THE STTNDAT OREGOXIAX. PORTLAND. JTJjLY 25, 1920 PORTLAND FEDERATION OF CHURCHES HOLDS SERVICES TODAY Impressive Religious Ceremony Scheduled To Begin in Laurelhurst Park at 3:30 P. M. Rev. W. G. Eliot Completes Course. THE Portland Federation of i Churches will hold a special re- i ligious service in Laurelhurst I park this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. The programme is as follows: Congregational singing under the leader ship of Professor J. A. Holling-sworth. Prayer. Rev. Dr. J. J. Staub. Solo, Mr. Gordon O. Onstad, Sunnyside Congregational church. Scripture and sermon. Rev. tr. Eugene C. Hickman, pastor of Wilbur Methodist church. Congregational singing. Benediction, Rev. Dr. Homer L. Cox. The music will be led by a union chorus composed of the choirs from the Sunnyside churches. They will be supported by C. J. Seifarth from Ockley Green United Evangelical church, on the cornet. The presid ing: officer wlli be Ralph C. McAfee, executive secretary of the federation of churches. The meeting will begin at 3:30 and will last one hour. All who are in terested are cordially Invited to be present. - Minister Completes Course. The- Rev. W. G. Eliot has com-: pleted the course at the Harvard : cummer school of theology and after a vacation to be spent in Hood River, Or., will return to the pastorate of the Church of Our Father about. August 1. Mr. Eliot was one of 103 Unitarian ministers from all parts of the United States and Canada who accepted the invitation of the Uni tarian Laymen's league to attend the The laymen appropriated $10,000 to defray one-half of the tuition fees and traveling and living expenses of their ministers. Song: Book Published Here. From the printing house of A. E. Kern & Co., Portland, there has just been issued "The Realization Song Book." The author and compiler 'is H. Edward Mills, founder and leader of the Realization league. Mr. Mills has written many of the 30 songs, and composed part of the music. A unique feature of the new book lies in the fact that it was not sent east for publication, but is one more "Made-ln-Oregon" product. The art work consisting of the actual notes on the musical staff was done by Mrs. May Van Dyke Hardwick. The plates were made by the Portland Engraving company. Frederick W. Goodrich edited the musical com positions. Sunday afternoon, August 1. at 3 o'clock, "The Realization Song Book" will be formally dedicated at a public concert in Lincoln high school. Several of the numbers will be sung as solos, others will be rendered by a chorus under the direction of George Hotchkiss Street, while sev eral others will be sung by the audience led by the chorus. Harlow John Mills, son of the compiler, will play an accompaniment which he composed for one of the songs Natlon-Wldf Campaign Planned. A nation-wide trnited evangelistic campaign of the Protestant churches has been decided upon for the coming year by the leaders of 18 of the larger denominations, the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America an nounced yesterday. The directors of evangellsmfor the Methodist bodies, the Baptists,.'-pres-byterlans, Lutherans, Congregation ailsts. Disciples, the two Reformed groups and other bodies met in New York City and decided upon tne -common programme to he carried out during 1920-21. The fall campaign will be opened by a series of all-day rallies for- minis ters in a dozen strategic' centers. - A party composed of the directors of evangelism of the co-operating de nominations will accompany Dr. Goodell of the Federal council to Buffalo. Cleveland. Cincinnati, Indian apolis, Chicago, Detroit, St. Louis, SCOFFERS OF CHURCH ARE CHALLENGED BY DR. H. L. BOWMAN Presbyterian Pastor Say's Those Who Do Not Understand Chris tianity May Find Within It Flood of Joy, Blessed Peace and Elevation of Character of Which They Have Never Dreamed. (Delivered by Dr. H. L. Bowman, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, last Sun day morning.) .... j "And they cast him out of the city, ana stoned him: and the witnesses laid down their garments at the feet of a young man named Saul." Acts vli:58. "But there came Jews thither from An tloch and Iconlum: and having persuaded the multitudes thev stoned Saul and dragged him out of the city, supposing that he waa dead." Acts xiv:19. THERE is nothing else more' in flammatory than the soul of man. Tuch, In either praise or blame, that which a man holds dear and his spirit will flame forth In response or resentment. Beneath many of somber face there Is a glowing spirit which betokens the hot passion of either loyalty or hate. Two souls flaming In a crisis we study this morning. One Is Stephen, the Christian, a simple man whose cold heart Christ had kindled and who now lived with but one purpose, to witness for his master. Stephen's bold testimony had called down upon his head the wrath of the Jewish enemies. Their false accusations he answered In terms that radiate with flaming loyalty to Christ. Ineed. as they looked at him, his very face seemed to shine like the face of an angel. But to his determined judges, ' evidence and argument were value less and Stephen was cast out of the rltv. hurled to the base of a cliff from which a hooting, jeering, hateful mob cast upon him their death-dealing stones. That Is one figure. Now for the other Standing dignified on the cliff was a young man of Stephen's age. It was Saul, under whose leader. Khio. these executioners came forth Saul of Tarsus, a young man of noble lineage and of extraordinary religious zeal. An inborn intensity combined with the enthusiasm of youth made him an outstanding figure among the religious leaders of Jerusalem, r irm Iv rooted as he was In the Hebrew faith he felt that the Christian com munltv