Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 8 March 1894 — Page 3

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A CONQUERING CHRIST.

The Greatest and Most Heroic Figure in All History. .*'

The Transcendent Power of the Blood Shed Upon Calvary—Dr. T»lmaj c's Sermon.

From the startling figure of the text cboseu by the Rev. Dr. Taljnage in his sermon in the Brooklyn Tabernacle, Sunday, the preacher brought out the radical truths of the Christian religion. The subject of the sermon was "Christ, the Conqueror," the text being Isaiah lxiii, 1. "Who is this that comcth from Edom, with dyed garments from Bozrah—this that is glorious in His apparel, traveling in the greatness of His strength?" He said:

When a general is about to go out to the wars a flag and a sword are publicly presented to him and the maidens bv'ng flowers, and the voung men load the cannon, and the train starts amid ahuzzathat- drowns the thunder of the wheels and the shriek of the* whistle. But all this will give no idea of the excitement that there must, have been in heaven when Christ started out on the campaign of the world's conquest. If they could have foreseen the siege that would be laid to Him, and the maltreatment He would suffer, and the burdens He would have to carry, and the battles He would have to •light, I think there would have been a million volunteers in heaven who would have insisted on coming along with Him.

You know there is a wide difference between a man's going off to battle and coming back again. hen be goes oil", it is with epaulets untangled, with banner unspecked, with horses sleek and shining irom the groom. All that there, is of struggle and pain is to come yet. So it was with Christ. He had not yet fomrhi, a battle. He was starting out,' and though this world did not give Him a warm-hearted greeting there was a gentle mother who folded Him in her arms, and a babe finds no difference between a stable and a palace, between courtiers and camel drivers.

But soon hostile forces began to gather. They deployed from the sanhedrim. They were detailed from the standing army. They came out from the Caesarean castles. The vagabonds in the street joined the gentlemen of the mansion. Spirits rode up Irom hell, and in long array there came a force together that threatened to put to rout this newly arrived one from heaven. Jesus now •seeing the battle gathering lifted His own standard. But who gathered about, u?

How feeble the recruits. A few shoremen, a blind beggar, a woman with an alabaster box, another woman with tvro mites and a group of friendless. mone\less and positionless people came to his standard. What chance was there for .Him? Nazareth against Kim. Bethlehem against Him. Capernaum against Him. Jerusalem against Him. Galilee against llirn. The courts against Him. The arm}' against Him. The throne against Him. The world against Him. All hell against Him.

No wonder they asked Him to surrender. But he could not surrender He could not apologize Fie could not take any back steps. He had come to strike for the deliverance of an enslaved race, and He must do the work. Then they sent out their pickets to watch Him. They saw in what house He weut and when He came out. They watched what he ate and who with, what he drank and how much.

But at last the battle came. It was to be more fierce than Bozrah, more bloody than Gettysburg, involving more than Austerlitz, more combatants employed than at Chalons, a ghastlier conflict than all the battles of the earth put together, though Edmund Burke's estimate of thirtyfive thousand million of its slain be accurate. The day was Friday, the hour was between 1U and 3 o'clock. The field was a slight hillock northwest of Jerusalem. The forces engaged were earth and hell, joined as allies on one side, and heaven represented by a solitary inhabitant on the other.

The hour came. Oh. what a time it was! I think that that day the universe looked on. The spirits that could be spared from the heavenly temple and could get conveyance of wing or chariot came down from above, and spirits getting furlough from beneath came up, and they listened and they looked, and they watched. Oh, what an uneven battle. Two worlds armed on one side, an unarmed man on the other. The regiment of the Roman army at that time stationed at Jerusalem began the attack, They knew how to fight, for they belonged to the most thoroughly drilled army of the world. With spears glittering in the sun they charged up the hill. The horses prance and rear amid the excitement of the populace, the b^els of the riders plungod in the flanks,urging them on.

The weapons begin to tell on Christ. See how faint He looks! There the blood starts, and there and there and there. If He is to have re-enforcements, let him call them up now. No, Be must do this »work alone—alone. He is dying.

Feel for yourself of the wrist the pulse is feebler. Feel under the arm- the warmth is less. He is dying. Aye, they pronounce Him dead. And just at that moment {that they pronounced Him dead He rallied, and from His wounds He ui:-

sheathed a weapon which staggered the Roman legions down the hill and burled the satanic battalions into the pit. It was a weapon of love— infinite love, all conquering love. Mightier than javelin or spear, it triumphed over all. Put back, ye armies of earth and hell!

