South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 109, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 19 April 1915 — Page 3
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
-iOSDAY, A I'll I L 10. 191.". o
o
BIBLE
1EST REVELATION
SINNERS SHOULD BE LOVED INTO DECENCY Hiu Kizht Sort of lfH".p!p Would AccomplMi Much Mocv Than I ho I'o!i
EXPECT TOD WIlICi
''Things That Cannot Be Shaken" is Subject of Sermon By Dr. James L. Gardiner at St. Paul's Methodist.
h ril d .1:; an a Cl.-iu. It is ali
old th io;- ai
rr.MUTi T IV r rni inn of doubt and keptiw Ion maa' tf the
i! t rin' s have been
i ;ui ; wh-ii in any .seeing on; iIo trin- a!ii .mother Kibing away have ;ikMl. 'Is :h re anything' really 2-rinaiu-nt in the Christian faith? Is then- :i n t r: in that cannot be hii;il:rnV" "siil J r. James I. Oardii.cr, pastor of the St. Paul's Methodist hutch, iti hi-- sermon Sunday rnornJniT i.r. th- th'tn , "Things That ("anJiot lb; Shal;-u". "In the Inst i.l.ico the great f.ict of f'.od is a f.o t that annl be disproved. W i 1 - r-rtaiii that Iol exist.ami ihat lie bears a personal relation to every human being. We hnou He is on- who sees and feeli 11 nd thinks and wills. We are certain of the great truth that He stands in tho relation of Father to the children of men. "Men may change and havo c hanged the ir i vs of the sun; hut that docs not change the sun. Men may change in the opinions in regard to the shape of the earth; hut th earth remains the same. It 1? so with Clod. We may change our views in regard to Him. Hut r,od never changes. In the beginning Ho was love. In the days .f Jesus Christ He loved; and in our own day the highest and I'cst name we can give to Dieity is Father; and the essence of fatherhood is love. Biblo Highest Ilcwlation. "The Ilible is (loci's highest and fullest and l.rst revelation to tho world. This is a fact that cannot he rdiakcn. In spite of the many attacks that critic.-" of this school and that frchool have made upon the Book, it Is htll! true that when compared to tho Korean, the Talmud, the Mormom 3:iblo and other religious hooks our JUble towers upon them as these mountains tower above sea. It has leen truly said that a better book lhan the lilblo can never be written Until a better life than tho life of Jesus Christ is lived. And this we j;now is impossible for He was without 'spot or blemish'. "Another fact that cannot be Shaken is this the church of Jesus 'hrist is th' best institution on tho lace of the earth. It is the only organization in the world that has for its solo nbjeet the propagation of tho gospel of the Son of C.ud the most glorious news that ever came from Jieaven to earth. "The church lays emphasis upon I wo things, character and service. It Is the b'jst school of character and of practice that the world has ever -'nown. This is a fact which cannot Ve denied. It is the one institution Ihat c,ver keeps before us that we are children of Cod and that all men hould practice the spirit of true trotherhood. I.tcil Shile late. "I would mention one. other fact Ihat cannot be shaken. It Is this: VTrsus Christ, the Son of Cod. lived a Sinless life. The verdict of the world Is that of Pilate. 'We can find no fault In Him. "We are absolutely sure of tho 1 hangelessnes of the character of Jesus Christ toward men and women. JIc never changes in his love for the tinner. He stills sas "Him that corned h unto me. I will in no wise cast iut To those with sad hearts he Mill invites, salving. 'Come unto me nil ye that labor and are heavy laden Mid I will give you rest. To those who are facing death Ho still is the resurrection and life and if we listen
ve can hear his voice as did Martha 1
In the Inn- ago. l am the resurrection and the life. He that believeth Vnto me shall live and whosoever livcth and believeth he shall never die ". SHOULD TESTIFYTO POWER OF CHRIST
'Tal-c and line Witnesses" is Topic of sermon By Ho v. John (). Moicr. "If a man is to tell the truth hej will do s regardless of w hether on not he is paid for so doing, he can'U Ve hired, or drien to say anything Tjtlnmt his consent." said Rev. J. Oj ?losier. pastor of Mizpah Evangelical chuivl. Sunday night in his sermon 011 "False True Witnesses." n false witness is, one that will rhai.c his word or actions for a pi in. will testify to false state.it. cuts or anything untrue for nioneyj The Christian should testify not to words of falseness hut to the savinc ica r of hrist. Christ came her to save : s from sin and it is our duty to live ;". yih planner that people1 will l.eli. e that we are s;u etl fromyln :iiui we ear. testify to this by liiivini: nothing to do with works of tIarUr.ess r with unclean fellowj Worker?. "As tV.e t-mi'Sto!ie is the mark of the cru o and the rnrn"rtnno of a hullding a mark of progress in husllss. so had we oimht to be a. marki jf Jesus Christ."