In Jerusalem was a menace on Incubus on Jewish society. Its founder Jesus, was an Impostor and hla followers fanatics. They were not onlv grossly misled, but they were maliciously subversive to the wel fare of the true Jewish. religion. They were spiritual anarchists not to be tolerated for a moment, and so with all of his eager intensity this young man threw himself into the effort tn stamD out the false faith and all Its followers. It was this flame of fanatical energy that was burning In the heart of Saul as he stood there outside the city consenting unto the Will vou trv to imagine the min gled feelings of irritation and antip athy with which that young Jew must have accompanied Stephen, the ranting religionist, as the maddened mob swept out of the city? As the etonlng proceeded, some such thoughts as these must have' been In the mind of Saul: "It is strange the way in which that man still adheres to this belief; what can prompt him to do It? He Is los ing his life, but he Is not gaining any- . thing. Just one word of submission ,,and he can be restored to safety, what can keep him from saying that one Louisville. Pittsburg, Harrls-birrg, i Philadelphia, Washington and Balti more. Theological Faculty Increased. The strength of the Harvard theo logical faculty has been increased by the addition of specially recruited experts in their several fields, among whom are President George E. Horr of Newton Theological Institution: George Grafton Wilson, professor of international law in Harvard; John Graham Brooks and Champlin Bur rage, authors of note; the Rev. Henry Sloane .Coffin of Union Theological seminary and Professor Louis Ginz--berg of the Jewish Theol-oglcal sem inary. New York; John F. Moors, president of the Associated Charities ai.d member of the Boston finance commission, and the Rev. Samuel McChord Crothers of the First church (Unitarian) in Cambridge. Dr. Stansfield to Preach Special Sermon Today. Talk to Be an Appralsment of the Christian Ministry and Polplt. AT the First Methodist church to night at 8 o'clock Dr. Stansfield will preach a special sermon, "The Ministry, the Highest .of High Call ings." " This sermon will be an honest ap praisement of the Christian ministry and pulpit, and incidentally a reply to reasons recently given In a published sermon in the Oregonian from a Congregational preacher of Portland on resigning the ministry of the church. In the morning at 10:30 Dr. Stans field will preach on "Religion Worth While." Miss.Goldie Peterson is solo ist for the day. Rev. W. S. Gordon, pastor of the Sellwood Methodist church, will speak today at II A. M. on "The Christian Soldier's Equipment," and at 8 P. M. on "the Unusual Friendship of David and Jonathan." D. S. Manney will superintend the Sunday school which meets at 9:45 A. M.. ind give his chalk-talk at 10:30 A. M. Mrs. Charles Howard is In charge of the primary department during the summer. Professor F. C. Strey feller will sing in the morning and Miss Evelyn Lawrence in the evening. The pastor will be away for the first three weeks In August, but the pulpit will be supplied. Mr. Gordon Is a member of the faculty of the Epworth League Institute which con venes at Jefferson. July 26. At Woodlawn Methodist church, the Scotch evangelist. George Wallace Scott, will speak and sing at the morning service. There will be no evening service that all may attend the Chautauqua afternoon and even ing. This church has generously vot'td the pastor. Rev. J. H. Irvine, a va cation during August, which he will spend -with Mrs. Irvine and eastern friends among the la. es in the woods of Maine. "What You Were; What You Are; What You Will Be:" will be the sub ject of Rev. E. Sutton Mace's sermon this morning at the Clinton Kelly Memorial Methodist Episcopal church, corner Po -ell and East Fortieth streets. -'' ' . . At the First Norwegian Methodist Episcopal church, corner of Hoyt and Eighteenth streets, the pastor. Rev. Elias Gerdinr. will- speak at the morning service today at IT "A. M. on "A Man Approved of God." The even ing service will begin at S P. M. with a short talk, followed by stereopti con pictures furnished by the cen tenary office, the subject being "Chil dren of Mission Lands.". word? What a folly that religion of his Is, anyhow: the worship of a crucified malefactor! What nonsense! and he thinks that criminal divine! Why doesn't he recant? Surely the approach of death will bring him to his senses; yet his face seems to be strangely radiant. Now he is-talking to the empty air as though that Jesus of his were present. What an Idea! And he is asking for our forgiveness. What strange paths for the human mind to take. Surely he must be in sane. But it is all over now. One more fanatic has gone." The pith of the situation Is this: Saul, the Jew. could not comprehend the motive nor the ideal which car ried Stephen triumphantly through his martyrdom. Saul saw the conduct of Stephen, but from the understand ing of the flaming spirit which prompted that conduct Saul was ex cluded by bars of reasoning and prejudice that were stronger than steel. Saul was a bystander as he stood there gazing upon the stoning of Stephen. As he stood by. he saw, but be did not comprehend. But he was a bystander in a spiritual as well as a physical sense. lor tne space which separated him bodily from Stephen was as cohesion compared with the space which separated him from understanding the man. Steph en s radiant faith was an insoluble mystery to Saul the bystander. We shall let Saul the bystander be for us a' type that represents a great many people with whom we rub shoulders day by day. They look upon certain phases of thought with that same unconcern which Saul mani fested at the death of Stephen. Like him, they look