THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25. 1956 THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina Page THREE Some Looks' At Books By LOCKIE PARKER FAITH HEALING AND THE CHRISTIAN FAITH by Wade H. Boggs, Jr. (John Knox $3.50|). Re viewed by Dr. Wofford C. Tim mons. It is not often that a book so sharply focused makes an. ap peal to such a variety of readers The whole point of the author is to canvass the present-day inter est in “faith healing,” but his challenge goes away beyond those who may be seeking help or those who are proposing to of fer it, to the wider fields of medi cine and religion, and even the basic philosophies of the nature of human life in the scheme of things. Not only the sick longing to get well, and the many who are capitalizing on their troubles, but reputable doctors and minis ters and social workers all pause thoughtfully as they are chal lenged by these carefully prepar ed pages. One thing that will impress the reader at once, and will be confirmed as he progresses from chapter to chapter on to the end, is the unique ability of Dr. Boggs to handle this theme with his toric perspective, breadth of un derstanding and depth of insight. He is definitely the Christian theologian and philosopher, and especially proficient in Biblical hstory, as his place in the Pres byterian ministry and on the fac ulty of the Union Theological Seminary would show; but he is as fair minded as a man could be, carefully equating all the factors involved, sifting out the false from the true on the authority of tested testimony and authentic experience. The book is so well balanced and so completely doc umented that even the most rabid supporter of Oral Roberts would be tempered in his ex treme prejudice! I do not imply that Dr. Boggs has left us with an ambiguity, but only that he has shown great skill in presenting a total picture; and because of this he has made a very valuable contribution to us all, those who need to be warned against the ungrounded! assumptions and promises of the charlatans, and those who need to see beyond the material to the spiritual possibilities that “faith” can bring to pass. Courageously the author ar rays the “faith-healers”, before us, not only those modern radio claimants with their fantastic promises to unfortunate suffer ers, but many of the world re nown of other years and far-off places. It is quite revealing to see this long line of concern for what, historically it really is, a priestly type of “medicine-man” proclaiming supernatural power over human ills. This book does not discredit all of the claims, but it does show up the pseudo religious faith when it slumps to sheer magic, distorting the mean ing of God in human experience and setting aside the laws of both mind and body. Dr. Boggs cer tainly knows all the antecedents to our fabulous “healers” of to day; and most of all he knows the great strides that have taken place in all phases of medical science, more especially psychi atry and psyho-somatics. And with consummate grace and skill he traces the Biblical references that shed the needed light on all these human limitations, reveal ing the divine purpose of the Al mighty in the marvelous provi sions that we mortals have been taking a long time to discover. These provisions are not only in the realm of “faith” and “prayer,” but also medicines and surgical skills and humanitarian concern —all equally within the redemp tive purpose and provision of the Eternal. Of course. Dr. Boggs does not leave us hung up on the points of a controversy; the faith, the fact, the action; the laws, the remedy, the attitude, the envi ronment—these are all inter- meshed and will fit perfectly into what he believes to be “a Chris tian philosophy of health.” And thats’ what he is headed for in every chapter. He has some mighty com forting words for sick folks! He dispels completely that all sick ness is the result of sin, even though sin often results in sick ness. And he assures us that in no sense is thei hand of the Lord against us, even though His hand may be upon us in discipline and character-making. The closing chapters are as fine a description of the mission of the Church to the whole man as I have ever read. I would give a lot to be able to sit around a table with a doctor, a minister, a school teacher, a nurse, and a few understanding parents and young people, with Dr. Boggs at the head of the table, and hear him explain how the resources of both religion and medicine may be combined in a ministry to the complete well-being of us all. Not having that chance, I suggest we read the book. (Dr. Timmons will have this book for further discus sion during the ‘‘book inter pretation hour” at the Church of Wide Fellowship, 4:30 p. m., Sunday, Novem ber 25. STATE OF SIEGE by Eric Ambler (Knopf $3.50). Even the occasional reader of suspense novels knows Ambler’s books as Eastman