Newspaper Page Text
CHRIST BRINGS JOY. Dr. Talmage Corrects Some False Notions About Religion. SJerava Dnn fraa the Story ! Kl lUi aa the aeea f hea HUaiaa Wn Ar Ways af IMeaaaataeaa. ICopyrtghU 1JM. by Louis Klopch. N. T.J W ihuif ion, Au. 4. In this discourse Dr. laliuage cor rect tome of the false notion about religion and represents it a being1 joy inspiring instead of dolorous; text, 3 Chronicles, 9:9: "Of spices frreat abundance; neither mi there any such spice aa the queen of Sheba fare King Solomon." What k that building out yonder flittering in the sun? Have you not keard? It ia the house pf the forest .of Lebanon. King Solomon has just taken to it his bride, the princess of Egypt. You see the pillar of the portico and a great tower, adorned with 1,000 shields of gold hung on the outside of the tower 500 of the shields of gold manufactured at Sol omon's order. 500 were captured by David, his father, in battle. See how they blaze in the noonday sunt Soiomon goes up the ivory stairs of his throne between 12 lions in statuary and sits down on the back of the golden buii, the head of the kuge beast turned toward the people. The family and the attendants of the Icing are so many that the caterers of the palace have to provide every day 100 sheep and 13 oxen, besides the birds and the venison. I hear the stamping and pawing of 4,000 fine torses in the royal stables. There rere important officials who had charge of the work of gathering the straw and the barley for these horses. King Solomon was an early riser, tradition says, and used to take ride ont at daybreak, and vien, in lis white apparel, behind the swiftest horses of all the realm and followed by mounted archers in purple, as the cavalcade dashed through the streets of Jerusalem, I suppose it was some- thing worth getting up at live o'elock in the morning to look at. Solomon was not like some of the Mngs of the present day crowned Imbecility. All the splendors of his palace and retinue were eclipsed by lis intellectual power. Why, he eemed to know everything. lie was the first great naturalist the world ever saw. Peacocks from India strut ted the basaltic walk, and apes chat tered in the trees, and deer stalked the parks, and there were aquariums with foreign fish and aviaries with foreign birds, and tradition says these birds were so well tamed that Solomon might walk clear across the city under the shadow of their wings as they hovered and flitted about him. More than this. He had a great rep utation for the conundrums and rid dles that he made and guessed. He and King Hiram, his neighbor, used to sit by the honr and ask riddles, each one paying in money if he conld not answer or guess the riddle. The Solomonic navy visited all the world, and the sailors, of course, talked bout the wealth of their king and a boot the riddles and enigmas that lie made and solved, and the news spread until Qteen lialkis, away off outb, heard of it and sent messen gers with a few riddles that she would like to have Solomon solve and a few puzzles that she would like to Aave him find out. She sent, among wJier things, to King Solomon a dia - mend with a hole so small that a xeedle could not penetrate it, asking :him-1o thread that diamond, and Sol- " "vim nu put it at me opening in the diamond, and the worm crawled through, leaving the tthread in the diamond. The queen also sent a poblet to Solomon, asking him to fill n with water that did not oiir from the sky and that did not ;rash out from the earth, and imme diately Solomon put a slave on the back of a swift horse and galloped Vhim around and around the park un 'til the horse was nigh exhausted. -" iuw )'rr..pirai.on 01 tne .iore the goblet was filled. She also sent to King Solomon 500 boyi in girls' dress and 500 girls in bovs' dress, wondering if he would be acute enough to find out the deception. Im mediately Solomon, when he saw them wash their faces, knew from the way they applied the water that Jt was all a cheat. Queen Balkls was so pleased with ba acuteness of Solomon that she said: Til just go and se him for myself. Yonder it comes the caval cade horses and dromedaries, chari ots and charioteers, jingling harness and clattering hoofs and blazing shields and flying ensigns and clap ping cymbals. The place is saturated vrith the perfume. She brings cin namon and saffron and calamus and frankincense and all manner of sweet pices. As the retinue sweeps through the- gat the armed guard inhales the aroma. "Haiti" cry the charioteers au the wheels grind the gravel in front of the pillared portico of the king. Queen Iialkis alights in an at mosphere bewitched with perfume. As the dromedaries are driven up to the king's storehouses, and the bun- . o"! carapL..