Christian herald. (Portland ;) 1882-18??, March 21, 1884, Image 1

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    DEVOTED TO THE RESTORATION OF APOSTOLIC CHRISTIANITY.
VCTTXÏV:
C hristian herald .
J. F. FLOYD,
Editor and Publisher, Monmouth, Or.
m wnonranK
We want to see more of that deep
seated piety'- and brotherly love
which characterized the first Chris-
tians of whom we read in the New
Xaateent. '
Waupun, Wisconsin, Associate Editor.
Subscription Price t
One Copy, one year............................ $2 00
. One Copy, six months........................ 1 00
1
ADVERTISEMENTS.
Prices will be given on application.
| Entered at the Poat-oflice at Monmouth, as
second class mail m»tter.J
l’lease Notice.
We are not responsible for the opinions and
sentiments expressed by onr contributors, but
for our own writing »lone. Hence out readers
Dust judge for themaelvesL We intend to give
apace for the free expression of opinion, within
the limits of sound diacrevion, anil the good of
the cause ; but not be held as indorsing what
others may write.
'**' ‘XIT'fflftTtor
paper should be written :
1. Ou one side of tho sheet only.
2. In a plain legible hand.
3. Lot tliero be plenty of space between the
line».
----- Write' with a jwn inataftd of a p encil. 80
that it maj not be defaced ui transTfT'
Write brief articles.
< Exf«*
attention to article*, notices, or
queries not Mcompanied by your name.
Salmi Morse, the author of the
Passion Play, has committed soui-
cide. Business troubles unbalanced
■his mind and led to the rash act,
When Judas sold his Master to be
crucified, he went out and hanged
himself. When Morse tried to dis­
honor the Lord by bringing" the
scene of his crucifixion on the stage
and failed, he went out and drown­
ed himself. This is a lesson for
those yet living.
ThC Portland church has already
of our house of worship in Albany,
and w’e learn they will probably
-giva us aliuildred dollars. Will it
turn out that the less able churches
will do the most for us ? Let the
brethren remember thaU we are
now ready to take subscriptions
KOHQK.-All private letters and all other
matter demanding the special attention of die
editor, and all orders for books, traets, etc.,
BbouïΓ'W wadre^
-11
whorA th« hrpf.hrpn
Oregon. AU subscriptions for the H erald
erald , all
»11 tWmWkH-pOHlte. WUereüretnren
matter intended for publication and letters in will help us in this good work. Let
reference to the businesa connected with the
papeF should be addressed to C hristian H er ­ any brother or sister who will^pb-
ald , Monmouth, Oregon.
EDITORIAL NOTES.
Our article on the Holy Spirit
for this week is crowded out.
Read R. A. Tenney’s advertise­
ment in another column, headed,
“Canvassers Wanted.”
We have received “ Hand Book
of Christian Evidences ” and “ De­
bate on Trine Immersion and Feet
Washing,” which will be reviewed
soon.
NO. 12.
MUNMOUTH, OREGON ; FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1884.
scribe or work for us, send to any
one of the committee at once for
subscription blanks, and fill them
up and return to us. We would
like to have a live agent for a few
days in every church on this coast.
Let every body help us build this
church, tor now is the time to es­
tablish the cause permanently in
Albany. Brethren and sisters, let
us hear from you. J. F. Floyd. Dr.
J; W. Cole and J. H. Campbell,
committee..