Dillon. Union Securities & Co. Members New York Stock Exchange 105 East Pennsylvania Avenue Southern Pines, N. C. Telephone: .Southern Pines 2-3731 and 2-3781 Complete Investment and Brokerage Facilities Direct 'Wire to our Main Office in New York A. E. RHINEHART Resident Manager Consultations by appointment on Saturdays A profitable place to SAVE All Accounts Insured —UpTo— $10,000 Current Rate 31/2% —Per— Annum ACCOUNTS OPENED ON OR BEFORE THE lOth EARN INTEREST FROM THE 1st Accounts Conveniently Handled by Mail. FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION 223 Wicker Street - - - - - SANFORD. N. C. W. M. Womble. Sec. & Treas. Established in 1950. Assets Over $3,500,000.00 something special. “Journey into Fear” and ‘'“A Coffin for Dimitri- os” are tales you do not forget. Ambler is at his best when he plunges his protagonist, an intel ligent and civilized young man, into an exotic atmosphere with overtones of evil—or call them different standards of conduct— which he finds piling up around him to nightmarish proportions and with no limit in sight. This time the background is the South Seas, an Indonesian state called Sunda which has re cently attained independence and is faced with the problem of em ploying Revolutionary heroes, i. e. army officers, in peace time. Jeb Fraser, a young engineer, has just completed his contract for building a dam and is happily on his way out, waiting for a boat at the port city when he gets in volved in a situation of counter revolution and devious treachery that for mounting tension and fantastic evil is first-rate Amb ler. An enigmatic girl of Eura sian blood adds to his emotional problems. THE WARRIOR, a Novel of Osceola and Ihe Seminole War of 1835 by Frank G. Slaughter (Doubleday $3.50). A beautiful woman, a brave man and a Lost Cause. It is an old formula for romance but none better, and Mr. Slaughter has mixed these ingre dients with a skillful hand in this tale of the Seminole War in Flor ida. So far as the Indians go, it is a too familiar tale of injustice, the red man steadily pushed back by the white man who makes treaties and “breaks them as he pleases and excuses his treachery by saying that the In dians are only savages. An added element of interest in this case is the proportion of Negroes among the Seminoles, escaped slaves or the descendants of escaped slaves, whom the chiefs of the tribes steadily refuse to yield up in order to get better terms for themselves. Charles Paige, the hero, has close friends among the Semi noles and champions their cause fearlessly as a hero should; so does the beautiful Marie, the ! “book-woman,” who writes dis- ! patches for the Northern papers telling the Indians’ side of the story. The two villains, of course, are on the other side in the con flict, one a ruffian, the other a dashing gentleman, but botH quite ruthless. FIFTEEN by Beverly Cleary (Morrow $2.75). Someone has re marked that we read novels in order to understand ourselves, and leading psychologists have often quoted novelists. Certainly the average teen-age girl will recognize a comrade in Beverly Cleary’s little Jane Purdy—not too noble, not too brainy, not too beautiful but very eager to have “a definite personality.” Told with sparkling humor and real understanding, the story of Jane’s trials as a baby-sitter, her talks with best friend Millie, her dealings with her parents and most poignant of all the ups and downs of her friendship with Stan Crandall make a draida that holds the interest from start to finish. This is an encouraging sort of book whose main point is that it is best to be yourself rather than try to assume a role that you think will make you more popu lar. But the point is not over stressed. Mainly this is just very enjoyable reading and so well written that we think mothers of teen-agers may enjoy it quite as much as their daughters or, for that matter, any woman who wants to refresh her memory on what it is like to be fifteen. There are some pleasing illus trations by Joe and Beth Krush. Bread prices have risen every year since 1946. Consumers in 1955 paid an average price of 17.7 cents for a one-pound loaf of bread, a new high, and 70 per cent above the 10.4 cents paid in 1946. Get Better Sleep ON A BETTER MATTRESS Let us make your old mattress over like new! Any size, any type made to order. 