- 5 : . ,5 ESTABLI' 0 IN 0RMNJ3FJHE NORTH CAROLINA CONFERENCE, M. E. CHURCH, SOUTH. 1855. RALEIGH, N. C, DECEMBER 13, 1899. Ml; Gro.r ? North Carolina Conference. :i Wkkki.y at Raleigh, n. C. Rev. Rev. One A':l .V.i : W.V -.ul-ci iss matter in the post-office at Raleigh. X. IVEY, D. D Editor. M. WATSON, Business Manager. New Series. Vol. 1, No. 43. of TEARS OF SUBSCRIPTION. .... - S1.50. 1 Six Months, -Cash in Advance. .75 of the gospel and wives of deceased ' .oo. ::ing preachers in hori.ed agents the North Carolina will receive the 1. It shows the date up to which has been paid. Change in label i-s is ordered changed, both old and :v.:t be given. ::uney, be sure to state whether it is Mibseription. o:ters and make all checks and money o io the .EIGH CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE. fiS' wlly not in the great works I do not know a single one of the eter nal, trnths of the Christian religion on which Victor Hugo' has not caTt some light, either by elaborate treatment of a character or by a line or a single word. . He pleasantly tells us of his first read ing of the Bible, how h a t,: ; brothers were playing in an attic, they saw on the top of a shelf an "inaccessi- uie cook." They managed, however, to take it down "and opened it on their knees." Then they read, and "from the very first word it appeared to us so sweet, that forgetting our play we gave ourselves up to reading. We read all the morning of Joseph and Ruth and the Good Samaritan, and were more and more charmed. In the evening we read it again; we were like children who have in their hands a bird of the skies, who laugh and wonder and stroke its plumes." Thirty years after, as he saw his two daughters poring over that book, he said, riom tms nook one is learning to read another to think." Again he says: this Holy Book there is a salvation HTORIAL I lome-Maker's Reward. v men who had served the Lord - heaven's gate for their reward, soul had her fair record brought viee for the Master wrought, i 7 "In so profound that a God was needed to dic- i sei . u whose life was full and long. i. ar inn had slain a giant wrong. "iiiiT children this one's life was .U ss outcasts hope that presence lent. :ri. d and stunted souls those labored low's blessings in the prison cell. " humanity,' sin-cursed and lost, v tlirir lives, and counted not the cost. .'.;.' bright and beautiful to see ! :'..!! u- had crowned them ere their souls :n e was who lone and trembling ;s throng of women great and good. .-t recording . !i'u her '.ngel, among the spe;u ble acre these T T lit :ing said, :sed dead thou nothing done their crowns of glory uiic li. wavs. e .snenscs or I'wnpti the Bible dazzled the world." Though he writes as a poet, he always writes as a believer, and is ever showing his rever ence and love for the inspired Word. In more than twenty of his works he makes reference to the "august text, where hearts reading with fervor drink in truth, beauty, righteousness." With him life is no playground, it is a place of combat between good and evil. It is the duty of all to side with virtue against vice, for all are free. Duty is a divine word. "Dutv is a God that will have no atheist " God alone is the sure oracle; faith that takes him at his word is the torch that never goes out, and always guides right. Hope comes with faith. "Hope, child, to-morrow, and then to-morrow still. Be lieve in the future and hope. Every time the sun rises, let us be there to pray, as God is there to bless." We know his mercy; he is the God of Calvary." What God wants is love. "To adore, i that is at once to love and to admire. As God is infinitely above man, how shall this infinite distance be overcome?" One day, the poet says, a phantom met him and offered to bridge over this separating abyss. "What is thy name?" He re plies, "My name is Prayer." "To bring by thought the infinitely low in contact v.'irh the infinite-lv high, that is Draver." . r- i x X.) -he weeping, said: "Let me return : -ir earth, for which I surely yearn; - that loved me all my service got; -ervice for the Lord I wrought. called John Wesley to teach a conscious salvation. The great doctrine of Meth odism is the doctrine of the witness of the Spirit. This is that supernatural fire that strangely warmed John Wesley's heart. This is that inborn sense, down deep in consciousness, deeper than logic, more certain than reasoning, that we are accepted of God, whereby we cry, "Abba, Father." Have you this witness? Brother, ask yourself; sister, ask yourself, "Have I this all-satisfying witness?" I am on trial for my soul. My case is being made up. The jury will soon goout. Its ver dict is final. I must know beyond a doubt what their verdict wxi-be. It will either set me free to walk with open face and glad heart about the city of God, with the good and great of all ages forever, or it will assign me to that lone land where mercy and hope never come. I cannot trust my own judgment; am little, ignorant, and often easily decieved, much prejudiced; I may be wrong; I may have an iufaiible testimony. This I may have in the witness of the Holy Spirit ? You may have. Pray mightily that this may come to you