THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, NOVEMBER 24, 1918. CHURCHES TO HOLD APPROPRIATE THANKSGIVING -SERVICES Number of Congregations Will Make Observances at Morning and Evening Services Today Two Big Union Meetings Set for Thursday. THANKSGIVING services will be held in Portlaud churches today and ' Thursday. A number of churches will make fitting observances at either the morning: or evening ser vices today, but the majority will celo brate the holiday with appropriate ser vices Thursday morning. At Lincoln Methodist Church this morning Bishop Matt S. Hushes, recent ly returned from three months in the East, will make an address of a patri otic nature. Thanksgiving: services will be enjoyed by a large congrega tion of downtown folk at Wilbur Meth-cd-st Church this morning. L'nion services will be held Thanks giving day at 10 A. II. at the White Temple, with the parishes of the First Methodist, the First Christian and the Lutheran churches Joining in the ser vice. The pastors of the respective churches will participate. Rev. Joshua Stansiield. pastor of the First Meth odist Church, will preach the Thanks giving sermon. Elrht congregations of the Disciples of Christ will unite at .the First Chris tian Church for union services Thurs day morning at 10:3d and a community service will be held at Hope Presby terian Church for the Montavilla dis trict. Rev. Hiram Gould, of the Monta villa Methodist Church, delivering the Thanksgiving address. The Woodlawn Methodist Church and the Woodlawn Christian Church will unite with the congregation at Pied-1 mont Presbyterian Church on Thurs day morning at 11:30 to bear Fred Lock ley. recently returned from France. An event ox unusual interest - in church circles of the city will be the visit of Rev. Charles L. White. D. D.. of New York City, general secretary of the American Baptist Home Mission Society, and one of the outstanding Baptists of the North. He will be the guest of Portland Baptists Sunday and Monday. December 1 and 2. A mass meeting of toe Baptists of the city and surrounding country will be held in the White Temple Monday evening at T:5. to be addressed by Dr. White. This Is the yearly rally of the Baptists of Portland. In which the various churches exercise a fine rivalry in promoting the largest possible attendance of their re spective churches. A Nation-wide movement among Baptists, known s enlistment week, will be observed by Baptist churches of Poraland and Oregon December 1 to S. This campaign proposes the re-enlistment of every Baptist In some form of Christian activity. The reconstruc tion period following the war makes It especially opportune that the churches should consecrate themselves anew to the task at building a Christian civil ization throughout the world. morning at 11 o'clock- At 7:30 in the evcnirfg he will preach on the theme. "The Haunted Heart." At Second United Brethren Church, Twenty-3eventh and Sumner . streets, the pastor. Rev. Ira Hawley, will use as his morning theme "Our Duty to Home Missions." in the evening his theme will be "Piltting Our House in Order." Rev. K. O. Shepherd, pastor of the Third United Brethren Church. Sixty seventh street and Thirty-second ave nue, will use as his theme for the morn ing service "He Gave Thanks," and In the evening "Seeking ReFt." The pastor of Fourth United Breth ren Church. Rev. C. P. Blanchard. will preach in the morning on the subject J 'The Other End of the Rope"; In the! - i evening the sermon will be on "The Summary of Prayer and Thanksgiving Week." On Thanksgiving day. Thursday, No vember 28, the four United Brethren churches of the city will join in a union Thanksgiving and praise service ! at the First United Brethren Church, I Fifteenth and East Morrison streets. , 10:30 A. M. Delegations from the four churches will be in attendance and Dr. Byron J. Clark will give the address. An offering will be taken. "God as a Destroyer," Topic of Sunday Sermon. EmlaC Service Will Be Preceded by Orgaa Recital. Major Mills to Speak at the Congregational Church. Dramatic Servant Given. Sermon - Reading, The In the House." te Be JOR T. A. MILLS will speak at both services at the First Congre gational Church. Park and Madison streets, today and give a dramatic ser mon reading of Charles Mann Kenne dy's famous drama, "The Servant In the House." A consideration of this play is very appropriate at this time. The morning topic will be "If or Though." The public is cordially Invited to these services. Bible school meets at noon and Inter mediate Christian Endeavor at 6:30 In the church parlors. The ladles', organ izations in the church are active again with Red Cross sewing and along mis sionary lines. The Intermediate Chris tian Endeavor recently did a great deal toward helpfng with war work In con nection with the Christian Endeavor Union of Multnomah County and the church In general looks to a great fu ture of activities which will begin as soon as a permanent pastor is selected. i ' . y . . jw .. v - . i :-' . . .