on. analyze the situa tion, weigh its merits, determine its value, and pass Judgment upon It. They rest calmly assured that theirs is the true judgment because they have the perspective of distance. They possess the intellectual isolation and calm judgment which are Impossible for those actively involved. Is this claim of the bystander valid? I wonder if the bystander realizes In what company he finds himself? Does he know that he is traveling in the same train with the one who knowing nothing of art, condemns all art as silly and meaningless and, visiting an art gallery, madl rushes through it with condescending pity for the poor artists who spend all their lives at mere painting? They are with the lady who complained to Turner, the English painter, that she did not see In nature the colors which he put Into his pictures; the artist replied: "Madam, do you not wish that you could? The bystander, to be consistent, must travel through Palestine with a party for two weeks, stopping only at the Jarge . European hotels and then write an exhaustive treatise on the customs -and the character of the in habitants of the Holy Land. Without any knowledge of music he must at tend the programmes of a symphony orchestra so that without prejudice he can judge the quality of their music. He must be like Sir Robert Peel who. when he conferred the poet-laureateship on Tennyson, con fessed that he had never read a line of his poems. The bystander, to gain a true judg f j M- V.."- I 11 With -r - : . f m 4 Portland ministers engaged In special summer religious work held here, throughout state and In rastt 1 Dr. W. G. Eliot Jr., pastor of the Church of Our Father ( Unitarian), who has Just completed the "religious Hlattsburfc" training; course given during the Harvard summer school in Cam bridge under the auspices of his denomination. S Dr. Eugene C. Hickman, pastor of the Wilbur Methodist church, who will read the scriptures and deliver the sermon at the special services to be held at 3i3o o'clock this afternoon In Laurelhurst park by the Portland federation of churches. 8 Rev. H. Edward Mills, founder of the Portland Realisation league, who has just published a song book containing SO selections written by himself and many of them set to music of his own composition. 4 Rev. Jacob Stocker, pastor of the Clay-street Evangelical church, who will de Ilverthe first sermon at the camp meeting and conventions of the Oregon conference of the United Evangelical church to be held July 29 to 'August 8 at Qulnnby Park, seven miles north of Salem. I Oregon Presbyterian Synod Closes Annual Session. Plans for Religious Work In Uni versity and Agricultural College Discussed. EUGENE, Or., July 24. J(Special.) With a vote to meet at Corvallls next year, the synod of the Oregon Presbyterians, In session here for the past 10 days, closed Tuesday. For several years past the synod has been meeting in Eugene during the session of the summer school of the University of Oregon. The closing session was given over to various reports of educational committees an9 the discussion of plans whereby religious work in the University of Oregon and Oregon Agricultural college at Corvallis might be started under the leader ship of a college pastor. A solution of the plan of religious work among the students of the two institutions is yet to be worked out A plan for various religious de nominations to maintain in Eugene avstudent pastor to work among Uni versity of Oregon students in the Interests of the churches was dis cussed Tuesday at a luncheon given by President P. L. Campbell to 16 guests, -including all the pastors of the city. This need has long been felt in Eugene, says President Camp bell. By three or four churches co operating, a student pastor may be supported for next year, the funds for the work to be provided by the churches. A building to house the work may be erected some place on the univer sity campus, and in this will be a lecture hall and offices. It Is planned to provide 'also a room for a library and reception hall. The plan does not include the Idea of bringing church services to the campus, but rather to supply the student ' pastor as a nucleus for de nomination Interested ' " Dr. R. C. Hughes, secretary of edu cational boards for 18 denominations, who has been in Eugene attending the Presbyterian synod, was present at the luncheon. Rev. William Moll Case of the Eugene Presbyterian ment, must remain outside the ex perience. To judge poetry, he must never have studied it. To appreciate music, he must be unable to read notes. To enjoy nature, he must never have studied natural science. To be delighted with art, he must never have considered Its laws or technique. To judge food, he must never have eaten it. To swim, he can hang his clothes on every limb, but never go near the water. To learn to walk, he must always remain In bed. That Is the fiasco to which we come if we follow the philosophy of the bystander to its logical conclusion. That Is why we must .