South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 116, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 26 April 1915 — Page 3
mvi.y APmr. ini-. r SPEL GURRIES MESSAGE OF GOD ALL MUST WORK IN HARMONY WITH GOD Thini: ron.lrrrI Uttle Ity Mn An irrat in lljrs at flu AlmiU'lity. TUBE LIFE IS 3 r CUP THE COUPONS A Ml R OF M LraLia
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Dr. James L Gardiner Treats on Teachings of Christ in Evening Sermon His Love is Everlasting.
?nmo Vita' Farts of tho fTosj.cl," v.rts th thfiii' u( l ly Jnm'.s L. Gardiner, I. D., ja.tor of .--'t. Paul's M- tho. list church la?t nik'ht in which ho jjointCM.1 f)Ut three vital points that th Kt?i)(.l contains. Dr. Gurillnrr in part said: "When J(-fU3 Christ va.s Mddln;; hi disciples farf.Ncll ho said, "(if, ye into all the world anl jirracn my (;t. 1 to every creature. Paul in writing to the Iio-nian-i rxclaiins, I am n't asha ut d of the r;n.sp 1 f Jeyjs Christ for it i.s tiio I'f.Aer of (JoI unto sihatimi unto i'U ryi.rif that la eth.' William F. (Ilad'.-done once wrote, 'Talk about questions of the day. there is hut one question ami that is the gospel. It can an 1 will correct all thai nceJd correc t ion.' "Now what are the essentials of that, posj..-! which Jesus commanded nrdisciph s to preach and of whi' h Paul wa. not ashamed? What are the central facts of that system f religion which Gladotone believed was t'u hope of the world? "First, the Gospel of Jesus ChrNt contains a rnes.saKc of God's love for sinning and sinful tn-n an 1 wo-nen. The sum and substance of t!v? Go:-pel is contained in the words of .!' us. 'God so loved thr world that H v.avo Hi- only begotten Son, that whosoever bolieveth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.' 'The love of God i.s everlasting Hefore the rnornin stars san t-., -th.?r Gotl was love. There never was .i time when He bean to love. He created man and loved him but man did not sem to understand the love of God. Hence Jesus came. "The highest expression of life is love and the highest expression of love is sacrifice. God to reveal His love gave Jesus Christ to die. upon the cross. The love of Christ is the bigest. the most real and the most personal fact in the world. "Another fact of the Go.-pel of Jrs is is the fact of sin. Paul said, "All have sinned and fallen short of the i;lory of God.' We live in an ae when there is a diminishing sense of sin. We do not feel the heinousness of sin perhaps as our father did. We ar- prone to whittle the keen edge off sin. Wo try to condone sin. The Hi'.do never does. It is the one thing that l;eeps men out of heaven. It is the one thin,-: that can mar and dam a human soul. This is a fact of the Gospel and we should not neglect to lay emphasis upon it simply because it i.s an unpleasant truh. "I would remark also that the fact of forivenss is again anil again set forth in both the obi and the new -es-tament. This too is a fact of tlo Gospel. Man is a great sinner but througn Jesus Christ God forgave man of .us sins. "I would like however, t call our attention to the truth that forgiveness is not a matter nf divine bookkeeping. It i.s not put away by any legal process. You may dissolve a marriage b legal process but you can not forgive sin that way. Sin can only be put away through passion and suffering. What is the cross of Jesus Christ? It Is the expression of what it costs Fiod to forgive. Human and diino forgiveiu ss always means pain and suffering. One writer says we have "redemption ami forgiveness through the blood of Jesus Fhrist.' "I have time only to speak of one other fact of th Go-pel. namely this -the r ligion of the Lord Jesus Christ is fom'"thinu that can be experienced. In fact religion does not consist in knowledge of God. Christianity is not what we may know about Jesus. It Is an experience of Him. Tin The Christian is the man who lias the experience of God within him. Christianity is the life of Christ within the human soul. This fact we may know and appreciate and can sing, Hle.