- ar unloaded, and the sacks of cinnamon and the boxes of spices" are opened, the purveyors of the palace discover what my text announces: ' "Of spices, gTest abun dance; neither was there any such spice as the queen of Sheba gave to King Solomon." Well, my friends, you know that all theologians agTce in making Sol omon a type of Christ and in making the queen of Sheba a type of every truth seeker, and I will take the re sponsibility of saying that all the spikenard and cassia and frankln cease which the queen of Sheba brought to King Solomon are might ily suggestive of the sweet spices of our holy religion. Christianity is not a collection of sharp technicalities and angular facts and chronological tables and dry statistics. Our reli gion is compared to frankincense and to cassia, but never to nightshade. It is a bundle of myrrh. It is a dash of holy light. It is a sparkle of cool fountsins. It is an opening of opal ine gates. It is a collection of spices. Would God that we were as wise in taking spices to our Divine King as Queen Balkls was wise in taking the spices to the earthly Solomon. The fact is that the duties and cares of this life, coming to us from time to time, are stupid often and inane and intolerable. Here are men who have been battering, climbing, pounding, hammering, for 20 years, 40 years, 50 years. One great, long drudgery has their life been, their faces anxious, their feelings be numbed, their days monotonous. What is necessary t brighten up that man's life and to sweeten that acid disposition and to pnt sparkle into the man's spirits? The spicery of our holy religion. Why, if between the losses of life there dashed the gleam of an eternal gain, if between the betrayals of life there came the gleam of the undying' friendship of Christ, if in dull times in business we found ministering spirits flying to and fro in our office and store and shop, everydsy life instead of being a stupid monotone would be a glor ious inspiration, penduluming be tween calm satisfaction and high rap ture. How any woman keeps house with out the religion of Christ to help her is a mystery to me. To have to spend the greater part of one's life, as many women do, in planning for the meals and stitching garments that will soon be rent again and deploring breakages and supervising tardy subordinates and driving off dust that soon again will settle and doing the same thing day in and day out and year in and year out until the hair silvers and the back stoops and the spectacles crawl to the eyes and the grave breaks open under the thin sole of the shoe oh, it is a long monotony! But when Christ comes to the drawing-room and comes to the kitchen and comes to the nursery and comes to the dwelling, then how cheery become all womanly duties! She is never alone now. Martha gets throusrh fretting and joins Mary at the feet of Jesus. All day long Deborah is happy because she can help Lapidoth. Hannah because she esn make a coat for young Sam uel, Miriam because she can watch her infant brother. Rachel because she can help her father water the stock, the widow of Sarepta because the cruse of oil is being replenished. O woman, having in your pantry a nest of boxes containing all kinds of condiments, why have you not tried in your heart and life the spicery of our holy religion? "Martha. Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things, but one thing is needful, and Mary hath chosen that good part which shall not be taken away from her." I must confess that a great deal of the religion of this day is utterly in sipid. There is nothing piquant or elevating about it. Men and women go around humming psalms in a minor key and cultivating melancholy, and their worship has in it more sighs than raptures. We do not doubt their piety. Oh, no! But they are sitting at a feast where the cook has for gotten to season the food. Everything is flat in their experience and in their conversation. Emancipated from sin and death and hell and on their way to a magnificent Heaven, they act as though they were trudging on toward an everlasting Botany Hay. Religion does not seem to agree with them. It seems to catch in the windpipe and become a tight strangulation instead of an exhilaration. All the infidel books that have been written, from Voltaire down to Herbert Spencer, have not done so much damage to our Christianity as lugubrious Christians. Who wants a religion woven out of the shadows of the night? Why go growling on your way to celestial en thronement? Come out of that cava aid sit down In the warm light of the Sun of Righteousness. Away with your odes to melancholy and Hervey'i "Meditations Among the Tombs. Then let our snngt abound And every tear b dry; Wa'ra marching through Emmanuel's ground To fairer worlds on high. I have to say also that we need to put more spice and enlivenment In our religious teaching, whether it be in the prayer-meeting or in the Sunday school or in the church. We ministers need more fresh air and sunshine in our lungs