_,_ . • - AtilvocA. MEM PRES BY TERIA. BANNER e ra terl onrian Banner. oI. V Vi No. 41. I " ONE THING IS NEEDFUL:" "ONE THING HAVE I DESIRED OF THE LORD:" "THIS ONE THING I DO." WHOLE N Advocate, 01. XIX, No. 38. • I'. ••••• s_ lg.—, iE 1,4 4 , 1 ear , kt`.• ; • r i qn epi 4,4 thi 4 , a. • oer • • t •ye or .• rg, tt v tc mo p) rA a • av e, °'f. he glr ee e . any 'msl 1,, 0111 e CI ti in true er 1 6 e \'' hol .f • 11 .d ••••'. • ul Deli eil of ` l , . It • t at (1 ( , d • • 'to ,`r til Ah n pad • ~.•s, , tiq•• , • • •.` ' by • esi . , an ii n Se 31 , Su • t tb, , ey ah, .r ..44,444 t'' , ler , , ° S I " r , I • • 1, tot na,• zs.• P 1 L . " of 4an '6 6 4 e 3 art to ''.h, s . .14 t• adi r t. • e t! MeKINNEY O Editor and Proprietor. IN ADVANCE. iginat tat% Acrostic. est brother thou art gone; of us must follow thee; ter shalt thou here return. ;his sin-cursed world to he. 'lly scenes with thee are past; eternity has come; we all with thee at last, ler sin and reach thy home. dog in the nrrrow way Is world of sin and woe, • shall f forget the day thou didst tow'rd me bestow since thy name's been dear, find hard trials here. dune 15th, 1857. e Bresbyterion Banner and Adyneate The Divinity of Christ, 'on su poicis P—John viii : 53. back 1827 years, and enter the ;le during the Feast of Taber ,s our astonishment at the gorge , of wealth and splendor gradually behold in a spacious court, on, an lilt provided, for those who instruct One who speaks as never man crowd are all attention, and tadly ; but certain Pharisees and the Law, occupying conspicuous im agitated. Theiinterfupt. his , ver and anon, with impertinent Id angry contradictions. He pro ,elf " The light of the world." . Lse him of falsehood. "Thou Jo rd of thyself," say they, "thy not true." He'offers them free the galling yoke of sin. "If ye i my word, ye shall know the truth, , th shall make you free." "We . in bondage to any man," they Thou art a Samaritan, and halt a He promises eternal life—" If any p my sayings, he shall never see. " Now we kqow," they exclaim,' of derision and triumph—". Now that thou halt a devil. Abraham ad the prophets, and thou sayest if ,ep my sayings, he shall never taste Art thou greater than our father who is dead ? and the prophets are makest thou thyself ?" ,hat same Being who addressed le in the Jewish temple on the the feast of Tabernacles, 1827 still speaks by the reading and of his Word to the children of offers light, liberty, and life, to a enslaved, and dying world. Some e proclamation as glad tidings, and he offer with joy; while others, ' to say, the great mass of men, Light because their deeds are evil, it bondage, and trusting to the the old serpent—" ye shall not —treat it with indifference, if not it and scorn. The language of at toward its Author is, Who art makest such extravagant preten ' hom makest thou thyself that est to enlighten; emancipate, and us ? This then is the question Jesus of Nazareth claim to be? was really and truly man, is evi was born of woman, was nourished er's breast, passed from infancy ildhood and youth, up to manhood, .d mind gradually developing in ry way. The child grew and ng in spirit. "He increased in • in stature, and in favor with God He was subject to all the physi ties to which humanity is heir. drank ; wore clothing, and sought ffered from hunger and thirst, cold was wearied, and needed rest; he he smiled; was sorrowful, and had of rejoicing ; fasted and prayed ; sickness and pain ; his back was th the scourge; his head was thorns; his hands and his feet with the nails; his side was th the spear; his soul was wrung h; he bowed his head in agony ; his body became stiff and cold That he was an extraordinary lily admit. And that he was a God, few upright thinking men ,3nt day deny. But he claimed • he claimed to be God as God-man—a being in whom natures, the human and the .erc united in one person; in second person of the adorable A veiled under a human form, sly united with a human soul—the nd the Creator strangely joined ! is evidently implied in his claim Messiah. Take a few passages• in 'estament, which the Jews uniform peak of their Messiah, Him whom ters expected 1800 years ago, and y are still expecting to come. "His .h," says Micah, are of old, from 7." " This is the name," says "by which he shall be called, The Itighteousness." " His name," " shall be called Wonderful The Mighty God, The Everlast , The Prince of Peace." " Thy exclaims David, in the language of " Thy throne, 0 God, is forever a sceptre of righteousness is the of thy kingdom.' Surely he, whose firth are of old, even from everlasting, , me is Jehovah, The Mighty God, mlasting Father,* to whom the Holy mompted David to ascribe in adora only a righteous sceptre and an ne: throne, but the absolute title be none other than the self-ex . ist- Oty and eternal One F It is plain, that He whom his enemies called 'mile, but whom we love to call our iu claiming to be the Serpent-bruiser ) Eve ; the Blessing, of Abraham; ofJacob ; the Prophet, of Moses; of lialaam ; the glorious, everlast- Kinz, of David ; the Ruler, of the lloly one of Israel, of Isaiah; oh, of .1 eremiah and Zechariah ; the Tian, of Daniel; the Shepherd Prince, iel; the Signet, of Haggai; the SavioUr, liah; and the Sun of Righteousness, Malachi predicted shoUld rise upon urch with healing in his wings—in ig to be Him of whom Moses and the :ts thus wrote, Him that was to come Father of eternity—a Ilebraiem for der —the Messiah thereby claimed to be truly God. He permitted himself to be worshipped. The wise men of the East, guided by a star to the place of his birth, fell down and wor shipped him ; a leper came and worshipped him; a certain Ruler worshipped him; the woman of Canaan worshipped him; the man whose sight had been restored by washing in the pool of Siloam believed and worship ped him; the mother of Zebedee's children came worshipping him; the sailors who be held him walking on the troubled sea amid the howling of the storm, and supposing him to be a spirit cried out with fear, when he entered the ship and the wind ceased, came and worshipped him, saying, of a truth thou art the Son of God. When he first appeared to his disciples after his resurrection, they came and held him by the feet and worship ped him; and from that time until he as-. cended to glory, oft as they met him, they paid him the same honor. In every instance he received the homage as his due. No mere man, acting under Divine authority, would have dared to do so. Cornelius • at tempted to worship Peter ; " Stand up," said Peter; " I also am a man." The Lystrians were about to pay Divine honors to Paul and Barnabas. Did they allow it? No. They rent their clothes and ran in among the peo ple, crying out, "Sirs, why do ye these things 7 We also are men of like passions with you, and preach unto you, that you should turn from these vanities unto the living God." No angel, no matter how bright or how near the eternal throne, would dare to do so. John, in eestacy at the brightness and glory of the New Jerusalem, twice pros trated himself to worship the angel that had showed him those things. "See thou do it not," exclaimed the angel; "Worship God." Our Saviour himself lays down the rule— " Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve." In permitting himself to be worshipped, did he not thereby proclaim himself'" The Lord our God 1" This is also implied in the prerogatives and attributes which he claimed. To mourning penitents he said, " Be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven." He consoled those who wept over the graves of departed friends, by assuring them that he was "the resurrection and the life ;" that the hour was coming when the dead should hear his voice and Jive. He forewarned the Jews that to him the Father had committed all judgment; that the day would come when the Son of man would sit upon the throne of his glory, and before him should be gathered all nations, to be judged, separated and doomed. He claimed power overhis own life—"l lay down my life for my sheep; I have power to lay it down, and have power to take it again.' He claimed to be omnipotent : " I give my people eternal life, and none is ableto pluck them out of my hand;" omniscient—" know ing all things;" omnipresent—" Where two Or three are gathered, together in My name, there am I in the midst of heni:" `"Le • r am with you alway even unto the end.of the world." Self-existing and eternal'; he calls himself the "I Am," the title assumed by him who Bindle to Moses from the burning bush. But He who is clothed with author ity to forgive sins, to raise the dead, to judge the world, to kill and to make alive—He who is almighty, all-wise, everywhere pre sent, self-existing and eternal, must be God. EMI Lastly, how else are we to understand his claim to be" the Son of God," especially since he so drew the parallel between the preroga tives of Father and Son, as to force upon us the conclusion that they are the same in substance, equal in power and glory? " All men should honor the. Son even as they honor the Father." "As the Father hath life in himself, so hath he given to the Son to have life in himself." "He that hath seen me, hath seen the Father." " I ate in the Fa ther, and the Father in me," &c. Indeed he positively asserts the equality—" I and my Father are one." The Jews so understood him. They inferred it from his assuming the power to forgive sins. "Who can for give sins but God only ?" They persecuted him, and sought the more to kill him, because " he had not only broken the Sabbath day, but said that God was his Father, making himself equal with • God." Again, they took up stones to stone him. Why? "Be cause being a man thou makest thyself' God." They charged him, before Pilate, with blasphemy. " We have a law, and by our law he ought to die ; because he maketh himself the Son of God." Had they not understood him as using the title in an in finitely-higher sense than that in which it is sometimes applied to good men, the claim would not have afforde the slightest ground for the charge. His disciples so understood him. Matthew called him Eman uel, God' with us. Thomas, convinced by the print of the nails and the wound in the side, exclaimed, "My Lord and my God." "I saw the Lord," said Isaiah, " sitting upon a throne high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple. And above it stood the seraphim. Each one had six wings; with twain he covered his face, and with twain he covered his feet, and with twain he did fly. And one cried to another and said, Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of Hosts; the whole earth is full of his glory." John -says that the Being of whom the prophet thus spake, and whose glory was thus dis played, was our Saviour. Yes, the beloved disciple considered that Jesus, on whose bosom•he was accustomed to recline, not only a God,' but the God' that created