( I JT jsp-v */ b ? 1*- “GO YE, THEREFORE, TEACH ALL NATION’S.” * MONMOUTH, OREGON; FRIDAY, MARCH 18, I88l. VOL. XI. no . U.K prudent father strive« to keep them from hi« cjiil- ' has already begun in National Legis­ esiantism can now since the loss of nets of the Republic. On the contra­ aren.” “ There mho doubt that the Church eondemns lature of France that has just met. Alsace-Lorraine, not number a single ry, Theirs, Grevy, Gambetta, Wad­ Libenty'in the ttenee of the Reformation and espe­ C hristian essenger , million, against some thirty-six mil­ dington, Jules Ferry, and the other cially ia that of the nineteenth century. ’ The readers of the Standard will be Devoted to the cause of Primitive Christi­ lions of nominal Catholics. It has a acknowledged republican leaders, The French government is only do­ kept advised of the progress of this anity, and the diffusion of general in­ vast, , preponderant, freedom-loving, have again and again defended the ing what the freest, mildest and most war between Ultrnmontanistn and formation. priest-hating republican population claims of religion, and of the Catholic tolerant State on the continent . of free institutionsin France.— Christian Price Per Year, in Advance, S9.M 1 Church, and have advocated the 1 Europe felt itself compelled to do Standard. All business letters should be addressed as shown daily in the elections'; and ..... granting of the budget of Public Wor­ 1 years ago. The Swiss peeple, Catho- . [ to T. F. Campbell^ Editor, or Mary even among the Monarchists, Orlear- ! —Edward Kimball, in the Baptist ! lies and Protestants consenting, have ship, which gives fifty millions of ists and Bonapartists, there are multi­ Btump, Publisher, Monmouth, Oregon. Teacher, speaks as follows of the uni- Advertisers will find this one of the best tudes who sympathize with the’ Re­ francs to the Roman Church. It is written it in their present admirable tform Bible Lesson, and the results I --- a C_ a -------------------------------- t ______ : a mediums on the Pacific Coast for making publicans in their love of free institu­ only when this Church, following its constitution, that no Jesuit establish- which it makes p<>-sible: I their business known. tions and their hate ef clerical, Jes­ eternal instincts and habits, has left [ rnent of any kind shall be allowed to The study <>f God’s Word, under BATES OF ADVERTISING uitic rule. Yet, all these subtractions the domain of pure religion and has exist within the territory of their lie- the sjstem of uniform Sunday school 1 Yr o M 3 M 1 M 1 1 W made, there are still left millions of invaded, and that with hostile intent, public ; no Jesuit, under this law, can lesson*, which now cover* the Chris­ iFoo S2 50 $4 00 «7 00 212 00 ! the prerogatives of the political and , ( teach even the humblest village school ■ tian world, is no ti gra«ie*t 20 00 j men, women and children, devoted to 7 00 12 00 4 00 2 50 % Col........... 35 00 7 00 12 00 20 00 4 00 movements in this dav of the Snirit Col........... 65 00 j and in the hands of the clergy and of j civil authority, that it comes into col- ■ The noble people were driven to this 35 00 20 00 7 00 12 0) li Col........... of .God. -Scores.of the ino.-t careful 1 Col............. 12 00 20 00 35 CO 65 00 120 00 the Jesuits—these deadly haters and | Lisi on with, the secular power. Un­ in self-defense, to save the very life of- and learned Christian scholars in Nngs Notice« in loci column» 10 cent»- per line lor the Republic from distructionf For vigilant, active assailants of the Re­ fortunately the papal church cannot , land and America are bending over each insertion. Yearly advertisements on liberal term«. public, its free institutions, its friends 1 possibly live within the strictly reli­ years the Jesuits were disturbing the j the Bible, and giving to the y>ung Professional Ca d* (1 equare) 112 per annum.. gious sphere; it is as all the world ’ peace of Switzerland, and were plot- ' of Research amMalx>‘J! t>y^ ^ves and supporters. w Mr. 1. G, l>»vid«®n I* ',u* Adv« living knows, essentially, and unchangeably [ I Finally, in 1847, they actually excit­ I But the French Republicans, and). Agent In Porti« ml. many tnorevof Christian ministers, all lovers of free institutions there a political church. As such it is in I 1 oriental scholars, ductors of divinity, Entered at the Poet Office at Moiimouth M ed some of the