-sontend this morning that the bystander is an in competent judge. As a witness to life and truth he must be ruled out of court. He Is irrevocably disqualified and this Is the reason he draws his conclusions from only part of the facts. He may be sincere but because he is a bystander and is not within the circle of .experience he knows only half the truth. He sees only the appearance and does not know the reality. He sees the gold on the brick, but cannot determine whether it Is superficial or genuine. He sees the outside of the building, but whether the furnishings within are munificent or scanty he cannot tell. He stands before the closed door and discourses at length of what is with in . but never having crossed the threshold he is ignorant whether be yond the door is a "room piled with the fairy king's gold or a gruesome chamber with the seven wives of Bluebeard. He cannot know the inner truth of things just because he is a bystander. He is building his pyra mid of evidence upon the apex, rest ing his judgment on insufficient knowledge. He must be ruled out of court because he is a bystander. Why do you suppose we have dealt with this attitude of mind at such length? You surely must see that it Is In order tht we may have a firm foundation upon which to base our disclosure of the fallacy of the by standers attitude towards religion. If you had kept your finger upon the pulse-bea't of our times then you know the prevalence of this attitude. Religion has, of course. Its opponents. People who. like the foreigner that landed on Ellis inland and asked the first man he met If there was a gov ernment In this country, and when In formed that there was, replied: "Then I am ferninst it!" Would that there were more people opposed; it would be better for us if there were. The curse of our day is not opposi tion. It Is indifference the attitude of the bystander. In every commun ity there are those who are content to, remain apart from all religious activity. They decline to participate in any of the services of the church. With a somewhat superior attitude these people rather pride themselves in being bystanders and from that position of aloof superiority they feel that they are Justified in judging and condemning religion and the church. And the really strange thing is that men and women listen with so much attention to the wild opinions of these bystanders. Dr. church, will serve as chairman of the Eugene pastors, who will organize as a committee to consider the propo sition of student pastor. Today is Missionary Sunday in the Norwegian and Danish Methodist church, Vancouver avenue and Skid more street. The pastor will speak on "The Church World-Wide Mis sions." ' ' Rev. H. Edward Mills will address the Realization League at the Modern Conservatory of Music, 148 Thirteenth street, at 11 o'clock on "Impression, Repression. Expression." 'God's Use of Broken Things," Sermon Topic. Dally Bible Vacation School at Italian Mission Will Bring Its Work to Close Tuesday at 2 P. M. IN the East Side Baptist church this morning at 11 o'clock Rev. Her bert T. Cash will preach from the subject "God's Use of Broken Things," and this evening at 7:45 his topic will be "The Vision Splendid." The daily Bible vacation school, which has been conducted at the Italian mission for the past six weeks, will close Its work Tuesday at 2 P. M. with a program and ex hibit, and on Wednesday there will be a picnic in Sellwood park at 10 A. M. "Weeds In the Garden of God" will be the theme at the Arleta Baptist church at 11 o'clock. Under this title Mr. Day will discuss the parable of the tares and give to it a practical application. In the evening at 8 o'clock the subject will be "Consist ency in Religion." The usual song service will precede the sermon. - The Young People's society will be left by Ralph Belmore at 6:45. . . This morning at 11 o'clock at Grace Baptist church. East Seventy-sixth and ASh. the- pastor, F. "W. Starring, will speak jon "The Church at Jerusa lem." His subject at 8 P. M. will be "A Critic for the Times." - The vacation Bible school has been successful. The school has two more weeks to run. Selby has said, "It is only in religion and theology that the opinion of the amateur meets with much respect." . Consider minutely the true mental condition of the religious bystander. The vital facts of the spiritual life, prayer and sacrifice, faith and un selfish service, are simply outside the circle of his comprehension. A young friend of mine, who is prepar ing for the ministry, was working last summer In a machine shop. The young men with whom he worked could not understand any possible teason for his choosing that life work. "Why are you going into the minis try? There Is no money in that." Any motives of life service were simply outside their ken. It was something in which .they did not participate and which they could not comprehend. A minister was once speaking on invi tation to 200 union labor men. They attacked the church and denounced her ministry, while he was contend ing that the church was making a contribution to the solution of the labor problem. He challenged those who had been attending church ser vices at any time during the last 10 years, except to go to a funeral or a wedding, to stand. Five men out of the 200 stood up. Behold the judg ment of the religious bystander, based on insufficient evidence! Hear him speak again: "Why will people go into a stuffy church on Sunday when there are parks and amusements on every hand?" "Religion is only super stition, prayer Is a foolish self-deception, the minister is a parasite in the community, and all this talk of service and sacrifice Is fanatical non sense. Oh, religion may be all right for the wife and the children, but it is nothing for a man." So he stands by, while his wife and children attend the church and the Sunday school. Sometimes It Is with a smattering of Tom -Payne or an overdose of Ernest Haeckel, or merely a case of elephan tiasis of the ego, that makes men feel they can just as well hold them selves aloof from the frumpery and superstition which are called Chris tianity. But why multiply instances, we all have met too many of them already. Each of them Is simply an other version of the old story of the bystander. Each one is condemning sometning tnat ne coesn t understand passing positive judgment on that of which he Is Ignorant. Though they do not realize it, they are like Parsi fal in Wagner's opera. Fresh from the wild wods, this Ignorant youth, under the spell