and be the rich enduement of power for the whole Church- This is the supreme gfft. Jesus said: "It is expedient for you that I go away." What could make it exnedient for the infant Church to have Jesus leave them? He had been all things unto them. He had been to them the peasant of Naza reth, Prophet of God, Son of God, and God over all, blessed for evermore. Yet it was expedient for them to have him go away. For Jesus says, "If I go not awav, the Holv Ghost will not come un to you." The Spirit is the promise of the Father. Let every Methodist, man, and stand by the rocks and the natural amphitheatres in Cornwall and Northum berland, in Lancanshire and Berkshire, where he preached his gospel to the heath en. Exertion so prolonged, enthusiasm so sustained, argues a remarkable man, while the organization he created, the system he founded, the view of life he promulgated, is still a great fact among us. No other name than Wesley's lies embalmed as his does. Yet he is not a popular figure. Our standard historians! have dismissed him curtly. The fact is, Wesley puts your ordinary historian out of conceit w7ith himself, How much easier to weave into your pages the gos sip of Horace Walpole, to enliven it with a heartless jest of George Selwyn's, to make it blush with sad stories of the ex travagance of Fox, to embroider it with the rhetoric of Burke, to humanize it with the talk of Johnson, to discuss the rise and fall of administrations, the growth and decay ct the constitution, than to fol low' John Wesley into the streets of Bris tol, or on to the bleak moors near Bur sleni, when he met, face to face in all their violence, all tlie r ignorance, and all their generosity the living men, women, and children who made up the nation. It was perhaps also to be admitted that to found great organizations is to build your tomb a splendid tomb, it may be, a veritable sarcophagus, but none the less a tomb. John Wesley's chapels lie a lit tle heavily on John Wesley. Even so do the glories of Rome make us forgetful of the grave in Syria. It has been said that Wesley's charac ter lacks charm, that mighty antiseptic. It is not easy to define charm, which is not a catalogue of qualities, but a mix- woman and child, pray for the personal iture. Let no one deny charm to Wesley witness of the Spnit and for the baptism of the Holy Spirit upon the whole church. This will secure the power of the church and the supreme and acceptable Twen tieth Century Thank Offering. Give yourself, then you will gladly give what ever God" wants. Put your hand between the King's hands, and he will secure the rest. Bishop Foivlcr. JOHN WE:JLEY. 15Y AUGUSTINE BIRKELL. her lamb and the calls Lord c W:e : - j r j j too short for me; when Death had U.l hut made on ear:h a happy home." iwst thou so, thou well-beloved Ay! lKv,vgxu-v of heaven, go in among the rest. that loved thee thou shalt have X Va:n: :ie I: th air i in y return, but thou shalt lose thy pain, shalt breathe in heaven ihynat.ve s glorious mansions, great and fair, - .":.? iliar all its joys shall come; n - 'vhaMhou hast left a happy home Fninroi FAkln Alliaon, in the Inte.ior. 77 T r ft HUGO AS A PREACHER. SIOMAS DGGGKTT, D. E "1 not surprising that ministers ad much in Victor Hugo's writ luVtrate their sermons and give v the essential truths of Chris N,r is it surprising that some, i ter to congregations in which numbers who are familiar with ikrature, should frequently take t -e gieat moral and inteilec- (. ions as furnishing subject r ili..- vivid enforcement of vital ; .! verities. The wonder is that i ne ;tr cone. 1 ne jiuic : ieu the living characters of a The sheep comes when i her: I called the Lore, came." "If men seek pleasure only, they find joys without happiness, sorrows without consolation. Happiness leaves in my soul regret, but impure pleasure, thou leavest remorse." Nothing better has been said of im mortality than "without it nature would be a mournful and cowardly impostor. Life would not be worthy of God who gives it, nor of man who receives it." At the tomb of Balzac he said: "I will not cease repeating it no, it is not night, it is light; it is not the end, it is the be ginning; it is not nothingness, it is eter nity." At the foot of the coffin of a young girl he said: "Emily has gone to seek suoreme serenity above. She has gone vouth to eternity, beauty to the fdeal, hope to certitude, love to the in finite, the pearl to the ocean, the spirit to God. They who have fed on Victor Hugo have no relish for the moral anatomy and the irreligious realism of most of the novelists of cur day. Victor Hugo preaches; would that there were more such preachers! THE WITNESS OF THE SPIRIT. Let me sneak to the great hosts of the rank and hie cf our membership. Is it not true that many live on and on in the Church on a plane below their privilege.' a fl-.nr.o not manv who fail of the rich on, used to throw an sacred page. The lit upon the i' rv and the incidents of com- v.hich the daily press presents, u upon as a matter of course to the Psalms and Prophets and md Epistles, and no objection is :d why not the works of one ' d has endowed with more than insight into life and character, i more than an ordinary power 111 ulml linnifin life and charac- and v to set r cranes irom ..:;hcq nf the Spirit t i ney piou better experience, inuigiy tualiy Having a sai- ,,i.i Iiy viHJ v.uuii! . 