t . - " cr ' ORGAN OF THE NORTH CAROLINA CONFERENCE, M. E. CHURCH, SOUTH. ESTABLISI N 1855. RALEIGH, N. C, JULY 12, 1899. New Series. Vol. 1, No. 21. - RALEIGH CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE. Organ of the North Carolina Conference. V T.I.ISHED WEEKLY AT RALEIGH, N. C. :ul-class matter in the post-office at Raleigh. to win his case. The idea of polished, " CORN-STALK FIRES." dignified, undemonstrative preaching is taking- the life out of our rmlnir in sottip i This expression does not, perhaps, com- ! carts of the rnnntrv. Prhfno- th. c ! mend itself to the POetical mind, yet it is j . lit" X. IVEY, D. D., . . . Editor. M. WATSON, Business Manager. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Year, - SI. 50. I Six Months, -Cash in Advance. .75 ; pel of Jesus Christ is a high duty and privilege, and immortal souls are in ; volved. Red-hot earnestness, attended by strong, enlightened conviction, and re ceiving stimulus and momentum from the Holy Spirit, is the demand of the hour. We are glad that the preachers whom we have lately heard, bid us feel encouraged. There are exceptions, of course, but the lers of the gospel and wives of deceased r-. j-i.oo. -..veiling preachers in the North Carolina ; outlook is bright. Close and unremitting "vv as authorized agents, will receive the ! , , . . . , , ; study, earnest and untiring prayer, glad ;-.Yhe label, it shows the date up to which j and faithful service are not unknown -vription has been paid. Change in label j among bur preachers. We are glad that this is true. a receipt. .. Idress is ordered changed, both old and ress must be given. lir-tr. money, be sure to state whether it is r new subscription. all letters and make all checks and money ivable to the RALEIGH CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE. OUR SCHOOLS. thing, EDITORIAL :e recent biblical assembly. mean the one held in Charlotte It would be a good thing, yea, a great if the duty we owe our schools . should be clearly defined in the mind and i heart of our Methodism. This consum- j ! . i ; mation can never occur until the basis ot j this duty be plainly seen and firmly es : tablished. This duty does not rest upon ; us as a Conference or as Methodists. It ! rests upon us as followers ol the Lord dariiig the latter days of June. It wasjjesns Christ. A Methodist school is not not - largely attended as some expected, j a thing which simply gives a Conference It brought to the "Queen City"1 a strik-1 a certaii forcefnl eclat in the education i::g array of talented, consecrated work-! of its preaci1XS) or merely advances Meth crs. That much good was done, no one j odism by teaching her youth ; but it is am doubt. The seed sown will not ger- j something over which Christ himself pre mir.ate in a night, but the harvest will sides, and which develops Christian man he certain and rich. The Assembly de- jhood and WOrnanhood. e-vts full recognition and the practical; we may meet as a Conference and pass co-operation of all who love the Lord our resolutions and forget them in a few Jesus in all sincerity and truth. We trust j weeks We may as Methodists point that it will be more successful next year j proudiy to Trinity and our other institu m point of popular interest. We believe j tions? and have onr minds "blinded by that it will be. Such a thing is en- i secaar considerations. But when we as dorsed by God and utilized by the Holy j christians 00k at these institutions as Ghost. It )s bound to succeed as long as men are faithful . The Bible is the one book ot tms natron. L pon its trutns j ph SOnnds all the depths and scales all rest all our national hopes and the su- ' the aitiuides of duty, and which we can- premaey ! t he exnonents ot Lnnst and ills Dnnci- ples, we must recognize an obligation of all good. We are glad that not repudiate nor deny. So the duty which we owe our schools does not rest upon simply loyalty to Methodism but on love seen. r rv. SllCil IOl Willis I. it is being studied as never before in the history of the world. It has a secure resting place in the great heart of our American citizenship. It is a significant j when we paCe onr Christian institu te: Spanish soldiers expressed surprise that so many of our bovs carried the Bible wonderful in its typifying power. "Corn stalk fires" are easily made, and as quickly die down. We have many of this kind in the field of religion. A certain preacher of the North Caro lina Conference preached sometime ago to a large audience, over which a revival wave of the newer sublimated kind had swept, from the text, 'For me to live is Christ, to die is gain." Toward the latter part of the sermon, his congre gation was strangely affected. Men, wo men and children began to laugh, weep, gesticulate, and shout the praises of God. Some were carried out in a state of com plete exhaustion. Others lay in a trance. The preacher could not continue his ser mon on account of the tumult. With seemingly heaven-born