The tide of battle turns. Jesus hath overcome. Let the people stand apart and make a line that He may pass down from Calvary to Jerusalem, and thence on and out all around the world. The battle is fought. The victory is achieved. The triumphal march is begun. Hark to the hoofs of the warrior's steed and the tramping of a great multitude, for He has many friends now. The hero of the earth and heaven advances. Cheer! Cheer! "Who is this that eometh from Edom, with dyed garments from Bozrah, traveling in the greatness of His strength?"

You have noticed that when soldiers come home frim the wars they carrv on their flags the names of the battlefields where they were distinguished. The Englishman coming back has on his banner Inkermati and Balaklava the Frenchman, Jena and Eilau the Gorrv.an, Versailles and Sedan. And Christ has on the banner He carries as conqueror the names of 10,000 battlefields He won for you and for me. He rides past all our homes of bereavement, by the door-bell swathed in sorrow, by the wardrobe black with woe, by the dismantled fortress of our strength.

Come out and greet Him today, O ye people! See the names of ail the battle passes on His flag. Ye who are poor, read on this ensign the story of Christ's hard crusts and pillowfess head. Ye who are perse-' cuted, read here of the ruffians who chased Him from His first breath to His last. Mighty to soothe your troubles, mighty to balk your calamities, mighty to tread down your foes, "traveling in the greatness of His strength." Though His horse be brown with the dust of the march, and the fetlocks be wet with the carnage, and the bit be red with the blood of your spiritual foes, He comes up now, not exhausted from the battle, but fresh as when He went into it—coming up from Bozrah, "traveling in the greatness of His strength."

At 2 o'clock to-morrow afternoon go among the places of business or toil. It will bo no difficult thing for you to find men who, by their looks, show you that they are overworked. They "are prematurely old. They are hastening rapidly toward their decease. They have gone through crises in business that shattered their nervous systems and pulled on the brain. They have, a shortness of breaduh, and a pain in the back of the head, and at night an insomnia that alarms them.

Why are they drudging at business early and late? For fun? No it would be difficult to extract any amusement out of that exhaustion. Because they are avaricious? In mail}' cases no. Because their own personal expenses are lavish? No a few hundred dollars would meet all their wants. The simple fact is, the man is enduring all that fatigue and exasperation and wear and tear to keep his home prosperous.

There is an invisible line reaching from that store, from that bank, from that shop, from that scaffolding to a quiet scene a few blocks, a few miles away, and there is the secret of that business endurance. He is simply the champion of a homestead, for which he wins bread and wardrobe and education and prosperity, and in such battle 10,000 men fail. Of ten business men whom I bury nine die of overwork for others. Some sudden disease finds them with no power of resistence, and they are gone. Life for life. Blood for blood. Substitution!

About thirty-three years ago there went forth from our homes hundreds of thousands of men to do battle for their country. All the poetry of war soon vanished and left them nothing but the terrible prose. They waded knee deep in mud. They slept in snowbanks. They marched till their cut feet tracked the earth. They were swindled out of their honest rations and lived on meat not fit for a dog. They had jaws all frac tured, and eyes extinguished, and limbs shot away. Thousands of them cried for water as they lay dying on the field the night after the battle and got it not. They were homesick and received no message from their loved ones. They died in barns, in bushes, in ditches, the buzzards of the summer heat the only attendants on their obsequies.

No one but the infinite God, who knows everything, knows the tenthousandth part of the length and breadth and depth and height of anguish of the northern and southern battlefields. Why did these fathers leave their children and go to the front, and why did these young men. postponing the marriage day, start out in the probabilities of never coming back? For the country they died. Life for life. Blood for blood. Substitution!

But we need not go so far. What is that monument in Greenwood? Is it to the doctors who fell in the southern epidemics? Why go? Were there not enough of sick to be attended to in these northern latitudes? Oh, yes, but the doctor put a few medical books in his valise, and some vials of medicine, and leaves his patients here in the hands of other physicans and takes the rail train. Before he gets to the infected regions he passes crowded rail trains, Regular and extra, taking the flying and affrightened populations. He arrives in a city over which a great horror is broodine. He goes from couch to couch, feeling thepulse and studying-' ,*• -'-"f

of symptoms, and prescribing, day after day, night' after night, until a fellow physician says: "Doctor, you had better go home and rest. You look miserable."

