SUNDAY SERMON Theme: Brooklyn, N. Y.—Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church on the theme, “The Life Spiritual in «Christ; the Fundamental in Chris- tianity,” the Rev. Ira Wemmell Hen- derson, pastor, took as his text John 8:5: ‘‘Verily, verily, I say unto thee, except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.” He said: It is my desire, as the Spirit may give me wisdom, to unfold to You what, to my mind, is the fundamental in Christianity. From the words of our Master I conceive the truth to be that, save as we apprehend the spiritual verities revealed in Jesus Christ; save as 1'e see the world, man, our God, with the spiritual vis- ion, we cannot become partakers of the glories of the kingdom of our Father. Only as we open our hearts and minds to the indwelling Spirit of Almighty God do_ we enter into the promised land. of the new dispensa- tion, to possess it, to enjoy it. Filled with the Spirit we live, but if the Spirit of God abide not in a man he -is none of His. In that beautiful figure of the vine Christ cuts clear for us the nature of the spiritual life. It is-our oneness within the Author of the universe and of us. It is the merging of our lives into the life of God. The perfect spiritual life expresses itself in union within the Maker. Entirely within the living Christ moves the flawless human. Fashion a man according to the stature of Jesus Christ and you have a spiritual man. The spiritual life ds that life within Christ which will make you always ask, “What would Jesus do?” The ethical judg- ment always referring for its sanction to the spiritual. Spirituality and godliness are syn- onvmous. Apart from the glorified Nazarene there is, Christianly speak- ing. no spiritual existence. Spiritual- ity is no mere statement of philoso- phy: it is a fact. A vital and a vivi- fying reality is the life within the Son of Man. The Christ life is not merely a state of mind, but a mode of action. The living of the man within Jesus and for the Father, and the Holy Spirit dwelling in him, that is the life spiritual. As the late Dr. Maitbie D. Babcock well said: ‘‘Spir- ituality is seeing God in common things and showing God in common things.” Now this spiritual life is not eso- teric in its nature. It is not a life for the few. It is a life for us all. The economy of the good news of the Master is worldwide in its application and inclusiveness. To all men the opportunity to dwell within Christ is offered. To all the higher life has its appeal. From Nicodemus of the San- hedrim, to Onesimus the slave. From the mighty in intellect, to the unlet- tered and unlearned. To the banker, to the beggar, without money and without price, are givenall the wealth at God’s command if they will. The highest Christian life is in- separable from the highest spiritual- ity. We cannot understand the soul of the message that the Master brings to us until we enter into His point of view. ‘The mightiest Christians of all the ages were men of the deepest sanctification. And sanctification is the soul’s progress toward the per- fectness of God. Witness Peter as he stands before the wondering, poly- glottous multitudes, on the day when the Spirit filled the church. - Witness Saul of Tarsus, as, ‘ringing down the grooves of change” he sends the watchword, “For to me to live is Christ.” The secret of the success of Wesley, of Spurgeon, is spiritual force. The most helpful power in the world to-day is the strength of soul of consecrated men and women. Men may come and men may go, but the influence of the soul which is grow- ing into Godlikeness is the influence which bends hardest upward and heavenward. To be truly Christlike, we must be truly spiritual. The greatest value of the spiritual fife is that, through it, we are en- abled, more and more, to understand Jesus Christ Himself. The Christ cannot be comprehended save through the spiritual depths of His nature. As true it is to-day as it was when Nicodemus went through the sable night to learn wisdom at the feet of Jesus: “That which is born of the flesh is flesh. That which is born of the Spirit is Spirit.”” Save as we en- ter into the Spirit we cannot enter into the things of the Spirit. We can- not grasp heavenly things until we fet Heaven into our hearts. Only as we discern the¢ soul forces which un- derlie the activities of the Saviour can we undenstand Christianity and Christ. Only‘ias we are filled with the Spirit can“, we understand the Lamb of God. & 4» The fullness ofithe promises of the Prince of Peace gan come to those only who are strongest in soul ser- vice. Christ has lefy us certain prom- ises. He has confetred upon us cer- tain privileges... But those promises and those privileges are realized, in their fullest measure, by those only who live the fullest life. Christ says to us with reference te@ prayer: ‘If ye abide in Me and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what%ye will and it shall be done unto yous’ A prom- ise and a privilege. Butyto whom? To us all indeed. But fully to those of us only who live fully within Christ. } The promises of Christ §ire con- stant. Prayer is the samg' blessed privilege to-day that it was on that fateful night in Gethsemane, To you and to me Christ grants thelkame ac- cess to the Father that He Him- self. But we need