Image provided by: Friends of the Dallas Library; Dallas, OR
About Christian herald. (Portland ;) 1882-18?? | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1883)
7 it Miss Anna Oliver says that On Easter day a one thousand ’ dollar bill was found among the either Boston University must cease offerings of St." Paul’s Protestant to admit women students to its Episcopal Church, Pawtucket, R. I. theological department, or the Methodist Episcopal Church must There are in Philadelphia 552 welcome them to the ministry. Sunday-schools, with a total mem- There is mucnah xiëty ôf ïnînd bership of 168,681, and an average’ attendance of 112,312. These among the Episcopal clergymen of schools have given during the past Rochester, N. Y., and other places, year 2 779 scholars to the communi because persons who caro little for cant membership of the churches, religion, and not so much for and have contributed $G5,464.22 to preaching, have been coming to the churches to hear tha_fin* music. 'purely benevolent causes. These persons have been attracted In Miles City, Montana, the by the publication of programmes MethodistB believe in receiving con setting forth what music would be tributions from anybody, whether performed. The clergymen think ——. — - _ - - » gôôd^ôr whb dhqroswM^ give. They, place contribution wise and they have come to the boxes in the drinking saloons, and conclusion to stop it, rather than some of the patrons of those estab tempt their fellow beings to commit lishments drop a coin or two in the sirT'of attending church from whenever they take a drink. unworthy motives. Rev. Josiah Henson, the original of Mrs. Stowe’s “ Uncle Tom,” died on the 5th inst., at Dresden, Onta- rio. He was born in Maryland, on rct-vrgy consequently 94 years of age at the time of his death. At the celebration of the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of Jesuitism in this country at the church of the immaculate Concep tion in Boston recently, Bishop O’Reilly «aid: "No one outside of the church of Jesus Christ can be saved, and it is needless to prove that this church is the only church of Jesus. One might as well have tried to be saved outside of the ark in the days of Noah.” After this there followed a banquet, and on the bill of fare were five different kinds of alcoholic drinks. It is a fact suggestive of the in fluence of the gospel on the condi tion of women, that, in Turkey, where a few years ago men yoked their wives with oxen, the curricu lum in some of the colleges for the education of women compares favor ably with similar institutions in America. One of the girls who was graduated from Harpoot Seminary is at present engaged in making a concordance of the Bible in modern * Armenian. Stockport, Scotland, claims to have the most wonderful Sabbath school in the world. Its member ship comprises 400 teachers and 4,500 children, and nearly 9G,000 children have passed through the school since its comencement. The Presbyterian ministers of Chicago have given up preaching in connection with the communion, and declare that they find it more profitable to devote the time to “praj’er, praise remarks on the sacrament, silent meditation, and thanksgiving.” They also think the practice of continuous speaking during the distribution of the ele ments distracting, and recommend the silent method. This the Pres byterian minister can do, and so can almost all the others. In the Reformed'Church the minister is only required to repeat two brief portions of Scripture. The Baptists of the State of Con necticut have purchased a large tract of land at Crescent Beach, about seven miles west of New London, and will there establish a denominational watering place. The land will be sold—one hundred lots at one dollar a piece—the bar gain to be invalid unless all the lots are taken. The parties now own ing the property agree, when all the lots are bought and paid for, to build a $4,000 tabernacle for the use of owners of the lots, who are ex pected to erect cottages on their property and dwell there during the heated term. Daily services will be held at the tabernacle. Seventeen lots have already been disposed of to families at Norwich. There is great enthusiasm rnani- • * * fested in the project by Baptists throughout the State. Mr. Sankey attended the gospel services at the Cooper Institute in the evening, but Mr. Moody was suffering from the effects of the voyage and was not able to attend. The evangelists give the mostsatis- factory accounts of their visit to Paris and England, “and esp^ciany" of their stay in Cambridge and Ox ford. They stat^that the clergy of the Church of England took a much warmer interest iir their work than on their previous visit. Mr. Moody gaas onceto-NnxthfijeWL.tCL.iest during the summer, and Mr. Stnkey to his home in Pennsylvania. They expect to return to England in October to resume their work _ “there. The General Assembly of the Presby terian church, North, meet at -Saratoga May 17; the Southern Assembly at Lexington; Va., May 17 ; the Cumberland Presbyterians at Nashville. Tenn., May 17 ; the United Presbyterians at Pittsburgh May 23. May seems to be quite a Presbjterian month. The digest chyle was intrusted to a committee in May, two hundred and thirty eight years ago. Two years later still, in the blcssom month of May, the Confession was adopted by the Scottish church. Rev. John T. Baldwin, in the eighty-eighth year of his age, and one of the oldest of the living grad uates of Auburn Theological Sem inary, is now residing at Santa Cruz, Cal., in good health, and able to preach the word. He was well known in Western New York* and in New Jersey, and greatly esteem ed in the churches. Sitting Bull is about to become a Catholic. The Bishop of Dakota announced that he was converted at Fort Randall, and after his journey to join his tribe on the Standing Rock reservation he will be receiv ed into the church with about 140 other Sioux converts. l’rof. Timothy Dwight, who will complete twenty-five’years of ser vice in the Chair of Sacred Litera ture in Yale Divinity School, at the approaching anniversary of the in stitution, May 17, is a grandson of President Timothy Dwight, whose term as Yale’s president extended from 1795 to his death in 1817. Prof. Dwight’s great-grand-mother, Messrs. Moody and Sankey ar President Dwight’s mother, was a rived in New York by the steam daughter of Jonathan Edwards. ship Alaska, on Sunday May 6. Prof, Dwight is most highly es n teemed as a scholar- and a man of sound judgment, and in 1870 he was recommended by many as the successor of President Woolsey in his grandfather’s office, now held by Noah Porter. W. ui k, treasurer of the Mount Hermon School for Boys established by Mr. Moody, has received from England the sum of £1,000 sterling for that institution. The trustees have built four new buildings at Gill, op posite Northfield, the home oF Hr. Moody. They have also received a bequest from the late Roswell Field of his museum, and the sum of $1,600 to provide for a cabinet and its increase. Chace Lewis, a venerable citizen of Providence who died last week, left the following public bequests : To Bates College, Lewiston, Maine, $4,00<l ; Roger Williams Free Bap tist church, Providence, $5,(MM); Home for Aged Men, Providence, $1,000; Woman’s Christian Asso ciation, -$500;....Home „Tor.- Aged Women, $500; Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, Mich., $1,000; Storer College, Harper’s Ferry, West Va, $2,000 ; and Rhode Island Hospital, $1,000. _ Dr. Schaff gives the following ex planation of the great falling off in the sale of the Revised New’ Testa ment : “ A reaction was sure to come. It is estimated that about 3,000,000 copies were sold—2,000,- 000 in England and 1,000,0(H) in America. That is not a small sale for a book which may be called a new edition of an old work. “ Another obstacle to its immedi ate acceptance by the public is that the work has no sanction of author ity as yet. The convocation of Canterbury will not pass upon the revision until both Testaments are finished. Then it may authorize it, reject it, or recommit it to the hands of the revisers for further consideration. At present the re vised Testament has no standing as compared w’ith the authorized ver sion, and, of course, its sale suffers in consequence. THE NAME AGAIN. Now it 4s Dr. Collins, famous in the discussion of the communion ✓wine question, who takes up the above subject, and proposes to demonstrate that the God-given name of the body of Christ is the “ Christian Church.” If he has not