-sed assurance Jesus is mine, oh what a foretaste of heaven divine.' "These then are some four fads of the Gospel the fact of the loe of God. tho fart of sin. the fact of forgiveness through Jesus Christ, and the fact that God mav be known through personal ex pc rnenee". GIVES EXAMPLES OF THE SPIRITUAL SPENDER -The Birthright or the Me of Pottage" Is Subject or Kov. II. II. I lete-tter's Sermon. "A few types of the modern spiritual spendthrift is the young man who ignores the many opportunities offered him and lets them go by; the vour.g man who drops out of school after only half finishing: the young raan who neglects to improve the mind hut stands on the street corner; the young woman who gives the tim' Oie should lu' putting to literary stmlv to the i a ; ing of .yellow back trash; the oang woman who treats bfe as a Joke and i- a m-Mv chatteri.ox." said Bev. H. B. Ho-tetter. pastor of the Westmin.-ter Presbyterian church Sunday evening in his sermon on. "Th Birthright er the Mess of pott.t ge." "The man who makes worldly gain, popularity and pleasure the chief aims of his life is truly a modern Fsau. The three el grees of life instead of positive, comparative1, and superlative are get .n. get honor and get honest, which amount to gold, great ness ami last goodness. ( haracter is j desirn hlo to every man. but the average man will prefer the c::sh in prrf-I amount of bitterness must come to every man who makes a worldly gain and Who will silence his conscious in order that, he may live a selfish, sinful b.f. ." MEN QFHURTTtO MEET Anuwments to IW IIKciwmM at St. Paul's Church Tonight. u n meeting of the menS 1 r )u rh-"! and the Fpw rth b-ague ef ;he St. Paul's Methodist church v. ill be h Id tonight at the churc h Sh-rt talks will he made hv Ms-rs B. M. Hu'chmon. C. F. Patt. e. Willi, it.i M.iUer. Harry Alhn and the pator. ! !. J. L. Gardiner on the subj-et, "Am1..- m nts and Fntertainme:; What Shobl th. chun-h Permit and F:i : ,ge ' A lively ho"...-;.in till ;;. .-torn by other ine-mbers of the I rothe thecal and the' league will fellow, after which a social hour will bo spent.
"In order to ph ase G d we must
do things which are in harmony with His work" said F v. A. K. Thomas. : pastor of the Fir.-t Brethren church .... - . - Y t I- A. W last night t:i a sermon on n.tt e ( two to God." "Kverything we do for Him is placing a jewel in our hearts. It is not the thinirs that seem irreat to man that are the greatest in the sight of God. one of the great things that we can do for God is to use our Christian influence. Fvr-ry community needs mor' people who will do this and by so doing they are winning souls into the- kingdom of God. "To have the ambition tf) work for God brings great joy to man. Wo wedl count a man's life: a complete failure if he d e's nothing for God or for his fellowrnen." Rev. T. J. Parsons in Sermon on "Religious Athletes" Urges Hearers to Devote Attention to Christ. "The hero at college is the man who can make the football siuud. or the baseball team, or win the trophies offered at the track meet while the religious hero is the one' that has found l God and confessed hU love for Him I public ly." said Bev. T. J. Parsons, pastor of the Quincy Street Baptist j church last night in his sermon on i "Beligious Athletics." I "Fxereise is ene great necessity that i the body must have in order that the man succeeds in business or in play whichever it may be. Paul does not under rat' physical training but he , makes a idea for religious athletics, i asking that we nut as much purpose j and practic e into religion as we do in ! eur business. j "Very few people treat religion with the seriousness as it demands. Some j have spoken of Goelliness as death or ' as a certificate to heaven while it ; really is a condition etf being filled with reverence and filled with God, with His word and His institutions. "At one time a frail ami feed do i body vas the symbol of grace. Today i there is a reversion from the medle- ! vial times of the w orhlline ss, in tin; ! times, who nthe people despised their i ewn hodles and sickness was a syno- ! nym of santification. e are now livi ing in the days when physical culture j holds the leading place and the body l is next to Godliness." LEADERS NEEDED TO AID RIGHT LIVING Man Mut Learn By Ixpcrieiuv and Observation Says llvx. J. O. M Older. I "Boligion is as a product ef tho i chemistry department of the college. ! It cannot he produced without tho f proper mixture. The formula, for i water is H2o while that for religion is repentance and faith." said