TIIE SUNDAY OltEGOXIAlV, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 10, 1922 FATHERHOOD OF GOD DECLARED ETERNAL TRUTH AND REAL FOUNDATION OF KINSHIP Simple Christianity of Jesus Cements Family Ties and Gives Comfort and Aid in Daily Life, Broadening Fellowship in Church and Love in Home Relations. 8 BY THE RIGHT REV. BOTD VINCENT D. D.. Bishop of Southern Ohio. A sermon preached Sunday, September S, at St. David's church: , Text Ephesians, 3-15 "The Father (of our Lord Jesps Christ), of whom the wholA family. In heaven and earth, is named." WHAT is the sign of blond kinship of family relation ship? It is your father's name the family name; is it not? If your family name rs Brown or Jones or Robinson you know that every one else who has the same name is somehow connected with you. So, in God, "the whole family" of man kind ;all spirits in heaven and on earth is but one . ta-miiy. - It all takes its life, as on earth it would take its name, from the one "Father" of all in heaven. Jesus said: "Call no man your father upon the earth: for one is your Father which is in heaven." Matt. 23-9. But now we may also read this came text in a different way. "W'e may read: "The Father, from whom every family in heaven and earth is named." That js, the very idea of the family of family life has not been carried up from earth to heaven, but brought down from heaven to earth, from God to- man, as we shall see. For, again, we may read: "the Father, from whom all fatherhood in heaven and earth is named." That is, "fatherhood" among men is a derived idea; it is a relationship -which belongs only to time. But Fatherhood in God is an eternal truth an eternal fact before ever time and men were. For Love and the procreation of children to be loved is of the very essence of the Divine. But there cannot be a father without a son; you cannot 'even think of the one without the other. Eternal Fatherhood in God, then, necessarily means also an Eternal Sonshlp In Him. And is not that the very way which St. John teaches us so beautifully to think of the" eternal pre-existence of Jesus? "The only begotten Son who Is in the bosom of the Father," he says; that is, who is in God's nature from all eternity. Both Fatherhood and Sonship, therefore, were always necessarily in God. This is the eternal truth from which the very idea of human fatherhood comes and in which it is to find its own highest ideal. But, whichever way we read our text, we instantly see that here w have a great and inspiring idea; an idea wnich links up an numan fatherhood and so all family life, in this world and the next, directly with God the universal Father. In deed, what I want to show you now is that this simple, striking idea is really the most central, the most vital and the most helpful truth in ail Christianity, i to be so often overlaid and ob scured by other ideas, even by Christians themselves. They lost their sense of proportion; they lost their judgment of relative spiritual values, even in what is written. Kt Paul. for instance, even though he still proclaimed this family, idea here in our very text, yet he un consciously changed the emphasis and directed our attention far too much from the human Jesus : our brother to the glorif'ed Christ as our lord and judge in heaven. The Greek mind, with' its love of meta physicSj must' needs occupy itself overmuch with the mere mode of God's existence within himself. The Roman mind, w"ith its instincts of law and order, substituted out right 'n the Roman church,1 the idea of a kingdom for that of the family. The mediaeval schoolmen, reviving Greek philosophy, tried to refine and define everything, even 'the mystical In the Lord's Supper, until they turned , that into the material and the miraculous. Lutheranism could not let go the idea of law even under,, the gospel; and so preached justification instead of reconciliation. Calvinism saw only sovereignty instead of fatherhood j in God. Anglicanism has always been too much inclined to think of the nation instead of the family in its religious life. Evangelicanism rightly emphasized personal re ligion, but too often forgot the fet- lowship of the whole; fuseyism threw the emphasis back again-on corporate religion, to be sure, but it was in the life of the body rather than that of the family. Is it any wonder, then, that with all these attempts to improve on the simple Christianity of Jesus and the gospels, we should so often be distracted and bewildered, as to what Christianity really la, and so lose the Inspiration and comfort and strength which that first simple idea of it was meant to give us? of our dying brother's love; the pledge of his life not only given for us but also given to us; and so the symbol of what should be our obe dience, as sons and