10J :." J) '. rp i 4 I In 1 i J2j J. J. JAMES, Editor. )cBote& lo ttcltgicm, iitoralita, literature, Agriculture anfc eneral i intelligence. C. HEREWITH Co., rrc;ri:t .VOLUME XX: NO. 22. : RALEIGH, N.j C.; THURSDAY, MAY 31. 1855. S WHOLE WO. 116 2 I - J I ' J 1 ' ': ! ' '--: v-V": " ' , ;.- . i --i " - '- ' . .. THE BIBLICAL RECORDER A Religious and Ldterary Paper: . Published weekly at Raleigh, N. C, at $2 00 per annum, payable in all cases is advance. I - JA11 letters on business should be directed to G. Meredith & Co.i Raleigh, N. C. " 1 . All letters containing communications, or in any way relating to the editorial department, should bj addressed to Rev. J. J. J axes, or Editor of the Biblical Recorder." , - v - - ; J&T All communications, to insure attention, must bs directed to Ualeigh, N. C pott-paid. . For further particulars see last page. j I THE LAW OF NEWSPAPERS. V j 1 Subscribers who do not give express notice to the contrary are considered wishing to continue their subscription.' ' i 2. If the subscribers order the discontinuance of their papers, the publishers may continue to send them till all cash charges are paid.' ' V fCjg j 3. If subscriber neglect or refuse to take their pa pers firom'tne effice to which they are directed, they are held responsible until they have settled their bill and order their paper discontinued. - ' j 4. If subscribers remove to other places without inlorming the publisher, and the paper is sent to the former direction, they are-held responsible. j 5. The courts have decided that refusing to take a paper or periodical from the office, or removing and leaving it uncalled for, is " prima facie evidence of intentional fraud. ! f , - For the Recorder. The Tail Untaken Away. "Great is the mystery of Godliness." Why this is so, oar gracious and adorable! Benefactor has not informed us. He prom - id the world a Savior ; but that Savior tar ried four thousand years. He promised to A-' braham the signal honor that the Savior should j descend from his family ; but- the faithful pa- j triarch's children saw him not in twenty-two : hundred years. Believers in Christ are God's i favorites; but their way to heaven is appoin ted through" tribulation. The Christian Reli- i gion is dear to our Precious Redeemer ; yet he i has permitted it to be opposed by enemies, and : dishonored by heresies. Why these things are so, is a question which ; claims no solution at our hands. : It is enough for us to know that, by many j who "profess to be the friendsand followers of ; our Blessed Lord and Saviour, mischievous in novations and destructive errors, have been introduced;? and held in his name. Among the most obstinate and pernicious of these may be classed the Remains- of abrogated Jewish Rites. f An attentive reader of the New Testament can not fail to perceive that it was the inten tion of theihead of the church to abolish: com pletely all the ceremonies of the old dispensa tion which deserve the epithet of Abratamic or Jewish. These are declared to have been done away, and to have been abolished. 2 Cor., iii. 11, 13 ) ; ' ' There may be some slight traces ofresem-. blance between these and gospel ordinances : and this fact has led incautious commenta--tors to search out and magnify the resem blances, and even to - see if they could' not make out a transfer of former rites to the gos . pel dispensation. . . The apostle calls those canceled rites, weak and beggarly elements - Gal. iv. 9. He calls them a bondage ; (Gal. iv; 1 and the yoke of bondage ; and their practice or exercise fall ing from grace ; Gal. v. 4 and the loss of . Christ. , Galv. 4. ' , , In all the cities of . heathendom were found , residing some of the children of ; Abraham. -; Some, of these were among the converts of al most every church. These were extremely tenacious of the rites of their fathers. Because first, the Law, and the Prophets had been rcs tricted to their family for more than twenty centuries j and from this fact they inferred that none but Abraham's1 children would ever be saved ; and that therefore the gospel ought not to be preached to any other ; that, as no other ' people had practiced their peculiar ceremonies, therefore, salvation could only ; come through those ceremonies. - Secondly, Christ had nev er prior to his death, sent the golpel to any except Jews, : but had earnestly forbidden his disciples to preach it to any one else. The Holy Ghost informs us : These twelve Jews . . sent forlhy and commanded them, saying Go not into the way of the Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans enter ye not : but go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Isratl. Matt. x. 5, 6. ' - To overcome this objection, which' Peter felt against going to a Gentile family (Corneli us, Acts x.) God visited them both Peter and Cornelias with a vision. And Saul of Tar- bus was likely to become willing to preach u Gentiles, only by a miraculous conversion Some of Abraham's children belanged to the v converts at Corinth.