and upholds all things. "In the beginninc , was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the word was God ; the same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him, and without him was not anything made that was made." Paul not only calls him the Son of God, the brightness of the Father' s glory and the express image of his person—the image of the invisible God, the first born of every creature, by whom were all things created that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whe ther they be thrones or dominions, or princi palities or powers, who being in the ibrm of God, thought it no robbery to be equal with God—but called him expressly God manifest in the fish, in whom dwelt all the fullness of the Godhead bodily the great God, even our Saviour who loved us and gave himself for us; God over all, blessed forever. Finally, he has been so understood by the great mass of those who have been called Christians down to the present day. Such facts we think prove conclusively that He whom the Jews called the Nazarene, but whom we love •to call our Savionr, though in fashion as a man, claimed to be the only living and true God PUBLICATION OFFICE, GAZETTE BUILDING, FIFTH STREET, ABOVE SMITHFIELD, PITTSBURGH, PA. FOR THE WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1857. if it is possible for language to express such a claim. JAY BEEM. Hew London, lowa. For the Presbyterian Balmer and Advocate. Religion: OR, LETTERS TO A FRIEND ON THE DOCTRINES AND DUTIES OF THE BOLE Letter IMlL—Nature of Regeneration Whereas I was blind, now I see.—JonN ix : 25 MY DEAR FRIEND :-I will proceed with what I have to say on the nature of regen eration. I have spoken Of it as a spiritual illumination. The regenerated soul can say, whereas I was blind, now I see. John ix : 25. Hence in xegeneration there are new and clear views of Divine things. 'There are new and clear views of sin. One great reason why so many take up with a false and' delusive hope, is because of their very defective views- of sin.. This shows that they hale not been taught.by the Spir it, never been regenerated ; ; for in regenera tion the mind is enlightened, and it sees sin in its true nature and deformity. The en= lightened soul regards sin as an infinite evil, and abhors itself on account of sin • and its great desire is to be delivered sin; And having such views, it can find relief only in the blood of Christ; it flees to the Cross for safety, and here only can it find relief and deliverance. Hence in regeneration there are new and clear• views of. truth. In that Divine illu mination spoken of, the Spirit takes of the things of Christ, and shows them unto the soul, and causes it to see them.—John xvi: 13-15. He guides into all truth, gives such views as were never possessed before,. so that the renewed soul ,is able to have some right apprehensions of all the great truths pertaining to the scheme of redemp tion. And it is because of this, as we may perhaps see at some future time, that a knowledge and love of the truth is one of the best evidences of regeneration. . For the present, I only say that in regeneration new and clear views of truth are imparted by the Spirit, in his illumination of the un derstanding, " enlightening our minds in the knowledge of Christ"—Short. Cat., Ques. 31. Hence, in regeneration, the Spirit gives' new and correct views of ourselves. By nature we are ignorant of ourselves; we have very defectiie views of our sinfulness; and we have little or no realizing sense of our ill-desert on account of sin. But con viction of sin precedes and follows the saving illumination of the mind ; and we look upon ourselves as hell-deserving, and justly exposed to God's eternal wrath and curse. Arid thus oppressed and burdened, we cry, What must I do to be saved ? Acts xvi : 29-31. And then new and correct views of Christ are imparted. We see now, and feel our -need of .him_; . we _know we must perish without him; and we are enabled to see in him a fullness and sufficiency to meet our wants. We see that he is adapted to our necessities ; that his salvation just meets our ease ; in a word, that he is just the Saviour we need; and we see, too, that he is not only able, but willing to save ; that he in vites us to come to him just as we are, and promises to receive, and bless, and save us ; and hence that he is not only willing to save us, but willing to save us now--yes, now! And having' these views of ourselves as sinners, and of Christ as a present and all= sufficient Saviour, we are enabled, by Di vine grace, to renounce ourselves, and re ceive Christ •as our Saviour, and put our trust in him for salvation. So that regen eration leads to self-renunciation and to trust in Christ. The very first act of the new-born soul is faith in Jesus Christ; just as soon as there is spiritual life, there is faith; and where there is faith, there is justification; and where there is justifica tion, there shall be glorification; so that re generation, as it is the infusion of spiritual life, so is it the beginning of eternal life. The new creature in Christ Jesus is an im mortal creature; it shall never die ! Its growth may not be uniform; at times it may languish; it may even seem almost dead; but it is immortal; it shall never die I As Jesus Christ declares, 'Whosoever liveth and believeth on me, shall never die. —John xi : 26: For it is written, Whom he did predestinate, them he alio called, or regenerated; and whom he called—called effectually, or regenerated and converted— them he also justified ; and whom he justi fied, them he also glorified. There is, therefore, now no condemnation to' them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.