our brotherly love among ourselves. What is Christian marriage but the earthly symbol of that mystical union of Christ with his . bride, the church? And the church itself, what is that? Not an insurance company, not a saints' club, but : God's family on earth, meant to be a real brother- ; hood and so part of our divine feU ; lowship here, even with those in heaven. . : Is it not plain "enough now that, in Jesus and his simple grospel,: this family idea was mant to run all through Christianity and bind It all together In such a simple, beau tiful, perfect whole? How men in all ages have strug gled to get at the truth about God and ourselves! The poor savage thought he saw a separate god in every -power of nature, in every mountain, river or tree; and so he made idols of them all as hideous and bloodthirsty as himself. The ancient classical religions fairly peopled heaven with so-called "gods"; but after all those were only so many deified men '- and women, with all our vices as well as our virtues. True, great think ers among those ancients at last began to see the oneness oi ioa and loved to think and speak of Him as pure Light and Life aiid Reason. But it was the Jews who first rightly thought of God as the One Supreme Being and Creator of all things, even making man in His own image. Afterward, to be sure, the Jews long thought of God only as their own Jewish tribal God, a "Lord of Hosts" fighting their bat tles for them, or else as a kind of awful Oriental Sovereign in the skies, writing His commandments on tables of stone and punishing all ignorance and disobedience with almost relentless anger and cruelty. Here and there, though, as time -went on, there were traces in Jew ish religious thought of another and far worthier idea of God.. For in stance, the prophet Malachi asks: "Have we not all one father? Hath not one God created us?" Tou see, It was just a faint glimmer of this same great thought of God as Fa ther, and of Love as His true char acter and so the rule of all our life In Him and with one another. So that when Jesus came, with His God-given Spirit, it was just this Idea, among all the religious ideas of His people this idea of God's Fatherhood on which He seized as the real truth about God and then gave to it all the force of a fresh an full and final revelation from God. All Christianity was to be built up around this truth as its cen ter. Christianity was to be a religion of family life. Jesus would take Just this most familiar thing in daily human experience, the life of the family, and idealize it and spiritualize it and sanctify it and glorify it as the, counterpart of all life'in God himself, and so make of it a religion for all men. -The greatest inspiration in such a re ligion would come from the very simplicity of this central idea- in it. Its greatest power would lie- in its ttppeat 10 ail maL eseeiii uiuest. real and most beautiful in life both in men and in God. Never mind, for the present, what other expounders of Christianity have tried to make of it. -But consider only Jesus' own teaching in the simple gospels; and you will see that here, in this ideal ized family lift of God and his hu man children, is the very heart of Christianity. Indeed' the - final revelation on this point was all summed up in one great object lesson, viz: the fact of the incar nation. He, Jesus, the eternal son of God, had come to earth and be come also man, not only to tell us, but also to show us in himself the perfect son, what God the Father is and what we, who also are his sons, should be, too. The whole meaning of our human life the one reason why we are here on this earth at all why God made us and made us in his own image, is that, as his chil dren, we should do our Heavenly Father's will. That will has but one law, the law of love; love and obedience toward God above all and love and service of our brother men as much as ourselves. Here is our Ideal family life as Christians. Will you say that what Jesus really preached was "the kingdom of God" and not the family of God? Well, then, remember how plainly he taught us that they are Just one and the same thing. For did he not teach us to pray: "Our Father in heaven, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as in heaven?" But one of our own American poets has caught and fixed the same truth, too, very beautifully, it seems to me. 