to-smoke-?" Miss .Twentyman (Willow- Lodge, Brixton.)— ,4 It 's all fuss and nonsense, and I quite lose my temper When persons question me about the inju riousness of tobacco. Of course, it is injurious ! Does n't it' kill spiders? Does n't it stifle gnats, and flies, and even earwigs ? Isn't it used in no blemen's and gentlemen's, gardens, to fumigate the plants? Are not our hot-houses and Sum merhouses smoked, when we want to get rid of the,vermin ? and really I half- wish sometimes that it would have the same effect on the gentle men, when they will . persist in injuring them selves (and annoying its,) .by smoking hours after hours to the , abominable extent they do I If I was called upon to . say what a man was, I should answer it by giving,this definition Man is the onlyanitunl that smokes.' " ' The RAGGED SCHOOL UNION • last week. ; distributed ;their •annual prizes to old scholars who had become, servants, and who bad kept their situations for more than twelve months The numbers thus rewarded were lour hundred, and two, of whom two hundred-and eighty received the sum of five shit .each, (CO a. 11,) and one- hull ,dred .and twenty-,two had ,cards given to thdn, signed by . Lord ,Shaftebury and the r -- Socre.taries, beautifully embossed, and in themselves a lasting memorial of good con duct. Let it not be forgotten that these are young persons from the. lowest class of so ciety, who ;might have been _criminals, and who are now a blessing to themselves and their country. A curious case of a CLVRGYMAN ,MAR RYING HIMSELF, in the case of the. late Rev. .31r.'Beamish, an Episcopal clergyman of. Cork, .has heen .before the Mali Law Courts. It has arisen out of a. dispute about his, property,, and whether the children ofthis, his second marriage, were legitimate. He performed the marriage between a person of inferior - rank and himself ; reading the English service; asking himself, as well as her, the.•usualquestions r and.:giving and re ceiving the usual answers, in the presence of a, witness, or witnesses. A narrow ma jority of the Judges, held the marriage to be valid, although irregular. The case is about to be appealed to the House of Lords. Allow me to express ' the .pleasurt.: with which I have read the articles on the BAP TIST CONTROVERSY, in your columns. The writer, puts old, arguments in a. new light, and with unusual force, to .say nothing of many original suggestions of Ma own. I hope the letters may be put into a more per manent form. Here: e have Close. Communion. Baptiste, and Free Communion, Baptists. The latter are Catholic, but inconsistent. The true Baptist must be a ,bigot practice, what ever he is at heart, and,most men are better than a bad system. But the narrowness of the- ImmersionWs is a powerful moral argu ment against the enforcement of one mode; and as, to the.subjects, they mislead thought less people by the sophistical use of the text, " He that believeth , and is baptized," &c. The real point as to infant baptism, and the possibility and, probability of, children being entitled to the seals of the covenant now, as _they ! were of old, (and the. religion of Aka . ham being virtually that of the faithful mend are ingeniously ignored, or evaded. Most •of /our- readers are well acquainted with the ; anecdote of: owland Hill, who, on a country exenrsion, went on Sabbath to a strict Baptist. chapel, and when desiring to. partake of the Lord's Supper, it, was said to him, " Sir, you cannot do so;" 44 Sir,"- was the , stingingi -aye,• and argumentative reply, " Oh, its the : - 4;aptist•,Tahle4sit ? Why I thought it was the Lord's:Able." J. W. P. S. My lettere are.dispatched ;regular ly;; and if they do. not, appea,weekly, it is from delays on ocean's 'highway, over which neither you nor I have any control. 0. 237