-;: . y :.-. ,-. :::'- . .- v -.v.-.-.y.-: .-..w.-.-.v. "X. .,.-.-..-.--. (;: :-::-.-.-. -.-r.v "if-' -fv .. i- :.v.- :--:::--.:-.. i charge of Professor Streyfeller. Junior League meets at 2:30 with Miss Dorothy Clifford and Epworth League meets at 6:30 with Miss Dora Martin. The Epworth League will serve a sunrise breakfast and conduct a short service at 6:30 on the morning of Thanksgiving day. At 10 o'clock the President's proclamation will be read and special services will be held. Rev. T. M. Mlnard, pastor of the First Divine Church, will speak this morning at 11 o'clock in the Apollo Club Hall, Tilford building. His subject will be "Thanksgiving and What It Means to Us." The Bible class meets Tuesday at 2 P. M. and the study class meets Wednesday at 8 o'clock. Rev. Mr. Landsborough, of Vernon Presbyterian Church, will take as his morning topic "The Coming Thanksgiv ing." In the evening he will take his tex from Col. 1:2 7, "Which Is Christ in you, the hope of glory," and his topic will be "Inward Beauty." He will deal with the beauty which is under the surface of most of us rather than exterior beauty. A special Thanksgiv ing service will be held in the church on the morning of Thanksgiving day at 10 o'clock. V'ctori Sundat JVt.7&or JPresbijterr3n. ChtcrcTz Disciples of Christ Unite in Thanks Service. "Three Kind of Heretics.' Theme of First Christian Sermon. CO.OUfetATlU. ti.Vlllfc.K3 l. fr HO.T OK SERVICE FLAG AT CLOSE OF PEACE SERVICES fOR PICTURE, V IllCii WILL BIS sK.vl' 111 1IU1S l. t'KACE, AT the First Presbyterian Church, Twelfth and Alder streets, the pastor. Rev. John H. Boyd, D. D.. will preach both morning and evening:. In the morning at 10:30 the subject will be "God as a Destroyer." This will deal with the questions which arise out of the tremendous changes taking place every day In the world and show how God destroys the old in order to bring about the new. In the evening at 7:30 Dr.' Boyd will preach on "Facing the Task of Rebuild ing." This will deal with the task of reconstruction in the church with an Inventory of the spiritual material available. The evening service will be preceded by an organ recital by Edgar E. Coursen with the following pro gramme: (a) "Rhapsody on Breton Melo dies, No. 2" Saint-Saena fb) "Cantabile" Grison The musical feature of the morning pervice will be a soprano solo, "My Refuge" (Coombs), by Miss Astrid RoaL Thanksgiving Day, at 10:30 A. M., a great patriotic Thanksgiving service will be held at the First Presbyterian Church. Rev. Mr. Boyd will give an address on "America's Part in the War." This is the address which made such an impression when given before the Rotary Club last Tuesday and, is being repeated by request. . Music will be furnished by the Fifcst Presbyterian Orchestra with the great organ and by the quintet, -"there j will be a large number of patriotic! songs for the audience to celebrate the victory and the coming of peace. All are welcome to attend this service. The Passion of Religion" . is the tReme that will be discussed by Dr. Byron J. Clark, the new pastor of the First United Brethren Church, Fifteenth and East Morrison streets, Sunday Holy Eucharist services will be held at St- Mark's Church this morning at j 7:30 and again at 11 o'clock. Church j school is at 9:45 A. M. Rev. J. E. H. I Simpson. rector-emeritus, will preach i the sermon at the morning services.. Rose City Park Methodist Church will bold a special Sunday School rally this morning. At the 11 o'clock serv ice a Thanksgiving -sermon will be given and at 7:30 this evening the regular service will be held. On Thanksgiving Day the members of Rose City Church will Join with the Presbyterian Church in a union service. The Baptist Ministers' Conference of Portland and vicinity will hold their regular meeting at the White Temple, Monday. November 25, In the small par lor, at 2:30. The topic of the day will be "The Minister a Leader in Evangel ism." by Dr. W. A. Waldo. Pastor to Answer "Is Religion Necessary?" People Should Know If They Lose Things of Value, Says Rev. Dr. Morrison. 