- These insisted upon the - necessity of observing their ancient . customs The iii. chapter of 2 Cor. is written to con - ' vince thenr of their ; error, by stating to them God's purpose ; the pernicious tendency of Ju daism, and the glory of the gospel over it.-. : He uses the following language : But their , winds vsert blinded: for until this day remain tth the same vail untaken away in the reading of Old Testament ; which vail is done away in Christ. But even unto this day, when Moses v ti read, the vail is upon their heart. . Never - ihelessy when it shall turn to the Lord, the vail haU be taken away. ' " - - ". - From the above, our caption is taken. : Its 7 object will be. to point out cases in which the vail that obscured the gospel under the Old . Dispensation, is retained under the New : and - that by this means ; gospel truth is not only dimmed, but is perfectly shut out from view, and completely lost. . f- vt v. - Prior to entering into the main design of the " . work it de?me(l proper to sUte that, it was necessary entirely to abolish Jewish ceremo nies ; first, because no just model of a gospel church could be made out of the Jewish Polity. The object of the old economy was to point to a Savior4 and mark t his lineage ; that of the New, the salvation of souls. The former was confined to a single family ; the latter extends to all nations. The standing Institution of the one circumcision, was committed to parents to denote their children's fleshly birth ; that of the other, f Baptism,) was committed to be .lievers in Christ themselves, to denote their heavenly birth, but especially, their profession of Christ. . --r' v - .- . Secondly i If auy of the "' old'; rites should be retained, it would naturally inspire a wish to retain all. ; :'h"'"': - ' Thirdly : If the shadow of good things to coml should be retained, th9 good things tbem selvesHffOuld be misunderstood and lost. Fourthly: The retention of every such rite, &o. - . ' The great error and ground work of all vail ed ceremonies under r the gospel, consists i in what is conceived by the phrase, The Jewish Church." Could all! ideas of what constitutes a Gospel church completely vanish from the mind when we hear the phrase, 44 Jewish Church," the deception and the danger would not be so great." But this phrase had no exis tence in the Old Dispensation. And since a Gospel church is a new thing, with a new heart, anew life, new forms, and under a new dispen sation, the ideas of a church cannot be attach ed to the old dispensation, without an abuse of terms and of the - Gospel itself. It is here in order to mention that our blessed Lord never uses the term in reference to the former .age. Nor does one of the apos tles. A solitary instance occurs. Acts vii. 37, .38. 4This is that Moses, which said un to the children of Israel, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren like unto me ; him shall ye hear. This is he, that was in the church in the wil derness with the angel which spake to him in the Mount Sinai, and with our fathers: who received the lively oracles to give unto us." Paul the apostle here says, Moses was with tho dharoh, nrl wttrAfi&rfrrrir nnnnt believe that; church and fathers are perfectly convertible terms. . ; Else that community would oftener have been called church in .Mo ses's time ; and Christ and the apostles would have expressly acknowledged it as such. Nor could it with propriety have been called a sha dow, as in Heb. x. 1. The term ; church used by Stephen in Acts vii. da, was only ngurative- Abraham saw Christ's day ; yet Christ's day was not then when Abraham was. Christ was with Abra ham, and before him ; and yet Abram was born about 2007 after creation, Vulgar Chronicle, and near 2000 years before Christ ; It follows tbat, if there was any church real in the ifliafer- ness. A Dram ana Moses and Unnst were all members of it. Paul declares the people were all baptized unta Moses in . the cloud and