TO WORK ON MEMORIAL Vm riling Ceremonies Will Take Place at Notre latno May '20. Work en the erection of the 'Maine" memorial monument will hgi. tills week at Notre Pame. The "oase has been completed and thi t .1 o larce blacks of stone have arrived utid will be put in place, the unveiling ceremonies will take place May '2$.
South Fend nerds a fw people who know how to love sinners into decency more than it does a blameless police force, stated Rabbi Cronbach in his Sunday morning sermon at Temple Reth-EI. ir. Cronbach preached on the subject, "Hosea", the discourse being the second of a series on "The Prophets of Israel". "How," he asked, "did Hosea come upon the thought that !od is love? Did he read it in a hook? No. Did he hear It from his grandmother? No. Was it the dogma of the church to which he belonged? No. How did lie find It out? God told him, in other words, experience told him experience, the only incontrovertible proof. "He experienced that God is love. "When you havo experienced that God is love, you will believe It. You will not only believe it, but you will act it, you will live it. Until you have experienced It. you may say It, yon may profess it. but your talk will have no morn life behind It than the talking of a phonograph. "There is not a rascal In the world but can be loved into salntllness provided there be someone to do the loving. "A venal police forco is not the only drawback a community may possess. Hard and unsympathetic hearts even on the part of respectable people ran be a drawback of no small magnitu de. "This community needs something more than it does a blameless police force. It needs a few people of the Hosea type. It needs a few people who know how to love and how to love sinners. It needs not policemen to force, people Into decency but paints to love sinners into decency. "The worst thing that you can do to the masses is to truckle to them. The best thing that you can do for tho masses is to be true to yourself. The masses have a right to "your original, your new, your unique idea, even though at lirst they may oppose or ignore It."
Should Try to Avoid Feeling of Discouragement For the Sake of Our Friends Says Rev. G. W. Allison.
WORLD HAS SEEN ONE PERFECT MAN Christ the Only One Who Had No Flaws Says Itev. A. K. Thomas in Sunday Sermon.
"There are many things of this world that do not always make an ideal man or woman. Wealth. Intellect or dress do not always make the man an ideal to be looked up to," said Rev. A. K. Thomas, pastor of the First Rrethren church Sunday night in an address on the theme, "A Striking Question." "When a man looks at another man because he is wealthy or very intelligent as an ideal man, he is not doing as a Christian should do. Many times we have the wrong conception of the right kind of a man. The only man that we should look towards as our ideal is Christ, who is the only perfect man that has lived. "There are several things more than power that make men w hat they are. Decision of a man doe-s not have any bearing upon whether or not the man has power. Decision may be the basis of success, but a great sin can come from it if the decisions of men do not link with the right kind. Man must he prepared to win In life. Great financiers fail because they are not prepared for these failures."
"DON'T GET CAUGHT" SAYS WORLD TODAY Idea Seems to IW That Anything is I'etiuitteil by iVactice Sajs IV. T. J. H assert ,v.
"Take what you can and blest is he that is not caught, seems to be the standard in the world today." said Fr. P. J. Haggerty at Notre Damn Sunday. "Underhanded business is praised by the outside world. And the only kind of robbery that is considered stealing is the day light roboe This is the standard of the world but the standard of Christ is to give every man his due, and not to take advantage of the weak or tho poor. This is in direct opposition to the standard of the world in general." Then ho Illustrated the manner of stealing at present in an exsaustive. manner and sald: "When the passion of wealth takes hold of a man all of his instincts leave him. If ho cannot KCt what he longs for in it lawful way, then he must get it in an unlawful way and his conscience is seared. But before this he quiets his conscience by saying that custom op business demands money and he will make restitution when he nets enough."
MODERN MIRACLES BEING PERFORMED
Kcv. 11. 1.. l)ais Tells What the l'oreisjn liiniiar1C" Are Ac-complKhing.
Sumo of the mod en miracles that are being performed by tho foreign missionaries were described by Rev. Henry I Davis In his annual sermon to the Women's Foreign Missionary society Sunday morning at the First M. K. church. "Greater works are being done by the missionaries today," said Ilev. Davis, "than were ever done in the past." Miraculous bits of surgery by the workers in tne foreign Melds, and the growth of Christianity from an exceedingly small beginning to the present development were sited as Instances of the "greater works."
FOR A BAD COUGH Hero is a fine old-fashioned rorij r. for coughs, colds or catarrh trouble that is absolutely unquoled. Get from your druggnn 1 oz. of Parmint (Double Strength), and add to it t4 pint f f hot water and 4 oz. of granu lated fjgar. Take one tablespoor.ful 4 times a day. No more racking your whole body with a cough. Clogged noetrilb will open, air paisages of your head will clear and you can breath freely. Tt Is easy to prepare, cots little and is plrcsant to take. Anyone who ha-rt a stubborn cough, hard cold cr cttarrh In any form should rlva.thls prescription a tii&i.
APPOINTED A DELEGATE
Hcv. .lohii McGinn Will Attend Char ities Convention.