1 ,1 x nurtimtU liT to nave tue utrcp God's witnessing op" -. , , rm the purpose lor which Methodism v.as cal.ea .mo f; s;orld to teacn aim i'Huo religion. The world was days of Wesley, with Old wlio li aa oniy a . r i. r,nH wanted a Uiurcn hope oi a hujjc. v- with a knowable experience. assurance of faith that of for a in heart, yet never isfactory experience m rrb'id to have Gc experience ici Met hod ism are in the w a knowable full, in the Testament believers, John Wesley?, born as he w7as in 1703, and dying as he did in 1791, covers as nearly as mortal man may, the whole of the eighteenth century, of which he was one of the most t pical and certainly the most strenuous figure. He began his pub lishecl journal on October 14, 1735, and its last" entry is under date Sunday, Octo ber 25, 1790, when in the morning he ex plained to a numerous congregation in Spitalfields Church "The Whole Army of God," and in the afternoon enforced to a still larger audience in St. Paul's, Shad well, the great truth, "One thing is need ful," the last words of the Journal being "T hone manv even then resolved to - r j choose the better part." Between these two Octobers there lies the most amazing record of human exer tion ever penned or endured. I do not know whether I am likely to have among my readers any one who has ever contested an English or bcotisli county in a pariia mentary election since household stiff rage If I have, that tired soul will know how severe is the strain of its three weeks, and how impossible it seemed at the end of tlip first vcppk that vou should be abie to keen it eoiugf for another fortnight, and how when the last night arrived you felt that had the strife been accidentally pro longed another seven days you must have perished by the wayside. Well, John Wesley contested the three kingdoms in the cause or Christ during a campaign whioh Listed fortv vears. He did it for - " - - - - rf-r the most part on horseback, lie paid more turnpikes than any man who ever bestrode a beast. Eight thousand miles was his annual record for many a war. dnrino- each of which he preached less frequently than five thous and times. Had he but preserved his scores at all the inns where he lodged, they would have made by themselves a So he I01 1 1 seldom who has not read his journal. Southey's life is a dull, almost a stupid, book, which happily there is no need to read. Read the journal, which is a book full of plots and plays and novel, which quivers with lite and is crammed full of character. John Wesley came of a stock which had been harassed and put about bv our un- happy religious difficulties. Politics, bus iness, and religion are the three things Englishmen are said to worry themselves bout. 1 he Wesley 3 early took up with eligion. John Wesley's great-grandfather and grandfather were both ejected from their livings in 1662, anel the grandfather was so bullied and oppressed by the Five Mile Act that lie early gave up the Ghost. Whereupon his remains were refused what is called Christian burial, though a holier and more primitive man never drew breath. This poor, persecuted spirit left two sons according to the flesh, Matthew and Samuel; and Samuel it was who in his turn became the father of John and Charles Wesley. The mother of the Wesleys was a re markable woman, though cast in a mould not much to our mind nowadays. She had nineteen children, and greatly prided herself on having taught them, one after another, by frequent chastisements to, what do you think? to cry softly. She had theories of education and strength of will, and of arm, too, to carry them out. She knew Latin and Greek, and though a stern, forbidding, almost an unfeeling, a parent, she was successtul. m winning and retaining not only the respect but the affection of such of her huge family as lived to grow un. But out cf the nine- teen, thirteen early succumbed. Infant mortality was one of the great facts of the eighteenth century whose Rachels had to learn to cry softly over their dead babes. The mother of the Wesleys thought more of her children's sculs than of their bodies. John Wesley received a sound classical education at Charterhouse and Christ Church; and remained all his life very much the scholar and gentleman. Nc company was too good for John Wesley, and nobody knew better than he did that had he cared to carry Ins powerful intel ligence, his flawless constitution, and his infinite capacity for taking pains intoany history of pr gnout it an 1- .1 i i ices. riuu iuro : l r : . - 4. , wiiai depression 01 spirub -though lie nad much to try him, and a leaions wile. lib ne nevt-'i icuc meant t h o 1 1 g 1 1 suits in chaucei In the course of this unparalleled con test Wesley visited again and again the most out-of-the-way districts the remot est comers of England places which to day lie far removed even from the searcher after the picturesque. In 1S99, when the map of England looks like a gridiron of railways, none but the sturdiest of pedes