in the sea. This baptism was as truly real as the church was raL And Paul is no more literal in this allu sion, than Stephen is in Acts vii. 3S. If there were visibly and literally a church t the wil derness, then there was also visibly and literal ly a ' standing baptism to that church. If this conclusion be not correct, then according to the combined testimony of "Moses and Paul, the church in the -wilderness had circumcision and baptism both at the same time. . Beside this, the baptism unto Moses took place in the cloud. And it also took place in the sea. The sea hid the children of Jacob from their enemies : this hiding was the bap tism. J he bright side of the pillar of cloud jwhieh followed or preceded the Israelites for-" ; ty years, illuminated their camps and their march ; while its dark side shrouded the ene- i mies in midnight darkness ; and this hiding was i the baptism in th b cloud, y The vail aside, and : this is clear. ' 1 Again, Paul says, they were baptized unto Moses ; he says not unto Christ. He calls i the manna spiritual meat ; and also the Rock,' or the water which followed ; them, spiritual: and say 3 it was Christ. 5 From all which it fol lows conclusively, that those who see a literal I church in the wilderness, must see also its lite ! ral ordinances ; and while they view it thus, j the ratf is untaken away. 1. Upon this mistaken hypothesis of a visi Ible church in the wilderness, rests the papal j priesthood, and its long train of heretical con I sequences. - - - i " Because the Old Dispensation had its priests i and high priests, the papal hierarchy must have fits priests and confessors. Whereas, the Gos- j pel chuich which commenced with the begin i ning of the New Testament, or with John's ! preaching would abolish every kind of priest hood which keeps up a representative worship, or a worship by proxy. Hence in the priest hood of the papacy, the vail is untaken away. .'From tbis continued priesthood, taken from Because no baptism, nor any type of it, . ever took place till Christ sent John to baptize. For John's baptism was from heaven, not from Moses, nor from circumcisior.' - the church in tho wilderness, the papists as sume tbat they have many mediators. ' They 44 affirm that it is acceptable to God tbat we should have many mediators of intercession.1 ' (Encyo. Rnl.; Knowl, Art. Popery; p. 955. ) From the church in the wilderness, political or civil merit is transferred to the gospel church ; and hence the Romish hiorarcby have expressly decreed, (conn.Trent Sess. 6 Can. 2 Eocyc. Rel. Knowl, p. 954,) that the good works of justified persons are truly meritorious; deserving not only an increase of grace, but eternal life, and an inorease of glory ; and it has anathamatused'all who deny this doctrine.", ' From the practice of one man making satis faction for injuries done' to another, under the Old dispensation, popery insists upon the doe-. 1 trine of penance, under the New 1 hey pro fess to believe that men can make satisfaction to God for their - offences against him. Sins are divided by them into venial pardonable ana mortal capital or unpardonable J and that no man can obtain the pardon of the latter, without confessing to a priest, and performing the penances which the Driest imposes." (Council Trent, Sess 6, Can. 2.) Rome, in her official character at Trent, pronounced a curse on all who deny that penance was in stituted by Christ himself. , And it is worthy of; remark5 that, after all, the papists are not so very great dolts, nor knaves either, if there was truly and literally a church in the wilderness. And it is equally worthy of remark that the creeds asserted by papists, and by protestants, built upon the doc trine in question, can not possibly bo supported without the aid of" oral tradition." According to the foregoing aitb, salvation by grace is denied, and the Inspiration of the Holy Scriptures placed on a level with men's devices. 