But he can not rest while so many are suffering. On and on until some morning finds him in a delirium, in which he talks of home and then rises and says he must go and look after those patients. He is told to lie down, but he fights his attendants until he falls back and is weaker and weaker and dies for people with whom he had no kinship, and far away from his own family, and is hastily put away in a stranger's tomb, and only the fifth part of a newspaper line tells us of his sacrifice—his name just mentioned among five. Yet he has touched the furthest height of sublimity in that three weeks of humanitarian service. He goes straight on as an arrow to the bosom of Him who said. "J was sick and ye visited me." Life for life. Blood for blood. Substitution!

I catch a handful of the red torrent that rushes out from the heart of the Lord, and I throw it over this audience, hoping that one drop of its cleansing power may come upon voo-f soul. O, Jesus, in that crimsoc oide wash our souls! W«* accept thy sacrifice! Conqueror of Bozrah. have mercv ^pou us! We throw our garments in the wav! Wo fall into line! Ride on. Jesus, ride ch! "Traveling, traveling Is the greatness of Thy strength."

IIOOSIEIi EAGLES.

Talcs of Aquiline Strujrslns and Discomfitures in a Grttiit State.

Now York Sun. "The Indiana eagles are on the rampage again," said George Bioshfield'of Wayne county, "and seem to have taken a particular fancy this time to small boys. It isn't so long ago since the Sun printed the story about the big Vermillion county eagle that swooped down on a flock of geese in a farmer's door yard, confidently expecting that it would be no job at all to soar back with a fat goose for d:-iner, and was almost knocked silly with surprise when the whole flock pitched into him with a vim that •compelled him to do some of the liveliest fighting he had ever run up against and even then, alter licking every one of the geese, the. eagle failed to get one of them for his dinner, because the farmer daughter came out and went at him with a fence rail and a dog and laid him so low that he never got any I higher than the farmer's mantelpiece, and then only as a stulied eagh". "That story'was all right, but indirectly it gave out the idea, somehow, that all the eagles in Indiana were in Vermillion county. Not bj,r a long shot! Old Scott's" all right when it comes to eagles! Vermillion county may have a few more eagles than Scott county, but it takes tivo or three Vermillion county eagles to size up with one of Scott s. Mrs.

Farmer Riokards can tell you that. She lived in Vermillion county when she was a girl, and once killed an eagle there that came down and tackled a turkey gobbler in her father's barnyard. She killed it with a flail with which she was threshing out oats in the barn. That eagle measured six feet and a little over from tip to tip. It was considered a fair average Vermilion county eagle. Mrs. Farmer Rickards now lives in Scott county. Some time ago. when the weather was warm, Mrs. Rickards was out in the yard boiling soap. Her three-year-old boy was playing about the yard. Suddenly a shadow like that of a passing cloud came over the yard and Mrs. Rickards heard a scream. She looked up and saw a heap of feathers as big as if one of her biggest feather beds had been dumped down there, but from the top of it rose the head and from the bottom of it were thrust the feet of an eagle. The feet were clutched in the clothes of Mrs. Rickard's three-year-old boy, who was kicking aud squirming and yelling to beat the band. Mrs. Rickards had a large ladle in her hand. She dipped it in the kettle of soap, filled it with the boiling stuff and sprinted across the yard only too quick. The eagle had got his hooks in on the boy all right by this time and was rising easily with the youngster. But he had tarried too long. Mrs. Rickards dumped tho ladle of boiling soap on top of his head and the hot stuff ran down and filled his eyes and nostrils jam full. The eagle dropped the boy as if he had been hotter than the soap and began doing some of the livliest ground and lofty tumbling around that yard that was ever seen. The soap hadn't only blinded him it was getting in its little alkali workon those sensitive organs in a way that simply crazed. "Mrs, Rickards grabbed her boy and ran with' him into the house. Then she got her husband's old army musket and' ran back to use it on the eagle, which was still pirouetting around the yard like a rooster with its head off. The gun wouldn't go off, so Mrs. Rickards clubbed and pounded that blinded and crazed eagle over the head until he was glad to die: He was undoubtely a patriarch of the sky, for every feather on him was as gray as the lichen on glacial rocks, and he measjured seven feet from tip to tip.

h.

"These are all the returns that were in when I left home, but I expect litter news of Indiana eaglfes when I get back, for they are on one of* their periodical rampages."

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MISCELLANEOUS NOTES.

Artificial ice was first made in 1783. The practice of hypnotism is considered a crime in Belgium.

Fish are becoming scarce in the seas around the British coast. A good quality of rope is now being made from the pineapple fiber.

Nearly half of all the real estate in the German Empire is mortgaged. The first public school in this country was established in Boston in 1-335.

Drovers assert that a sheep, when lying down, weighs more than when standing.

A London engineer has a plan for storing heat in specially constructed boilers for use whenever wanted.

