J MOVm AIRY, JfORTIl CAROLINA, THURSDAY JULY 17, 1913. AO. 3 1 A. li all seems to mo like & tin hiii that the Lord should load Tnf fro hi oim place to another as I have sought t o follow the die vim; cloud and fire until now I filial myself in tin; great surging fir.v of London; yet 1 have, been viiprcv.nl by the fact tliat you have much tin- same problems here in Mt. Airy that we have in London, the problem of in and iinbc'it '. of death and of life. And ax my 'mind has t n run- n:?ig hack, and I cannot help it, I in vp thought of the first, mt lm n 1 preached in Mt. Airy about fifteen people. I have felt that 1 would like to preach about 100 sermons thus mcrning; but the day Ls too hot for that, and at bust my mind has settled down upon a text that is kindred to the one I preached my first .sermon from. Ii tlte first verse first chapter of F.zekial in con nection with the first, verse of the :57th chapter. "The Heavens were opened and I saw visii lis of God The hand of the Lord va.s nMn me and carried me ot;t 1 1 d the spirit of the Lord and set me di-wi in the midst of the val ley which wa.s full of bones," and my subject on that first, oc casion was "The valley of dry bones, and how to raise them." This morning my subject i.s the preparation which every Chris tian needs as he enters the Val ley of Dry Hones. There has been .some magie power at work durintr the past, thirty five years, to which our dear Brother Ilay more referred, transferring death into life and bones into inert and women, nsnd we would like to know the secret of that power. Created in the image of God, man has become only a bone, of Ms former self. "Can these bones live!" asked Cod of the l'rophet, and the Prophet refer red the question back to Him for answer, "Lord God thou knmv est." I.s there ajiy way whereby a bone cm be transformed again into a man;? God tells how, in this vision given us in the first cha-ptrt of EzekiaL.At least ft vol times the Heavens are said to have opened; above Christ at his Hajrtism; when he heard the di vuk' words of the Father; above 1'eter, when on the housetop he vvn.s taught that the Gentiles should have the- Gospel; above Stephen, when lie was being martyred; above John on the Isle of l'atmos, when lie too caught glimpses of celestial glory, and above Ezekiel when he stood aanong the captives by the river of C'hebar. "I saw visions of God," and this vision of God was a preparation for the vision of bones, which Is the vision of man. And what did he see first of all in that vision of God? A union of the human with the Divine. Peculiar creature with wings, and under each win.g a human hand, the human hand, of course, standing for humanity, and ki the poetical portions of the sci turn the wing always refers to deity. Whenever you see that word wih'g in the pages of the Hible, it refers directly or im directly to God; so "tlut the union of the hand with the wing, means the union id' man witli.tiod. The hand. is under the wing; the wing moves the hand, rather than the hand moving the wing. I think tlie tendency in our The-1 ology Ls to magnify man rather i than God; much hand, little' wing"; but when we link1 our-' Selves with God and are willing! that the wing should move the; hand we are ready for the Val-j ley of Dry Hones. If you go in-; t the Valley of Hones to raise them by the process of manipula-' tion with only the hands, you will leave broken hearted. No hand can put life into death. If 1 had a blackboard here I'd write on i't the figure 1 ; then 1 would put a big nought before it, and it is still 1 ; then I'd put 'J. :t. H0 and 1.000 noughts before it; :t is still 1. Then I'd take th;-t same 1 and a little nought to th' right i f it and it is 10, two noughts and it is 100, three noughts and it is 1(m'n), and so on. If jou put (!ih1 first in your mind, in your heart, in your life, he can Mill create sm-th;iig out of nothing. lie can take the very Valley of Death and ni- ' of it an Anny of Life. Look at this vision a 1 ttle mon closely and you will sec reason linked with God. These peeyli-r creatures have the face of a, 'man I and the human face everywhere stands for intelligence, for reaw for mini I; but linked with, the wing, intelligence joined with the Divine. Reason without Gid, upon which some men pride thomsel ves, is intelligence wal lowing in, the mini. Hut when intelligence is linked with, when the hand is joined with the wing, yen have the divine idnal, A; il if von go into the Valley of Hones to raise them into life by the reasoning process alone, you cannot reason one bono, into life; there Ls no re-.pou.se to your argument in a bono. It takes the truth fr.mm heaven to give them life, and if you go and try to sitVe m fit in Mount Airy or in Loudon by jut the process of reasoning, you'll find yoursel disapMiinted ; but if you link your intellect with the Holy spirit, with God, If you are will ing that, all your intellectual en deavors shall be governed by the master mind of Gd, you .re ready for the Valley of Dry Hones. Then as you look, a little more clo.sdy, you sec another w'r.g ;,nd there ;!n face of h lion: and th lion in Scripture always stand lor courage; riot courage in the face of dinger so much. The b n"s won't hurt you ; they may make you feel a trifle ipiier if you walk among them in the dusk and quiet of the evening, but they will not harm you. There are difficulties" in life. ni:d it takes a courage to met t difficulties superior to the courage that meets danger. A man can charge into battle realiz ing hat the world is looking at him. willing to be killed if neid be; but when he steps down to face the difficulties he some times despairs. When Jehovah commanded Joshua to go into battle, to meet the Caanites and compter the land he said "He of Good Cheer." When lie com manded Solomon to build the Temple, which envolved years of toil and seemingly unsuniiount', able obstacles, He said, "He of Good Courage:" ami it takes more courage to meet the dif ficulties of Temple Huilding than it does to fight armies. The fact Is, I had rather underta'ke to turn 10,000 men into bones than one bone, into a man. You can destroy so much more readily than you can build up. It is easy to go into an Art Gallery filled with beautiful paintings and statuary and with a hammer de story every tiling; but, if you go there with chisel and pencil, you will find difficulty in restoring them. Now as I look back over the past 3f years it seems to me I can see difficulties overcome, mountains removed by the touch of faith, greait obstacles prayed out of the way, worked out of the way, waited out of way just because yoi have linked yourself with God. That brings you to the thuVl point "The Winged Patience." There is the face of an ox, and the ox everywhere stands for jwi tiencc, perseverance, for courage under the yoke, for duty in the id ust. It is easy to mount upon the winks of an eagle, or to run and not grow weary ; but to walk and not to faint Ls harder. When you come down to the walk and the hum-drum of life and the dusty, duties of every day toil, your heart Is apt to fail von. Many a preacher standing before a great crowd! Mid preaching an ehxiuei.it sermoi d( s not appear so well to hlsi wife at home. He is swiietvmtw : like Jonah under the gourd vine.; despondent and aturry. We can . Illett tile crises I! lid t!l" e!!e-'.'. II- eii s so much more readily than v." can the humdrum and the loutine. Stanley sail tlu.t in. his travels he didn't mind the ele phants that be could bring down with hi Kerning! on Kif'e, but he did fear the chitrgers, miser able little insects, that got under the nails of the hands and feet and killed s.-iiH- of lii.s men. The rhigyer was beoi:i his reach, lit tle and contemptible, yot that was what killed them. For my part, I had rather meet a Hciurftl tiger or an African lion, if I had a good rifle, than to fight Jersey mosquitoes on a hot ninht. It takes more courage to fight mos quitoes and keep your patience, than it does to fight lions. Io you know some times mosquitoes join the Church! I do nt know ii The Preparation Which as He Enters the "Valley of Dry Bones" Sermon rc-ache ! t.v Dr. t'.xnn at First Rapilst Church, Mount Airy, SunJaj Morning; July ijth. 1 1 DrrXrCk Dixon, whether you have any in Mt. Airy with its good pure atmos phere or not, but I have never yet been taster of a church that lid not have a few nio.spiitocs in the congregation; men and wo men who come to prayer meeting just to bufcz and bite; who come to the Trustees Meeting just for a bu2z anil a bite. It's nothing but buzz and bite, and it takes more grace to mcH the mos quitoes than it does to meet the lions. Sam Jones said he never did sympathize much with Jonah; that he had just as lieve be swal hAvevl by a whale as not; nTit what bothered him was to be bitten , arid nibbled to death by minnows. It takes less grace to meet the great crises and emer gencies of life than it does to bear the worries and petty trials of every day duty. The jruest picture I ever saw Is Murillo's Kitchen Scene a great canvas, and on that beautiful canvas a woman cooking- dinner a most commonplace affair but as you gaze at that picture you see yngel faces appear; the a litre Is are helping the woman crok din in er, and bye and bye as you gaze a trifle longer, you pereive that the woman herself Ls an angel: she has wings. Murillo may have meant that it is angelic to cook a gixd dinner, but he went deeper than that; he meant to say that it was angelic to do well the humble duties of the do mestic walks of life. An ox with wings. What breaks the most of us -down is doing the humdrum separaN d from God, trying to do the wear ing work and details f every day without linking ourselves with the Divine; and if the devil ca.n. ju.st get us off from Gmt in the kiMicii. on the farm, in the store, be will beat us every time. This linkinir of God with the hu man, with the ox, with the lion, a preparation for the Valley of Dry Hones, for it takes cour ;ie. endurance, and humdrum work there, "lie set nic down in the midst of the valley which Mas full of bones," or ruThcr he Rets you down in the midst of a great city with its millions of dry bones ling about, bleaching on the sands, ami