Kov. J. 0. M osier. paster of the Mizpah Kvangelical church Sunday evening in his sermon on the subject. "Experience, the '. Great Teacher," I "Much can he learned hv studying i hooks and theories but only a small i percentage can be learne d this way j as compared with that which can be obtained through experience'. That I which is learned'by expedience is sta- ! ble as the mind, i and as enduring. .Many things ought te be learned by observation. We should learn by set ing the cigarct fiend ami the result on his body in a few years that the habit is very dange rous. The finished product of the- saloon is the best example of the liquor habit which should teach every man and boy to refrain ! from that great evil. ! "More men are needed in every 1 walk of life who are experienced good i men. those that' can set a good ex ample to the younger generation. It is mote easy to tear down and find fault than It is tr build up and establish habits of value to ourselves and others." FAREWELL ADDRESS IS GIVEN BY C. E. TAYLOR Will Tako l'p Studies at Moody Inth into "GeMl s Gifts' is His Subject. I "God's Gifts" was the theme used j by c. t:. Taylor at Grace Methodist 1 church last night in a farewell adI dress made by him. He compared the King of Kings with the kings of the present day saying "God sent His Son to the world to save men and be leader while the kings eif the modern day have their sons in the background." Mr. and Mrs. Taylor will leave the city on Wednesday afternoon for the Moody institute at Chicago where they will each take up a two year course in theology. Thev have been strong workers of the G race church as well as at the Citv Mission on Jefferson blvd.. where they have lead in a large number of meetings. Mrs. Taylor spoke a few minutes on "The Lord and the Harvest." Mrs. IV n. j. Shafer. mother of Mrs. Tavlor will i:ive them a farewell din ner Tuesday' evening at her home at t S. Franklin st.. wnen ineir niwi ' immediate friends will bid them fare- ! well. R. A. BIRD IS IN CHARGE "God Be st" v. as the subject used by Bay A. Bird, superintendent of the e 'ity mission on Jefferson blvd. last night v hen he showed three rests that a Christian is given by accepting Chrt. Tile meetings for the week will be as follows: Pat Fmmons, tonight; Ibv. .tohn s itarns at Trinity Prest. r:ar. church, of the Tuesday evening; iv. mission. Wednesday; A. Bird Bev (h nas. a. pocKcr oi me i-h.-i. hureh Thursday evening; Baptist Bibb- study in cnarge of Bird. Friday and praise and testimony meeting Saturday evening. poirr KiM !! I.'NImX .April C. News has been received hero of tho death at Lemos "f Kupert Brook, a younjr English pott of reat rtnlas.
GIOOS HERD CONFESSES GOO
Most Rev. Alexander Christie,! Archbishop of Oregon, De-
livers Sermon at St. Patrick's Catholic Church. Most Bev. Alexander Christie, archbishop foT ere gon, preached a powerful sermon Sunday morning at l"::b" o'clock mass at St. Patrick's church. He was present in the- citv enroutoi from Washington. 1). C where' he attended the silver jubilee of the Catholicuniversity of America The subject of his sermon was Christ's love. "This life is not our own." began Archbishop Christie, '"it is but a tarrying place. We- are here but a short time to prepare for a future life-, our one object here should be to prepare for the home which the Savior has purchased for us. "It was love which brought Christ to earth to purchase by the shedding of his blood a home for us and to establish the means by which we may attain the home which his love has purchased. "Christ saw the conditions of the world. He saw his people taking unto themselves idols, defiling even the vilest passions of the human heart showing, at bast, that man must worship something. Our Savior pleaded with His Father t be permitted to visit the earth and by His death to purchase the souls of the human family. Love Iinpe'l-. SacHlicc. "We see him in his fast of 4 0 days, praying for the souls of mem. It was love that took him there. We see him prostrate in the Garden of Ccthsemane. siiecbling from e very pour of his 'body his sacred blood. Your sins and min we-rc" there- in Gethsemane weighing him down. The sins of the world, the sins of blasphemy, the sins of oovetousness. the sins of immorality rolled in upon him like the waves of