2. Upon this mistaken hypothesis of a literal and visible or organized church sin tho wilder ness, rests also the doctrine of infants' or babes' right to church membership. It is customary to begin said ancient church with Abraham, and the covenant of God with him. ! Commencing here, circumcision almost inevitably forces us to retain some, or much of the ceremonies ob lisatorv UDon tho circumcised. I a The error of this position seems to me to manifest ifself by reflecting that : " (1) If there was a visible and organized church posed to have commenced with Abraham. The apostle Paul would not be likely, in writing to this same church in the wilderness, to have committed such a fault as to begin in the wrong place. But this apostle beginsj not with A- braham, but either, with the prophets ; (Heb, i. 1) or with Abel. (Heb. xi. 4.) He makes the prophets speak to the one church in the wilderness; and Christ speak to the other, that is, the gospel church. He makes Abel and Enoch and Noah, without either circum cision, or Abraham's covenant, to be members of the same church with Abraham, Isaac, Ja cob, Sarah, Rebeccah, Moses, the people in the wilderness and David. Hebj xi (2 ) This arrangement by Paul argues that circumcision was not ordained to j initiate peo ple into the church: for it was not known in Abel's and Enoch's and Noah's time, nor du ring a period of two thousand years before A braham. Had it been intended 'to designate church members, it should have been applied to all the faithful, from Abel to Christ, the or der in which the apostle takes them. To No ah's sons especially. Abel, and Enoch had no " children, so far as history is concerned. Its design, then, was to designate, not a church, but a family. It was not even to make strangers to become of Abraham's family, nor to intro duce aliens iuto it ; but to denote those that were already such, or acknowledged to be such. And all this to mark the genealogy of our Sa viour after the flesh : after which flesh or gene alogy the apostle says, we now henceforth know him no more. 2 Cor. v. 16, This circum cision and its concomitants were our school master to bring us unto Christ. Gal. 4 iii. 24.! That is, to conduct us along till Christ shoul 1 come. He was then the end of this law to in troduce' righteousness by faith. Rom x. 4. Circumcision marched up to him at eight days old. Luke ii. 21. But up to this period, it could not be decided whether he was the child of promise made to Abraham, or only one from whom Messiah should spring. At bis baptism the vail was drawn asider Dressed in the light' of the third heavens,' the finger of God in tho bavior, the toon ot Uod is come, pointed to him, and proclaimed . to a weeping and lost world, This is he. This is my belevcd Son in whom I am well pleased. Matt. iii. 17. . " . . - ." ; Circumcision has now accomplished its pur pose; and is forever laid aside. And to view baptism or Christ, in connection with circum-i . -?' . imi . .t . l , . eisiou is suu to wear . me van ; omee it is . boldly announced by inspiration, that in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth anything,' nor no circumcision, but a new creature. GaLi vi.. 15. 'Not : baptism is in the place of cir cumcision, but faith which workelh by lovt. Gal v. 6. Not baptism is in place of cir cumcision, but circumcision of tho heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter. To prove form of a dove, as the echo of the angels was' seeing and speaking face to face with the Lord still filling the Yir anolthe earth with the good of Life. We can well imagine how much that tidings of great while they sing, Lo the hour's discourse was worth. Yet what was taptidnj from circumcision, is to prove a posi tive gospel church ordinance from Christ's nat ural genealogy.: : But the vail is done away in Christ. ' 2 Cor. .iii :14. But to prove bap- tistu from oircumcision, is, to put on the vail in order to seo Christ. .." V . - ! . " (To be continued.) . MISCELLANEOUS; v From the Advocate. "What Cap I Do?" This question is very - frequently and very 8 sincerely asicea oy persons woo v are sensible that something ought to be done for the moral and religious welfare : of the neighborhood in Chich thev livo. A Sabbath school is one of the very best means ever devised for promotiner A iuo luor&iuv, auu proapeniy ot any neigooor hood. This may be admitted by some well- I disposed people wno dwell where neither this nor any other public means of grace is enjoyed.' And st'l tho query arises in the mind of one and another of these 44 What can I do to wards establishing a Sabbath school for the good of my family, and the families around me ?" Let the following J facts in relation to Sabbath school efforts in Maine, encourage those who would be glad to do some good to their neighbors by affording them the means of religious instruction In the town of B., a Sabbath school mission ary, after addressing the people in their school house on the subject of organizing a Sabbath school, submitted the question