sometimes you feel like runnu.p away; Imt God set vou down, ami He savs, rtIe Vis 1 VVTFTTtt tTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT Every Christian Needs 4 MSHH- I. ' Il 1 t . cf Louden , England, brave, be a man, be an ox, be a lion, liiihi with me, and I will give you the victorv sooner or later." Then we see again the winged astral: the face of an eagle, and the eagle stands everywhere for soarii.g, rising on wings above dust, and gazing into the sun. That's the Christian's privilege, inul 1 am sorry for the man or woman who never soais, who's willing always to live with feet on the earth. Many of us are like the quail that just rises, flies low, ai:d drops again into the dust. We have to get cut of ourselves, and the limitations of the flesh, to come out into life add tlie broad expanse of God's great glory. The ox-like work linked with the eagle's aspiration is the Christian's privilege. The fact & we can never tell what is great and what Ls little. I have learned that little is much when God is in it. I stood the other day under the okl thatched cottage roof in the Town of Taversham, King, in which Clias. II. Spurgeou preach ed his first sermon, and I felt that I was on holy ground. The young student preached his first Minnature sermon to a little g"oup f village folks. Some one said "there is a man across the read who heard him; and I said, "I am going to see that man." I went ever there, and found a litth. eottagi, surrounded by vines and floweis. and an old man f'M years old in the midst of the beauty, eye bright, step elas tic, voice char, and as avc talked he said, "Would you l;ke to hear my favorite hymn?" and with a sweet tone he repeattd it : "There is a hoii.se not made by hands eternal in the skits." I doubt wry much whether that old man lias evr bei-n out of the village (1 did not ask him), for he L uks as il he bad lived right there among his flwvrs always. Hut who Is the greatest. Spur 4Teon. prcachii. g to the millions on earth, or the pixir man in the thatched cottage, just living his honest, faithful christian life, re producing Jesus in the midst f the village folks! It Ls just possible that this old man may get the brighter crown. "Who knows! Then I went atid saw the place where 8pnrgeon was baptized, and stood on the banks of the river, which flowed through a meadow where butter ciijw and daisies grow, and I looked out upon the big expanse of horizon of ctoiid and sky above, then down 'it the little but tercups and daisies. Some one said, "there lives in thu village a woman who was baptized with him," and 1 said, "I will ice her, if it takes me all day." 1 found her in her little cottage h'ine, 82 years old, bright, cheery, hap py. She had never been to Lon don but once in her life. Then f thought of the great expanse of sky, which meant Spurgeons influence and the little butter cups and daisies which meant this true .woman's life in her little cortief, and I know that the but tercups and daisies will Ret a bright a crown. God say, "He thou faithful unto death and I will give you a crown of life." and if yu will link yourself to Cod just as a little buttercup or daisy you will get the crown, just as if you had written for I he ages or preached for the mil lions. And as you look a little more closely you will notice a winged stability. All these creature have feet like calves' feet, and you have to turn over to the Prophet to understand all that "Lord God, make" my feet like hind's feet," and the hind's foot i.s made for movement in hUj pery places. The hind can pass safely right on the edge of a .precipice an leap from rock to rock, move very rapidly ai.u yet very safely; and that's what we need; agility with stability; to know how to stand for truth, and to kuow how to do something for God at the same time. You will find that some people stand f;r nothing' in particular. They just want to be ou the move. You ask them what they -believe, und for the life of you, they cannot say. They have the agil ity but"uo4.,thB ability r You sometime mSsfc sprogres;""; tirj standing stal ; you can be m such a nervous hurry that jou never get anywhere. Two sail boats were running a, race on the Jer sey coast; the wind was very strong, thtT waves tosed high. One of the Captains, looking ashore, ir.tieti! that though the wind, was so very strong, the tide was reallj stronger, and he just cast anchor, and stood still, leaving the other bout far be hind; and thu he won the race. What we need to know is how to anchor iu G.xls truth, haying the agility and also the stability ti. stand "for God the truth of I'UrLst. Then as yon look you will soe a winged fellowship. These wings are joiiwd together, all united. The spirit of this age is to get together. Anything to get together, to work together 1 Men who don't believe in Christ at nil are trying to work with pei iple who bow down before Him. 1 was in Chicago preaching for Mr. Moody during the Worlds Coil vent ion of Religions some years ago, when an effort was made tot combine all the relig ions of the world. An attempt was made to mix paganis-m and Christianity; descendants of the l'rophct of Rial, believing just what those old prophets in Kli jah's time did; descendants f the Jewish Sanhcdrin, who sent Jesus Chirst to the Cross, and they have not. changed a bit; and side bv side with them were the DLscinhs of Christ all mak- ing an attemjit to join hands in ; workjnjr together. We must get together in Christ. There must ile a v.nic-n of wings; a union j w ith the Divine, and if we c.