Gov. lialston has appointed Ilev. John McGinn of Notre Dame a member of tho National Association of Charities nnd Correction, which will convene In Hiltimore. Ohio, and discuss the various problems encountered In the past years and to make plans for the future. During the past few yean? Fr. McGinn has been doing, active work In South Ilend and sur-. rounding towns and Is recommended as one of the foremost workers in tho ttate.
FOR JEFFIUns ACTOMOniLIlS. eeo Frazier and Frailer. General repairing. Distributing arenU for Hosh magneto and Stromberg carburetor. 11S-120 Lincoln way 12. Advt.
"Discouragement" was the topic of
I the sermon at Hope Presbyterian
chapel (Sunday evening by the minister, George William Allison. In speaking on this theme so familiar to all through experience he said in part: "Many characters of the Bible appeal to us by their very' humanness. It is so In the case of Klijah. In connection with themo of our present thought, we find this great prophet sitting In dejection and gloom beneath a Juniper tree utterly disheartened with hla efforts to lift his people
out of their degradation. It ia an
exceedingly fortunate person who does not occasionally at least have this feeling sweep over his horizon with its groy gloom and hlurr hla vision of God and righteousness. "Put we are not so much concerned with tho fact of its existence. "We all recognlre it as a characteristic of our own lives. We want a cure for this rankling disease of tho soul which poisons our happiness. WTiere shall it be found? What is its price? How shall it be obtained? These are the things which concern us in our humanity seemingly so subject to the 'blues'. Is there a euro for disappointment, discouragement, gloom and unhapiness? "Jet us note llrst of nil the reason for this state of things in many cases. We expect too many things. We want to accomplish things too rapidly. We do not wait God's time. 'e try to Impose our own standards upon every situation and make or try to make situations conform to our standards rather than conforming ourselves. Wo have expected too much consequently are foredoomed to disappointment in the very nature of the case. "Now we should every one endeavor to free ourselves from this feeling for the sake of those with whom we live. There is probably nothing more disagreeable than association with a person who Is always yielding to discouragement and speaks in perpetual whining' tones of life's failure and disappointment. So for the sake of others we should free ourselves from bondage to this low spirit. Hut for the sake of self too it Is advisable that we he free from discouragement. It will be mastered not only by the Christian spirit of resignation in saying 'Thy will be done', hut also by throwing ourselves into our tasks with new enthusiasm. Get a fresh vision. Interest yourself in new things. Meet new people. Try a new angle of approach. "Compare your life with that of Jesus Christ. See whether you havo the reason for discouragement He had. And then hide your complaint in shame and silence. Catch the vision of the Master, and the secret of His submission to things in calm resignation which would have crushed a weaker man In hopeless discouragement and gloom and disappointment. See how lie overcame. Then follow His example. Hope, face forward, work, play, love, worship. these .are some of the things which help to dispel discouragement. Above all 'Hope thou In God. Matthew Arnold says in one of his poems. "Resolve to be thyself; and know that he. Who finds himself, loss his misery."
WILL GIVE PLAY AT ST. MARY'S WEDNESDAY
Notre Dame Mudonts to Ircont 'The Girl of the Golden West" Again on Saturday.
"The Girl of the Golden West" seems to have everyone hypnotized at Notre Dame and everyone is awaiting tha performance Saturday. Everything will be new and many things will be original. The stage scenery will ho an example of what local decorators and manufacturers can do. Prof. Ackerman is drawing some special designs for the scenes and under his direction the new material will be iittod up. Director Prof. Drury left last Thursday to pet the new costumes in Chicago and the players are busily engaged with their rehearsals. Wednesday afternoon the play will be given for the llrsi time and wil Te exclusively for the SU. Mary's Krls. The students and friends will be treated Saturday. Owing to the large cast of players and since only a few of the seniors are members of the dramatic club, nearly every member has been called upon to tako part. Some of the veterans to take part are John Kile, Kmmett I.eidhan, Kaymond Kichenlaub, Rupert Mills and Knute, Kockne.
STORE EMPLOYE ACCUSED Former South IU'iider Under Charge at Kiehmoihl, Intl.
Pen Pomeranco. former Moor walker at the Grand Leader, who has been at the Grand Leader at Richmond, Ind., for the past few months, was accused of assisting Miss Fairy Xeher of Richmond in stealing goods from the Grand Leader there to the amount of $269. The girl pleaded guilty and Pomeranee pleaded not uuilty. The hearing will be held April 27 at Richmond.
SOCIETY WILL MEET HERE Audubon Members Will Gather on May 5 and 7.
Pro. Alphonsus, assistant editor of tho Midland Naturalist, a publication sent out from Notre Dame, will be one of the speakers at the convention of the State Audubon society. Tho convention of the organization will be held in South Pend. May 5-7. The meetings will be in charge of Prof. Stanley Coulter, president of the society. FOK SALli All kinds good brick and lumber at old high school. Inquire on grounds. G. J. Gundoman. Advt. Good nourishing food, Mrs. Austin's Rolled Oats. Best you ever tasted. Advt.
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