DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OBEQON, FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 19X3. PAGE SIX, i . . : Pastor Russell's Sermon PERILS AMONGST FALSEJRETHREN St. Paul's Experiences Dupli cate the Master's, HIS FAITHFULNESSTO CHRIST Jesus' Footitep Followers Wounded In the House of Their Friends The Philosophy of the Matter How to Re 1 ceive Such Experiencee Why They ! Are Permitted The Results They 8erve Speoial Perils Today. i, f Ottawa, Ont, March SO.-Pastor Russell, wlio since his last yM has many friends bore, arrived again this morning. As usu- r -.. , f- j al, the largest au- ' - , 1 dltorluin was en t i waged for him. no spune twice today. We report one of his ad drosses, from St. Paul's words. "Perils among false brethren." (2 Cor- luthluns 11:20.) lie said: St Paul was remarkable In many re elects, but chiefly for Ills loving devo tion to the Master and Ills Caus His faithfulness brought also many trying experiences, Iu our context ho enum erated some of these. Ho served the Cause of Christ to such an extent that many thought htm unwise, and count ed him a fool. This service brought him stripes, whippings, us a disturber of the peace not thnt he did disturb the peace, but that those who opposed his touching raised a tumult and blamed him for it, in order to bring bim into disrepute, hiuder his service and forward their own Interests. This at times brought him to prison, too, und even closo to denth's door. Nevertheless, he rejoiced in all such privileges. He declared that five times ho received whippings, stripes; once ho was stoned, and threo times bo was shipwrecked. But none of these things moved him from faithfulness to his Master, whoso servants lie had perse cuted before his eyes were opened. Then ho recounts various perils ex perienced from waters, from robbers, from tho Jews, from the heathen in the city, in the wilderness, on the sea. He winds up the list of perils In the words of the text, "Perils amongst false brethren." One question which will arise in mauy minds Is, "Were these sufferings stripes, perils, etc. deserved?" If asked, the answer would Biirely bo that they were not deserved; for St. Paul was a noble, character and bore the Message of God's grace In Christ "good tidings of groat Joy which shall be unto all people." The next ques tion with some would bo, "If his suf ferings were not punishments, what wore they?" We reply that they woro the same as woro the Master's evidences of his loyalty to Hod and of the dnrlcucss of the world, which led them to oppose him. The declaration, "Whosoever will live godly will sulTer persecution," was fully exemplified In his own ex periences and In tho Muster's. The mount of suffering us a reward for well-doing ninrked the measure of loy alty and zeal, and the measure of hatred and malice aroused by the Ad- Tersary. The answer to the question as to why Jesus suffered Is the answer to all such questions In respect to St. l'aul and all other footstep followers. Darkness Hates the Light. The Master declared thnt lit) stood for the principles of light, righteous ness, Truth; while Satan stands for the reverse darkness, superstition, blindness. And so it Is with the fol lowers of Jesus. They must all bo children of the light, must walk lu the light, must be uncompromising In their attitude toward sin and all thnt li wrong. Therefore the world will hate them and say all manner of evil against them falsely. Yea, men will feel that they do (5od service when they slay the righteous, whether llt crnlly, as In Jesus' case and St. Pnul's, or by "shouting out arrows, oven bit ter words," as is the moro popular method of the present time. Hut some one will say, "Ah, times have changed! Today our bishops and jtopos and preachers are all reverenced. IS'o one thinks of persecuting them. Ituther, all men speak well of thorn. Any one not spoken well of today must be in some way unworthy." How stninge Hint we should forget, nnrt ar gue along these lines! Were there not lhictors of Divinity lu Jesus' day? Were there not priests nnd chief lulcsts and l.i'vltes then? And were there ii"t Pharisee who made long prayers in the Temple? And were they not highly spoken of and revcr enred'.' I til they not make broad their phylacteries? l'ld any one think of inidii'-lnir themt No! tut Hie ,1ti.ifir wns there, and III disciples; nnd they were not of the popular rlergy. Ity their own record they were styled "the lilt It and on Hcourlng of the earth"; and. us the Master sold, whoever persecuted them thought I hat they did Cod service. How apt we all are to think of our own day as being different from other periods! So It was In Jesus' day. As He told soino of them, "Yo garnish the nepulchcr of those whom your fnth r slew, jot y do their works." So todny many extol the Iord and the Apostles, nnd denounce their persecu tors, while they similarly persecute. The climax of St. Paul's perils, the severest of them all, was from false brethren. How strange that seems! One would think that however much tho heathen or the Jews might have persecuted him, at least all professed followers of Jesus would have thanked God for his example and ministry, and have esteemed him. But this was not so; and as we look back to the Master before him, wo see the same to bo true. As Ho declared, "A man's foes shall be they of his own household." The Master was n Jew. The Jews were His brethren according to the flesh; nnd