finesse, he turned his efforts in the direction of taking up a missionary collection. He wanted eigh teen dollars for those who have not the Gospel. But the frantic crowd evidently scorned the idea of descending the mount of their 44 transfiguration " to take up the prosiac duty of obeying their Lord's last request on earth. They continued to shout while the almost empty hat went around. The preacher, after all his ex hortation, succeeded in getting only a small part of the amount asked for. We heard once at a camp-meeting a sermon from one of bur best men and strongest preachers. At the conclusion of the sermon, a 44 son of thunder'1 but a holy man and now in heaven arose to exhort. Many of the congregation were worked into a frenzy7. The scene was al most a pandemonium. Children were weeping, while men and women were leaping and shouting. Tn our simplicity. we prophesied a grand time for the after noon service. We saw prospectively peni tents flocking to the altars, and heard the shouts in the camp of Israel. Nothing seemingly7 but dead apathy7. The fire had burned down. Hardly any ashes could be faced the sunrise of a new day, with the noble ambition to reap for Jesus many7 golden sheaves before the dying of the day7. But alas, it was not his lot to 44 wield his sickle in the ripening fields." Among the shadows,' he sat down to talk for and with his Master. With the dag gers of disease piercing his body7, parrying the thrusts of an old appetite which had nearly destroyed him, listening to the wolf of poverty howling at his door, awaiting the final and apparently early summons, he strikes from the harp of his sweet and buoyant faith a melody which rings all over the State. He may7 at times get happy 44 in meeting" and roil on the billows of ecstatic joy. But we know that the truest baptisms of spiritual power come to him m the quietude of his daily7 con flict, in the watchings of the night-time, and in his constant breaking of the ala baster box at the feet of the Master. God in War and Providence. BY P. RICHARDSON. that, in the late war with Spain, the ; tions npon tlie same piane as tne Sunday school, then our duties will be obvious. A Sunday school is not an annex of the with them into the camp and the fury of j cmirch, but an institution in which all, battle. Many of those who were killed j from the iittle cnlid to trie gray-haired had their mothers1 Bibles next to their nr vvftl1ian. mav be tauo-ht the Word - " 5 J O hearts. God rest their souls! As long as the Bible and 4 Old Glory" go to gether, so long will the 44 God of nations" smile upon us. May an annual Biblical Assembly bless our commonwealth, and Heaven-favored he those who have helped to make it a benediction to our people. of God. So a Christian institution of learning is not a mere foster-child of the church or a protege of a sub-organization, but an institution for developing the youth of our land into an intelligent, j Christian manhood. . God could place the great work of ! teaching only in the hands of an agent having a knowledge of God's thought, j the ability to correctly interpret it, and , , i the Heaven-inspired desire to use it for :e nad occasion lately to come . . . - . . . f . 4. , , t the attainment oi ine oniy true eim ui to the conclusion that our younger preach- . . , , , . r . education. The Church is the truest eou- cis are developing very sausiaciomy a There are but two ways to govern men and nations. The one is to appeal to their reason and moral sense. The Lord said to the Israelitish nation, 44 Come now and let us reason together." The other is to appeal to their fears and danger of punishment. The child must fear the rod until it gets old enough to be con trolled by reason. The history of the Israelitish nation, as recorded in the Bible, and Josephus, is but a history of God's dealings with men and nations. God deals with nations as he deals with indi viduals. To one he gives five talents, to another two, and to the other one. ' He adds to those who improve their talents, and takes from those who bury theirs. Humanity was made to grow, and man's Creator has wisely furnished him with the ir. ems of growth. Man was not finished in creation, but complete in his endless possibilities. The recent war between the United States and Spain, the manner in which it was begun and conducted, with its far reaching results, furnishes food for pro found thought and action, both by church and state. The American people had no prejudice or hatred of the Spanish nation, nor any special regard for the people of those islands. The real, underlying prin ciple of the American mind was to make peace by arresting the suffering of those people and the devastation of those grand islands. The American government had not the remotest idea that those islands would be thrown on its hands to be taken care of, and looked after in their future destiny. Without much effort or instances as the above could be multiplied. The times demand