1 DAY SERVICE MRS. D. C. THOMAS Southern Pines Lee Bedding and Manufacturing Co. LAUREL HILL, N. C. Makers of “LAUREL QUEEN” BEDDING BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN Background Scripture: Psalm 23. Devotional Readingr: Ezekiel 34:11-16. The Paths of God Lesson for October 28, 1956 ■\17ITH a poem, the best thing to ’ » do is not to listen to a professor analyzing it. This may be of some help if the poem is an obscure one. But where the words are simple, you don’t need a professor. What you need to do is to listen to some one read it who knows how to read and who loves poetry, or to read it aloud to your self, for poetry is not intended for the eye but for , the ear. Let the poem itself speak to you. If it js not too long, let it literally become a part of you. Dr. Foreman That is to say, commit it to mem ory, file it in your little grey cells so that you will always be able to find it. Millions of people have done just this with what is perhaps the most widely loved poem in the world, the 23rd Psalm. God the Shepherd No commentary can improve on it, and this column does not pre tend to do anything but set down a foot-note or two to an inspired masterpiece. The first footnote is on this picture of God as a Shep herd. One thing this brings out is the vast difference between God and ourselves. The shepherd can get along by himself; the sheep can not. The sheep knows only what is just a few feet in front of him. He has a poor memory and very poor judgment. The Shepherd has to think ahead aU the time. There are notions of religion that speak of God as the “man upstairs” and similar familiar expressions. There are notions about God that put him down on a sort of buddy-buddy basis with ourselves. How sUly! Some people even think that if they just pray hard enough, that is, if they want ‘something enough and keep nagging God long enough, he is bound to see it their way and let them have what they ask. God Cares for Me It has been found that one good way to read this Psalm is to read it aloud, emphasizing the personal pronouns. The Lord is my Shep herd; I shall not want ... I shall fear no evil, for Thou are with me . . . Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me . . . Reli gion has to. be in the first person singular or it isn’t real. You can go aU your life knowing this Shep herd Psalm by heart, and thinking what a lovely picture this is, of God the Shepherd of his people. But then one day you make the psalm your own, not in mind only but in heart—the Lord is MY Shep herd!—and then it simply comes alive. It helps, too, to remember the difference between a shepherd in David’s time (and still, in that country) and a sheep-herder today. A farmer, in Kentucky for in stance, who raises sheep just has them in a big pasture well fenced in. He has to keep his eye on them, all right, but, then he can go to town or do other things. In a big green pasture a sheep can’t do it self too much damage. But in Pal estine, with no big green pasture, only little narrow strips of green along creek beds in rocky ravines, with jackals and other animals al ways on the prowl on the wild un fenced hillsides, the shepherd sim ply has to be there protecting and guiding each sheep personally or they will be ruined. So God the Shepherd cares for me, individu ally, he protects me, fights for me, he does not intend that I should be lost. The Paths of God Some kinds of religion, even some kinds of the Christian reli gion, think of God as living in some sublime heaven, watching man as he toils along his low and winding trail. The picture in this beloved Psalm is quite different. The Shep herd travels with his sheep, from one pasture to another. When one stream or water hole dries up, the Shepherd knows where another is, and leads the flock there. So the Bible reveals to us a God who, hard as this may be to believe, ac tually shares our afflictions, is close beside us at every step. So the paths the flock of God follow are his paths, not because he laid them out but because they are the paths where he goes. They are not easy. The peace of God is not free dom from danger. The paths of God go by cliffs where falling rocks threaten; they lead to springs and streams that will die in sum mer’s heat, they descend among the shadows of death, they are within sight of God’s enemies and ours. But iSince they are God’s paths, we walk secure, knowing His choice is always best. (Based on outlines copyrighted by the Division of Christian Education, Na tional Council of the Churches of Christ in the U. S. A. Released by Community Press Service.) Bookmobile Schedule Tuesday—^Routh’s Service Sta tion, 9:30; Sam Taylor, 9:45; Lewis Marion, 10; Cameron School, 10:15; Cameron, 11:15— 12:15; Wade Collins, 12:30; Mis? Margaret Gilchrist, 12:45; Walter McDonald, 1; Paul Thomas Sta tion, 1:30. Wednesday — Doub’s Chapel Route; Arnold Thomas, 10; Clyde McKenzie, 10:15; Elmer 'Vest 10:30 Mrs. Francis Scarboro, 11; R. L. Blake, 11:30; W. E. Jackson, 12; Robert Blake, 12:30; Clyde Auman, 12:45; Landis Cox, 1; Frank Cox, 1:30. Thursday—^Westmoore School, 10; Roland Nall, 11:45; Charles Stutts, 12; Arthur Baldwin, 12:30; C. C. Cole, 12:45; Davis School, 1:15; Enloe’s Grill, 1:45; Carth age, 2:30. Friday—Murdocksville Road:: Dan Lewis, 9:45; W. R. Dunlop, 10; Miss M. McKenzie, 10:15; Tom Clayton, 10:30; Mrs. A. Rice, 11; Mrs. Ethel Black, 11:15 Ed- i ward Black, 11:30; Earl Monroe, 12; Mrs. Helen Neff, 12:30; Coy McKenzie, 