ORGAN OF THE -A^FRIO-A-UT METHODIST EPISCOPAL ZTEOIST OHUROH IN AMiERIOA. VOLUME XXL __' CHARLOTTE, N. C„ THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,1897. NUMBER 35 UNPARDONABLE SIN, What Is It? Is It Possible To B Committed In Oar Day? matt. 12:31, 32—II heb. 12:17. [Synopsis of a sermon preached ii Asheville, N. C., by Rev. G. L. White ^M. D.] You see from the first passage tha I read that there is a sin against thf Holy Ghost for which a man is neve: pardoned. Once having committee it, he is bound hand and foot foi the duDgeons of despair. Sermon! may be preached to him, songs may be sung to him, prayers may be of fered in his behalf; but all to no pur pose. He is a captive for this world and the world that is to come. Dc you suppose that there is any one here to-night who has committed thal sin? All sins are against the Holy Ghost but my text Bpeaks of one especially What is it? It is very clear to my own mind that the sin against the Holy Ghost was the ascribing tht works of the spirit to the agency of tht devil in the time of the apostles. In deed, the Bible distinctly tells us that In other words, if a man had sighi given to him, or if another was raised from the dead, and some one standing there should say, “.This man got his sight by Satanic powers, the Holy Ghost did not do this; Beelzebub ac complished it,” or, “This man raised from the dead was raised by Satanic influence;” the man who said that dropped dowh under the curse of the text, and had committed the fatal sin against the Holy Ghost. Now I do not think it is possible in this day to commit that sin. I think it was possible only in Apostol ic times. But it is a very terrible thing to say anything against the Ho ly Ghost, and it is a marked fact that our race has been marvelously kept back from that profanity. You hear a man swear by the name of the Eter nal God, and by the name of Jesus Christ, but you never hear a man swear by the name of the Holy Ghost. There are those here to-night who fear they are guilty of the unpardon able sin. Have you.such anxiety? Then I have to tell you positively that you have not committed that sin, because the very anxiety is a result of the movement of the gra cious Spirit. I can look off upon this audience and feel that there is salva tion for all. But while I have said I do not think it is possible for us to commit that particular sin spoken of in the text, I have by reason of the second text, to call your attention to the fact that there are sins which, though they may be pardoned, are in some re spects irrevocable; and you can find no place for repentance, though you seek it carefully with tears. Esau had a birthright given him. In old en times it meant not only temporal but spiritual blessings. One day Esau took his birthright a»d traded it off for something to eat. Oh, the folly ! But let us not be too severe upon him, for some of us have com mitted the same folly. After he had made the trade he wanted to get if back. Just as though some of these business men to-morrow morning should take all of their notes and bonds and gov rnment securities and should go into a restaurant, and in a fit of recklessness and hungei throw all those securitiescto the coun ter and ask for a plate of food, mak ing that exchange. This was the on< Esau made. He sold .his birthrigh for a mess of pottage, and he wai very sorry about it afterwards; bu he found no -place for repentance though he sought it carefully witl tears. There is an impression in almos every man’s mind that some when in the future there will be a chanci where he can correct all of his mistake Live as we may, if we only repent ii time, God will forgive us, an< then all will be well as though we ha< never committed a sin. I will shov you, to-night, if God will help me that there is such a thing as unsuc cessful repentance; that there an things done wrong that always sta; wrong; and for them you may seel some place of repentance, and seek i carefully, and never find it. Belong ing to this class of irrevocable sins o mistakes i» the folly of a misspen We may look back to ou days and think how we nog lected Chemistry, or Geology. We may be sor y about it all of our days, ' but that doesn’t bring them back. My brother, they are gone I Gone! You may le very sorry about it, and God may forgive you so that you may at laet reach heaven; but you will never get over some of these mis haps that 1 ave come to your souls as , the result of neglect of early duty. , You may try to undo it; you cannot undo it. When you had a boy’s arms , and a boy’) eyes and a boy’s heart, , you ought to have attended to those things. A. man says at fifty years of age, “I do wish I could get over these habits of indolence.” When did you yet them? At twenty or twenty-fiv i .years of age. You can not shake ;hem off. They will hang to you the very day of your death. If a young man, through a long course of evil conduct, undermines his phys ical health, and then repents of it in after life, the Lord may pardon him; but that does not bring back good