that our people should learn well the difference be tween spiritual power and a frothy emo tionalism. Spiritual power is attended by emotional phenomena of some kind. We have seen noise and power go together. But true spiritual power not only appeals ; sacrifice of blood, the Spanish rule has ENCOURAGING FACTS. preachers. They show very clearly that j they are reading and studying and what is better, praying. They show progress, not by making homiletical excursions into the domain of the so-called higher thought, but by selecting practical and tvargelical themes, and preaching the plain old truths of the Gospel with intel lectual and spiritual force. Avoiding a spurious and inert conservatism, they evince that evangelical radicalism which boRs to the best of the old while ad vancing to the best of the new. We have noticed, too, that there is a growing earn estness in the presentation of Truth. We have often thought while listen 1!:g to some men preach that they, n account of their lack of earnestness anfl their mechanical delivery, would make but a slight impression upon a jury if they were lawyers. It is a good thing, We would say by way of parenthesis, for evy preacher to go into a court-house nce in a while just to see how earnestly, and often importunately, a lawyer strives cator and the best conservator of the real educational idea. For 3000 years the Church carried the responsibility7. The sacred and secular wTere one. All was God's. To-day, according to common acceptation, the preacher is the one who stands in the pulpit and preaches the Word of God, while the teacher is re garded as one who teaches the thoughts of God as revealed in the book of nature. Yet it should be remembered that the Church is not relieved of its duty of teaching all of God's thoughts wdiereso ever revealed, whether in the little log school-house, or in the rude church. During these vacation days many parents are deciding upon a school for their children. May the foregoing thoughts and others be in their mind. God grant that the coining scholastic year may be the best in the history of Trinity and our other schools. Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. to the emotions, but is attended by7 a completer equipment for, and a livelier stimulus to, a practical and Christ-reaching service. Benificence and blessing must go together. When our hearts overflow some other heart must catch the surplus. The fire of the Holy Ghost burns bright and long. No rains of a varied experience can extinguish it. In the former instance cited, there was a lad who remained practically unmoved in the midst of the shouting and tumult. After the happy ones had exhausted their little store-houses of liberality7, he turned to the preacher and said, 44 Preacher, I'll give you a dollar for the heathen. I hav'nt got it now, but I'll work for it un til I get it." Here was the evidence of spiritual power. The boy felt the impact of that eloquent gospel sermon. The wave which shattered itself against the self-centered hearts of those noisy eccles iastical Epicurians gathered its force and swept the silent lad into the very pres ence of the Eternal One. The fire which burned in his heart did not leap and roar, but it had a heat which fused the rougher elements of his nature and brought out the pure gold. He felt the touch of God, and his heart burned with love for sin ning and dying men. Let us realize what true spiritual power is. Let us distinguish between spiritual exaltation and religious dissipation. We know a man who, years ago, was about to sink beneath the waves of life's storm lashed sea of sin. Christ came walking on the water, and all was peace. Christ possessed and Christ-possessing, this man been retired, and the American govern ment don't think it either wise or just to recognize those insurgent organizations. Therefore the United States finds those islands in her hands under military7 con trol. The recent discussion in Congress was most unfortunate. It gave encour agement to the insurgents, left the people in the islands in a state of unrest as to their future, and discounted our nation ality7 abroad. But the Divine providence seems to have moved straightforward in the midst of all opposition to accomplish His ends. A man must be a very super ficial observer who cannot see God in His providence in nations as in individuals. He chose the Israelitish nation to reveal His law and worship to mankind. 