It was they that hated Him without a cnuso they thnt persecuted Illm-they that said, "He hnth a devil and Is mad" they that "took up stones to stone Him" they thnt finally cruci fied Him. "He enme unto His own, nnd Ills own received Him not," except a few saintly, elect ones. St. Paul also had persecution from the Jews, who repeatedly sought his life. He lived nfter the establishment of the Church. Ho had also Christian brethren, begotten of the Holy Spirit nnd fellow-members of the Body of Christ Jesus had none such. "Of the people thero were none with Hlin." The Holy Spirit was not given until Tontecost; hence Jctsys could not re ceive ChrMinn persecution. The near est approximation' was tho case of Judas. But if St. Paul enjoyed the sweetness of Christian fellowship In his study, labors and tolls, he also knew tlie bitterness of opposition and persecutions from fulse brethren tho cllmnx of his perils. Wo may lie sure that such experiences were more diffi cult for him to bear than any others, because they came closer home. They came from brethren of tho closest im aginable relationship fellow-members of tho Body of Christ. The Godly Suffer Persecution. As we glance down through this Gos pel Age, from St. Paul's day to the present, wo find thnt nil followers of Jesus have hnd experiences such as Ho foretold for .thorn persecutions. We find that these persecutions have come from every quarter, but none, appar ently1 moro severe, more cruel, more perilous, than- those which have come from Christian brethren. It Is scarcely necessary for us to refer to history to demonstrate this fact. Disputes be tween Christians have been very bit ter. Thousand have lost their lives at each other's hands. The word heretic Iwcnme moro obnoxious than nny other term in the dictionary. Neither Catholic nor Protestant can deny tho terrible story of tho pages of history. All true men aro ashamed of tho record. All are ready to say, "Wo would not so have done." Monu ments stand In various pails of the world, marking plnces where sectarian strife has manifested Itself in ntrocious, barbarous acts. Our Catholic friends blush nt the story of the Huguenots. Our Church of England friends blush at tho story of the Covenanters nnd other non-conformists. Our Prcsby- terliin friends, In turn, blush for atro cious acts, Injustice, etc., done In the name of Calvinism. Wo might almost say that each de nomination In its turn has been a sub ject of persecution from ono nnd an other. Baptists were publicly whip ped sometimes driven from their homes to exile. So were the Puritans, who afterwards became persecutors themselves. Tho Methodists also suf fered from sectarian spite nnd Jeal ousy, lgnorunco and superstition. In deed, who will dispute that Christen dom has omul tat to be ashamed of her own record, no mntter what her standpoint may be? Thank God for the advancement mndo along the line of human sym pathy! No longer can civilized peo ple tnko pleasure In public executions, tortures, burning at tho stake, as In former times. Whatever competition may remain between Christian broth' rcii, the peril Is not that of open per secution; for general sentiment has ad vanced beyond the point where pbysl enl torture could lie tolerated. Wo have come to the tlmo when Cnlvlnlsts erect n monument to Serve tus, expressing dissent from their great lender's mlstnke In cunning a Christian brother to he burned. We have come to the place where the "perils amongst false brethren" are of a different kind Now whatever Jealousies or rivalries there may be, either at home or In the mission fields, are recognized ns Im proper nnd suppressed, so fnr ns breth ren connected with popular and lulluen Hal bodies of Christians aro concerned, Hut Is It iiot true today that the Truth Is unpopular? Has this not al ways been the fact? Is It not true thnt In proportion ns the denominations have iMH-ome popular they have escap ed persecution? But woe be to those who, ns were Jesus nnd the Apostles ure unpopular! If they Indeed escape the cross, the guillotine, the rack and the fagot, they are amenable to other means of torture. Something can bo trumped up against their personality Insinuations can be given by word nnd look, and shrug of shoulder. More damage can be accomplished In this way than lu outward nllack. K II speaking, evll-surinlslng, slnu Icrs, ambiguous suggestions, etc.-nll, as torture -run be applied to the fol low-el's of Jesus today. And all who loduv take such a course aro sharers with the malefactors, even though they do not Indulge In (iijWiul torture. Who can dispute that sometimes mental tor- lure Is equally severe? In our day there nre other and more refined ways of persecuting, torturing, open to false brethren, than linprlsomiuuit or cruci fixion or burning. And what shall we any of the false brethren who do such things? And how shall we assure onrsolv s thnt we shall not be of them? Undoubtedly the Mnster Is still of the 'same mind as St. John expressed when he de clared, "Whosoever hatoth his brother Is a murderer, and ye know that no murderer hath eternal life abiding In him." tl John 3:15.) Murderers may indeed receive severe stripes, and eventunlly learn better under Mes siah's Kingdom; but no one of a mur derous condition of heart, seeking to do evil to a brother, could possibly be of suitable churncter to Ihj a joint-heir with ills Mnster In the Kingdom. "One of the Least of These." In every