'Unconditional Surrender to Be Sermon Topic. V Dr. William A. Waldo to Present Victory Greeting of Military Men. D" REV. A. A. MORRISON, rector of Trinity Episcopal Church, will take for his subject this morning "Is Reli gion Necessary?" "In our time there are many respectable people1 who never go t6 church," says Dr. Morrison, "pre sumably most of them see no necessity for going. If it be true that they are losing something of real value, they should know of it. What of the chil dren who grow up with neither the fear nor the love of God in their hearts?" At 8 o'clock, this evening Dr. Morri son a subject will be "Malicious Thoughts," one of a series of sermons on "Psychology of Religions," giving a modern view of scientific religion. Sun day school will be resumed at 9:-45. Rev. S. J. Reid will preach this morn ing at the Montavilla Baptist Church on "The Strangest Hiding Place in the World." His subject at the evening service will be "The Man Whom Time Cannot Change." R. WILLIAM A. WALDO, pastor of the First Baptist Church (White Temple), has arranged two delightful services for today. The morning serv ice at 11 o'clock will deal with the problems of the present hour national and ecclesiastical. The subject of Dr. Waldo's sermon will be "Unconditional Surrender." The service will be Inter spersed with appropriate music, and the Temple Quartet will render Clare's "Oh Lord, How Manifold Are Thy Works," and "Praise the Lord, Oh Jerusalem," by Maunder. A great patriotic Thanksgiving serv ice will be held tonight at 7:30 o'clock and Dr. Waldo will preach on the sub ject, "A Nation's Gratitude." Dr. Waldo will refer to several contributions tnat have been made to the war and then to the final victory that has been gained. Representative men from dif ferent branches of military life will bring greetings, which will be pre- gseniea prior iu Liie ei iiiuii. xne stringea orcnesira on me iujin Squadron will be present and render music for the song service and will play at intervals during the service. The Temple Quartet will give the anthems: "Thy Light Is Come" (Brack et), and "I Will Magnify Thee" (Mosen thal). Harold Hurlbut, the church chorister, will direct the music and lead the congregation in singing patri otic songs. The public is invited. Memorial services will be held this morning at the First Evangelical Church for George Snidow, a member of the church who recently gave his life on the field of honor. Mr. Snidow's parents from Oregon City will attend the service. The church will be ap propriately decorated and patriotic music will be rendered. The Second Spiritualist Church will hold services in the Alisky building to day at 3 o'clock and at 8 o'clock.- Spe cial music will be given-at each service). . At the East Side Baptist Church this morning. Dr. Hinson will preach on the question "Does JPrayer Change God?" At night the theme will be "The Truth About the Second Coming." These sermons on the return of the Lord are to be printed weekly, and distributed at the church.. When the series is completed the sermons will be bound in a volume. Last Sunday the church gave more than $2000 in a thank-offering, and 10 new members joined the church. The Sunday School meets at 9:45 and the Young People's Societies convene at 6:15. A prayer and Thanksgiving service will be held at the new Hamilton Chapel at 10:45 this morning. Rev. F. J. Eppling, pastor, will speak on "The Privilege Which We Americans Enjoy." . Rev. C. August Peterson, conference Sunday school missionary, will preach at the Norwegian Danish Methodist Church this morning at 11 o'clock and at 8 o'clock this evening. Union Thanksgiving Service Will Be Held Thursday. Patriotic Musie Will He Feature of Occasion. Lincoln Methodist Church to Burn Mortgage. Thanksgiving Service to Be Preached by Bitthop Hughes, Backs From the East. " BISHOP MATT S. HUGHES returned Wednesday after a three months' absence In the East attending the Board of Bishops and the Foreign and Home Missionary boards. Bishop Hughes will preach this morning at Lincoln Metho dist Church. East Fifty-second and Lin coln streets. Dr. W. W. Youngson will be in charge of this special Thanks giving service. The mortgage of the church will be burned. More than $1250 has been paid off by the church In the past two years. Special music will be given under the direction of Mrs. Wick ersham. Rev. F. A. Ginn is pastor of Lincoln