for their action, whether tliey would have and sustain a school An old deacon 'of the little, feeble church; which bad been sometime destitute of preaching arose and said he felt as though they must have a Sabbath school. His little grand-daughter, who had previously attended Sabbath school, had repeatedly asked him if there could not be a Sabbath school in their school-houses, and begged that he would do something towards opening one. He had felt anxious to have one, but had been discouraged, by the indifference of others ; but he said, with tears in his eyes, he 44 could not stand such entreaty any long er." They must have a Sabbath school : and he called on his neighbors to help him begin it then, and sustain it through the season : and they all agreed to do it. The school was then organized. Some books for the library were then purchased, and the missionary, (an agent of the New England Sabbath School Union) made a donation of enough more to supply a sufficient library, left some tracts and copies of the 44 Young Reaper," tor distribution, and went his way. That Sabbath school was sus tained. The people, young and old, attended it during the season. In the autumn follow ing, the missionary met the old man again, when-he expressed biscratitnde for the former TiOi, ami UmA.. -- ' esting a Sabbath school before. If you, reader, are a little girl or a little boy who want a Sabbath school to go to, you can ask your parents or your grand-parents to do something about it, and beg this of them till it is done. . If you are a professor of religiont a member of the church, you can ask your neighbors to come together, and then tell them how you feel about this matter, and beg their assistance in teaching the children and youth of your neigh borhood, as well as you can, the word of God and the way to heaven. If you cannot leave your own dwelling to do good, stilV you need not despair, although none of your neighbors are sufficiently interested in the welfare of the youth to establish a Sabbath school. In the town of N. b., dwells a praying lather and mother advanced in years, whese children, all hopefully converted to God, nnd one of them a minister, are. scattered abroad far from that house ftf prayer. ' But these aged parents though deprived of the privileges of the house of God, would still bring forth fruit even in old age. Tin mother was always in the Sab bath school with her children, when she could be When over fifty years of age, she would 1 il M- A - lil T?1t l ! walk more than a mile to meet her Bible class in the school of which her son was Superin tendent. But she cannot do this now, and there is no Sabbath school in that neigh borhcol, except the one which . this praying woman conducts in her own house, where she has invited all the children to come and recite God's word, receive instruction, and sing his iraise with her. Her husband receives regu- arly a package of the 4 Young Reaper," with which ho supples all the families wfco are wil ling to take it. Their son in the ministry oc casionally visits the 44 old house " and leaves a few new and interesting books for his mother's Sabbath school. Thus a second generation of children, not their own, gather around them in that humble dwelling, to recive instruction from lips which, not in vain we trust, in former years were' wont to instruct the now absent ones of their own household., Who shall say that . none of these little ones will yet be brought to Christ through the pray ers and labors cf these aged disciples! ' urelymone who read; these lines need long ponder upon tho question, 44 JVhat can I do ?" A talk with Christ. . The Samaritan woman who . conversed with Christ, while he sat on Jacob's well, had an in valuable privilege, in that hour's discourse in privilege the'presence" of the Spirit of Christ; That" hour '8 discourse was worth no more than such; as can be procured by every ono who will now come into converse with Christ. Through his Spirit actualizing his personal presence, Christ can as well interchange thoughts with any of us. as with .the Samaratan woman. While his J bodily presence was in Samaria, it could not; be in Galilee, nor in Jeruaalemn Ubut now. tus presence comes forth to the world through his uncoufined Spirit., r '. , ':'---.