phys cal condition. The simple : fact is that men and women take twen ty years to build up influences that re quire all i he rest of their life to break down. T ilk about a man beginning life when he is twenty-one years of age; a wcman beginning life when she is eigh teen years of age. In many respects that is the time they close life. CONFERENCE GLEANINGS. :jy eev. j. c. coln. A few dollars privately dropped into the curses of some of the super annuated ministers will sweeten their clos mg days. Fishing committees abound, but, they ofte i fail to get their drag nets into the waters where the big fish swim. The Sa tanic Conqueror comes up to the annual session with the preachers, and, “Jet us” is the Conqueror’s name. If the bishop looks grave do not take it fc r a sign that he means to send yox. to a grave town where you will need a coffin and a grave-digger. If a pr jsiding elder rushes past you hurriedly when you want just a word with him, remember the Lord is always r ;ady- to talk with you. The wry to have a pleasant con ference i 3 to sleep in the chamber of peace, w.th the bosom of Jesus for a pillow, a nd your head close up to His heart. If the bishop, as he comes into the conference, does not happen to stop and shake hands ;with you don’t let the devil make you think that he in tended to slight you. The jioil-call is solemn, especially when th i names of the translated ones are reac led. How about the general roll-call? Who^will be there? Shall you, shallf? Presiding elders should not prom ise more than one man, Gold Hill. He kno vs only one can go there, and as a rule, he knows who that man will be. The f residing elders are the devil’s scare-crows; they represent them as having horns, porcupine quills and iron he* sis to tread offending .preach ers intc the dupt; but they are clev er fello vs after all. A bea iitiful bouquet for the bishop’s table, nade up of the rose of sharon, and th< i flowers of meekness, gentle ness, patience, long-suffering and brotherly kindness, is beautiful and rich an d in fragrance. Seer staries of the benevolences ' should bring an alarm clock to con 1 ferenc*, and set it to go off in half an ' hour from the time they commence ’ speaki lg; then wind up with half an 1 hour of short, sharp, earnest, evan gelical service. ' Sab ation is the treasury replenish ! er. * Ha >py is the preacher who when * asked where he lives can reply: I live 1 on the margin of two great oceans; ^ one tl e great ocean that has been ^ heavii g and rolling since the cre 7 ation; and more than all in full vrew * of the fathomless ocean of God’s love so tha t X often sing: 3 Th< u art the sea of love \ W1 ere all my pleasures roily c The circle where my passions mourn, ^ Th< t centre of my soul. ’ Yo’kvMe, 8. C. BisS top G. W. Clinton is a yonng man but h« is fast going to the top as a leadl ing e. :pouent.-The Western Index. . ilfl POWER OF THE BALLOT Let Us Use It To Enforce Equality 0 Opportunity For AH. AN ABLE AND TIMELY ADDRESS. [Counselor T. McCants Stewart make! the oration at the Emancipation Cele bration at Bath, N. Y.J In the month of August for over t half century the people of Western New York have publicly celebratec the emancipation of the slave. Th< custom grew out of Great Britain1! abolition of slavery in the West In dies; and Gerritt Smith, Frederick DouglaBs, Samuel Ringold Ward Henry Highland Garnet and othei American anti-slavery leaders used this celebration to arouse sentiment in favor of the abolition of slavery it the United States. Although slaverj is a dead issue, the people of Bath, Penr Yan, Ithaca, Rochester, Corning, Can andaigua and the regions of the State of Pennsylvania bordering around these towns still annually gather and -rejoice with exceeding great joy over the fact that “freedom is national,” as Charles Sumner once put it. They hold the celebration one year at one town, and the next year at another, and wherever it is held crowds gath er there from every neighboring lo cality. From break of day, when bells ring, and cannon fire a salute, there is bustle and go until the stars sink. The chief feature of the day is the procession through the streets, x-^ich are decoratad, to the public park, where an oration is delivered. Frederick Douglass, John M. Lang ston, W. B. Derrick, T. Thomas For tune, J. C. Price, B. K, Bruce and other leading men of the race have furnished the oratory for these cele brations. Counselor T. McCants Stewart, the orator of the day, said, among other things: “A new question has come upon the stage of action since the eloquent voice of Frederick Douglass and Samuel Ring old Ward sounded in these parts and at such celebrations as this the battle cry of freedom. We gather here to-day, and, despite the new conditions, we shout the same old battle cry of freedom. We rec ognize the fact that a conflict is upon us sterner than the old fight, in which Hen ry Highland Garnet was a leader. We are striving for equality of opportunity in the enjoyment of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. And