of the old hermit, comes Into the presence of the Knights of the Grail, as with an over awing solemnity they are partaking of the Lord's Supper. For almost an hour does the Ignorant Parsifal stand there looking on, wondering, half amused, half disgusted, but totally ig norant of the meaning of the service. He was outside the realm of experi ence. He was only a bystander. Our earlier discussion will make It apparent that we cannot justly trust the opinion of the bystander. If not In other realms, so certainly not in re ligion. The man who does not go to the church is no judge of the church. He does not understand It. He is onlv I Judging it superficially. John Spargo made a sweeping -statement recently "When Parallels. Meet" Is Dr. Bowman's Topic. New Pastor Occupies First Pres byterian Church Pulpit. THE First Presbyterian church, cor ner Twelfth and Alder streets, will have its new pastor. Rev. Harold Leonard Bowman, in the pulpit both morning and evening today. At 10:30 A. M. Dr. Bowman will preach on "When Parallels Meet." At 7:45 P. M. he will preach on the Prodigal Son with the subject "Beasts and a Father." There will be a contralto solo at the morning service. "The Holy City" (Gaul), sung by Mrs. Vir ginia Spencer Hutchinson. At the evening service a soprano solo. Gou nod's "There Is a Green Hill Far Away." sung by Mrs. Blanche Will lams Segersten. The quartet will also give an anthem at each service. At 12:15 the Sunday school will meet in the Sunday school auditorium for an illustrated lecture on the gos pel according to St. Luke. The talk will be given by B. A.' Thaxter. ' On Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock, in the chapel, the' church will give a re ception for Dr. and Mrs. Bowman. All members of the First Presbyterian church and congregation are cordially Invited. A welcome will be extended by a representative of the Ministerial association and also by officers of the First Presbyterian church. It is expected that Dr. Bowman will reply to these messages of welcome. Walter Henry Nugent. D. D.. pas tor of Central Presbyterian church. East Thirteenth and Pine streets, will preach this morning on the topic "Folks That Are Missed." This ser mon Is what may be called a pre vacatlon sermon, as this will be the last Sunday for Dr. Nugent until the first Sunday In September. Mrs. Maud Belcher Pritchford and Mrs. Arthur I. Moulton will sing solos. Dr. Nu gent, during the few months he has been pastor of Central, has been a visitor In every home of the church and has called. upon at least 75 fami lies who live In1 the vicinity of Central who have no church home. Whole families have been received In the church, with the prospect of a large that all the sermons that will be preached in America in the next 12 months would not do as much good for America as one little red school house, or one farmer plowing his field, and then with a naive frankness, he undermined the validity of his con demnation by stating that he very rarely went to hear a sermon. The In competent judgment of the bystander! Thomas Edison we may respect pro foundly for his achievements in the realm of science, but when Thomas. Edison, wrapped in scientific study and heedless of the moral and spirit ual forces of life essays to speak on the subject of immortality, he has wandered from his realm. He is no more fitted to speak on immortality than I should be to discuss in tech nical terms Professor Einstein's theory of the relativity of space. And when Henry Ford speaks slightly of the church and then confesses that he rarely , goes texcept on an occasional Easter, we have simply another evi dence In our growing argument of the Invalidity of the bystander. Yes. the man who does not pray Is utterly Incompetent to discuss the reality of prayer. The man who does not devoutly study the Bible cannot discuss Its inspiring power. The man or woman who today dismisses reli gion as a useless element In modern life, who discards it as a superstition of a past age, who peremptorily rules it out of his own heart, that person is judging something pf which he is Ignorant as truly as were the Judges who condemned Jesus or as was Paul standing by while they stoned Stephen. Bui what troubles me the most is that within the church there are so many of these bystanders, people who are formally enrolled among the fol lowers of Christ, but to whom that fact has never brought any vital reli gious experience. They have never en tered into the joy and the power which Christ has promisd. They read of Paul's experiencing the "peace that passeth understanding," or Peter, "with joy unspeakable and full of glory," they learn of John "enduring even unto the end" through all perse cution, but in their hearts there is no Instinctive response that says. "Yes, that was my feeling, 1 have known that peace, that power has come to me." You speak to them of these great truths, they look at you In blank amazement. You ask them If they have ever felt the throb of Joy as they give their missionary gifts to carry out the glorious world-wide programme of their Master. They have never felt the thrill of world-wide service! You ask them, "Have you ever had a definite answer to pray er?" And with a shocked haste, they reply, "Oh, no!" You ask them If they have ever talked with other people about Christ and with an outraged modesty they disclaim ever having thought of such a thing. Power in service! Constancy In prayer! Long suffering In adversity! Sacrificing for Christ! The strangeness of these truths to our hearts reveals the ex tent to which we are only bystanders, the way In which we have failed to share the experience of the full Christian life. And Intense Christian ity which thrills every activity of life Is a remarkable, but