44Who are Israelites, to whom pertaineth the adoption and the glory and the covenants, and the giving of the law and the service of God." England, in her aggressive forces, has done more to civilize and Christianize mankind than all the other nations. Wherever, in the ends of the earth the English flag goes, the open Bible, prayer book and personal, civil, religious liberty go. She opened the Celestial empire to the gospel at the mouth of the cannon. It is said the United States govern ment is the best in the world, and so it is. We say nothing about party spirit in poli tics, and many other evils, but the gov ernment in the shortest time has neutral ized all national prejudices and unified all nationalities, and developed the very highest forms of personality in the world, former pledges, and there is now but one way open for the government, and that is clearly to annex those islands as territo ries, and deal with them accordingly. The Christian public ought to rise up in their God-given strength at once and send five hundred missionaries as teach ers to those islands. This would help the State to an early settlement of all the affairs of government in those islands. Over ten millions of people are now open to the churches and teachers for sal vation. It may be replied, the Catholic Church has been there. That is true. Slavery can elevate a savage to a certain point, but beyond that in slavery there is no room for growth, so can the Spanish government and the Catholic Chnrch ele vate a savage race to a certain altitude, but beyond that there is no room for fur ther development. In fact, the govern ment of Spain and the Catholic Church have been in the way of progress on those islands. They have made but lit tle advance in the last hundred years. There is no place now in the higher and more advanced civilization for the Catholic Church. Wherever the Ameri can flag is unfurled, there will be found an open Bible and civil and religious lib erty. I can't see how any patriot who enjoys these blessings can vote against giving them to others. I am no politician, and belong to no political party. Some of our Congressmen who oppose the annex ation of those islands to the United States remind me of my youngest boy. When about five years old he came into the room where his mother was having a carpet tacked clown. He took in the movement, and asked his mother if the Lord did not have a barrel of tacks ? His mother asked him what use the Lord had for tacks. He said to keep his sky nailed down. His world w7as confined to his little horizon (the reader can make the application.) This great nation can't crawl into her shell and ignore the claims of men and nations. The United States, without in tending, has done more in the past year than ever before, to impress upon the na tions the grandeur of her government, the intelligence and courage of her peo ple, and the vastness of her resources. The United States is obliged to take her place as a nation and meet her national obligations, and in the providence of God aid in the civil and religious freedom to the ignorant and down-trodden of all people. The people of the United States don't want to annex these islands to enrich themselves, but to better the condition of those islanders by giving them a better civilization, better government, and a better form of religion. If they are an nexed, then they will be a part of the nation, and no good can come to the na tion that will not come to those islanders. They will be a part of the United States. The annexation of those islands will make the geography of the nation com plete, having all soils, all climates, and all products produced on the globe, from the icy north to the sunny tropics. The nation needs the products of those islands ; coffee, sugar, the finest timber in the world, and all tropical fruits. The resources of those islands are end less. It is seed time and harvest all the year. The tropics extend about twenty eight hundred miles across the center of the earth. The Creator planted humanity, in the tropics, and by this annexation the United States will add about 300,000 square miles to her territory, and over ten millions to her population. I write understandingly, having lived near the tropics. Much is said about the burning; sun of the tropics and climatic condi tions. I know it is not as hot in Ha vana in mid-summer as it is in Atlanta or New York. The people are not sub ject to half so many diseases, and thus live much longer. I have spent many years in all parts of Florida. I never saw nor heard of a case of sunstroke or of any7 one being overcome by heat. I lived two years within forty miles of the tropics. I never saw the the thermometer but once above ninety, and only twice below sixty. As you approach the equator every schoolboy ought to know that the days and nights become more nearly of a length and the twilight shorter, as you approach the tropics. If these islands whether in war or m peace. If this is true, then all people are justly entitled to are permanently annexed to the United the same blessings, and every tnend of humanity ought to give his influence to extend civil and religious freedom to the ends of the earth. Whatever promises or pledges the government has made, the new order of things abrogates all those States, in less than five years more than a million of Europeans and American citizens will go there, and in less than twenty years the islands w7ill be made an earthly paradise. Wesley an Chris tia?n Advocate.