—Rom. viii i 1, 28-30. Thus, as to the nature of regeneration, we see that it is a 4 / real change, from na ture to grace ;" an inward change, yet, mani fested outwardly; a great change ' a vital principle; the beginning of a new life ; at tended with new views, and feelings, and exercises; new ends, aims, and efforts; new joys, fears, and sorrows; new hopes, and prospects • old things are passed away; be hold, all things are become new.-2. Cor. v: 12. Charnock on Regeneration, published by Presbyterian Board, page 100, &c. What I have to say of the Agent in re generation, the means, and the end or de sign of it, must be reired for future let ters. At present I will only ask one question, and it is a question which demands your se rious consideration • it is this : Have you experienced this change ? Have you been born again ? I hope you have; but remem , her. two things : First. The doctrines advanced in these letters are not human opinions. I say they are not human opinions ; they are the teach ings of God's Word; they are the true say ings of God; truths which are to judge you ir and me at the last day. I uld deem it worse than trifling to addre 'on these let ters merely to amuse you human spec ulations, to present fine-spun theories, or to speak about things which pertain only to this world i or about evils which have no very near relation to yourself, and truths which concern not your immortal destiny. What I would impress on your heart is, what God's Word teaches. I say, then, the doc trines of these letters are the teachings of God's Word. It is the Bible which teaches both the necessity and the nature of re -1 generation. It is , Jesus Christ who says, Ye must be born'again. It is an inspired Apostle' Who says, Of His own will He be- gat us with the word of troth.--John 7; Jas. i : 18. • Second. The other thing to be remem bered is this : these matters concern you. They have erelation to each and every one; they concern you, individually and person ally; and you should make them , a matter of personal interest and -attention. They concern you, my friend, you; you, just as much as if you were the only person, man, woman, or child, in the world; they concern you, my friend, you! Y'ou, you must be born again ! The necessity rests upon you! And from the nature of, regeneration, ,you see what that necessity is,; yell see ,What the change. is which you nivt eiperience, in order to be saved And-Zwith this full be fore you, realizing your Orsonal interest. in the matter, what the char' cessity of it; with all t this question come right heart, Have you expert Have you been born' hell depends upon the .w.., or- damnation is involied; ,l. aeatn, reader, heaven or hell; ;with these before you, answer the question. Are you a new creature in Christ JesUs? Have you been born again ? These are the words of Jesus Christ : Except a man be born again, he can not see the kingdom of God ! Ye must be born again! Have You been born again ? —John iii : 3-7. I hope you can answer this clueition with comfort and satisfaction: But it is well to examine ourselves, and see that our hopes rest on the Rock , of Ages. Enough, how ever, for this time. I have more to say. Till I write again, adieu. Read John ix : and 2. Car. xiii : and Hymns 197, 287, and 199. May I ask the favor of a letter.frorn you, as to your present views, feelings, and exer cises ? I hope you will thus favor , me. Farewell. Yovus, TRULY. For the Presbyterian. Banner and Advocate. Malawi Presbytery. This Presbytery met in Mansfield on the 16th of June, and the following items of business are thought !to be of general inter est Messrs. James R. Burgett, James Fred ericks, and Geo. Grabam, students of, the Western Theological Seminary, were licensed to preach the Gospel. ' Mr. 3. W. McGregor'was ordained to the' full *oil of the Gospel Ministry; and in stalled pastor of the t ehurch of Mansfield. The. Rev. Henry H4rvey preached the ser mon, the Rev. Wm. Hughes presided, pro posed the constituti l eital questions, and de . livered the charge to the pastel., and the Rev. J. P. Caldvrell delivered the charge to the congregation. The pastoral relation between Rev. J. M. Dinsmore and the church of Mount Pleas ant, was- dissolved, and this church was de clared vacant. - The follo*ing teiOlirtions were unani mously adopted by Presbytery t Resolved, That we consider the testimony of the General. Assembly (0. S.) on the subject of slavery, from the beginning of that body in 1789, up to the present, as one, and uniform, (when rightly understood) against the slave system as being of Divine right, and of perpetual continuance ; or that those professing godliness should volunta-. • rily avail themselves of the privileges of the slave laws for their own profit or indulgence, and against the ceasing of desire and effort for the complete deliverance of the Church and the world from the system and its ef fects; and inasmuch as there appears to be an increasing disposition manifested in Southern authors, presses, and speakers, in and out of the Church, not only to justify slaveholding in' certain circumstances, but the slave laws which authorize them to hold them; we wish it; therefbre, to be under