It is too funny. The other wreek
we had occasion to state that a con­
Bro. J. Durham, our California
vent in Italy had recently been de­
editor, has our thanks for his pho­
moted to secular uses, and that
tograph. • It is a good one, and of
among other things the bones, so
course, looks just like an editor.
so much esteemed, of St. Peter were
We will return the compliment
sold by the commissioners for eighty
soon.
cents ! We then said, “ Our friend
— Indifference is one of the chief of the Catholic Sentinel ought to
obstacles in the way of Christian have Ko"uglil”these“ bones tu assist
growth. That brother or that sis­ him in establishing his theory of
ter .who treats the church or her Papal infallibility !” This was
work with indiflerence “"¿Toes - not- “enough.—
possess the spirit of the Master, and poured out half a column of holy
is a hindrance to the cause of Christ. indignation on our head for having
no “ pride of ancestry,” for “defam­ was Shem (Jerome, Luther); and"
ing tho apostles of Christ ” and some have conjectured that he was
“ridiculing their venerable bones,” an extraordinary emanation from
etc. But we are still alive. Now the Deity which suddenly appeared
what we want to know is, if the for a little while on the stage of
action and was then as suddenly
S e ntine l
that those wrere the bones of the removed from it."” But aH siKtr’YTCS'
apostle Peter ? If so, and it will tionsare purely hypothetical,and are
convince us of that fact, we will wholly inconsistent with the mani­
agree to lengthen out our face as fest purpose of God in making Mel­
long as the occasion will demand chisedec on extraordinary type of
and will take on a degree of solem­ his own Son as the great high priest
nity in perfect accord with our of our confession. For it is very
“ pride of ancestry.” We do not obvious that the Holy’Spirit has
claim any very close fleshly kinship intentionally thrown an impenetra­
to the apostle Peter; and if we did, ble veil over both the birth and the
we can see no very good reason for death of Melchisedec, over both his
standing up over his bones eighteen parentage and his posterity, for the
hundred years after his death, with purpose of making him a more per­
sanctimonious faces, and like some fect type- of Chi ist. He now stands
great" sniveilng^caTF,"^feiTiTiYigTtvcrs' “'before* ns
nnnvas
of tears, instead of letting these alone, without father, without
bones rest in peace till the morn of mother, without genealogy, having
the resurrection. We claim to ex- neither beginning of days nor end
ercise a due amount of reverence of life. He appears in the sacerdo­
for the apostles of Christ, and are tal drama by himself, and in the
willing to treat their bones with all prime of manhood, honored and re­
the deference required by the spirit spected by the most eminent ser-
of ChriStt^^that - religion - vants of God_ as. a priest upon his
which draws its chief source of throne, thus beautifully illustrating
spiritual nourishment from the tra­ in his own person the royal dignity
ditions and dry bones of a few and the perpetual character of
Roman Catholic monks of the Dark Christ’s priesthood. But let it once
Ages is not the religion we care to be clearly demonstrated that he
possess. We suggest that of our was Shem, the son of Noah, or any
contemporary would pay less atten­ other person of known genealogy,
tion to the bones of St. Peter and and that moment the analogy fails,
give more heed to his living and and he forever ceases to be a fit
inspired teaching, it would see a type of Christ.” Hence such ques­
little more of the Christianity t>f tions as these give us but little con­
the New Testament.
cern. We can find plenty of ques­
tions respecting matters of a more
A brother asks us to answ*er this
practical nature all around us which
question : “ Who was Melchisedec ?”
need to be discussed and, if possible,
The shortest way to answer this is
settled, and to those we prefer giv­
by telling the truth, and saying we
ing our attention.
do not know. We agree with the
following from Bro. R. Milligan’s
In our judgment the article of
Commentary on Hebrews. The Sister Bedwell in last week’s H er ­
author says: “Who this Melchisedec ald places woman’s work in the
was, has long been a question of in­ church in a somewhat unsatisfactory
terest with both the learned and light before our readers. It begins
the unlearned. Some say that he by asking, “ Why not let God’s word
wft» 41hrLst hiin.self .(Ambrose, Hot- settle this question ?” and then
tinger); some, that he was the Holy strange to say, in all the Scriptures
Spirit (Hieracas, Epiphanius); some, referred to, not a single passage
that he was an angel (Origen, that bears directly on the question
Didymus); some, that He was Enoch' TsTo^be fbUIfd'in the whole article !
(Hulsius, Calmer); some, that he It would not take God’s word lon^
,
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