-ui- i not get together in Christ, t ' i -re is no use going into the Valley of Hoin s. Win n I w ;us Pa.sf r in HrookUsi a man came to me and said, "We are having a un'mn nieetii r out in tow n and want ,ii to join Us; we n.sl .vou; it is the greati-t union ymi ever saw; all the denominations in town have united, even the Cnita riaius, and the Cniversal ist.s and th.- Kati malls 4 have come in"; and I said. "My brother if vou will tell me how- to work with a IVrtar'an without : And as I Lead it I said. e- , i .i.ilw . i iiit working un him l win giai- h j"'11 jou." How can I work with a man who makes fun of j the cross that saves from sin!ibriiiir the music out of me bv Hut when I meet a man who unites with me in the service of Jesus Christ I am moved to give him my hand. Then as you look again you will see a winged progr.-xs, ami thats my last point. Winged wheels, and the wheel is every where the symbol of progress. i 'ivilization goes forw ard on wheel. Take out the wheels and progress drops.' I came here on wheels; J expect to go back to London on wheels: whether I am on the itcejHi or oji the land it will be the wheel that, will take me there. Tlnw wheel" so im mense and so full of even that they were terrible. Wheels with in wheels, indicating cumplcie" organiz. it'n n noon the earth; the organization of the Church of 1 hrist for the purpo-e of going into the Valley of Hnes to raise them into life. Ym will notice the spirit of ths living enatuns was in th W heels. When the creatures went f 'rward the wheels went forward. We ri"d to link our organizations with Gods spirit. Do great things, make trreat plans fi r God. for organization ; so big that they are terrible, putting all the eyes yen have into them, all the wisdom you can pack into them. Sninchow I feel that you Chris tian pei pie. you Hapti't breth ren have had a big vismn of Christ, going forward in th name of the Master. The little organization of il") or 40 years ag.t has grown into this larg" work cii'dosed L'l these grante walls; yi u have hjol a vision of God that was great, "but there's still a greater field. Jesus pro nounced himself. "Son of Man." not the son of a Jew, 'not the .son of a Koman, nor of iui English man, nor a German, in r an American, but the Son of Man. The blood of all the ages is in his veins,'"and a heart big encugh to take in all humanity, even un to the uttermost parts of the M'orld. If I had to run the org;uiiza tions of the Tabernacle alone I'd wnaJi jtopjiertf! 'ia fcss-tluuL. three" months. I think there are over 45 organizations together, ami all important. Too many for one man alone to handle, but each day I get down before God and say. "Lord, this is Thy work; fill the wheels and make them n-spond to the spirit of Piod; If there Ls a csg in it that is not of Thy manufacture break it to pieces; if there is one that Whim art not in destroy it." Its a great comfort to feel that. Just try to run the organization your self and you wall feel nervous and by and by a cog will fly out and hit a Deacon in the eye. Don't trus t the organi sation, but trust God and you ran depend upon it that the or ganization will be full of life. I got a message from heaven which I tried to pass on in Kal eigh and will give to you; it came to me that a famous viol inist would play one night on a jf.".(HH).00 violin". Ten thousand people paid 2.V a head to go in to that vast auditorium aaid hear that celebrated mu'iscian play r.pon the $0,000.00 violin. He came before them with the in strument in his haiuls: he keyed it up and began playing. It was so sweet it was so thrilling that they eheend, they waved their hands, they shrieked their aj proval; and in the midst of all that enthusiasm he lifted his vio lin and smashed it to pieces ou the b.ck of a chair. The frag ments flew into the eyes of the people around him; everybody thoaeht lie was crazy. "What - i sl::! we tb i we tio. fsome s ir:cKii. js'iui- groaned! lie too t there ; :; the olatform with the frag m, .-its of the violin sti'l iu his bar. J and liftii g them !,;. he sani. indies an. i e-. n l.-men m. it violin cost just .'f'J()t). ,'i-w I will play tii my $.i.i(M0 vl liii;" and the music from tie- f.YiM'iO.oO instrument did not s':":n much su.-tt. r th: that of the .sj.i) in stru.n.'i.t. "."iHj (0 violins do To 111 ike llllisie. It t ike.s a llU.sici.lii to put tlie llULS.tr into am! t g"t the mi-sH' out i-t it You have jta'ul your 2"c to h-ar my .".. (KMhi i 1 in. Now I .v;. ist yu to know you are lUten iu" t. me. ii't the instrument." Lord .icsns. I may be ma.ie oj plain comim n stiiff, 1 may be a sr-2.. -0 vi..lki, but t.tke me in thy h.ui.U, l- Continued to page 8. iri-iw