and our heart and our heal Do you wonder that the world is ao far "from beinif converted when you find so little vivacity in the pulpit and in the pew? We want, like the Lord, to p:snt in our sermons and exhorta tions more alien of the fie.d. We want fewer rhetorical elaborations and fewer'susquipeda'.ian words, and when we talk about shadows e do not want to say adumbration, and when w mean qaeerness we do not want to talk about idiokjacrasie. or if a stitch in the back we do not want to talk about lumbago; but, in the ptain ver nacular of the great masses, preach that Gospel which proposes to wake all men happy, houest, victorious and free. In other words, we want more cinnamon and less gristle. Let this be so in all the different departments of work to which the Lord calls us. Let us be plain. Let us be earnest. Let us be common-sensicaL When we talk to the people in a vernacular they can understand, they will be very glad to come and receive the truth we pre sent. Would to God that Queen Balkis would drive her spice-laden drome daries into all our sermons and prayer meeting exhortations! More than that, we want more life and pice in our Christian work. The poor do not want so much to be groaned over as sung to. With the bread and medicines and garments you give them let there be an ac companiment of smiles and brisk en couragement. Do not stand and talk to them about the wretchedness of their abode, and the hanger of their looks, and the hardness of their lot. Ah, they know it better than you can tell them. Show them the bright side of the thing, if there be any bright side. Tell them good times will come. Tell them that for the children of God there is immortal rescue. Waks them up out of their stolidity by an inspiring laugh, and while you send In help, like the queen of Sheba, also send in the spices. We need more spice and enlivenment In our church music. Churches sit discussing whether they shall have choirs or precentors or organs or bass viols or cornets. 1 say take that which will bring out the most inspiring mu sic If we had half as much zeal and spirit in our churches as we have in the songs of our Sunday schools, it would not be long before the whole earth would quake with the coming God. Why, nine-tenths of the people In church do not sing, or they sing so feebly thst the people at their elbows do not know they are singing. People mouth and mumble the pralsea of God, but there is not more than one out of a hundred who makes a joyful noise unto the Rock of Our Salvation. Sometimes, when the congregation forgets Itself and is all absorbed in the goodness of God or the glories of Heaven, I get an intimation of what church music will be a hundred years from now, when the coming genera tion shall wake up to Its duty. Now, I want to impress you with the fact that religion is sweetness and perfume and spikenard and aaf fron and cinnamon and cassia and frankincense and ail sweet spices to gether. "Oh," you say, "I have not looked at it as such. I thought it was a nuisance. It had for me a re pulsion. I held my breath as though it were a malodor. I have been ap palled at its advance. I have said if I have any religion at all I want to have just as little of it as possi ble to get through with." Oh, what a mistake yon make, my brother! The religion of Christ is a present and everlasting redolescence. It coun teracts all trouble. Just put it on the stand beside the pinow of sickness. It catches in the curtains and per fumes the stifling air. It sweetens the cup of bitter medicine and throws a glow on the gloom of the turned lattice. It is a balm for the aching side and a soft bandage for the tem ple stung with pain. It lifted Samuel Rutherford into a revelry of spiritual delight while he was in physical ag onies. It helped Richard Baxter un til, in the midst of such a complica tion of diseases as perhnps no other man ever suffered, he wrote "The Saint's Everlasting Kest," and it poured l.ght upon John Bunyan's dungeon the light of the shining gate of the shining city. Have you read of the Taj Mahal, In India, In some respects the most ma jestic building on earth? Twenty thousaud men were 20 years in build ing it. It cost about 1.000,000. The walls are of marble inlaid with car nellan from Bagdad and turquoise from Thibet and jasper from the Pun jab and amethyst from Persia and all manner of precious stones. A trav eler said that it seemed to him like the shining of the enchanted castle of burnished silver. The walls are 245 feet high, and from the top of these springs a dome 30 more feet high, that dome containing the most wonderful echo the world has ever known, so that ever and anon trav elers standing below with flutes and drums and harps are testing that echo, and the sounds from below strike up, and -then come down, as it were, the voices of angels all around about the building. There