-": Any one of us would count it an ineffable; privilege, if Christ in bodily form should reveal : himself to us, laying aside all the robes of his heavenly royalty that would overcome and re pel, and in the humble and familiar manner in4 which he sat on Jacob's well, should invite us 3t ...... i to mm, uiscoursmg so irceiy 01 euivauwu, lead us to the well of water Bpringi'-j up into everlasting life. ' Bat . tho equivalent of this same privilege is within the reach of all. j All are invited to come ! to ; him for converse on these very themes. ; He has sent his Spirit to meet every one of his people when they wilL He bids them approach to the interview with-" out constraint, and says, Come now, and let us reason together.", We have no occasion to say, 44 Who shall ascend into heaven and bring Cnrist down from. above ?" If yon will enter tain it and listen to it, the "word of Christ is- I already spoken, and! is. now speaking within 1 . . term 3 ! t ; . -1 - .. vim. ; V- xuf woru is nigu inee, m tny mouth and in thy heart." The - thoughts of Christ are already present in your memory, and you have only to bring them on, and reply to them and yon will be as ! much in converse with Christ, as was the Samaritan woman, who stood wondering at -the gracious words that proceed out of his mouth. The written word of God ia, . it were the telegraphio Una on which he gives conveyance to bis thoughts from heaven to earth. We have only to hold the mind in close connection with this medium of divine communication, to have thoughts pass and re pass in effectual converse. .i-). K - ::gy The subject of holding ; converse with 1 God i3 a difficult one for many to make real to their , minds. It may perhaps be , illustrated by an example.' v-- . . A man of wealth and worldliness was walk ing at leisure, and holding the following dis course mentally with himself. 44 I am a hap py man with an ample" fortune, all of which 1 have acquired myself, so that I am depend ent on no one. ;It is all my own." At that moment a sudden shower drove him for shelter into the open door of a Church. Just as he entered, the preacher was reading his text 44 Ye are not your own, ye are bought with a price." This he thought was a strange doc trine ; but he felt that it did not apply to him. For said he to himself--" I am my own, and all that I have is my own." As the sermon proceeded, however, it disclosed to his view the ground and reality of his obligations to God ; and at its close, he retired with an im pression, which did not leave him till it issued ic his conversion. . Ti; This was an instance of God's discourse with man. He brought about the coincidence of that text with the man's thoughts at that mo ment. And by it he opened a discourse with him, and carried on an argument which issued in his 'conversion. So, in all the exercises of our minds under the dealings of Providence, and particularly under afflictions, Christ is re ally talking with us. The dispensation or chastisement has a voice which ' speaks his meaning. The illustration of the telegraphic wires may serve another purpose. The operator at a cen tral point, has a message to send abroad to all the stations in communication with that point. tT - I- V it ' . . 1 ne presaeu jus uuger upon toe instrument, ana every station"1 BynTutferahce0 " Hgcfes fo many receivers, and to each is as complete as if it were to him alone. In a manner infinitely more effectual than this God makes his own thoughts to be present, at the same instant, to every one with whom he will converse, and each one of us, in all the Outgoing of thought and desire, may tonverse with God, as really as if we stood before him the, only creature in the universe. By suggesting thoughts and making impressions on the mind, God sustains a more effective intercourse with men than ever takes place between men in conversation with each other. Pu. Recorder. Treatment of Ministers The calling of a new minister is often an oc casion for exhibitions of absurd and unchristian feelings. It not seldom happens in such au exigency that when more than one individual has appeared before the people with a view to settlement, each one has bis admirers, who are decided in their preference ; and, convinced ; that their favorite is just the man for the place, that no other could with any propriety be set- . tied over them, the adherents of the respective candidates insist upon the calling of the man i . . i 1 . . .., t ot tneir cnoice witn as mucn pertinacity ana warmth as if the whole welfare of the church was involved in the gratification of their sever al preferences. -All cannot be gratified,' and no matter who is settled, unless it be some compro mise candidate, some are dissatisfied.