Catholic cantons to a are not willing, after so many years of every State; an imperium in imperio •econd clans matter. educated and godly lay min, with a . ; toils and hopes, and of prodigious sac- j a State within a State. Here the revolt against the Federal government . host of devoted women of the mast The French Government and the rifices ; after such grand progress,and ‘ whole trouble lies. and this peaceful people were plunged careful culture, and the deepest .piety Jesuits.. such splendid successes, to give up I Some reflections will not be out of for several weeks into the distresses . —many of these last being wives and and horrors of civil war. The confed­ and lose all these glorious achie vments; place here. I mothers-—are writing, week by .week, France is a Catholic country ; here eracy triumphed, several of the Cath­ t for the Christian and the secular press to see laid in ruins again the majestic * BCHBKB TUBER. temple of freedom, of light,' of life, of the secret of the special danger of olic cantons, Tessino included, stand­ • studies for Sabbath scheol clashes. j =” hr th e prec e ding —article- iL_ 5saa_. e y- and hope, r ea re d a t a n much rn.tt, Fil l a i m n itane , JexurtTnltuence in that ing by the national “cause. ‘The new I This work, for its faithfulness, accura- ahowii that the Catholic world now—i and eherished by the deepest affec­ Republic. In a land overwhelmingly constitution of 1848, modeled after ,| cy, and spiritual value, not only sue-, all that is truly Catholic—is in its tions and the most ardent hopes of sa and truly Protestant and where the that of the United States, now ban-' cessfully challenge criticism, but com- mind and conscience, and therefore in many millions of Freipchtrien, and in people, well understand and have long ishes these common disturbers.of the i pels grateful admiration. the full control of its life, entirely in which the whole free world is rejoic- enjoyed and been trained in the high­ peace ef States forever from the terri­ | Of course, some crude work is done; the hands of the Jesuits. This the ! ing, and to witness the dark cloud of ■ est forms of intellectual religious, po- tory of the Alpine Republic. I but, what I have asserted is true of Some genorously think that with | dominion settling ( litical and sociaf freedom, the dangers statesmen of France, who are now Ultramontane i this work, as a whole. 'Either of mv I from the machinations of the Jesuits the progress of liberal ideas and insti­ children, I think, to-day know.s more guiding it>s destinies, as well as all 1 down again on France ! This is the peril, this the situation, ar.d their obedience allies in other or­ tutions the Jesuits have also changed, enlightened Frenchmen generally well- ’' of the Word of God than I did at the this is the strife, and this the ders and the clergy, may not be so This is not so, even in the least de­ know. It is the object of the present same age, and I had godly parents, article to set forth the reasoning that question at issue. No intelligent man great as to justify an act of suppress- gree, as they said to Mr. Cailus, so and was in the Sabbath school at four has brought them to the aecision to of whatever party, is ignorant of the . ion and expulsion*,"but may be met by they say now ; " Thanks to the divine ' years of age. If God’s Word “ giveth revise and execute the “ decrees ’’ true situation. The writer in the in­ the wakeful intelligence, the deter- favor, the spirit which animated the light,” if it is " Spirit and life,” if " It against the Jesuits and the other ‘'un­ terests of thb Church and the Jesuits I mined will, and the liberty protecting first Jesuits lives yet in us; and by runneth very swiftly,” if it is " quick the same mercy we hope never to authorized” orders affiliated with will deny all this before „the world. institutions, of the peeple. and powerful,” if” it shall not return t lose it.” And the same spirit lives in The discreet, polished article of the ! As for the United States, it is not them and tinder their control. unto Him void,” if it shall prosper in 1. The Syllabus, these statesmen Abbe Martin in the Nineteenth. C cr -{ j yet done with the Jesuits and the all of them, as one of their great lights the thing whereto He sent it,” if “it A conriict conflict has said. “ Xos omnes in ha-. causa say has put a new face on the entire tury, is a specimen of