Church. Dr. Francis Burgette Short will preach at Epworth Methodist Church this evening at 7:30. Dr. W. W. Young son will have charge of the revival service. Miss Delia Milligan, city dea coness, is how a worker in the Epworth parish. npHERE will be a union Thanksgiv- A lng service in the Piedmont Pres byterian Church, Cleveland avenue and Jarrett street, at 10:30 Thursday morn ing, in which the Woodlawn Methodist and Christian churches will unite with this church. There will be special patriotic music rendered by a union choir under the direction of Miss Uiea Mae Phelps. The speaker for the oc casion will be Fred Lockley. The service will last one hour. On Sunday morning at 11 Dr. Hutchison, pastor of the church, will speak on The Tragedy of opportunity," the third in the special morning series. At 7:30 the third study In the book of Daniel will be given on the topic, "The Course of World Empire." Bible school at 9:45. . The first Fall rally of the Interme diate Christian Endeavorers of Mult nomah County will be held Friday evening, November 29, at the First Christian Church. Among the attrac tive features of the programme will be society demonstrations of songs and yells. A pennant will be awarded to the society with the highest percent age of its members present. Short ad dresses will be made by intermediate workers, Faye Steinmetz, president of the County Union; Mrs. Bess Duncan, former intermediate superintendent; Effie Torgerson, state superintendent; Harold Cross, a California worker, and G. Evert Baker. There are 14 societies in Multnomah County and the membership la made up largely of high school students. Miss Elma Rehwalt is chairman of the com mittee in charge of the rally and a large representation Is expected. The Thanksgiving spirit will prevail today In all the services of the Rose City Park Community Church. Dr. Rob ert H. Milligan, pastor. The quartet, under the direction of Stanley Norvell, is doing, excellent work. Great interest is being shown in the Sunday school contest, the begin ning of -which the superintendent, Mr. St. Clair, announces for next Sunday. It is an "On to Berlin" contest between Army and Navy as represented by the boys and girls, respectively. The subject of Dr. Milligan's morning sermon will be "The World Getting Better God, Not the Devil, on the Throne," Last Sunday evening Dr. Milligan preached the first of a series of evening sermons on "The War and Prayer." His subject, "Both Sides Praying." The subject of the second sermon of the series will be "What's the Use?" The hour of beginning the even ing service has been changed from 8 to 7 :30 o'clock. "World Readjustment and Recon struction Our New Task" will be the subject of the sermon by the Rev. Will iam E. Brinkman at St. James Lutheran Church this morning at IX o'clock. The topic of the evening sermon will be, "Present-Day Events as Revealed in Prophecy." Sunday school, 9:50 Ai M Luther League, 7 P. M. A memorial service will be held in connection, with, the service .of worship Sunday morning in honor of Frederick Nulton,. enlisted. In. the .United States Navy, who died in Russia. The first gold 8tar.wiU.be placed on th.e service flag of St. James Church in honor of the first pne.of the 45.y.oung.men of the congregation to make the supreme sac rifice of bis lite qr .humanity's cause. Thanksgiving day services will be held at the .church. Thursday . morning at 10:30 o'clock. Special Reformation services will be held at St John's Evangelical Lutheran Church this morning at 10:45 and this evening at 7:30. Thanksgiving day services will be held Thursday at 9:43 and at 10:45. . At Universal Messianic Church Thanksgiving services will be held at 8 o'clock this evening. The subject will be, "Thanksgiving; a Token of Recognition." Sunday school is at 11 A. M. All services are at 414 East Everett street. The study class meets Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Rev. William Stoddard, Sellwood Methodist Church, will speak this morning at 11 o'clock on "David's Grat itude, a Subject for Thanksgiving Day." His evening topic will be "Jesus at the Dinner Table." The music will be in THIS orning at 11 o'clock at the First Christian Church, Park and Colum bia, the pastor. Rev. Harold II. Grlffls, will speak on the subject, "Three Kinds of Heretics." The pastor's topic in the evening at 7:45 will be, "The Primitive and the Perfected Man." On Tuesday evening at 6:30 the, Bible school workers will meet for dinner and conference at the church, to