stood wherever our testimony may go, that we will not tolerate any retrocession oflprin ciple from that heretofore prOmulged by the General Assembly, from time to time, on this subject; that instead of the Church retrac ing her steps on this subject, she ought to be, with more earnestness, expecting the consummation of the period, when every yoke shall be broken, and the outcasts of every nation shall rejoice in all the privi leges, civil and religious, which it is the de sign of the Gospel to procure. Resolved, That we are pleased with the plan of the Ashmun Institute, designed for the liberal education of colored men, and re commend it to the favor and patronage of our people. In view of the exhausted condition of the Treasury of the Board of Foreign Mis sions, Presbytery adopted the following resa olution on that subject. Resolved, That this Presbytery earnestly recommend, in accordance with the recom mendation of the General Assembly, that our churches be called upon, at an early period, to take An extra' collectiOn for the Board of Foreign Missions, to meet the debt incurred by that Board in the enlarge ment of , the missionary work during the past year; and that the agent of Presbytery. be directed to address all the pastors and church Sessions on this subject. 3. P. CALDWELL, S. C. P. B. As the Stated Clerk is the Pres. byterial Agent on this subject, he wnuld take this method: of addressing the pastors and Sessions' on this subject. The amount of indebtedness of the Board is $ll,OOO, the first time in all its history that any thing of the kind has occurred. It is hoped then, for the honor of the Board —of this Presbytery in carrying out effi.- ciently its own action—and for the love of souls, that all' our churches 'will respond promptly to this recommendation of Pres bytePleary. se trensmit immediately your contri butions to the Treasurer of Presbytery, at Ashland, O. 3. P. CALDWELL, Agent of Presbytery. THE HUMBLE Holtm—Are you not sur prised to find how independent of money,peace of conscience is, and how.much happiness can be condensed into the humblest home ? A cottage will not hold the bulky furniture and sumptuous accomodations of a, mansion, but if Goa be there, a cottage will hold as much happiness as might stock a palace.-- Rev. C. HaTailion: Iris' a matter of faith not to trust to that which the'eye Beath, but that which the word promiseth. • From onr London Correspondent The Fine Arts in England—Their Prosperous Con- dition—Art Treasures Exhibition alManchester— lis Unique Character—A Visit to the Royal Acad emy of Paintings and Sculpture—Suggestive Stat ues, Portraits, and Historic Scenes—The Bearing of Art on Morals and Religion—Architecture and the New Reading Room of the British Museum— )(talc, Oratorios:' and .Operas in England—Dr. Livingston and the Freedom of the City—Mock Elections inTrance-Colliaion between the Priests and Popular Feeling in Belgium—Their -Short lived Triumph—The Scotch Presentee ultimately Reected 2 -Deputation to 'the Ilree Church:—lts Remarkable y P.rogress-The Grand Duke Con stantine—Commerce, Money, and War. The FINE ARTS (including under that title Music, Architecture, Statuary, and -a Hite, iVall. ll 4 16 r L e- very flourishing condition in 'otetir tutt , - 4 , , ...:-, reoak traction iforsallifort , 4' '' ' ' ' ' Ak e t . ' ''.'''` '. - ` " 241 :-.' '*' I a itirdvaniMitla ireposin., togetb__ ii , ... ,L5.. .- 0 1 1 1k g Eng.:l7:l;7mM ''::, LI„ P , ~,, . *. r i ...- !.. ,a. ......, . , ~,., ;.... I- lore g orions. , may not_ ~.. write . at ... ;$ $$ e 'foeuirodralvdtt:!lss,_u and refinement have for centuries been grad ually accumulaAing•Art Treasures, not mere ly by government purchases and splendid bequests of eminent:private collections to the National Gallery, but also and chiefly by the purchase, either from London picture-deal ers, or on. the Continent by noblemen and gentlemen, of some of the finest and rarest productions of the Old. Masters. But these treasures' were. alike Tidely diffused, and comparatively unknown, being family heir looms, or accessible only to a favorite circle of friends.. At the time of the World's Ex hibition of 1851, several noblemen in Lon don threw open their mansions, particularly the Duke of Northumberland, and the re cently deceased and accomplished Earl of Ellsmere. I remember going through the halls and rooms of Northumberland House, in 1851, with much interest and pleasure. But the present Art Treasures Exhibition has this novel peculiarity, that it brings to gether in One grand building; the scattered gems ofi art possessed by individuals, begin ning with the Queen, and embracing all who, like her, have been willing to lend their pictures, for the occasion. And so it comes to pass, that whereas our "National Gallery," or our "Vernon Gal lery" in London,' are not to be compared with the collections at the- Louvre, or the pictures in Italy, and other Continental States, England is found to possess- and produce, for popular admiration and instruc tion, as well as for the etimulus of the artist or amateur, a collection of treasures such as, brought under the eye in one place and at one time, give us an idea of an amount of artistic " wealth untold," of which we never dreamed as indeed our own. Manchester is not the ideal of-a place for such an exhibition, but probably it was chosen for its being more cheaply accessi ble to all parts of the United Kingdom, than the metropolis. Besides, in Cottonopolis, Art and Literature have warm, wealthy pat reriii, and - the 'Exhibition is likely tw be a great .success. ' 'Facilities are giten by the railroad companies for, popular access to it.;, I visited, last week, the, Annual Exhibi tion of the Royal Academy. This is a year ly spectacle of what our sculptors and artists have been doing, and of what the English School of Art is, accomplishing--.