12:45; R. E. Lea, 1:15; ! J. V. Cole, 1:30; Ed Smith, 1:45; H. E. Blue, 2; Ira Garrison, 2:15; M. L McGuirt, 2:45. Your tractor ignition key can be a key to safety or tragedy. The National Safety Council and the U. ,S. Department of Agricul ture remind you to shut off the engine if you work on it, refuel or oil it, or make any adjust ments. Remember that ma chinery is quicker than the hand. Keep your tractor as a good friend with careful handling. NEW BOOKS from Carolina Authors WHITEY ROPES AND RIDES, a western for boys by Glen Rounds $2.25 ^ 1 f OTHNIEL JONES, a novel of Rev- <->11111011 in North Carolina by John Adams Leland. $3.75 REBEL BOAST, the true story of five young soldiers from North Carolina in the Civil 'War, by Manly "Wade ■Wellman. $3.95 Bennett & Penna. Ave. Telephone 2-3211 Attend The Church of Your Choice Next Sunday <• « No. It’s just a rope ... at the break ing point. But, frankly, it’s a good illustration of how a man feels when his nerves are “worn to a frazzle.” The Church has never claimed that religion is a cure for Irazzled nerves. But a man’s Christian faith does this for him: It shows him a Purpose in life more important than mere existence. It shows him a Power more effective than his own strength. It shows him a Future more rewarding than selfish gain. And it gives him courage more lasting than the sheer force of his human will. With these spiritual resources, founded in the certainty that God understands and helps, a man never reaches “the breaking point.” For when his human reserve is exhausted ... he has only begun to tap the vast reservoir of Divine Strength. THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE CAN SHOW YOU THE WAY! the church for AU .. . AU FOR THE CHURCH char^M building of ®°°‘' '‘““nship. It ®Pbitual values Wuhout a strong Church, neither sur”rve T.."" '‘’'■"““on can survive There are four sound P®"'’" should Pon lhTch^^ regularly and sup- =°be, (3) For the sake For'^th. (-I) terini "nd ma- leriaj support Pl^n 4^ Day Sunday. Monday..., Tuesday./. Wcdnesd'y. Thursday.. Friday,. Saturday, Jeremiah 17 g.17 6 li9 • 1 Corinthians 15 20-34 .1 Corinthians 15 35-58 t>S?””*****”* 16 1-14 Phihppians i 1.31 Coi^riaht 1956, Ktitt«r Adv. Service, Strmabursr, Va. CHURCH (Presbyterian) Cheves K. Ligon, Minister Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Wor ship service, 11 a.m. Women of the Church meeting, 8 p.m. Mon day following third Sunday. ■llhe Youth Fellowships meet at 7 o’clock each Sunday evening. Mid-week service, Wednesday, 7:15 p.m. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH New Hampshire Ave. Sunday Service, 11 a.m. . Sunday School, 11 a.m. Wednesday Service, 8 pm. Reading Room in Church Build ing open Wednesday 3-5 p.m. THE CHURCH OF WIDE FELLOWSHIP (Congregational) Cor. Bennett and New Hampshire Wofford C. Timmons, Minister Sunday School, 9:45 am. Worship Service, 11 a.m. Sunday, 6:30 p.m.. Pilgrim Fel lowship (Young people). Sunday, 8:00 p.m.. The Forum. EMMANUEL CHURCH (Episcopal) East Massachusetts Ave. Martin Caldwell, Rector Holy Communion, 8 am. (First Sundays and Holy Days, 8 a.m. and 11 a.m.) Family Service, 9:30 a.m. Church School, 10 a.m. Morning Service, 11 a.m. Young Peoples’ Service League, 6:30 p.m. Holy Communion, Wednesdays and Holy Days, 10 a.m. and Fri day, 9 a.m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH New York Ave. at South Ashe David Hoke Coon, Mimster Bible School, 9:45 am. Worship 11 a.m. Training Union, 7 p.m. Evening Worship, 8 p.m. Scout Troop 224, Monday, 7:30 p.m,; mid-week worship, Wednes day 7:30 p.m.; choir practice Wednesday 8:15 p.m. Missiona^ meeting, first and third Tuesdays, 8 p.m. Church and family suppers, second Thurs days, 7 p.m. MANLY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Grover C. Currie, Minister Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship Service, 2nd and 3rq Sunday evenings, 7:30. Fourth Sunday morning, 11 a.m. Women of the Church meeting, 8 p.m., second Tuesday. Mid-week service 'Thursday at 8 p.m. ST. ANTHONY'S (Catholic) Vermont Ave. at Ashe Father Peter M. Denges Sunday masses 8 and 10136 am.; Holy Day masses 7 and 9 a.m.; weekday mass at 8 a.m. Confes sions heard on Saturday between 5-6 and 7:30-8:30 p.m. SOUTHERN PINES METHODIST CHURCH Robert L. Bame, Minister (Services held temporarily at Civic Club. Ashe Street) Church School, 9:45 am. Worship Service, 11 a. m.; W. S. C. S. meets ?ach first Tues day at 8 p. m. —This Space Donated in the GRAVES MUTUAL INSURANCE CO. CITIZENS BANK & TRUST CO. CLARK & BRADSHAW SANDHILL DRUG CO. SHAW PAINT & WALLPAPER CO. CHARLES W. PICQUET MODERN MARKET W. E. Blue JACK'S GRILL & RESTAURANT Interest of the Churches by— CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT CO. UNITED TELEPHONE CO. JACKSON MOTORS, Inc. Your FORD Dealer McNEILL'S SERVICE STATION Gulf Service PERKINSON'S, Inc. Jeweler SOUTHERN PINES MOTOR CO, A 8t P TEA CO.