a remote ideal. It is one that we have looked at, but we have never apprehended. We are number coming In early in the fall. Arthur F. Bishop, D. D., former pas tor of Central, will be the supply pas tor during the month of August. The evening services have been discon tinued until September. - Ferdinand G. Strange will occupy the pulpit of Fourth Presbyterian church. First and Gibbs streets, for the next four Sundays. Bible school will be held at 10 o'clock and preach ing at 11. Dr. Strange will speak on "The Supreme Investment." There will be no evening service. The pas tor. Rev. Monroe G. Everett. Is spend ing his vacation in California, where he will supply the pulpit of the First Presbyterian church of Modesto. At Mlzpah Presbyterian church Rev. D. A. Thompson, pastor, morn ing service will be held at 11 o'clock. the sermon theme being "The Day of Gods Power. Evening ' service will be at 7:4o. the topic being "The Re ward of the Upright." There will be no evening services in this church during the month of August. The pastor and his family will leave Wednesday for the annual vacation at Neah-Kah-Nie. The pul pit will be regularly supplied during the pastor's absence for the morning service only. At Piedmont Community Presbyte rian church, Cleveland avenue and Jarrett street. Rev. J. F. Morgan, pas tor, preaches at 11 A. M., his subject being "I Have Prated for Thee." Sunday school at 9:45 A. M. There will be no evening services until Septem ber. At the Thursday evening prayer and Bible meeting the subject will be "Miracles." "Jesus Christ Personally Responsi ble" will be the sermon subject of Rev. George N. Taylor, pastor of United Presbyterian church of Ken ton, at the Men's Resoat meeting today at 4 P. M. Solos and duets will be given by Mrs. Ella Hoberg Tripp and others. Instrumental music will also be a feature and the men will sing favorite gospel songs. ... . At 'vreStfrirnster Presbyterian church Dr. Pence will preach his last sermon before going on his summer j vacation. He has chosen as his theme: "The Man Who Made Good With Mostly Bad." During the month of August there only bystanders, gazing, but not com prehending. Now we have come to one climactic truth. Saul did not remain a by stander. One day on the road to Damascus where he was journeying to kill other hated Christians, his eyes were closed, but his spiritual . . t : - 1 .. , ' in the mountain fog who suddenly sees the mist roil away and finds that he Is on the mountain's su-mmtt with a hundred miles of sun-gilded and rainbow-dizened ' grandeur laid out before htm just so it was that Saul, the narrow-minded Jewish zea lot, found the mists of prejudice dissolving before him, and his eyes gaining the' far focus, until he, saw the glories of the God-life, the un speakable riches of Christ. Yes. he saw for the first time, Christ, Ste phehn's Christ, not the crucified malefactor, but the risen Lord, and! the redeemer from sin yes. from his sin. which rolled away with the en trance of Christ. He saw a Lord who meant so much to him that he would be willing, not alone to follow him, but to be Imprisoned for him. to be scourged for him, yes, even to be stoned to death for him In Jerusalem we see Saul standing when Stephen was stoned for the sake of Christ, but let the scene change and we behold at Lystra an other great host of angry Jews ston ing a fellow-countrymen, but Paul Is not standing by and watching, as they stone a poor follower of the Nazarene, for Paul is now the man they are stoning and they are ston ong him for the same reason that he helped stone Stephen because he was a friend of Jesus Christ. Wherein lies the difference? "We need not searoh long. In the first case we have Saul, the bystander, outside the experience, and in the second we have Paul, who has en tered in and understands the mean ing of Christianity. Not Saul, the onlooker, but Paul, the initiate. Not Saul, the opponent of the faith, but Paul, the exponent of It. Not Saul, the cynical critic of Jesus of Naz areth, but Paul, the warm advocate of the Nazarene. Not the Saul who scoffed at Christ, but Paul, who said "I know whom I have believed." My appeal Is that those of you who have endeavored to judge Christianity from a distance will enter in there by alone being able to understand: I am eager that those of you for whom Christianity has lacked a grip ping vitality will enter Into the ex perience. You never can really be lieve in Christ until you know him as you cannot swim until you have been in water, or gain a financial return until you have invested your money. Why should you fear to venture forth into the fullness of Christian life? Christianity is not a step In the dark;. It does not ask belief such as the White queen de manded of Alice in "Through the Looklng-Glass" "You do not believe what I tell you? Then close your eyes; take a deep breath and try again!" Christianity demands noth ing like that: the message of our faith is this "Taste and see that the Lord is good." Try it and see. Do I not condemn prayer until you have prayed . as earnestly as those who will be no preaching service as the church auditorium will be repaired. Bible school will be held during the preaching hour, 11:00 A. M-, and its programme will be of such a nature that it will be an hour of real wor ship. Dr. Pence and family expect to leave next week for Neahkahnie and will not return until the first of September. The Young People's society of St. Stephen's Pro-Cathedral will meet at the main entrance of the Good Samaritan hospital at 3 o'clock. where they will sing in the various wards until 4 o'clock. They will then repair to Macleay park for a picnic supper and the usual weekly meeting. Lemonade will be furnished. Miss Myla A. Chambers will be in