--always full of interest. It remains open for several months. The pictures, (many of them,) are purchaseable; and to show how art is pat ronized, it was 'stated the other day, at the annual dinner of the Benevolent Artists' Fund, that the sales this year were not much less than £30,000. Walking through the different rooms of sculpture and painting, I met' various ob jects very suggestive. The statuary room is small: some figures are full length, others are marble busts; but, as a rule, both are beautifully executed. There is a repose about statuary which, to me at least, is very sublime and impressive. It has something of the solemn beauty that speaks to the soul of him, Especially is this the case, When parental love has called in the aid of the sculptor to perpetuate the form, and likeness of lost ones, such as meets my eye in "the posthumous marble group of two of the children of --." Dr. Livingstone's bust is here, much more faithful than the painting of him in another room, which last almost made me angry with the artist who has failed in giving the world "assurance" of the "man," as he is, in his noble simplicity of char acter. ' Here, too, by Bally, is an exquisite pair of full-length figures of " Adam consoling Eve after the evil dream," (Paradise Lost, Book V.) Models, also, of the statues of Chatham and Fox, intended for Westmin ster Hall; the Welsh "Baiir a fine ideal of one of the patriot clais whom Edward'''. ordered to be put to death, and whom Gray, the poet, represents as crying— . “ Ruin seize thee, ruthless king i Confusion bn thy banners wait." The " Massacres of the Innocent's " a marble group, is worthy of the subject—the mother, the child, the murderer and the sword up lifted—each is perfect in its expression. Here is a bust of , the late Lord Raglan; another of the late Joseph Brotherton, M. P., who was so well known in the House of Commons for his advocacy of short sittings, and the rising of the House at, midnight, at farthest. Here are actors, artists, poets, authors. Among the last, are the bust and medallion of our poet-laureate, Tennyson, telling of a true and great man. Here, also, is the medallion of Thomas .Carlyle, the great- thinker, but alas ! the great skeptic, warring with the Bible, with all that is amiable, pouring fierce scorn, indiscriminate and unrelenting, on what, he thinks "shanis," and believing in nothing. Ah ! his'aspect here is stern, severe, almost - appalling, from' the indications of the play of " inner fires" of wrath beneath that grim surface. Once he loved the old faith of his native Scotland. He has rescued Cromwell's memory also from the misrepresentations of partizan history, and Puritanism with him, once the grander glory and preserving leaven of the past. May he be yet brought out of that slough into which he' has fallen ! Let me not forget the bronze Statuette of your own immortal Washington; and then leaving the Sculpture Room, let us ascend the grained staircase. Here is a grand per speetive of three 'great rooms filled with pic tures, and all, of them _hung -with laste and judgment, under theay " T best light& Th ere r , • , ~h , " ',, 3 , t^ i‘ ', ,il •'. LONDON, June 5, 1857. LOU " Who hath bent hint o'er the dead, Ere the first day of death is fled." are side rooms also, devoted to architectural plans and drawings, as well as to water-col ors, &e. I may not dwell upon the twelve hundred pictures, embracing every subject, including portraits, such as that of G-eneral Williams, the defender of Kars, and of Dr. Adler, Chief Rabbi of the London Jews. This last picture made me sad for that na tion, " scattered and peeled," and'still hav ing a veil on, its heart, of which the Rabbi is a type. There are paintings, also, of the Queen and Prince Albert, and likenesses, in military costume, on horseback , of Mr. Dal las, the American Minister, of Mcalm tack, one of the discoverers of the North- West Passage, and of Dr. Cooke, (a noble likeness) painted by MaeNee for the Presby terian. College, Belfast, of which the veteran antagonist of Arianism is the. president..: Landseer, the great animal painter, ex hibits 'a large . picture of Highland red deer, KitAA; - )osir \er ing mi length of Summer scenes—English land scapes, the glade, the brook—nor of house hold sketches, nor yet historical paintings, save to refer to such as " The Burial of Charles 1.," and the " Field Conventical" in Scotland's "killing times;" or to " Christ with the Woman of Samaria," " Peter the Great in the Dock-yard at Deptford," and The Pilgrim Fathers;" "Departure of a Puritan Family for New England," with the kneeling figure of Robinson, " with watery eyes," (as Governor Bradford's journal has it) "commending them, with most fervent prayer, to God." I go next` to " The National Gallery," in the same building, which stands , open to rich and poor alike, without entrance fee, and in which are the old masters, English and foreign. Pictures by: Teniers, Cuyp, Poussin, Leonardo De Vinci, Rubens, Corregio, Claude, Rembrandt, and Vandyke, meet the