the deepest spir- itual~insight to learn the segret of success in prayer. Read thaf peti- tion of our Lord in the sevenf§eenth chapter of the fourth Gospel #hd see if it is not the spiritual feryor of it which enthralls you. The Secret of the success of Christ in His) earthly career is the secret of the payer in the grove by the Kidron ist has revealed the secret to . is for us to decide whether or nd ng the - —— - = - Nib, ; PULLYT 21 AE i vid WINS 3 The Life Spiritual in Christ. spiritual energy that we have, we shall go on to further glories in the life within our Saviour. In our time the material needs of men are, instead of being subordi- nated, pushed into primary import- ance. The mad rush for wealth and power among the leaders in society has its influence on those in the rear ranks. Materialism masters all men, save those who see clearly and think profoundly. And in this there is cause for fear. Would that we might look less at the world material and more to the realm spiritual. Christ came not to save the pockets, or the power, or the position of men. The Saviour, cru- cified on Calvary, died, not that we might be enabled to gain riches or honor or glory in this world. Rather did He suffer that, through Him, we might be led to discern the spiritual realities of life. Rather did He offer up Himself that, through Him, we might gain an eternal weight of glory; that, through Him, we might gain spiritual plenty, power, peace. Would that we. might discern that the spiritual life that we are to live] hereafter is the normal life now. Would that to-day we might cease to sear our souls with sin. Would that we might, here and now, re-dedicate ourselves to the spiritual service of our spiritual God. Let us cease to make the passing pleasures of the present the motive in our lives. Let us rather strive for the primal and the fundamental in life. To the at- tainment of the eternal graces, the endless powers, the everlasting pos- sessions, let us bend our energies. If we are to live the life spiritual here- after, then, by all means, let us gain all spiritual wisdom now. ‘If, through the aeons, we are to dwell within the light of the countenanceof the Christ, then let us become accustomed to the glory of His presence here. The student studies against his life’s labors. The scientist devotes his larger energies to his field of in- vestigation. The disciplines of the student subordinate all else to them- selves. The scientist specializes. All else is secondary. Not otherwise is it with the Christian. The Christian is fitting for spiritual specialism. His duty it is to draw so near to God that the divine life is within him and he within the divine. His duty it is, here and now, to subordinate all things in this life to the soul’s devel- opment. Wealth, position, power, all are secondary, all are incidenta. None is primary. None is fundamental. Poverty with purity is peace. The true wealth is the wealth spiritual. Real content comes from above and abides within. The purest happi- ness is the gift of the Spirit. The power that persists is Pentecostal. Do you doubt? Come then to the hovel that. they call home who are poor in earthly possessions but who are rich toward God. Poor? No. Rich? Yes. Unhappy? No. Happy? Yes. And you ask: ‘How can this be?’’ Listen to the words of our blessed Master: ‘‘Let not your heart be troubled. Ye believe in God, be- lieve also in Me.” “I will not leave you orphans, I will come to you.” “These things I have spoken unto you that ye might have life.” “I am the bread of life.” A son of God un- happy? A daughter of our Father in tears? The need of the church and of the individual Christian to-day is spirit- uality. The power of the Holy Ghost the Comforter is sadly neglected. The church relies too much upon the might of man and not enough upon the grace of God. We need to se- cure, as a real and virile fact in our own lives, the consciousness of our being within God through Christ. Thus may we be clothed with the might of the Master. Thus may we gain in soul energy. Thus may we grow from spiritual childhood into spiritual maturity. Leaving the mi- asma of the prison house of the bedy material, we may climb ever higher to the spiritual heights where the air is pure, and clear and vigorous. Es- caping from the bonds of sin we may clamber upward toward the pinnacle of perfectness. Beloved, we must lead. The posi- tion of the church is at the front. We must move up to our colors. Our ideal is Christ. Our aim the spiritual regeneration of the world. An aenemic church cannot lead. We need red blood in our veins. The church of Christ must be filled, indi- vidually and collectively, with the deepest spiritual grace. The Chris- tian man must be ‘one who measured by the spirit level of his own ideals, justifies.” If we are Christians let us live the life. Let us place the em- phasis upon the enduring things. Let us bring men to the knowledge of the spiritual truths revealed in Jesus Christ. Let us teach mankind that he is richest who is wealthiest toward God. Let us live as we pray and preach and teach. And having dedicated ourselves to the service of the Lord of Light and of Love let us go out to men with the truth. To the highest, to the lowest, the cultivation of the soul's powers has its appeal. The spiritual chord struck by Jesus Christ can awake an antiphonal note in the soul of every man who wants to hear. 1 ————————————— Waves. The waves of the ocean spring up, we know not where or why. They come careering past us, the very em- blems of resistless power. They sub- side and are lost among the succeed- ing waves. In like manner, on the vast sea of human life, individuals, then empires, mysteriously emerge. They raise their ephemeral forms conspicuously high, overwhelming whatever stands in the way of their march. They also subside and are lost, but the unfathomable abyss of humanity still remains, and God’s eternal purpose moves on toward the accomplishment of the determined | end.