'Thy kingdom come" Yea! bid it come! But when Thy kingdom first begau On earth. Thy kingdom was a home, A child, a woman and a man. What a tragedy it Is, then, that this simple Ideal has tome at length But now let us reverently test this idea of family life and see how it -works out In the different parts and actual practice of Christianity Take the theological side of Christianity; take the doctrine- of the trinity. We will not deny the difficult idea and distinction of 'persons" in God as set- forth, for nstance, in the Nicene creed; but we will not concern ourselves over much nowadays about It. We loyally confess all that, as part of the church's historic statement and de fense of hr corporate faith. . But in actual practice, In our own per sonal religious life, who and what else is God to us than just 'what Jesus taught us to call him, that is, "Our Father"; the giver of all life and light and strength to our bodies and our souls? ' Who arid what is Jesus himself but a son, God's per fect son, and. at the same time our human brother, living for us and dying for us, his erring brethren to show us our Father's love and win us back again to him. And who and what is God the holy ghost? Noth ing magical, nothing mysterious (indeed, how I wish that that mis leading and repellant word 'ghost" never had been used here). But, God thS holy spirit? Who and what is he, but just what the creed calls him, the spirit which proceeds from the Father and the son, that is, the spirit of a father and a son, that is, the spirit of all true family life, the spirit of love and obedience and service? Or take the ethical side of Chris tianity, its system of morals, its principles of right living. What is its law of duty, as Jesus taught it? Not a law of mere commandments any longer ("thou shalt" and "thou shalt not"); butv again the simpLe law of family life, the law of love making all commandments unneces sary. For Jesus had but one rule of life, for himself and for us, toward God: "I always do," he said, "the things which please my Father." And for the rest, all he said was, "You are all brothers"; that is, go and do the .actual deeds of brotherliness among yourselves. What is sin in Jesus' eyes? Not a law broken, not justice violated, no such! abstract unreal thing as that: but rather an intensely personal thing. Sin is a son's disobedience to a holy father's consequent pain (not anger). And forgiveness? This, too, is another personal act. It is the father's in stant reconciliation with his peni tent ' and returning prodigal " son. And heaven? Just "my father's house". Jesus called it. And hell? Just the refusal and so the loss of all that family joy and blessedness. Or, once more, take the institu tional side of Christianity. ' What is baptism, but just a new spiritual birth into God's family? Or confir mation but just a father's blessing? Or the holy communion but just a family meal; the Lord's supper; the celebration of a son's utterly self sacrificing obedience; the memorial Just two or three other thoughts in conclusion: . : ! Do not fail to see the greatness of thsi ' truth in its very simplicity. Once,- you will remember, after Jesus- had sent out the 70 to test this simple gospel and they had come back rejoicing over their suc cess, he was lifted up in the spirit and said: "I thank thee, O Father, that thou didst hide these things from the wise and understanding and didst reveal then! unto babes." For ages, before Christ and since, as we have seen, men have tried to solve all the mysteries of truth and life in God by their own wisdom, and failed; failed just because they never thought, or would not believe, that the solution lay in anything so simple and familiar as this family idea. But every little child in stantly understands such a religion, and loves to. For the very first word it learns to speak, the world over, is "father"; its very first word of prayer Is "Our Father, who art in heaven." So with all of us, when we are ready to give over our own wisdom and self-sufficiency and "become," as Jesus said, "like little children," we find that the whole necessary truth about God, the whole meaning of our human life, lies right here in this family ' ideal. It Is this very simplicity which makes the greatness of Christianity and fits it to become a universal re ligion, a religion for all men. Next, always remember that this simple Christianity of Jesus is a good enough religion to live by and also to die by. Your growing Christian experience will teach you this. All the elaborate apparatus of salvation of which some Christians are so proud and so fond and all the subtleties and mystifications about Christianity which tou used to think so important will seem less and less so to you as they cer tainly do to God. Jesus' one simple law of duty is guide enough' for our daily life. We have an understand ing and merciful father and an. af fectionate and sympathizing brother to be our example and comfort and help in all our earthly trials. We have what was meant to bo a true family fellowship in the church. And at the earthly end it will be enougn, will it not, just to fall asleep, con fidently and peacefully, in the