we are not without hope in this struggle, because freedom is spread throughout all the earth, brushing out of its way, like Ni agara, fossilized ideas of despotism and monarchy and scattering new concep tions of brotherhood and equality. The sovereignty of the individual, the fact that no man is naturally entitled to be called master, but that all men are cre ated equal in their right to opportunity, is fast becoming the universal law. Witness the marvelous change in Europe. Even Russia’s grasp of its iron rod is changing, and Great Britain long since became a practical Republic with its Prime Minister as president by grace of the people. While herein our own coun try citizenship is the symbol of individ ual sovereignty and the ballot is the sceptre of his power; so that in the exer cise of his elective franchise, each Amer ican is king, illustrating in his person the only rule by divine right. “If we win the fight we are now in— the fight for equal opportunity, oppor tunity to labor and opportunity to enjoy, we must use as weapons business and in dustrial pursuits. We must be come producers. Wo must stop being dependents; stop working for salaries and wages, and become employers; cre ate something, which other people will want, and upon which other people will depend. Then let us use the ballot, and make it do better work in the future than in the past. Every race variety un der the American flag, except Afro Americans, finds in the ballot a battle axe, which never fails to destroy the enemy. Tax beer, and the Germans overturn the government. Touch the Catholic Church, and the Irish vote strikes like a thunder-bolt. Discrimi nate against the Jew, and every Hebrew ballot pierces the politician to the very heart, and he does so no more. But the Afro-American takes kicks, cuffs, lash ings from every hand and marches like a slave to the polls tb reward with re newed honor and power those who treat him with scorn and contempt. “Throughout the nation a wail is go ing up from among Afro-Ameripans over the shabby treatment whioh he is receiving from the present Administra tion. Editor Fortune of the New York Age is leading a protest whose echo is heard throughout the land, and which will sooner or later take shape in such form as will startle the politicians* and i arouse them to tj^e fact that Afro-Amer ipans have passed out of the period of complaint into that of action. Why is not Lyons appointed postmaster at Augusta, Ga ? Will Crum be named for postmaster at Charleston, 8. 0. f' Should not Lang, ston have been nominated for Commis of the District of Columbia, pdUHH •1-. Bruce sent as Minister to the Soutl American government ? Why is Colo > nel Pledger, and why is Colonel Lewis and why are other deserving Afro Americans ignored, while their whit< allies in politics, no abler, no more infln ential, no more deservirg, have been giv 't en places of honor and emolument in th< public service ? What public man of oui race in the great State of New York hai been honored ? Not one ! Why an these things true, I ask ? Why have Af ro-Americans in the President’s owi State been passed by in the distributioi of patronage with only a crumb throwi 1 to one of Ohio’s ablest men, who ough to have declined the job without thanks' Why has Mayor Strorg of New Tort City* ignored Afro-Americans entirely although he owes his place to our vote' Why are %11 these things true ? The] are true, because we' have habitnall] turded the other cheek, when smitten oi the right. We have cried at electioi time as we faced thoi e who turned us down ‘ With all thy faults I love thee still. “But this thing will end. Aye, yes the end is near. Wo must strike bact when struck, no matter who gets hurt If we should do this, we would teach i national lesson, we would show what j mighty weapon the ballot is in oui hands. We would us; it to enforce jus tice and equality to our brethren in the South, and we would loll away the stone from the mouth of the sepulchre of po litical degradation in which we now lie.’ The orator then discussed the ques tion of citizenship in its largest sense and stirred the patriotism of the en tire audience by dealing with matters affecting black and white alike, and then sketched the results accom plished by the race since emancipa tion. He dwelt uj)on the fact that we are in the country to stay and that we»must work out our destiny here. He advocated industrial edu cation and urged the race to become producers by engaging in business pursuits and in farming. He illustrat ed many of his views with humorous anecdotes, and kept the vast audience enthusiastic throughout his address, which occupied an hour. He ended by saying : “We cannot change in 25 years the conditions of 250 years standing. We shall come up, felloiir citizens, through the process of evolution. A change in our relationship to other races will come when we get wealth as a class and cul ture as a class; wheri we come to be a class of producers; when we come to represent as a class business and indus trial forces. Let us never forget, fellow citizens, that wealth is power, that knowledge is power j that character is power, and that we are charged with a great responsibility so far as it is our du ty to bring these forces to our aid both as individuals and as a class. Napoleon said to his mighty legions, as they stood in battle array under the pyramids of Egypt, ‘Forty centuries look down upon us.’ Moved by the 4ame spirit, Nelson said to his brave sailors, as they faced the enemy, ‘Englancj expects every mau to do his duty/ So to-day, generations look down upon us, and expect us to do our duty. Voices shout ‘forward’ at us out of air and out of sky. They bid us strive to transmit to generations yet un born our grand nationality and citizen ship, so that liberty and equality may be the last best heritage of our common brotherhood”.—N»Y. Age. spead-eagle squall, BACKWOOD PHILOSPHY. Truth hates nothing worse than concealment ; but; if men’s breasts were made of glaiis the truth -could not be hidden. There are some trees like some nfen they enrich' the earth; others impoverish. * The Arab said :1 “If thou canst not take things by the* head, take them by the tail," but say : If you can’t be the bell sheep gallop in the flock.” We have plenty of ministers in Zion who can make the words that “hustl but our bishops have said in other if we expect large' churches. I have heard it said that whoever will eat the kernel must crack the nut; but there he s been such a thing in Zion (and may be now) of eating the kernel withoi: t knowing whether there is such a thing as a nut. Whenever the winds of trouble whistle around uf, we shquld join in the whistle; for two whistles make harmony, * Harmony is a law of heaven. The winds are composing a dead march to be sung this winter, the title of which is: “Wlierd have you been all the summer, the winter time is come and you’ve got no clothes,” The man who has a chronic debili ty for lying makes himself the hero : MAN OP GREAT FAITH. > The Great Faith And Wise Choice Oi The Hebrew Lawgiver. . BISHOP CLINTON’S ELOQUENT SERMON . Yesterday morning a large and! ence assembled in Taylor-st Firs! 1 Methodist church and listened wit! 1 great interest and profit to a fervent and eloquent sermon by Bishop 6 W. Clinton, of the African Methodist , Episcopal Zion Church. In introduc ■ ing his distinguished guest, Dr. Chas Edward Locke, the pastor, said that a few years ago he and the Bishoj ’ were brother pastori in the city oi Pittsburg, and it afforded him great pleasure to present the Bishop to the congregation as his personal friend, The sermon was a strong presenta tion of the charactei of Moses, and bore the marks of the refinement and scholarship of the earnest preacher. Following is a transcript of the excel lent discourse : The Bishop announced as his topic, “The Great Faith and Wise Choice oi Moses,” from the text: Hebrews 11:24-26. He began by saying: “To strive for a plate of honor and a position of distinction in a good cause, or among noble persons, is an endeavor worthy of the ambit .on of any man. When such an endeavor brings a man into the higher favor a:id greater service of God, and at the same time tends to promote the happiness of his fellows and the good of his countr j, it then becomes a duty. History, bott secular and re ligious,furnishes the na mes of men whose • lives and deeds have some down to us as a heritage and ben ^faction which we do well to profit bj emulating their worthy examples. In the beautifully in teresting chapter from which the text is taken, the apostle give 3 a list of-worthies who won their achievements for God and man by their simple and earnest faith. In this list, no name stands deservedly higher and shines w .th more brilliant luster in the galaxy of religious stars than the name of M >ses. The Bishop then gave a graphic account of Moses’ life from the time when he was adopted by Pharaoh’s daughter until he .visited his oppressed brethren and started out from Egypt to the land of Midian. “Moses’ checkered, eventful and varied experiences charm our fancy and call forth our highest admiration. There are many phases of ffis life upon which I might talk at length, rat the present oc casion affords only time to briefly con sider his great faith and wise choice. The lust point in this connection that impresses us is the tint when he makes his choice. Says th3 text; ‘Whenhe was come to years, that is when he was 40 years of age,” Acts 7:28. His youth ful frivolities and unsettled notions were things of the past. He had not only reached manhood, but his inexperience and lack of wisdom had been overcome by the training whict ho received from the wisest of the Egyptians, and the ad vantages offered by Pharaoh’s court. This was a most opportune period for him to make a decision which mafts the turning point in hi:) marvelous career and forms an important epoch in the his tory of one of the greatest peoples of the earth. His example is commended to all young people whose school life is ended or who may be cal ed upon to decide what shall be their