plan for the church's Christmas celebration. An interdenominational rally for all the intermediate Endeavorers of the va rious congregations of the city will be held Friday evening at .7:30. The eight congregations of the Disci ples of Christ in Portland will unite thia year in a union Thanksgiving- service at the First Christian Church on Thanksgiving day morning at 10:30. The sermon will be delivered by the Rev. J. F. Ghormley, of the Rodney Avenue Christian Church, and a special programme of music will be rendered by the First Church quartet. Dr. Beth Nqjthlngton will speak this evening at the New Civilization Church. Tilford building, on "The New Age and What We "Can Expect of It." Union services will be held Thanksgiving morning at 11 o'clock in the realiza tion League rooms, Woman's Exchange building. Rev. A. Scott Bledsoe will hold ser vices at the First Spiritualist ChurcU. Sixth and Montgomery streets, at 3 o'clock and at 7:45 this evening. Mrs. Bledsoe will assist with the services and Mrs. Powers will sing at the even ing services. At the Rodney Avenue. Christian Church, Rodney avenue and Knott street, Rev. J. F. Ghormley will speak at 11 A. M., taking for his theme "Rea sons -for Thanksgiving." The Bible school will assemble at 10 A. M. Classes for all ages. At 6:30 P. M. the Christian Endeavor will hold its meeting, with the timely topic, "Count Your Mercies." At 7:45 a song and praise Bervice led by C. H. Dougherty will be held, fol lowing which Dr. Ghormley will speak on the question, "Has the World Seen Its Last War?" A community Thanksgiving service will be held Thursday at 11 A. M. in the Central Methodist' Episcopal Church. Rev. J. W. Beaven will deliver the ad dress. Special services were held for the 24 members of the honor roll at Central Methodist Church last, Sunday. Pictures of the boys were thrown on a screen and short talks of their life In the service, their promotions, and other news, was given by prominent laymen in the church. ""Rebuilding a World" and "The Earth Shaken; Why?" will be the sermon sub jects used by Rev. R. II. Sawyer ut the East Side Christian Church, Est Twelfth and Taylor streets. Capacity audiences have long been the rule at this church, and last Sunday was no exception. The work done by this con gregation durine: the war period has been a remarkable one. In-addition to having a creditable part in all war ac tivities, it has paid cash for the present church home and has panned and . dec orated both the interior and exterior. (Concluded on Pace 7.) CHRISTIAN RELIGION MIGHTIEST OF ALL, DECLARES PASTOR Rev. Joshua Stansfield Says Monarch Values Shrink, Wlrile God's Law Becomes More Firmly Entrenched. "The Coronated Christ." sermon by Rev. Joshua Siansfieid, pastor of tho First Pres byterian Church. IN speaking npon the "Coronated Christ." and I shall take as a text three statements, two from the Book of Revelation and one from the words of Jesus, and the text will read like this: "They cast their crowns be fore him. saying thou art worthy. O, Lord, to receive glory and honor and Powr." And on his head were many crowns. "i am glorified in them." In speaking to you, by Brother Sir Jinignts. 1 am saying nothing new if at the outset I suggest that the Chris tian religion, which is your religion, is the most human of all the religions of the world. There is more of the distinctly human, and less of the mys terious, in Christianity than in any other religion the world has known. In Christianity all the great doc trines are to be interpreted in. and by, and through, the human. They are never Interpreted in speculation, or theorizing, or upon oertaln hypotheses. The great realities and doctrines of Christian revelation may all be proven, and are verifiable In human experi ence. Christian Rellgloa Mighty. The marvel Is this, that in Chris tianity God is not alone revealed but he is revealed In human life. The glory of the eternal Is seen, not In startling, staggering majesty, nor In dazzling, blinding splendors, but in the face of Jesus Christ. There is not another re ligion like that In all the world, and there is not anything approaching it. Personally. I have a profound respect for all religions, and In all religions there is good, but the highest, the eupremcst of all is the religion in which God comes so near to man that be is in man, the God-man.