the cunning,. '^tramontane church. unum sumus." (- We are all one in shall accomplish chat which He pleas­ I skillful rhetoric, intended for the out-1 may yet arij(e in tbe future> perhap8 Catholic Church—its teaching, its es,” what may we not expect ? What conscience, its life. What was before side Protestant world. But whatever . notteo far off U)at wiU obHge our this matter.”) \\ ill the French people sustain the ; may not our faith counters sure from t again9t well known of the absolutism of: ¡delusion it may produce abroad, it . Q . ¡u 8elf.defense to government in its efforts to subdue ' this constantly maintain«»! ami fart-h- France, ‘ thus i 1 fatal , , , enemy . in trance, ffltal e of , dur institutions Rome, that it was accepted and taught i will — deceive no .. one _________ - where , of institutions fully pursued stuffy of the Bible? our nieasure8 tliat have the Jesuits 1 To this, I answer: We by many of its teachers, has now be- 1 ' this art is well known and under- Training the youngs for, say ten or these , honeyed 17'71 7 not 1 ’ , been ' in • ¡n our l - a hitherto or ¡n. may rest assured that the French gov- ' come universal, and has been made | stood. , , Underneath . , • hitherto our . habit8 habits or tn- twenty years of their forming life in these ,. .. «• ... necessity clinations. We hope this this necessity | ernment would not have moved in binding on the consciences of all words, , this calm moderation, . . . . , clinations. w e . hope this study—the very essence and i V^aC^1CeJ* may not come, and that our vigilance I this matter without the confidence of Catholics, at ths peril of eternal dam polished sentences, * 1 heart of this truth of God being set a powerful support in the will of the nation. And this Syllabus and the eye defects the rude, mortal, insatiate I may avert it. But let us not be too ' I forth, week by week, taken off from nation. Only those intimately fa mil now established dogma of papal in- violence of papistic ambition ; as the over-confident in our security. There j these living and glowing altars of iar with the present and past senti­ falibility, that make the Pope, as French say, the mitt conceals the Jiri is a solemn warning in the words of ' loving, burdened, praying, believing ments of the French people, know Melchoir Cano, in his letter about the God, omnipotent over the destinies »f —the honey disguises the poison. hearts, in these workers who prepare The reader can now understand Jesuits to the confessor of Charles V.: how old, how deeply rooted and wide­ the souls of men—both the work o'f the lessons, and the teachers who spread is their hostility to the Jes­ Jesuit inspiration and of Jesuit hands and judge the reasons that have mov­ “ God grant,” he says, “ that the time study and teach them—must result in uits. \ et this society has a power­ —teach expressly and avowedly the ed the French government, in defense may never come, when sovereigns • great things for Christ.-- tdkrietmn— ful support in France. The contest, subjection, in the most abject way, of the very life of the Republic, and of will desire to resist them, but shall I Statesman. is just begun; and every etfort will of all human authority and power, its free institutions, to execute the not be able.”* —The Bible production in our be made by tne partisans of the Jes­ decrees against the Jesuits and other • What Romanism forebode* to our country may political as well as spiritual, to the l>e seou in the following iiamtageft from a contem­ uits to thwart the government and time is equal to more than a million unauthorized congregations. These Church—that is, to the Pope, and porary, Roman Catholic American journal ef the nighe«; authority, the Catholic H’orld, which l»oar* overflow it in this battle. What the copies a year, or say more thau nine­ reasons as here set forth are faithfully that means to the Jesuit. the official endorsements of the Pope, Cardinals, gathered from the speeches of minis ­ and Archbishop. There u no ambiguity in the issue will be, the near future will in­ teen thousand every week, more than The Syllabus throughout utters the language, read it. . . - most extreme denunciation of all lib­ ters and their supporters in the Sen­ •• For ourselves we do not pretend tliat the dicate. The final end of the conflict three thousand every day, three hun- Chureh ii» or ever has l>een tolerant.” i dred every hour, or