future course in life. His great faith stards out prominently when we note the things which he sur rendered in makmg iiis choice. “1st. He refused (o be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter. This refusal not only deprived him ol the comforts of the elegant home in vhich he had long abode, but precluded the possibility of his attaining to the throne and crown to which he would have been the legal heir, since Pharaoh had no son. * * * * To have remained at court didnot necessarily prevent him from being pious as some have argued. We have In Joseph, Dan iel, Esther and Nehi miah illustrious ex* amples of persons oo mpying similar posi tions, whose piety shines forth in re splendent beauty when oompared with the profligacy, idolatry and wickedness of their times. But Moses knew, doubt less, that he could not accomplish the great task which ho felt was laid upon him asnid such environments; Are thSre not men to-day occupying positions where their lives aid influences do not tell for God? If there be such it is foil time they were giving up and taking a decided stand for Clirlst. Says the Mas ter: ‘Whosoever would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.’ “2nd. Moses alsi surrendered' the prospect of vast we iltfl—all the riches of Egypt. Like the great Apostle Haul, he counted all things 1 iss that he gain the greater riohes of Christ. His oonduot was quite different from that of men even of ouftown time. The love of mon ey, which is the ‘root of all evil,’ is deep imbedded in tb»j hearts of a majority of mankind. Mdn have compassed hand and sea, faced datjgmand death, resorted to ways that are) dark and tricks that are vain in the g& edy efforts and mad rush far gain and g (tfd. What an illqs nof this we 1 in the heedless re that men were as eager for the one thing needful, that good part which cannot be ’ taken away. When we consider what a deteriorating effect vast wealth and much power have upon religious lives of most men we say, well might Moses have given up all these. “3rd. He renounced the pleasures which his position would secure to him. Happily are theytermed ‘ pleasures of sin.’ ’Tis true, there are innocent pleasures and harmless amusements, but too many fail to stop at these. Some to whom po sition will never come and whose pros pect for vast riches is not sufficient to make these great snares, yet how often these same persons are lured into paths to ruin and go down deeper until the , victims are cast into outer and irretriev able darkness. “Many ask what harm is there in cer tain things. This is putting the question wrongly. Rather should we ask, What good is there in it ? We are taught that the chief end of man is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever. The apostle says whatsoever we do we should do all to the glory of God. Any pleasure or amusement which we are called upon to engage in where we can’t glorify God, we should refrain from it. “Men of all times have been beguiled, bewildered and destroyed by certain pleasures. Wise Solomon, of Bible fame; brave Mark Anthony, victorious Alex ander the Great,1^brilliant Edgar Allen Poe, and the famous Parnell, and many lesser lights in past and present times i have bowed their knees at the altars of the god of pleasure and gone from thence to the lowest depths of infamy and death. To all who are enticed by such dangers I hold up the example of Moses.” The Bishop concluded his discourse by referring to the hardships which Moses endured by casting his lot with the people of Israel, and then referred in glowing terms to his career as a great leader, his undying fame thus acquired the lasting glory which he gained as a faithful servant of God. He wound up with a beautiful climax made by contrasting the fading glory and perishing character of all that Moses forsook with the abiding and ever-increasing beauty of. the things gained by choosing Christ. He in vited all to examine the two and urged upon them to make the choice made by Moses.—The Portland Oregonian. OUR SMALLER COLLEGES. “There are a few striking facts about the small American college,” writes Elf ward W. Bok in the August Ladie»' Home Journal. “ One striking fact is that sixty per cent, of the brainiest Americans who have risen to prominence and success are graduates of colleges whose names .are scarcely known outside of their own States. It is a fact, also, that during the past ten years the majority of the new and best methods of learning have ema nated from the smaller colleges, and have been adopted later by the larger ones. Because a college happens to be unknown two hundred miles from the place of its location does not always mean that the college is not worthy of wider repute. The fact cannot be disputed that the most direct teaching, and necessarily the teaching most productive of good results, is being done in the smaller American colleges. The names of these colleges may not be familiar to the majority of people, but that makes them none the less worthy places of learning. The larger colleges are