- The in cumbent is not the mat) of their choice, and as a po nt of spite they 'are never cordial to bim. Some even declare he shall not stay ; and are unprincipled enough and unkind enough to do all in their power to make 'his situation too un comfortable to be held. , . They effect their ob- ject, because the self-respect of the " minister compels mm to leave. ,ms irienas are grieveu, the breach is widened, and things go on from bad to worse. Can any church prosper where the messengers of Christ are so lightly esteem ed and so shabbily treated ? Will not He who ' sent them X avenge his own honor in them ? 44 He that despisethyou despiseth me." j -'- ' Some churches seem to have but little regard for the reputation of their minister. Even where there may have' been . unanimity in the call, there are some congregations that seem to think themselves entitled to take strange liber ties with their mirjister.vAlUnive!their;6wn notions about ministerial X propriety, to which they are free to exact conformity. ' Their views are very decided, and cover the whole range of ministerial life, from the pulpit to the kitchen. ; instead of nobly and unitedly rallying around the pastor of their choice, holding up hi3 hands, passing by his ' unavoidable weakness or cast- ing the mantlo of charity over them, cheering him on in his arduous work, letting his private I affairs alone, discouraging all , "petty scandal about himr standing by him and defendirjgbim from all defamation and unjust accusation, and showing their estimation of the Gospel and their appreciation of his labors, by a faithful attend ance upon his ministry instead of such a jeal ous regard for their minister's -reputation an& 1 usefulness ; (for they are inseparably connect ed,) tbeje are some congregations in which no allowance would seem to be made for anything in the" minister short of perfection." : Breath that should be spent in defending him from ca Iumny before men and pleading in bis behalf before God, is devoted to the utterance of se vere and meddlesome criticism, or in extending reports tending to impair bis standing, and so bring his ministry into disrepute. " His matters, public and private, are bandied about and tho- roughly canvassed. . Hi servants, all have to pass the ordoal, and be come the subiects of free m ordrnary conversation. There is no- tender ! regara ror nis personal weuare ; no studious endeavor to make his residence all respects agreeable ; no standing up for hia whenever he is right, nor charitable allowance for him when he errs ; there is no appreciation oi ine iact tnat his . usetalnesa depends very -materiallv noon hia rfirnifAtinTi. and that M. tation is the property of the people, to be care fully guarded and jealously defended by them. -The pastor seeks , in. vain for that cordialitr- wnicn ne uas a ngni 10 expect, and after striv ing fora time in vain " to live down and outlive by a course of dignified straight-forwardness, all obstacles arisinsrfrom the sonrare nf the in-nrm he resigns in sorrow, if not in disgust, the - B V" ywptfs wuu seeui ii nave caned him for other, purposes than to receive the Word at his mouth. . It is to be hoped that ' such looiditie8 are not numerous ; but some stich ' therecertainly are,!fand the frequent removal ' of ministers, which has become so noticeable, may perhaps be traceable in not a few cases to this 44 fallacy,'.' in greater or less degree." Mm-. isters may expect and exact too much they are humau, and are not to be worshiped. Yet the spirit and the letter of their credentials en title them to a good deal, and they are not ex cessive until Jiey go beyond that. . Let tiera ; v magnify their office. - " ' , Some churches, again, go to the opposite ex treme. ;They impair their minister's re puta - -tion and usefulness by excessive praises They -praise him to his face, and they praise him be hind his back. ; They, raise for nirn a reputa- tion which he cannot sustain, which re-acts to his injury, and, they" disgust discerning minds by their excessive laudation of what was per haps really creditable. V There is i no man like their minister ; at least they seem to wish po- . pie to think so--that he is a very great man ; -that they may live under the shadow of his greatness. X ; If their minister is really a worthy man, discerning minds will find it out, while his - -devoted flock will have enough to do to shield . him from those shafts which envy 'always aims at true