bosom of our heavly father and his eternal love. And, then, lastly: Try, from the very start, to keep this religious family ideal alive in your own ac tual home life. It will be hard to make much of It in your religious life if its beauty and power are being constantly mutilated and denied in the spirit of your home life. Ask yourselves, you Christian fathers, how faithful or unfaithful you have been, both by : teaching and example, in inculcating in --our children's minds this same religious ideal, this Christian family iife of love and reverence and obedience and service, both in heaven and on earth. And you young people, do yoa gladly respond to all this? Or, on the other hand, do you not see what danger there is that, in your thoughtlessness and selfishness, you, on your part, may ".-a drifting far away from this right spirit of children in your home life? Do you not se that, in spite of -your wilfulness and false spirit of in dependence, there are still family ties and home obligations which, both in God's sight and your own, must forever rest upon you? But, unhappily, there are too many fam ilies where the only Ideal is that of parental sovereignty and a hard law of commandments, to be en forced by blows.- Oh, how far away this Is from that true fatherhood and true sonship which carry with them, all througn life, tha joy and blessedness of a happy comrade ship and a real brotherliness. But if you want to see and have your children see, how beautiful such a Christian family life can be, get and read "President Roosevelt's Letters to His ' Children." I wish the book could be In every home in the land. r . . " im ; Table, Buffet aod Six Chairs 1 O 1 )J it Jrfi f i) n Terms $12.00 Cash---S2.50 Week " Here is the premier value of all the dining; room furniture ever of fered at the price. An oblong table, handsome buffet with mirror back, full length of buffet, together with one arm chair and five straight chairs. This most complete suite specially priced at $125. All pieces are tftie reproductions of the Queen Anne style. The turnings have been carefully worked up and the result is evidenced in a suite of furniture out of the ordinary. This only means that you can now furnish your dining room in just the way you would have it and at a very minimum expense. The suite is finished in American walnut the chairs differ slightly from illustration inasmuch as they have higher backs and are upholstered in genuine blue leather. ' Specially Priced Floor Coverings From the New Autumn Showing "Kroehler" Bed Davenport $61.00 A splendid number with solid oak frame upholstered in Span- , ish leatherette. A comfortable davenport during the day which opens into a full size bed. The Kroehler gives you an extra sleeping room when you need it. 9x12 seamless tapestry Brussels GZOA 8 rugs, .special at. DiTb.OtJ Extra heavy 8-3x10-6 seamless vel- .(jJCO Cft ;vet ruga with, fringed ends, at. . . . . . Three patterns heavy . print . linoleum, QQn special, square yard OL Two patterns, 36-inch ingrain carpet, special, yard 98c Extra heavy 9x12 seamless velvet (JJCTQ QC rugs with fringed ends, at D3J 0J $1.95 grade inlaid linoleum one pat- J" Q tern, special, square yard. DXUO Velvet hall and stair carpet, CJO A p? yard ..$2.00, $2.25 and DuO $1.75 grade inlaid linoleum one-pat- (J-! 4( tern, special, yard.... DX'x7 LIVELY SCENES PRESENTED BY GREAT MOSLEM FEAST Harvesting of Crops On in Palestine and Syria: Prototypes of Ruth arid Naomi Seen in Every Field. -. - ' 1 JERUSALEM. Sept. 9. Thl, is the. great, Moslem feast " of c-r Bairam, and Palestine and Syria present scenes of unusual gaiety and animation. The two countries are really one. Only the artificial division to suit the ideas of British and French mandates make them two. The people are the same. Aleppo, by the extraordinary French , agreement with Mustapha Kemal of . Angora, is now deprived of all its hinterland and all Its trade, and it must either die or be returned to the Turk again. The crops , are being reaped, the barley cut, and the fields are re splendent with flowers. One can see prototypes of Ruth and Naomi in every field, cutting the corn with the sickle and gleaning afterward as they did in Biblical times, on the southern slopes of Bethlehem. This scene probably has been painted a hundred times by American and European- artists, but they have never got it quite right. For the women of the East squat on their heels to reap, using the left hand to hold the sheaf and the right to use the sickle. In pictures Ruth is always shown as gracefully bend ing, but no Arab ever bends. In the east no one ever walks where he can ride, or stands where he may sit, or sits where he can lie down. This is the land of true repose. The Arab custom is to have three great blocks