eye of the million, on the walls, to say nothing of West's " Christ Healing the Sick." Many of them have sacred sub jects, though not a few are tinged with Ro mani= and Mariolatry. Some of the best modern pictures were,sent away to Marlbor ough House, in Piccadilly, to be added to the " Vernon Gallery," some time ago. I have written far more than I intended about Artistic Exhibitions in England. The question arises, ," What bearing have these on morals ?" The Bishop of Manchester's prayer at the opening of the Art Treasures Collection, had a petition that "it might refine our tastes! A strange petition, surely 1 Yet religion ignores not art, or any thing which human genius produces, if the glory be given to God the Giver; if the intellect and the heart be not injured, but rather cultivated; if the tendency be not demoralizing, but, purifying ; and if innos cent recreation be afforded to those mentally or physically overtasleed. And, there is much of all this, I trust, in the present con dition of art, And in the feelings .of its patrons. _Not that these thinks...will ever. be substitutes for, the Gospel, or be the cure of man's sins and sorrows. But bringing 'tributes to Christ, and teaching great moral' lessons to the thoughtful and the thought less; stirring the heart with noble historic reminiscences, by the pictured stories of martyrs, reformers, patriots—even these things tend to do good, and speak forth to all, the animating word, " Excelsior !" The New. Reading Room of the British Museum, is one of the greateSt triumphs of architectural skill and taste. It is circular in form, with a mighty dome overhead, equal in leftiness, save by a few feet, to that of St. Peter's, at Rome. Galleries go round the building, tier after tier, giving access to the books which in .myriads are placed there, each bound and gilt-lettered. Besides desks and tables at which librarians stand to attend to the desires of the read em, each reader has a separate seat for him self, with every facility for taking notes and extracts. The beauty and gracefulness of the whole structure are extraordinary; the eolorine• b and painting by the celebrated' Owen Jones, admirable. Crowds of rich and poor have been passing through the li brary, to inspect, it, ere it is . opened to the literary public. The cost is £150,000. Taken as a whole, the British Museum is a glorious structure and its' contents most precious. The Nineveh marbles are now beautifully arranged; and while the, world lasts, will testify to the retributive justice of the great Governor of Nations, and to the truth of his "sure word of prophecy." As to Music, as one of the fine arts, never was it, so extensively cultivated in England, as it is now. There is to be, this' Summer, a " Handel Festival," commemorative, in its character, of the great composer, at 'the Crystal, Palace, at , which his best. Oratorios are to be sung by the most eminent profes sionals, and a chorus of probably , one thou sand voices. 'As to the lawfulness 'of Ora torios, I say nothing, save that the professed ly religious world is divided; some 'earnest Christians—like Lord Shaftsbury, in a re cent conversation I had with liim--holding and maintaining, from their personal con sciousness,- that the '.effect is eminently de votional, And tends to subdne us, and to melt even the careless. Others, like Cecil and Newton, among the dead, and Dean Close, among the living, condemn the Ora torios, on the ground that they must, be sung by persons, some of whore are notoriously immoral, (stage players, &c.,) and that, as in. "The Messiah," a great crowd is col lected to draw entertainment from a re hearsal of the 811fferine of the Son of God. I am persuaded that the majority of the Evangelicals are opposed to Oratorios. But surely the time may come when " The ! Messtah" may become a, glorious outpour ing, from sanctified multitudes, of homage, faith, andpenitence at the feet of the Re deemer, and to the glory of God the Father. As to' Operatic Music, ". Trovatore," and Traviata," are all the rage, and the tri umph of Veidi, as a composer, is unparal leled. But there is positive 411 hero. the latter Opera, the heroine is a fallen one; and as she dies of consumption, by slow de grees, her sweet singing and beautiful acting make the charm which is se, potent. Vice, indeed, is veiled; but is it the less danger ous? The Qdeen has never once given her presence or countenance to either of these Operas. DOCTOR -141 1 11NOST9N was,last week, pre ' rented with the freedom of - the City of. London. In his reply, he indicated the probability of trade and commerce penetra tittg, ereiong,the heart of Africa ) and that Philadelphia, 111 South Tenth Street, below Chestnut By Mail, or at the Office, $1.50 per Year, I SEE PROSPECTUS. Delivered in the City, 1.75 " the abolition of the slave trade would be the result. Ile made mention, also, of the vast productiveness of the soil, and of many fruits quite unknown in this coun try. One article, a specimen 'of which he produced, was "quite new to commerce.." This plant has a fibrous tissue ; it is a sub stitute for flax, and an eminent London firm says that when prepared it will be worth ,E,50 or £6O a ton. All this is hopeful, while'we do not forget Dr. L.'s own words, " The end of the geographical feat, is the beginning of the missionary enterprise." The MOCK Er, onoNs in France, for Louis Napoleon's mock. Legislature, are about to commence. The