charge. Dean Hicks will preach at the morning service. Holy commun ion will be at 7:45 A. M. Truth Sermon in Christian Science Churches. Sunday Evening. Services Discon tinued In All Churches Except Sixth Church of Christ In July and August. esson-sermon in all the Chris tian Science churches In Portland to day. All the Christian Science churches will hold services this morn ing at 11 o'clock. Sunday evening service Is discontinued during the months of July and August in all the churches except Sixth Church of Christ. Scientist. Wednesday evening meetings are held In all the churches at 8 o'clock. Testimonies of Christian Science heal ing are a part of these meetings. All of the churches hold Sunday school for persons under 20 years of age. Sessions are held in all the churches except Third and Fifth, at 9:45 and 11. In the other two churches at 9:30 and 11. The churches u-nite in maintaining free public reading rooms in the Northwestern bank building and 266 Burnside street. Fourth church main tains a reading room at 148 Killings worth avenue. The Bible and author ized Christian Science literature may be read, borrowed ' or purchased at these reading rooms. Christian Science churches may be found at the following locations: First church Nineteenth and Everett streets. Second church East Sixth and Holla day avenue. Third church East Twelfth and Salmon streets. Fourth church Emerson street and Vancouver avenue. Fifth church Sixty-second street and Forty-second avenue Southeast. Sixth church PythliTn temple, 3S8 Yam hill street. Seventh church 403 Smith avenue, St. Johns. A cordial invitation to attend serv ices and use the reading rooms is ex tended to all. Rev. Harold H. Griff is to Be Heard Twice Today. First Christian Church Pastor Will Preach on "lUch Man In Hell." THE REV. HAROLD H. GRIFFIS ' will speak today, both"1 morning and evening, at the First Christian church, corner of Park and Colum bia. The service in the morning at 11 o'fclocK Will 'be a 20th-century ap plication of Jesus' parable of the rich man and Lazarus, the pastor having for his specific topic. "A Rich Man In Hell." In the evening at 7:45 -the musical programme will be led by a male quartet, with Mrs. have found prayer a power. Do not let religion go by the board until you have given it the same trial as have others who have found it an in dispensable 'element of life. Treat religion as you treat a text book, a science, an art, or a business as something that you cannot compre hend until you have studied it and with an open mind struggled to mas ter it under the leadership of those I who have had more experience with it than you. Religious truth is like Rbslyn chapel in the lowlands of Scotland. It is not exceptionally attractive on the outside, but when you enter it you find that it is one of the most intricately carved and Indescribably beautiful buildings that the hand of man has constructed. So when you Bee Christianity from within, when you have placed yourself within the scope of its infuence. when your life has been brought within "the trans forming influences of Christ, then and then alone will you understand that which from the outside seems to be unattractive and dull. In a recent book we are told the story of two men, strangers, returning from a funeral. One was a matter-of-fact business man who scoffed at the idea of im mortality: the other was a representa tive, though not a typical one, of those who believe in Immortality. Details of their argument we shall omit. They were both caught in the upper floor of a burning hotel. The business man. seeing that there was opportunity for but one of them to escape and know ing that he was without a family and that the other had those dependent upon his support, compelled his com panion to take that one avenue of safety. "But you will die," he screamed as he descended. "I am to live, but you will die." "No," called back Thornton, above the crackle and through the smoke. "I am up against It and I have changed my mind; I know I am here, and more than here, more. I shall not die." The build ing fell with a crash. He had sud denly entered Into the experience. In the crisis there had come a clarity of vision which had not been his when life was prosperous and disaster seemed remote. There is no greater tragedy , than the life of him who never enters into the experience, for whom Jesus is always an enigma, for whom Chris tianity remains an unsolved riddle, who remains for all time a bystander. An illustration of this tragedy If found in an incident that occurred a number of years ago, when Robert Ingersoll was scheduled to speak in Pittsburg. The day of the lecture he received a letter from an old trlend of his, a lawyer. This was the mes sage: "Dear old friend: I see that. ou are to deliver a lecture tonight against Christianity and the Bible. Perhaps you know some or my his tory since we parted. Perhaps you know that I disgraced my name and my family, lost my character and all that a man can hold dear In this world. You know that I went down until I became a poor despised out cast, and when I thought that there was none to save and none to help there came one in the name of Jesus, who told me of his power to help and of his loving kindness and of his Fred Newton at the organ and Miss Ruth Collier as contralto soloist. The pastor's evening discourse will be a study in social salvation, his subject being "Social Aspects of the Lord's Prayer." The congregation has recently ar ranged with a religious printing eup ply house for the publication of a church directory and handbook. There directories are now ready and will be distributed on Sunday free of charge. The booklet contains the names and addresses of all members, together with much information con