Our grand business is not to see what lies dimly at a distance, but to do what lies clearly at hand.—Carlyle.

Whenever lightning strikes the Sahara desert, it vitrifies a small portion of the sand, making a 6ort of Lflass.

A Buffalo barber has put out this sign: "Hair cutting Ordinary mortals, 15 cents foot-ball players, 50 cents."

A burning mountain is visible near Concord, Ky. It is supposed to be fed with oil that oozes from a crevice in the mountain.

Nearly everybody smokes in Japan —men and women. The girls begin tvhen they are ten years old, and the boys a year earlier.

The stamp-collecting fad is on the increase. Lrfst year two London auctioneers disposed of about £15,D00 worth of stamps.

Albert McDonald, of Macon, Mo., was so afraid that he would lose a large fortune he had just acquired that he shot himself.

France uses a new kind of fuel, just invented. It is composed of petroleum, which is solidified with the addition of sawdust and pitch.

A milkmau's mule in Louisville, Ky., returned to duty after a vacation of twelve months recently, and remembered the door of every customer.

In a Scotch asylum there is a' woman whose one form of insanity before she.was incarcerated consisted in having hsr horses' shoes of solid gold with gold nails, each set of shoes and nails costing $2,500.

A man caught a large bass atCenterville, Mich., the other day, in an unusual way. He was sawing ice on a pond, when the point of the saw struck the fish, which, impaled on the point of the instrument, was unable to escape.

Few people become wealty through playing cards. A gentleman named Godall, in England, who had handled more of them than any other man in the country, lately died, leaving a §300,000. Ho rarely played them, however, It was his business to make them, and he manufactured millions of them every year.

Some oue has suggested the addition of kitchens to churches, to supply food to hungry people, and thus fcempt the needy to take part in the devotions. A Boston evangelist ridicules the idea, saying religion is coming to a pretty pass when you have to supply "a flapjack to every worshipper—cooked while you pray."

Distressing want still exists among the fishermen of tho Guif bayous whose property was swept awav by the great storm of last October. In the tangled undergrowth of the islands the remains of a victim are sometimes found even now. The buzzards have perhaps left little else than tho bones, but letters or papers in the rags of clothing identity the unfortunate. A petition for the remission of certain taxes, which the fishermen of Cookbayou have drawn up for submission to the police jury of the parish, speaks eloquently of their destitution.

Pandy's Nervo and Politeness, London Truth, After the repulse of the rebel attack on the Shah Nueejf, at Lucknow, one Pandy counterfeited death with great skill, then all of a sudden sprang to his feet and ran like a deer. He was still within easy range, and several rifles were leveled at him but Sergeant Findley, who was on the rampart, and himself one of the best shots in the service, called out: "Don't fire, men give the poor devil a chance!" Instead of a volley of bullets he got a cheer to speed him on his way. As soon as he heard it he realized the position, halted, turned around, and putting up both his hands, with the p$ijE*s together' in fsdjat of his face, salaamed profoundly, and then walked slowly away, while the Highland soldiers on the ramparts waved their feather bonnets and clapped their hands.

Standard Publications. The death of Mr. George W. Childs has revealed once more the strong hold he had upon the affections of men and women in his own profession. Harper's Weekly for February 10th contains a striking tribute to hfs many manly virtues by Talcott Williams, of the Philadelphia Press and the Weekly for the 17th will print a page of illustrations showing Mr. Childs as he appeared in his Dffice at the Public Ledger building, and scenes at the funeral. Harper's Bazar, which looks at the world1 through feminine eves, will publish) this week some "Reminiscences of Mr. George W. Childs" with a glimpse of his home, "Wooton" at' Bryn Mawr, by Mrs. Mary WagnerFisher. ...

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Schedule oi Passenger Trains-Central Time

Westward.

45 7 I 81 AM!PM AM 45'*3 0nj*-7 30 10 20. 4 42 8 11 07j 5 40^ 9 28 112li 5 57

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5 Meals. Flag Stop. Kos. 6, S and 30 connect at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the Kasl. and at Richmond for Dayton, Xcnia and Sprmghcid, and Ko. 1 for Cincinnati.

Trains leave Cambridge City at. 17.00 a. m. and t3.30 p. m. for Rushvilie, Shelby ville, Columbus and intermediate stations. Arrive Cambridge City 11.45 and 16-45 P- no.

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11-29-93.-T4 Pittsburgh, Penn'a. For time cards, rates ot fare, through tickets, baugaga checks and further information regarding the running of trains apply to any Agent of the Pennsylvania Lines.

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