—Draper. and y G A Sample Order Which Entitles You fo a $10 Premium FREE 20 cakes Walker’s Soap, Rooster Brand... $0 5 cakes’Naptha Soap ......... v's S cakes Floating Tar Soap.. 4 cakes Floating Wax Soap... 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A Women’s og Co-operative Store By Velina Swanston Howard. ‘AE city of Stockholm, Sweden, can boast the only women's co- operative store in the world. ers and sellers are all women. these- drive the delivery of the woman suffragists scheme. Her appeal means. ER) the Woman's club. was to the cultured women She outlined the before the women's ciubs of Stockholm. Her propaganda the Fredrika Bremer association, Students and Workers, Shareholders, management, buy- Only two men are employed; wagons. Miss Anna Whitlock, leader in Sweden, was the promoter of this of small movement in talks met with favor in White Ribbon and possibilities of this On April 5, 1905, Svenska Hem, as the women’s co-operative society is called, was incorporated, with a membership. of 391 women Quarters were found in Jacobsberg, Gatan, about $6,000. went to work with a will attuned, and But they found themselves, as the were boycotted on all sides. crush these women, who had dared to compete with them. and a capital of and the women plenty of enthusiasm. Americans say “up against it!” They The retail dealers made up their minds to The women Soon learned that the markets of their own country were closed to them, for every wholesale dealer had been warned. ing short of wuicidal! deliver to 1etailers, making night deliveries. the women’s store, as detectives were in a side street, some distance away, to haul barrels. sacks. ete. to their ow It meant the loss of all other customers. were also warned, but they They did not dare, however, to drive boldly up to To sell to these women would be noth Drivers, who got around the thing by always on the alert, but they stopped where the women sent their workmen n storerooms.—Good Housekeeping. The Wife of a a Brilliant Husband By Mary Stewart Cutting. T is no doubt a most bewildering thing to a woman if she does see that her husband is distancing her. Thera are so many kinds of being clever that aman is expected to be that it isn’t especially daunting to find him cleverer than she expected. But when his brains and his she has no foothold, where not only ent plane, but the women ther: is a new condition of things. efforts raise him into a goclety where the -men are on this differ- also, then she becomes conscious that She can let him move in this orbit entirely without her and drop down to the home level when he comes with him, defiantly, with the feeling, way!” or humbly and sensitively, feeling every mistake, ] That is the trouble, that terrible self-consciousness that will- nov sciously. back there. “1 guess I'm as good as they are, any- She can try to take her place eveny lapse self-con- let her sit, or smile, or speak or hold her hands naturally, in the presence of people who know so well how to do these things. she can’t converse with them. tions, and that badly; gets herself wrong thing and that her husband is looks and talks like the other people, ‘he kmows it. and does talk naturally she suddenly She can only answer ques- If by chance she for- feels as if she has said the ashamed of her. She knows that he and she doesn’t, and she knows that No one can be fitted either mentally or socially for another sphere of lif bv precept, but cne’s mind can learn a wider range even by reading novels and magazines of the day and talking about what is read. A very slight article may sometimes call out a real interchange of thought if one talks about it.—Harper’s Bazar AMENDED. “Mr. Hunter's married now,” said the bride-tosbe, preparing to send out her cards, “so we'll have to address his invitation to ‘Mr. and Mrs. Hun- ter.” ” “Better not,” her brother advised. “She’s the boss, you you'd better send the invitation to ‘Mrs. and Mr. Hun- teresa’ Y——Philadelnhia Press. A FASHIONABLE FLOWER. “This flower is strictly up to date,” said the florist. “What do you mean by that?” ask: ed the prospective customer. “Why,” he explained, “it was ob- tained by grafting.”—Detroit Free Press. THE AMATEUR GARDENER. Mrs. Black—Your husband is so straight out from the shoulder. He always calls a spade a spade, dpesn’t he? Mrs. White—I though he did, but yesterday 1 was listening while he was spading up a garden patch, and I'm sure I heard him call it some- thing else.—Detroit Free Press. THE PRICE. “But,” said the weary millionaire, “the plain people do not know what the rich have to put up With.” “Huh!” snorted the plain man, “wa know you've got the money to put up with, while we haven't any to put up.”