cerning the plans, purposes and plea of the Christian church. Dr- J- F- Ghormley will speak at 11 A. M., taking for his theme "The Seer and His Vision." at Kern Park Christian church. Korty-elxth avenue and Sixty-ninth street. At S P. M there will be a song and praise serv ice, followed by an Illustrated lecture-sermon. The annual excursion of the Mult nomah County Christian Endeavor union will be held Monday evening. July 26. The trip up the river will be made on the boat Swan, leaving the foot of Jefferson street at 7:45 P. M.. and returning at 11:00 P. M. Cash prizes are being offered for the society having the largest attendance proportionately to their membership. Games and demonstrations will also be attractive. Cash prizes are of fered for competing societies. Spe cial music has been arranged by Le Roy R, Robinson, who is in charge of the excursion. One feature of the trip will be the music furnished by a special male quartet. Refreshments will be sold on the boat. Tickets may be secured either from society presi dents or at Christian Endeavor head quarters in the Y. M. c. A. for 55 cents. Rev. Brinkman to Speak on "Man's Unseen Helpers." Sermon Planned to Show God's Presence at Times and Places When Truth Has Been at Stake. "TV! AX'S UXSEEX HELPERS" will" '- be the subject of the sermon of the Rev. William E. Brinkman Sun day at St. James English Lutheran church at 11 a. m. In his address Rev. Brinkman will show how the miraculous of divine interposition has attested God's pres ence at peculiar times and places in the history of mankind, when truth and righteousness have been at stake. The Sunday school will hold its session at 9:50 o't-incif in , v, v.--i The Y'oung People's Luther league and the evening services will be oiu'tted during July and August. At St. Paul's Lutheran church. East Twelfth and Clinton streets. Rev. A. Krause, pastor, two morning services will be held. The subject of the Eng lish sermon at 10 a. m. will be the question of "Would You Be Lost or Saved Were You to Die Today?" At 11 a. m. a German service will be held and the topic of the cata chetlcal Bermon is "What Body and Blood of Christ Do We Receive in the Holy Supper?" Sunday school meets at 9 A. M. No evening service. Trinity Lutheran church will wor ship Sunday as follows: German serv ices. at 10 and English at 11:15. Sunday schoo! will be held at 9:15. The church "Is situated on Williams avenue, corner Graham. Everybody is cordially invited. J. A. Rimbach is pastor. . "-' "The Comforter" center holds Sun day services in the assembly room. Portland hotel. Topics are: 11 A. M.. "The Understanding Heart." Ethelina Lord Camnirtn: R P M Without I Smell of Fire," Florence Crawford. tender sympathy, and the story of the cross of Christ. I turned to him. I had lost my wife, but I returned to my home and gathered my children together, and we are happy now and I am doing what good I can. Now. old friend, will you stand tonight before the people of Pittsburg and tell them what you have against the religion that will come down to the lowest hell and find me and help me and make me happy and clothe my children? Will you tell me what you have against a religion like that?" Ingersoll's comment on the letter was this: "I have nothing to say that will do for this man. I am here to talk about the religion of the preach ers!" Granted that much of the preaching of Ingersoll s day dealt with un worthy minutia while many of the great truths were neglected, vet what an unspeakable pity that he should remain a bystander, a looker on, utterly ignorant of the vital forces of Christ, whose touch had empow ered the lives of men. How truly did he say that he-could do nothing for this man. In the presence of a drunk ard who is saved, a ruined home which is restored, a broken life re generated. In the presence of the mar velous salvation of Christ, and the Joy of eternal life, the bystander can only gaze with a blinking amazement. But do not be a bystander. ii,nter Into the experience of righteousness Be among those who are, as Bergson puts it, "in the midst of life, feeling Its warm currents, hearing sympa thetically Its many voices, gripped by Its manifold mysteries, playing aJ man s part in its onward progress." It is all gathered up In the great in vitation, come to Christ! Give your will into his control. Try the surety of his guiding hand. Give prayer a trial. Do a daring act of Christian service. "Taste and see that the Lordl is good." Investigate the rest which! Jesus has promised to weary toilers Seek the blessedness which he ha-J assured to those who mourn. Do not stand off in critical aloofness or irJ stolid indifference. If you are a man if you are a woman, give the master! a chance in your life! And we shall find, as Paul found that however much we have mlsun-l derstood or underestimated Christian-) ity, yet within it. there is a flood o joy, a blessed peace, an elevation o character of whjoh we have neve dreamed, and which must be expari enced to be appreciated. In the ar gallery of an eastern city there is picture by Dagas-Bouvert, represent lng the supper at Emmaus. wltH Jesus and his two companions. Th. artist has painted his wife and lit tie son kneeling in the foreground o the picture, reverently paying obel sance to the Savior. But he ha painted himself standing in the back ground of the picture, half amused with feet apart, arms akimbo. Th mother and the son have entered int the spirit of the scene, the fathe stands indifferent and unmoved. Wd cannot appreciate Jesus Christ whil we stand with a jaunty, Indifferen attitude, with arms akimbo. We cai understand Christ and experience th saving power of his love only wheri we kneel and in humility and e-ur render recognize his lordship in ou lives