- The highest reve lation of God that the world has ever seen or known Is In the "God-man." and he is our Lord., That is the Lord we believe in. and love, and cling to, and trust. Christ coronated Is Christ made conscious and manifest in human life. All valid Interpretatons of doctrine must necessarily be In the thought terms and life terms of the age in which the doctrine Is interpreted. Therefore, when the doctrine of Christ and Christianity was Interpreted in the first century, and the second, and the thought "terms and the life terms of never make an imperial government. that age. And in that age, and for cen turies later, the greatest personality, the highest, the mightiest, the best. was a King. And so very rightly Christ was King. The highest,- the best, the noblest, the fullest, the finest, the richest of all Christ was that. But now Kings have depreciated somewhat,, monarch values have shrunk. There is not a King in all the world today that is on par with Kings of a century ago. Christ's Love Far-Iteachlng. Has Christ changed? Is Christ any thing other than w hat he always was? Our estimates of life have changed and now in the development of human life and moral consciousness Kings are not the highest standard of human life and character, nor are , potentates, or Princes, or Emperors, Czars or Kaisers, nor any ot. the whole kith, or kin. -what is the highest now? A human life man. In these days of democracy, under the growing Christian conscious ness, human life has come up and King riife 4s discounted.' Kings were always made either by hlood or conquest or political or worse forces. Kings were an office.. Some thought them an or der, just as In the .church some think that priest or preacher or presbyter or deacon or' whatever name you give is an order of being. Some think such an order, some an office. With Kings it was both, but either-way, or both. Kings are not the best. The best of human life is not an officer or an order, it is a human. Men Are Brought Together. The best of human life Is not one, set off and apart and different and other; the best of human life is in a fine. full, - fair, noble manhood and brotherliness. Jesus Christ, wlio was the Son of God, always called himself the Son of Man. lie belonged to all of us. He was as approachable by one man as he was by any other.. He was as available to' everybody as he was to anybody and he was as close kin to everybody as he was to anybody. Jesus, the Son of . Man fine, full splendid human life, touched and filled with the Spirit of God. The humanest of the humans, and wherever he has gone and has been rightly known, brotherhood has followed. Christ never separates into classes, he brings Christ can make a world democracy. Christ never makes for variety of or ders, Christ can make a grand human brotherhood. diriat Humanest of .41 Jesus Christ was the humanest of all and he has brought to the world the most human religion that the world shall ever know. Now, in saying that one thing I have said a big thing about the Christian religion namely, that human life Is so constituted that it is akin to the Christ and related to God, and as human life comes to its possi bilities and rises to its best it comes up to Christian consciousness and Christian character and Christian char acter is the most superbly human thing in all the world. Christian character Is after the order of Christ; it is sympathetic to suffering and sorrow and need and want; it is challenged by wrong and stirred by in justice, and it rises in wrathful indig nation ' against any burdens pressed upon another unjustly, Just as Jesus did. I Christian Character Human. Christian character Is the most hu man and superb thing in all life. And Jesus Christ is "crowned" crowned. n,ot by a monarch's crown, as one might be. by being put off in some special order vand cldss Jesus Christ is coro nated when men and women here, there and yonder crown him as the lord of their life. And If ever there was to be a corona tion in the other world, or this, where Jesus Christ should be set off on some throne of splendor and the greatest of all dazzling crowns conceivable should be placed upon his head, some of us wonld not be "pleased. It would not look well. Some of us would think it hardly decent; we cannot stand for that kind of thing. It would be of fensive to our moral sense. Yes, but if we think of a time when the "re deemed" did you get it? It Is the "re deemed" that are to place their crowns upon his head, that is what the text says. There will never be a great crown of gold, or diamonds, or pre cious jewels placed upon his brow. It would be too tawdry and