Government sends to Prefects and Heads of Departments a list of candidates, and urges them to use every means to insure` their election. The Times asks, what would England say if the Queen attempted such a course ? , And then, in its. lal] lowerful, way, yet under the veil n MO% API -t-t • will have it so, and that s e is not tented, as England would be. Somewhat dishonest and treacherous to both parties, is this style of writing, even while declaring in favor of constitutional liberty on the whole. • The French Republicans talk of bring ing forward Cavaignac, and others; as oppo sition candidates. But the effort will be 'followed by small results, when corruption and systematic repression spread their net work over the whole kingdom. Iw BELGIUM, there has been. a :collision between the priests and, the people, which may be followed by important results in fa vor of Protestantism. The priests have always been the bitter` foes of the constitu tion. But, as they could not get rid of it, they moved the masses, by superstitious in fluences, to -elect a Chamber which gave their . party a majority, and put their abet tors into office, as the Ministers of King Leepold. " By the law, as it has stood since the revolution of 1830, priests could not re ceive bequests and will-making (at which in Ireland and elsewhere they have always been such adepts for their own good, and that of Mother Church,) was absolutely for bidden them. The cry was raised of the poverty of the convents, and the hardship that people, when dying, could not leave their property to be disposed of as they pleased, without State interference: And so, by a majority, they carried, last week-after a tumultuous opposition—a virtual repeal of what may be called a Mortmain Act. Whereulmn the people at Brussels; at Antwerp, at Ghent, and elsewhere, of the middle class, gathered in threatening crowds in the streets, and some of the Jesuit clergy fled. The Pope's Legate also was insulted at Brussels. Seeing the danger, the crafty Leopold, only too glad to have the opportunity of quashing a measure which he detested, dissolved the Chamber. Thus the priest party are com pletely upset in their calculations; and not only will they never dare to propose the ob noxious change again, but they have made themselves hateful to multitudes. All this savors more of a political and secular strug gle, than a spiritual one. But it is a token for good. ,And the Evangelical Protestant Church in Belgium will not fail to take ad vantage of it. Much prayer should be offered on behalf - of Belgium, whose soil has been watered not only with the blood of hostile armies fighting and falling there, but by that of some of the most renowned and precious of God's martyred servants. In reference to the CASE OF A PRESENTEE in the Scottish Establishment, referred to in my last letter, and whom the moderate party in the Assembly had succeeded in de claring eligible, it gives me real pleasure to record, that this disgraceful vote was vir tually repealed by the success of another, by which it was resolved to take` the evidence of ministers, and others, who knew the real state of the parish. The result was that the objectionable presentee was set aside by a majority of thirty-six. Thus the Evangeli- Cal party in the Establishment has its reputation. The FREE CHURCH ASSEMBLY has re ceived Deputations from the Irish and Eng lish Presbyterian Churches, as well as from the Church in Canada. M. Monad gave an address to the Assembly on the state of religion in France. Religious persecution still "continues there, to a certain extent. The progress of the Free Church is remarkable. At the Disruption, it numbered. four hun dred and seventy-eight ministers. It has now eight hundred and one ordained minis .ters, and eight hundred and eighty-one con gregations. In the first year, the Sustenta tion Fund amounted to £68,704; it has since increased upwards of £40,000. Then it had not a single school ; now it reports six hundred and seven schools, and fifty-seven thousand scholars. Then its country ministers had no homes'; now there are five hundred and thirty pleasant Manses. Then the For eign Mission funds were £4,949 ; last year they.amounted to £14,470. Since the Dis ruption down to May, 1856, there had been collected £3,902,000, or an average of £300,000 a year, 'for thirteen satcceEsive The GRAND DUKE CONSTANTINE has paid a brief and private visit to the Queen, at the Isle of Wight. He remained but a short time, and in the Royal Yacht took a short excursion with • the Queen, amid the thunders" of a royal salute from the ships in Portsmouth harbor. He was conveyed with all honor to Calaisi and thence departed to Germany. TRADE is much disturbed and depressed, by the constant drain of money to the East. About one million sterling is to be dispatched to-morrow, to India and China. The war in the latter will likely be but a local irrel: J. W. A SUMMARY OF RELMON.—There is no salvation but by the free mercy of Goal no mercy, but through the mediation of Christ; no interest in Christ except by faith in him; no justifying faith but that which works by love and purifies the heart ; no love to Christ which does not include love to' his people, his example, his precepts no genu ine love to, his people which does not influ ence a man , to do good to them, as he has ability and opportunity. la ONOE we are sure God hath ,done a thing, there is no room left to dispute its equity: 0. 249