worth. Extremes are never in the ' right. ' The best mode for a peoplo to show . their appreciation of their ' minister is by their V personal kindness, and faithful attendance upon his ministry, t Christia n Intelligencer I X Si - - i i .. : v" rX --X- ;v The Idolatry of Wcallli. Wealth' is the goddess, whom all the world ' -worshiped. There is many a city in our em pire, of. which, with an eye of apostolic discern ment, it may be said, that it is almost .wholly " given over to idolatry. If a man look no high- - er than to his money for his enjoyments, then ' money is his God. . , It is the god of his depen dence, and the god upon whom his heart is Staid. Or. if ftriart, frnm ntlior oninumonl. - 7 I w m v. vmjvj utymffj i., vi nuc uviiig uvu. xic is ruuueu 01 me grau tude that we owe him for our daily sustenance; for, instead of receiving it as it came direct out of his handjwe receive it ai jf it camo from the bands of a secondary agent, to' whom we ascribe all r the stability and independence ' of God, as the real though unseen author of our various blessings ; and, as if ' by material . intervention, does it hide from the perception "1 of nature, the hands which feeds, and clothes, and maintains us in life. It just has the effeet " of thickening , still more that . impalpable veil ; which lies between God and the eye of the sen ses. We lose all discernment" of him as the giver of our comforts ; and coming, as they ap- pear to do, from that wealth which bur fancies have raised into a . living personification, does this idol stand before us, as a substitute for that Great Being; with whom it is that we re- ally have to do. All this goes both to widen and to fortify that disposition which has taken place between God and the world. It adds the power of one great master idol to the seducing influence ; of all the lesser idolatries.;; When ' the liking and the confidence' of men are to wards money,', there b' no direct intercourse, . either by the one or tho other of-these affec- , tions towards God ; and in proportion as he sends forth his -desires," and rests his security ' on' the former, in that very proportion does -r he renounce God as his hope, and God as his dependence. .--.. And to advert for one moment to the misery . of tbis affection,' as well as to its sinfulness he, over whom jt reigns, feels a worthlessness in his present wealth, after it is gotten and when to this we add the restlessness of a yet unsatiated appetite, lording over all its 'convio- tions, and panting for more ; when to the dull ness of bis act&ai satisfaction in : all the n ebes ' he has, we add his still unquenchable desire for -riches that he has hot ; when we reflect that, .i . as, in pursuit of wealth, he widens the circle of m his. operation, so he lengthens out the line of r his open ; and hazardous exposure, and multi- , plies, ; along ; the extent" of those vulnerable " , points from which another and another dart of anxiety may enter into his heart ; when he feels hinue!f floating onlan ocean f.of contin- J gency, onwhich, perhaps, he is only borne up by the breath of a credit that is fictitious,- and which, liable to burst every moment, may leave -him to sink under the 'weight of his overladen : " speculation ; when suspended on the doubtful result of his bold and uncertain adventure, he . dreads the tidings of disaster in every arrival, and lives in eondhual agony of feeling, kept up by the crowded turmoil of his manifold distrac-' tiohs and so overspreading the whole . compass of bis thoughts as to f leave not one : narrow 1 space for the thought of eternity ; will any be-' holder just look to the mind of' this unhappy ' man, thus - tossed and bewildered, and , thrown ! V -into a general unceasing frenzy, made, oat of- . many fears and agitations, and not say, that the , bird of the air which sends forth its unflecting , song, and , lives on tho fortuitous bounty of -Proyidence, is not higher in the scale of enjoy t ment than he ? and how much more, then the -'quiet Christian beside him, who, in possession -of food and raiment, has that godli2::3 with' contentment, which is great gaia who, with -the peace of heaven in hi3 heart and the glories j . 'of heaven in his eye, has found out the true . . philosophy cf existence has sought a portion , ,where alone a portion can be found, and iaj , bidding away from his mind the love of rr.:3y , . baa bidden avray all the cross and all ths care-- Talncssaloc''v;:'.h it.- Dr. Ch7.lrr.trs.