poor. The only crown of material character that he ever wore was a crown of thorns. and while the thorns pressed into his third, and on, it was Interpreted in the men Into conscious kinship: Christ could precious brow because of the malignant passions of men, that crown he so glori fied and transfigured that it become a crown of glory. Humanity Is Redeemed. And no crown would ever be his ex cept that which came out of the trans figuration of the worst things of life. The crowning glory of a human life is to take the worst there is and to trans figure it. Christ took the cross and the thorns and transfigured them into a symbol of conquest the greatest, fin est, and best of all. He transfigured the crown of thorns until it is infin itely beyond the best crown of gold the world ever gazed upon, and that trans figuration was made by the character of the Christ. Our text says, "That the redeemed" those who have known his life, felt his saving power commanding love and loyalty, and allegiance to him. Loving him who loved them, and blessing him who lives for them, they, they shall bring their crowns upon his head. Those are the crowns that will coronate the Christ, the crowns of a redeemed hu manity. The crowns of redeemed lives. good character, fine folks, from any where and from everywhere, as they shall come before him, they crown him lord of all. American Flag Greatest. Never has there been a time when the coronation of the Christ was so - wide and general and full as it is in America, and certain parts of Europe, today. 'The best, the most consciously redeemed men who have been redeemed into a purer, higher, nobler manhood are coming by the thousands and the millions, and by their sacrifice and service are crowning him. Do you know the finest flag, and the most general flag there is ill all the world's battlefields today? It is the flag on which is the Red Cross. Do you know what makes "Old Glory" the Stars and Stripes that grandest of all earth's flags? It is the sacrifices and self-giving, and heroic self-denial for others that makes our flag so glorious. From the first day they wer flung- to the breeze those Stars and Stripes have never moved forward be fore the finest human forces in our land, or in other lands, but In the in terests of humanity and for the sav ing, the deliverance, the relief, the up lift of men somewhere. And what maizes your , flag, and I mine, the best of all flags that float? It is not because it is ours, but be cause from the very first until this day it has never floated except in front of forces for the establishment of hu man betterment and human rights. Christ's Influence Is Felt. When Christ came to this earth he came for human betterment, human re demption, human uplift, human saving. He came to redeem humanity to its highest and best, and wherever there is a flag, or a people, that comes under his inspiration and goes forward with his purpose and his passion to do that kind of thing, that flag, of all flags, is the flag that should float entwined with the banner of the cross of the Nazarene. And I say to you, my dear people, that there never has been in all the Christian centuries, so many who are coming to coronate our Christ and to crown him as Lord, as now. .Not by making him Emperor, or Czar, or Kaiser, or. King, but coronating him by placing on his head many crowns many crowns, l our Ked Cross workers at home by the million, in fine service, persistent, self-denial efforts and for what? To help and heal and lift and comfort and save bruised and broken and hurt humanity. The finest bit ut coronating that the world has seen up to this day. And your men, and your boys who are going out for the first time in the history of nations, not to gain territory, or trade, or commerce, or international stand ing, but rather, going out to be an up lifter and defender and deliverer and savior and establisher of justice and righteousness for men and for all na tions, small and great. There were never so many people in God's world going out to do that Christ-like thing as are going out this very year. Christian Nations to Rule. . I want to tell you that the cor onated Christ in these days of the world's war is more glorious and com. ing more fully into the consciousness of individuals and families. and na tions than ever before in all our his tory. "On his head were, many crowns." Every ship carrying the cross, every hospital, unit carrying the cross and this whole Nation lifting our flag to day until it touches and mingles so beautifully with the flag of the cross of the redeemer of mankind, is going forth with the most victorious forces Jection the free spirits of Christ-llb-I that the world has ever known. The erated men. America andthe nations ' I.