five every minute eral government and institutions; it ate and the Chamber, and from the “ The end. or (rod as a final cause prescribes may be more momentous to France th o law which all men must obey, or fail of at­ and to the Catholic Church, than the J of ’ working time. At this rate, the leading newspaper articles, explaining taining their ends, which is their Mipreme good.” declares reconciliation with these, on “ The Church, as all Catholics hold, is the em­ conflict itself; it may not unlikely j press is producing an English Bible or and defending the action of the gov ­ the part of the Catholic Church, im­ bodiment of this law, »nd is therefore iii her very and constitution teleological. Mhe Hjieaks result iW the entire separation of j New Testament every twelne seconds. possible ; and therefore proclaims ernment, as well as from the . speech nature always and everywhere with the authority of Clod, Signs of this are ! These Bibles are not wasted—they as the tins) cause of creation, and ’herefyre her Church and State. universal and eternal hostility to and articles on the other side. words are law,- her commands art* the commands 3. The French republic" is not hos­ of already appearing. ! are required—and more copies of the God. Christ, who is G<»«1 as well as man. is'licr them. But it is now notoriously the personality, and therefore she lives, t-aches, and Some of the moat eminent, but al»o j Scriptures are demanded in the Eng­ tile to religion in any of. its forms. governs in him aneople, rulers and ruled, in all things Girordin, oppose the de­ though the number 6f versions to sphere; neither the last president, enjoined by the teleological law of man's eahtence. laye, and affiliated With them, to teach and es­ ami therefore in the recognition and inainicnance croes, agan st the Jesuits; n,,t because the illustrious TheirA, nor M. Grevy, for the Vhureh of that very supreme authority which this country gives encourage­ tablish among Catholics the doctrines which the popea have always claimed, and against they have any better opinion« ,,f this the present head of the government, which ment and assistance, over and above, the Reformation protested^ and which secu­ of the Syllabus, and to mold the mind nor even Gambetta, nor Jules Ferry, lar princes are generally diapwaed to resist when it order, but because they would invoke is considerably more than one hun­ crosaeH their pride, their policy, their ambition, or and conscience of the Catholic world instead ot these measures of force, the dred and fifty. The number of copies the author of the famous “ Ferry law,” the love of power.” by it. The Jesuit is, in the most aw­ “ The Protestant experiment has demonstrated has ever uttered a hostile word or beyond (preetfcm that tne very things in the Catho­ American Spirit and doctrine of *'ree of the Bible in circulation at the be. ful sense, by the most binding and lic Church which are most offensive to this age. inaugurated a hostile measure against and for which it wages unrelenting war against toleration, and would Itattle against ginning of the -present century is es­ terrible vows, devoted, for life and fer her, are precisely thoec things it moat needs for its these enemies with’mural wuapufM. religion, Catholic, Protestant or Jew­ own protection and safety, It needs, first of all, timated at 5,OOO,-Miitsrns the devoted increased to 154,000,000 copies. all free institutions everywhere at politicw may no longer be divorexil fr»>ni reli­ tives of the Republic. This is very gion, but be rouperod mil»ehlary to the mnriiual, mortal enemies of i-.t» ny and of —A teacher asked his class : “ How because these are fatal to the triumph the eternal «ltd of mah'.'lorlrlinh V.oth individuals | notably true of the Protestants who and society exist and civil government* are institu­ I rance, and tlio nioimst.c ur ittr-t gen­ do you pronounce s t-i-n-g-y ?” A and dominion of the Papal church. ted, . . . to take charge of tsIncatin« -rwhip , smart boy Bto»ke- journsls or ciety. himself being one of these; as well as depen.ls a great deal on whether you lectures, and to keep fr<»»u the public im whieb Catholic by birth, by traditions and the battle-on the Jesuit Question j mean to use it on a man or a wasp F of the Prote^ants in the othei Gabi- tend to m*alo*ul the mind or coruipi t»-u heart, aa a habits, almost universally. Protes- Pacific M .. .1 f I .