a gre-at sea and caused him for a moment to shrink. But love? came? and love spoke. "Thy will, not mine, bo elone." This was his partial payment for the; home which he purchased for up. "In turn he has imposed certain conditions upon us. He estaldisheel his church. He called it the Church of Christ and oommande-d us te believe and obey those upon whim he established his church. He created the Hedy sacraments. He empowered his representatives to administer his sacraments that weak human nature might be strengthened. In this age there are many who claim, that Christ did not give this power tf) the priests of his church. Here is a ."prraoher who sa.vs that baptism is:not necessary, who says that Mile bread and wine are not the body '.and blood of Christ, who says that the priest has no power through C hrist "to forgive sin. "Who for L'.OOO years has preached these truths of the church? Christ himself. As he spoke them to his apostles he spe-aks them today frho Christ who walked the waters, who made the blind see and the deaf to hea r. "Who is this creature who dares to tell this Christ he is a falsifier? Iot him first return the dead to life, restore sight to blind eyes and hearing to deaf ears. Then and then only will we listen to him." UGLY. MEAN AND BAD SLOWLY DISAPPEARING Ilabbi (ronhacli Says World Will i:ciitnally Kill Off tin I'.xils Nfiw Ivxistimr. "The number of people attending a gi.em church never proves the least thing one way or the either about the truth of that which i.s said in the church" said Rabbi Cronbach Sunday evening in his sermon on "Israel," the third in a series on "Prophets of Israel." "The fact that ..n.ono pmpfp hoar a statement does not prove the statement true. The fact that the audience hearing a statement is only a handful does not prove the statement false. A small audience may be evidence that the preacher is ungifted. It is not an evhknee that his preaching lacks truth. "The mean, the ugly, the bad, are in this Cod-filled world lined up for destrucion. You cannot point out one single smudge ef bad in this entire universe which is not in the process -f getting killeel off. Our very act of calling it 'bad, 'horrible,' 'despicable' or 'revolting' is part of the killing off prevess. As surely as there is anywhere something bad so surely will there be someone detesting that bael and what is detesting but a preliminary to destroying. "All peac is one peace (piece) spell it as you v ,11. Spiritual peace inside of our hearts, industrial social economic peace inside of our national boundaries, international peace beyoiitl our boundaries, really it is all at bottom the same thing. Where one is missing the other will be missing. Cur restless inward ambitions bring on our restless industrial conditions and our restless industrial conditions bring on our restless international ;clations." Compare a Canadian Summer Trip With Any Other of Which You Have Been Thinking: Out of this country virtually a trip abroad iIti fact, account of tli' war, tlio oidy alj.ic'nt foreign trip pm'ticable this j je.in -t' the' Canadian Jb'rts. I The e h.irmlng "Highland of Ontario." I including the picture-piM tioe-rgim bay; the' h.ruitiful Mukoka Lakes, witli its Itoyul Muskoka; the bake' .-f P.ays. with its W.i.Wa: the Alconuuin I'rovin. i il Park T 2..--mioo ae-ri's; Mair.uie'taw an nnd rr'Ti.-h llivTs and virgin, peerless Titn.iganil. rnusu.il n.irae-5 fvr u:i i:r.uuir.y attractive country, i;fv t many Aiacrletms. A . ti r f It vt Mvi.rry anio-. i: the pines and ha Nam. Pure air. t':hi:ur. bathing, t'ontJr.k' and delightful ev;de. Pveryone who has ever visite-' the Canadian reports is kei-n to g. again. 1 htain our f : illutrte"l guide beok with maps and talde of tl: low f.-ire i r.i;t,,j-trlp teurii iitkctf w;,: .1 win ie j in rfTect thl- um:r.er. I.'t i; j'lan your : trip and mala reservations f t you at i hote-N ,.r hardi:.g housed. r if VeU Pike. can arransro for a -ottag' lor t:.- se-as-u.. i A. M.'Nntt. Passenger Agent, (Iran 1 Trunk Kv. Station. S-uith i:.-nd. Te-Ie-.b,;,.-e: P.cll Ib'tue :v.Ct. TRY NEWS-TIMES WANT AD?
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he Morris P t
OF SOUTH BEND CHARLES R. HUFF, Manager. Corner Main and Jefferson St. Opposite Postoffice
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