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About Christian herald. (Portland ;) 1882-18?? | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1883)
« ■ : .U;' '■-* < -, ‘í'’1 ..í*í ' ■ ■ ■ -. ------------ ------------------------ ---------------------- ---------------- — the deep waters and over the rough seas. While this language perhaps, had a special application, it never- . theless coines to every Christian bearing the sweet consolation of '"’ftgAVrtC Ttis not only jffiysicaT suffering through which Christians must sometimes pass, but it is mental, moral and spiritual as well. The frowns and scorns of the world must be endured, the cunning and ossip will malicious serpeni drive his poisonous fangs into the innocent Christian, while the fierce > and Unjust attacks of designing and godless men and women must H eavy L ogic ’—Dr. A. M. Col lins has been writing a good deal of late on wùne in the communion. He has said softie good things and some things that are not so. good. Dis last*^ contribution is to the Christian Standard from which we clip the following paragraph. He say s : It is a fact that can never be ex plained away by “ Oriental poetry,” or in any other way, that wine is condemned and th at wine is ap proved. All this talk about the use of wine being approved and its abuse being condemned, is mere twaddle; it is the sheerest nonsense, courage of the true soldier. This will all cause more or less suffering. But when the thought fully comes home to us that it is all for Christ, we glory on this behalf, thank God and take courage. bosh. It is wine that is said to be a mocker, not its intemperate use; it is wine that is said to be a de ceiver, not the excess of wine',' it is wine that is said to bite and sting; it is wine that is said to produce woes, wounds, contentions, bab blings, redness eyes, etc., etc. On the other har/1, it is wine that is said to be a gift of God (tirosh); it is wine that is said to cheer the heard of God and man ; it is wine that is said to contain a blessing. If there is arfy more "twaddle” and “ bosh ” about the thing our brother so severely condemns than is found in this paragraph, we pity» the cause it advocates. Dear brother, will wine be a mocker to any one if it is not used I Will wine de ceive any one if it is not '-used ? Will wine bite an4-sting any one if it is not used I Will wine pro duce " woes, wounds, contentions, babblings, redness of eyes,” etc, if it is not used I On the other hand, will the Dr. tell us how wine will “ cheer the heart of God and man ” and "contain a blessing” if it is not used I In getting away* from one error let» us not swing into another equally absurd. t ■ ■■ ■ Selections and Comments. F aith and O bedience . — A writer in the Central Baptist, St. “ Faith and Obédience,” from which we clip the following : 1. We often speak as if Chris tians are saved by faith only, an< not through faith that " worketh by love,” and purifies the heart. We seem to forget that faith is made perfect by works—by "the obedience of faith ”—and thus al righteousness is fulfilled and' *made complete. Hence, Jesus said to John the íe Baptist, “ “ Thus it becom- eth us ( (by obedience) to fulfill all righteousness.” But we see’ii to separate what God hath joined to gether, and speak of faith—saving 1 faith—as if it could exist, without its consequent—obedience. James says : " Faith, if it hath not works, | is dead, being alone;” therefore : true faith and obedience thereto must go together in the work of salvation, for without faith it is B ase . ball on S unday . The impossible to please God, and faith without works is dead, and conse Nexv Northwest, of Portland, comes quently inoperative and useless. back at us on this fas!4k>n for our 2. Mark 1G : 16, says, "He that believeth (hath faith) and is bap- little note of her display advertise i tized, (obeys that faith) shall be ment, on the editorial page of a saved.” But we are not authorized match game of base-ball on the to say he shall be saved, whether Lord’s day: I he obeys, and is baptized or not. The Christian Herald, of Mon Thirty years ago this would have mouth, saw’ in the N ew N orth ¡been strange doctrine to appear in west a base-ball advertisement, and a Baptist paper ; but now it can go straightway asked: “Are we to understand that base- ■n without even a word of com- jail on the Lord’s day, in which inent from the editor. This looks gambling is not a stranger, is one 4 good deal like baptism for the re of the planks in the “ Woman mission of sins which our Baptist Suffragists’ ” platform ?” brethren have so earnestly opposed This is about as sensible as the all along, and if the writer of the Herald's previous references to above paragraph shopld prove able Woman Suffrage. With equally I escape this conclusion we should good (or bad) taste, we might ask, after noting several advertisements regard his theological feat as an of