- , . ,1 T I . I ' I 1. 1 1 ....11 . L. - Redeemer of Men, going forth In manhood lifted to highest purposes, and doing the very work of the Son of Man, the Son of God. "On his head were many crowns." Oh, people, military strategists have their place, a most important place; and men of large genius for, the Gov ernment and direction of men. and the co-ordinating of forces have their place, and I think one of the finest things in America today is that men of great brain power, marvelous execu- who know freedom will never do other than go forward. After defeat and suc cess and set-back, and advance, they will Jinally go forward until they trample under their heel (the heel of good men is the march of the eternal God), they will trample under their heel that worst of inhumanity, ii justice and wrong. American Slavery Broken. And so to you, my. brethren, who know what It means by your own al- tive ability, and wonderful strength are legiance to coronate the Christ, who giving not their bit, merely, but giving themselves. The best brains, the fines inventive genius, the largest financiers, the ablest men, not all of them, but many, and the persons who say that this is a money-man's war, lie, and are far from the truth and the fact. This war, in America at least, is a human war. and we are all in it. It is a manhood war to put down by the best touched bit of humanity the worst frightful- ness, inhumanity and butchery and wrong that the world has ever known. That being the case, as the forces go out under these two flags mingling, they go out to crown him the cor onated Christ.' Human Freedom la Goal. - And in a little while, thank God. it must be so, for Christ never lost a war. He may have been defeated in an engagement, the good has often lost a battle and engagement, but the good never finally lost a war. Christ never lost a war. Human freedom, which is one expression of the finest bit of the Christ life and character I speak slowly now human freedom never lost a war. Never. For when truth' was beaten to earth, and it was thought that the powerful had put' shackles upon aspiring men, there . was no permanent peace, and in due time the spirit of man, which, if it fall, shall rise again, the spirit of man came forth and : never, never,- has- human freedom finally lost a war. And we shall not lose this war. Oh, the forces of autocracy, which may be harnessed and handled, and focal ized more rapidly I had almost said more efficiently more rapidly than any other, but with all that, autocracy and the iron power of the rule of an- know something of the rich symbolism of Knights Templar and something of the thrill which comes in a con sciousness of your allegiance to the Lord of life, the son of man; 1 come to you, and to this Christian congrega tion, and behind this open book t as sure you that on his head there are many crowns, and there will be. By the sacrifice and heroism of this great American people there came a half a century ago to the son of man, the Lord of life and glory, the crown of liberated Ethiopia. It was a great crown on the brow of the son of man when American, slavery was broken, and human beings, not withstanding previous conditions of servitude, were lifted into native, free dom and human rights. It was a great croWn placed upon the head of the redeeming Son of God, the son of man, our savior, when darkest Africa brought her first trophies of redeemed and changed humanity. And again when Corea brought her wonderful trophies of hu manity, saved from cannibalism and the grossest barbarism, into a .fine moral confidence and superb citizen ship, it was a crown on the head of the Christ. And so out from every part of the earth that is what the book says, and it is right they will come bringing their crowns. : Not the crown or a Czar, or a Kaiser, or a King, such a crown could never have place on the head of my Lord, the Christ, but the crown of the redeemed and uplifted manhood, the crown of liberated and saved people, they shall crown him Lord of all. Heaven haste the day when ' every nation, every tongue on. .this, terrestlal ball shall rise In the con sciousness of a redeemed manhood and crown -him Lord of all. "On his head other can never bring Into lasting sub- were many crowns, i