trians, the most determined of cyclists can retrace the steps of Wcsiey and his horse eludes m J. i of the markets cf the world, he must have earned for himself place, fame, and fortune. Weslev's motive never his early manhood, after being greatly affected by Jeremy Taylor's "Holy Liv ing and Dying" and the "Imitatio Christi," and by Law's "Serious C; and "Christian Perfection," he met "a serious man," who said to him, "Sir, you wish to serve Goel and go to heaven Remember vou cannot serve Him alone You must, therefore, find companions or make them. The Bible knows nothing of solitary religion." He was very confi dent, this serious man, and Wesley never forgot his message, "You must find com panious or make them. The Bible knows nothing ot solitary religion." These words forever sounded in Wesley's ears, determining his theology, which rejected the stern individualism of Calvin, and fashionitig his whole polity, his famous class-meetings and generally gregarious methods. Wesley's humor is of the species don nish, and his modes and methods quietly persistent. "On Thursday, the 20th of May (1742), I set out. The next afternoon I stopped a little at Newport-Pagnell, and then rode on till I overtook a serious man with whom I immediately fell into conversa tion. He presently gave me to know what his opinions were, therefore I said nothing to contradict them. But that did not content him. He was quite uneasy to know 'whether I held the doctrines of the decrees as he did ;' but I told him over and over 'We had better keep to practical things lest we should be angry at one another.' And so we did for two miles till he caught me unawares and dragged me into the dispute before I knew where I was. He then grew warmer and warmer; told me I was rotten at heart and supposed I was one of John Wesley's fol lowers. I told him 'No. I am John Wes ley himself.' Upon which Lnprovi&um asbris Veluti qui seiiti'nus an? item PrcsscL hu would have gladly run away outright. But, being better mounted of the two, I kept close to his side, and endeavored to now nun 111s neart 1111 we came into the street of Northampton." What a picture have we here of a fine May morning in 1742, the unhappy Cal- vinist trying to shake off the Arminian Wesley ! But he cannot do it ! John Wesley is the better mounted of the rtv?, and so they scamper together into Northampton. Wesley was full of compassion, of a compassion wholly free from hysterics and like exaltative. In public affairs, his was the composed zeal of a Howard. His efforts to penetrate the dark places were long 111 vain. He savs, in his dry way : ' They won't let me go to Bedlam because they say I make the inmates mad, or into Newgate, because I make them wicked. The reader of the journal will be at no loss tcV see what these saoient magistrates meant. Wesley was a terribly exciting preacher, quiet though his manner was. He pushed matters home without flinch- ing. lie made people cry out and ian M. A. down, nor did it surprise him that they should. You will find some strange biographies in the journal. Consider that of John Lancaster for a moment. He was a young fellow who fell into bad company, stole some velvet, and was sen tenced to death, and lay for a whiie in his hour. A good Methodist woman, Sarah Peters, obtained permission to visit him, -though the fever was raging in the prison at the time. Lancaster had no difficulty in collecting six or seven other prisoners, all like him self waiting to be strangled, and Sarah Peters prayed with them and sang hymns, the clergy of the diocese being otherwise occupied. When the eve of their execu tion arrived the poor creatures begged that Sarah Peters might be allowed to remain withthem, to continue her exhor tations, but this could not be. In her absence, however, they contrived to con sole one another, for that devilish device of a later age, solitary confinement, was then unknown. When the bellman came round at midnight to tell them, "Remem ber you are to die today," they cried out, "Welcome news! Welcome news!" How they met their deaths you can read for yourselves in the journal, which concludes the narrative with a true eigh teenth century touch. "John Lancas ter's body was carried away by a com pany hired by the surgeons, but a crew of sailors pursued them, took it from them by force and delivered it to his mother, by which means it was decently interred in the presence of many who praised God on his behalf." If you want to get into the last century, to feel its pulse throb beneath your finger, be content se.metime to leave the letters of Horace Walpole unturned, resist the drowsy temptation to waste your time over the learned triflers who sleep in the seven teen volumes of Niehols; nav even deny yourself ycur annual reading cf Boswell or your biennial retreat with Sterne, and ride up and down the country with the greatest force of the eighteenth century in England. No man lived nearer the centre than John Wesley. Neither Give nor Pitt, neither Mansfield nor Johnson. You can not cut him out of our national life. No single figure influenced so many minds, no single voice touched so many hearts. ttr slu.nhi be? As we find "sermons in