patent medicines in the Herahl, . other wonder of the world. Let if aiding quacks to defraud the public is a part of the créed of the the good worlugo on. and most gifted writers of th© nineteenth century, and a believer in the abstract right of woman suffrage, says: l »U u what «*** the me ballot mv * w * those But dofor A forty -- I. wu »» « u . will thousand , ^offien^hen' tlrey get it ? It will not give them hus bands, nor make their thriftless husbands provident, nor their inva lid husbands healthy. They can not vote themselves out of their dark, unwholesome sewing rooms, AK-* *Xi>J Vii Ml** vv) ;^nU>^rooms CWX. »».I offices, nor have they generally The qualifications which these places require. Tl^e ballot will not enable them to do any thing for which their constitution or their education has not fitted them, and I do not knowofanylawnow, which prevents NEW THIS WEEK. them from doing anything for which they are fitted^ except the holding of government offices. I can think of no other occupation, which, the right of suffrage will Stars vs Portlands. ’ open to woman, and of public officers the number must be, in pro SPECIAL MATCH CAME, portion to population, insignificant. Christian Church. We hope oui’ contemporary can see the point. • When our fair sister convicts us of ad vertising that which we know to be demoralizing to the communi- ty and a'"sln Inihe si ght of doff , we pledge ourselves to clear our columns of all such ; and if we fail to do so, she is at perfect ljberty to set down demoralizing the com munity and defrauding the people as a _ plank in our platform. Can we expert as much of the Neto Northwest ? From the following advertisement which appeared on the editorial page of the last num ber, wtrlcavc- our renders to judge: ................... ■'■A«**».«.1.'....... '1___ ".iBW'i; BASE-BALL! At City View Park, N ext S unday , july is , at 2:30 p . m . “ W e W ould S ee .”- Under this heading the Signs of tfie, Times — ' ————— ——>»———— The New Team, McElroy and ’ ■ says i Kragen, will play with the Stars. We have no disposition to inter fere in any controversy between the Christian Advocate and the C hurch R afflings .—The Do Christian Herald, Disciple, of mestic Journal, Springfield, Mass., Oregon, but we have a. request to has this to say about church make of the Herald. In its indict ment of the M. E. Church, it rafflings which we fully indorse : says: Church »rafflings and lotteries "In this church the Lords table have for the most part,- we are is set quarterly, whereas the Scrip happy to say, become things of the tures require it weekly.” past; but there are some relics of We have no little anxiety to these still remaining in some of our learn where in the Scriptures that churches, that ought to be -buried requirement may be found. . The with the grab bag and games of Herald makes a strong profession chance. We refer to the bed quilt of strictly conforming to the Scrip mania. It is sometimes some other tures, ami we are certain that wa article, but the bed quilt seems to wish to do so. Now we will con be the most popular in this line form to that particular Scripture of Some would be Dorcas gives a bed which it speaks as soon as we are quilt; two or three prominent informed where it is. members of the church are men Prof. McGarvey is a man highly tioned as candidates for the honor esteemed among the Disciples as a of receiving the prize, and the teacher, a preacher, and an author. friends pay a dime or a quarter for In his “ Commentary on the Acts,” the privilege of counting a vote in he says:— favor of their candidate. Jly such " It must, in candor, be admitted cunning devices a few dollars are that there is no express statement diverted from the pockets of the in the N. T. that the disciples broke people into the treasury of the the loaf every Lord’s day.” church. The plan is less objection Now as there is no command able than the lottery it is true, but ment that they should do so, and it is one that is not creditable to no express statement that they did the church of God, and the sooner so, that is, there being neither pre it is consigned to the oblivion of cept nor precedent, how is it to be the past the better. known that " the Scriptures require it ?” We wait for an answer. WOM an -S uffra GE.—Once upon We would ask the Signs how he a time one of their orators was led know that females have any right to exclaim: “ Shall Senators tell at all to commjinc ? -for there is me in their places, that I have no " no command that they should do need of the ballot, when forty so and no express statement that thousand women in the city of New they did so.” When the Signs York alone are earning their bread answers this question we will tell at starving prices with the needle ?” him how we know the Scriptures In reply, Gail Hamilton (Miss A. require weekly communion. M. Dodge), one of the brightest v But we give the above extract for