—Philadelphia Ledger. Loo ol ER REE .-er The Wonders of Cellulose. By Professor R. K. Duncan. HE commonest thing in the every-day vegetable world is cellulose —the material of which are made the cell walls of every plant, Cellulose, which makes up one-third of the plat life on the sa globe, is capable, like gold and silver, of resisting the efforts of a time. When pure, it neither rusts nor decays, but can endure Hah, through all generations. Yet, common as it is, it is one of the teast understqpd of substances, and its greatest wonder is the fact that every tiny chip of knowledge we have been able to extract from it has led to the establishment of some new industry, and has added enormously to th: resources of mankind. . Linen is almost pure cellulose, and So is cotton, and so is silk; yet although the chemical substances are to same, their structure is very different, and their qualities vary with the structure. The paper on which The Companion is printed is made from cellulose—and this would be true whether it were linen or cotton or wood-pulp paper. It can be extracted either mechanically or chemically from the wood. Wood cellulose is not as good or as lasting ag cotton cellulose. The chemist cannot distinguish wherein the difference lies, yet a fortune awaits the man who can discover how to make the one as good as the other. : The entire cotton industry is based upon cellulose, and it seems. as if it were a -nastered scence; yet so little do we know about the basic material that even a simple discovery in connection with it can still open the doors to enormous changes. John Mercer discovered that if. a piece of cotton, which is pure cellulose, be placed in a strong solution of caustic soda, the cellulose unites with water, the cotton shrinks twenty per cent. and becomes fifty per cent. stronger, and it has greater dyeing capacity. But if it be kept under tension so it cannot shrink, the whole fabric assumes the sheen of silk, A great industry has sprung up in the manufacture of “mercerized coda. 2 Linen, cotton, jute and hemp are cOMMON fibers of commerce, all pure cellulose, which we have learned how to use; but there may be, in any field of weeds, a dozen or a score of plants of equal value and utility could we but master the secret of their chief component and learn thus to use them, Cellulose will dissovle in a hot solution of vince chlorid, and makes a sticky sirup. When forced through a tiny orifice into alcohol this sirup pre- cipitates a fine thread, which, when carbonized makes a filament for incan- descent lamps. Paper soaked in the solution asl worked up forms vulcan: ized fiber” Dissolved in another solution cellulose forms a material which renders goods dipped in it water-proof, and such goods pressed together form bullet-proof sheets, such as were used for barricades in South Africa. Dis solved in nitric acid, the cellulose forms guncotton, a high explosive; by a slightly diferent treatment it becomes celluloid, and by another, collodion. One of the newest and most wonderful of its uses is in the manufacture of artificial silk from ‘viscose,’ or ceiiulose mercerized and dissolved in car- bon «isulphid. Forced through tiny holes by tremendous pressure, it issues in threads which solidify and are led to bobbins, eventually passing through the spinning and weaving processes to emerge lustrous silken goods.—Har- per's Magazine, Japanese Morality. By J. Ingram Bryan, M. A,, M. Litt. Professor of English in the Imperial College of Commerce, Nagasalxi. APANESE observers assert that at present Buddhism has no influence in China, and the statement is still more true of Japan. . The average Japanese who has any conception of the difference between one religion and another, feels that Buddhism has a scant message for the twentieth century. The real religion of Japan is Ancestor Worship—a reverence for, and service of, : departed ones whose spirits are believed ever to pour their mighty forces into the life of today. To a large number of the more in- telligent Japanese, ihis creed is no more satisfying to the spiritual nature than the anniversary of a funeral would be to us; and as for the masses, they are slaves to tlie most blood-cardling superstitions, amounting in many casas to a worship of demons. In a very able article in the “Shin Jin” (New Man), Mr. Ebina contends that notwithstanding its philosophical excellence, Buddhism is destined to be overcome ‘by the practical efficiency of Christi- anity. Japanese Christians are now exerting a powerful influence at home, and that influence has conspicuously followed the flag into Formosa, Korea and Manchuria. When the main points of the ethics of old Japan, loyalty and filial] piety, are consecrated by the social service of a pure and noble character, a great and lasting leadership will be assured to Japan, not only in statesmanship, bur in religion and morality. In this most vital point of all—morality, Japan is weakest, and so long as sha continues so, she will’ lack one of the most essential requisites of as- sured .uccess. In assisting her to feel rightly on this ‘question, Christianity ‘must prove a potent factor. But at present Japan's social morality is the greatest menace to her advance. SANNY AN RAR XX Sa RAAF SLY ’