is around it a garden of tamarind and banyan and palm and all the floral glories of the ransacked earth. But that is only a tomb of a dead empress, and it it tame compared with the grandeurs which God has builded for your living and immortal spirit. Oh, home of the blessed! Founda tions of gold! Arches of victory! ("rvetnnes of Dralse! And a dome in which there are echoing and re echoing the halleluiahs of the ages! And around about that mansion is a garden, the garden of God, and all the springing fountains are the bot tled tears of the church in the wilder ness and all the crimson of the flowers is the deep hue that was caught tip from the carnage of earth ly martyrdoms and the fragrance is the prayer of all the saints and the aroma put into otter forgetfulness the cassia and the spikenard and the frankincense and the world-renowned spices which Queen Balkis of Abys sinia flung at the feet of King Solo mon. When shall thest eyes thy hesven built wslli And psrly gates behold. Thy bulwarks, with salvation stroojg, And streets of shining gold? Through obduracy on our part and through the rejection of that Christ who makes Heaven possible I wonder if any of ns will miss that spectacle? The queen of the sonth will rise up in judgment against this generation and condemn it because she ctma from the uttermost parts of the earth to hear the wisdom ot Solomon, and, behold, a greater than Solomon la here! May God grant that through your own practical experience yon may find that religion's ways are ways of pleasantness and that all her paths are paths ot peace that it is per fume now and perfume forever. And there was an abundance of spice; "neither was there any such, spice as the queen of Sheba gave to King Solomon." Needed in Every Home .... I Noth.ng is productive of more happiness in the family than a good Sewing Machine and THE SINGER is the best machine on earth. It is always in order and can be depended on to do every kind of work. If you are interested, write or send word to L. V. BRELSFORD, Local Agent, Lexington. Mo. When Tired . And Weary . . . With the heat and dust of travel or the labors of the day, drop in at THE FORT Where you can secure a good luncheon, a refreshing drink of the choicest beverages to be found anywhere or a delightful emoke in the cooling shade. Grand Central Hotel, Reopened and Newly Furnished Good Meals and best service. Your patronage solicited. D. M. FRAZIER, Propr. Ceo. I. 5mitl7, D. V. s, VETERINARIAN, Phone 117 Leiinoto,Mo. Look Pleasant. Hot Weather Prices. 0?.17BvT0sU,?T"redMucaeda UlUM tries tor twenty Jaw f, Km" ? " prices. We cn save yCa" D(I 6d wick's SloreViYn'gCMo.0"7' 0ver GUARANTEE We the undersigned Reed Manufacturing c pany, do hereby certify that " m' r a (M mm vaugnan oc i icueiland of Lexington, Missouri, has an agency for Reed' Patent Anti-Rusting Tinware. We hereby rant and guarantee against rust, each and ever' piece of our anti-rusting tinware. Should any returned rusted at any time we Guarantee to re place same with new goods free of charge Is Witness Whereof, we hare hereunto affixed our cor porate seal and signature thia 20th, day of June looi Reed Maufacturing Company, jSpstiil Ira M Trig j mm Tbs Ho. Pao. Ry. Co. an mUi,, to almost rtverywbsra at vsry low m for tbs round trip. Nots tola luton raue: BU Psal sed Mtnnsanolli nut.- 118.80. Tickets oa sal from augoiiluaj uooq to return onul October 11, From Lexington to Pnsblo, ColoJ 8 Prists, Dearer and return, its U on mIi from Anr tut 1 to ia. Owj J ret ara ootll October 81. " mnM; HomssMksr datM Anguit 6 aid if Beptsmber 8 ana 17. Buffalo 36J0 and 133 88; oa ssliaill good returning 10 and lSdtvs. Mc&lMter Springs and rstura (l.flt;J saie aaiiy. MoAlesUr Springs and rttorn fUM sals Frldsy aaa Baturdsv, McAltstsr Springs and sals on Sundays only. - i Pertl Springs and rsiurn p.S5;ona dstly. Partis Springs and return 2.96;oiJ daily. Pertle Springs and return fl.96; oiai Sundays only. Lonlsville, Ky., and return, Aufos to 2U, 116.95. 8priDgdeld. Mo., sod return. Aur.'J 7 to li, fO.50. - i New York snd return, oa ssli U) 113.50. 8s n Antonio snd rtiuro.BepKmbei to IS, E5.20. Kansas City and return, OctoberlSc Kansas City and return, Octobwi 12, f 1.80. 8u Loan and' return, October ( 11. 18.95. Cleveland, Ohio and return, Septta 8 to 11, f 30.05. For farther Information pleas eala A.8.LO0MI9.AP C S Mitchell &S01 FEED STORE The best and cheapest line ofW cpi in ucxmgxon at iae r !! fit Paa Ca.. TIT A rrPttfn exchange business with the fararj for wheat or corn. Our Flour 1 ft beat on the market. Phone 0 Cigar Clippings granulated and coarse 30 - Cents a Pound 3! HINESLEY'S SMOKER Dr. C, T. Ryland, Office on second floor Kriehn building. TELEPHONE NO. DR.T. B. RamseJ Successor to flassell A Bamsef SURGEON DENTIST Office over Schawe & Vein, Co 10th and Main Street. Nltros Oxide Oas Given. km