time, nnd now, the spirit of persecution naturally would strike most prominently certain lending fig ures; nevertheless, even as Jesus' words Implied, all lovers of righteous ness are to have more or less share lu such experiences of opposition. St. Paul mentions this, saying, "Ye en dured a grent fight of afflictions; part ly, whilst ye were made a gazing stock and partly whilst ye be came companions of them that were so used." (Hebrews 10:32, 33.) Jesus gives us the same thought In His declaration that whosoever shall of fend one of the least of these, His disciples, It were better for him that a millstone were hnnged nhout his neck and he were drowned in the depths of the Bea. Matthew 18:0. This, of course, Is very highly figura tive lnngunge, and yet it must have a special meaning. It must mean thnt the Lord has a special care over all of Ills consecrated saints; nnd thnt no mntter how poor, how weak, how Ig norant, they mny be, the very lenst of His followers nre supervised, nnd in Jury to the lenst Is punishable. Of course, there would still bo an awak ening from tho dead for the one who was drowned In the sea; and so there are possibilities of help nnd recovery for those who would stumble the Lord's "little ones." Nevertheless, the Intimation Is that of drastic punish ment. This would not mean anything like we once supposed eternal tor mentbut some Just recompense of re- wurd for every evil deed. From this standpoint we mny rcndlly assume that considerable satisfaction of Justice Is necessary; for surely a considerable number of the Lord's "little ones" have suffered persecution. And as wo have seen, not nil of this persecution lies nt the door of the world. Much of it lies nt the doo of tho professed Church of Christ "false brethren." Speaking of some such, Jesus once declared thnt they would have grent disappointment when the tlmo of re wards would come. He says, "Many shall sny unto Me in thnt Pay, Lord, Lord, hnve we not prophesied in Thy name, and uone many wonuerrui works? And I will deelnre, I do not recognize you." They will not be worthy of tho Lord's recognition ns amongst His Elect Church, Ills Brldo class. We shall be glad If they will be found worthy of somo blessing under Ills Kingdom. But there will be great disappointment to them. They missed tho greater point of the Gospel .ore. Love For the Brethren. The Lord's will concerning all ni followers is that they should love one another hs He loved them. St John expressed this sentiment, saying that ns Jesus loved the Church nnd Inld down His life for the Church, so also His followers should lay down their lives for the brethren. (1 John 3:10.) If this is the hire standard that the Lord has set for His people, how sorely some will booh lie disappointed In re spect to Ills will If tncy hnve Ignored this requirement. If, Instead of loving the brethren and laying down their lives for them, they say all mnnncr of evil ngnlnst them, etc., what then? Then they ure false brethren. Then they nre tho peril of the true brethren, ns men tioned In our text. Oh, how much the true followers of Jesus need to Impress upon themselves this grent lesson thnt love does no III to his neighbor, thnt love in sympa thetic, suffereth long nnd is kind, vnunteth not Itself, is not puffed up, seoketh not merely its own Interest and welfare, but see.keth the Interest and welfnre of othersl The supreme test of our loynlty to Ocxl Is our love for Him. And this, love Is manifested by our desire to do those things acceptable to Him. There is little that we really can do for the Almighty. Ho Is so great nnd we nre so small! But If we have Ills spirit of Love, then wo shall love nil thoao wlio love Him. And our conduct to wnrd them will demonstrate tho rcnl sentiment of our hearts. Thus seen, wo are dully making our rewnrd In the lord's sight, dally showing Him to what degree we are worthy or un worthy of Ills great reward. Those mentioned In our text ns false brethren were perilous to the true brethren, but did not get Into this po sition Immediately, It was n growth, n development. Tho wrong spirit gmd unity supplanted the right. It Is well that Christians note this Insidious canker which gnaws at the root of brotherly love, tends to poison the spirit and to bring forth the evil fruit age mentioned. Apparently, In some cases, the spirit of pride, the spirit of sectarianism, the spirit of ambition, are the lending features of the wrong course, which, If permitted to go to the heart, will develop n bad fruitage, such as we are discussing. It will pro duce false brethren, persecuting breth ren, blind to the real spirit of their Master, heady, high-minded. let us then, beloved, be more nnd more on guard against the encroach ments of the Adversary upon us ns New Creatures) Lot ns lie more and more zealous for the Spirit of our Mns ter and show forth the praises of Him who has called us out of darkness Into His marvelous light! In no way can we better show forth these praises than by exemplifying In our dally conduct the lessons we have learned of Hlmt Ye$iia'am,Cottolene- s.Brown is ensifr Woman) yfir jfev I I III Cheaper Than Butter fc. 'lew . When vou order Cottolene you are . fVio hpcf rnnldncr fat nn the mar- '..J IV Uiucimg HIV, (W- ? w-; . ... , ket butter, lard or cotton-ou imitations of Cottolene included. ; : Cottolene was the first successful cotton:oil shortening. 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