unquestionably good. But there are smaller colleges just as good, and, in some respects, better. Some of the finest educators we have are attached to the faculties of the smaller institutions of learning. Young girls or young men who are being educated at one of the smaller colleges need never feel that the fact of the college being a small on s places them at a disadvantage in compari son with the friend or companion who has been sent to a larger and better known college. It is not the college: it is the student,” Rev. C. R. Conrad, our beloved pastor, is visiting all mission points on his oircuit. During his turkey hunt about and around the village of Turkey, he found several of us Zion members, who would not leave Zion, though too far from any other Zion ohuroh to attend conveniently. We are very eager to build ar church here which will make the fifth on the cir ' cuit. God has enabled us, with the help and encouragement of our beloved pastor, to frame our new church. We are also receiving some help from our friends, white and colored. We mean to have a new church at Turkey. Our pastor is a graduate of the Golds boro State Normal School, and also at student of Livingstone College, and is, of a truth, a "living-stone’* in the conference building. He, by revival meetings, has increased the member , ZION IS EXTRAVAGANT. Suffering I nstitutions—Centennial Hon ey—No Need of Robes. P/r REV. W. J. SIDES. Extravagance, poor institutions, abusing ministers for non-perform ance of duties, seem to be the most potent subjects agitating the minds of those who desire to see the old ship of Church sail gloriously over life’s great ocean. ' I must commend you, Mr. Editor, * in every action you have taken to champior. the cause of Zion, but why don’t you knock the life out of this monster, extravagance? We are tired of seeing the money of the Church collected for the various institutions of our Church, prodigally spent. What has become of the Centennial money? It does seem to me that from the interest that was stirred up in the Church, and the excitement that was displayed in New York last Fall at the Centennial Celebration, that the various institutions of the Church ought net to be in such a critical con dition; they ought to have something left besides the eloquent speeches that were delivered. All of our institutions were crying before the Centennial and now they are still bleating. The institutions have not been benefited from the re sults of the Centennial Jubilee. If they had, there would be less whin ing in the convention. The situation— ^ is becoming to be very precarious and morbid i n our Church. There are a number of men not doing any thing in the Church and you are knocking them senseless. .There is a class of men that spend the money of the Church injudiciously and they need pelting. We are going to wait pa tiently i:o see what has' become of the Centennial money. Another extravagance is spending a whole loj of money uselessly for episcopal robes. I am informed that ,_ an annual conference appropriat ed the money collected to print their minutes to buy an episcopal robe for the chieftain of their con ference. Thousands of members are deprived of the proceedings of this important assembly and ^one 'man wears the great robe that actually cost the taxation of many a hard day’s tcil to raise the money that the people thought would be spent di rectly for the benefit of the Church, when to their surprise the money is invested in robes. The time has come woen we musfspend the money of (he Church in its entirety judi ciously, . I remember one esteemed and highly honored prelate who was' not a thousand miles from here on .a sac ramental occasion, and actually the people were so cold and excited, so wonderfully amazed, until it eeemed V* that the robe knocked all of the-spir- ^ itual life out of the communionists and the Eucharistic services. We are to excite the people .to continue , a perpetual memory of the death of Christ until His coming again. How are we to do this when we encourage x. a cold, obsolete and ceremonious rite in the Church? Primeval Method ists stepped much of their ceremoni ous de potions in the earlier days of Methodism. They saw that it was a failure and it is nonsense and fool ishness for us to follow the fathers of Methodism and pick up their failures to experiment upon in our Church. I am satisfied with the progress that Zion has made during the last cen tury; her triumphs, her successes; and the stubborn conflicts against'the strong powers of darkness have as tounded the very powers of hell it self. And this suoceas must be ac credited to the wonderful working of the Holy Ghost and not to vain show, prodigal living and ceremonious de votions. fr R6v. A. J. Rodgers, Presiding Elder, held my second quarter May 14th and 15th. We had a glorious time. ' I have received in church 29 members and have not started my re^ vival yet. I have raised en my work up to the seoond quarter, $330.26. We .ht.d a grand rally the 5 th Sunday in May and raised $30. We intend, God