of arable land, and to cultivate them, one every third year, leaving the other two great fields lying fallow. They use the same primitive methods of cultiva tion as of old; a camel yoked with a donkey to pull the wooden plow, and the sickle as the only Instru ment of husbandry. Jerusalem is a perfect kaleido scope of color. Jews with long side curls and brightly colored robes, not yet accustomed to their new- I found liberty, slink along the pave 1 ment with downcast-' eve: young. bold, self-assertive Zionist Jews in white shirts open at the throat; Russians in white blouses; defiant, contemptuous Arabs, with their flowing white headdresses; Moslem women shrouded in black veils, and PasFing. them the modern young women of Jerusalem in cheap silk stockings and high-heeled shoes. Up and down the street the pic turesque Palestine . Gendarmerie ride upon their gray Arab ponies, or talk to the town police, In khaki and black astrakhan fez. It would be hard to find such a strange mix ture of races even on. the east side of New York. The sober British infantry or garrison artillery, smart and alert, take up, position along the Jaffa . road to see the pretty girls go by. As usual Tommy Atkins is quite inconspicuous, and it is dif ficult to believe that he . alone allows all these warring races and creeds to meet and pass in peace. He keeps the peace in all the near east now. Were it not for him, many lives would be in- danger. Not far distant from the ancient capital is a different Dicture. In the fields of Beersheba, Gaza and tne Mount or Olives the traveler sees 10,000 crosses marking the graves of the British soldier dead, to whom the subject races of the Holy Land owe their redemption. Tangelo Is New Fruit. Scientific American. The department of agriculture is turning its attention to the angelo, a cross between the orange, tan gerine and grapefruit that in ap pearance resembles a round orange. There are two varieties, the Samp son and the Thornton; the latter, is less acid than the former, but both are delicious in flavor, while the Thornton exhibits little tendency i to squirt when the spoon is inserted! : Poster Beds $49.50 Two distinct patterns are of fered at this price, both fin ished mahogany. One a low head, the other the standard height. Both are priced regularly at $60.00. Things You'll Need for the Youngster There is always something in our big Ju venile Department which the kiddies are sure'to'need. Here are a few specials' of unusual interest: . - $4 Porch Gates, 5-foot length, built of Norway pine and copper riveted: J0 (TA special at &U.O3 Child's Chiffoniers in ivory enamel, fitted with two short and four long Y fZfi drawers. Specially priced at D-I-"tvJ Fine quality fiber reed side Sulkies with top fold conveniently. Spe- (PI Q OK cially priced at .. 3J-0.J Genuine Reed Carriages lined in corduroy with tubular reversible gear,,dJQ PA i choice of gray or ivory enamel. . DxeJv A Sterling Rotary ewmg Machine -Sent Home for $1.00 The new Sterling Rotary is a light, un usually smooth running machine, complete with all the modern appliances. It is a machine worthy of a place in every well equipped home. If you prefer an electric, we recommend our Western Electric. Let us demonstrate them to you. No Interest Queen Anne Dining Table $51.50 You have your choice of eithor walnut or mahofcanay at this special price. The table when extended will seat ten. Strong ly built and well finished. IP! Davenport Tables $33.50 $44.50 is the usual price. A splendid davenport table fin ished in mahogany, built on graceful Queen Anne lines, is an exceptional bargain at the price. This Five-Piece Breakfast Set $33.75 : Above is pictured a very attractive breakfast set fea .tured at a very low price. The table has a 'shaped top which measures 40 inches when- leaves are raised. The turnings on all the chairs and the table exactly match. The suite is shown in ivory enamel and- is an- extreme value at this price. ' ' . , fin f I'mt lV, jrhr Jit ,'t,(?Nl.A'Fi' 1 1 I $15 Cash $3.00 Week Sends Home This VICTROLA That one word "Victrola" insures you mu sical excellence. It's best demonstrated in the new and attractive Victor models. The one illustrated is displayed in either ma hogany or walnut. The price $160.00. No Interest ,. ;S5r Bed, Spring, Mattress $9Q 7C In offering this outfit at this special price we know we are giving you better value than has been possible heretofore. The bed is a big two-inch continuous post pattern in ivory or gold bronze and the spring a guaranteed no-sag one, both of guar anteed Simmons make. The' mattress is built of 45 pounds of layer felt covered in art ticking and finished with roll fdge. It is a superior value through and through. 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