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Oshawa Daily Times, 8 Aug 1931, p. 8

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'REV. L.C. gating B.A, BD. ov. Ticicher 4a 4 sun ot Rer. Dr. ot Japam; AUGUST 9TH . GEORGE C. RB.' First Church of Christ, Scientist 64 Colborne Street East Morning Service at 11 a.m, hirbgnih AUGUST 9 " SPIRIT " Wednesday Meeting, 8 p.m. Including testimonies of Heal- ing through Christian Science. You are cordially invited to attend the services and to make use of the Free Public Reading Room where the Bible and authorized Christian Science literature may be read, borrowed or purchased Open on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday Services i in the Oshava Ch arches Evangel Tabernacle 200 King St. West J. T. BALL, : Pastor Residence, 21 Park Road South. Phone 1921J. 10 am.~Sunday School. 11 a.m.~--Morning Worship. 7 p.m.~Evangelistic. Good Singing, Helpful Service. The Regular Services will be held on Tuesday and Thursday at 8 po. Northminster United Church Minister A. E. Thornley, M.A. 86 Elena Street Sunday School, 10 a.m., 3 H. Wilson, Supt. 1 am Mr. RB Wilkins. Rev. A. C. Hahn 154 Albert St. L SUNDAY, AUGUST 9 9.30 a.m.--Sunday School. Service at 2.80 p.m. ALL ARB CORDIALLY . Wercomn Sidr 8 Millbrook --During a heavy thun- derstorm hy io ove this' Somumnily ue: ay afternoon between four o' fivesthirty, rE ltge as Deas Toi fora 8 white tes leaving the hich punctuated the storm racle Ky.; : of Musa. raurings the vacation, very busy conducting evangelistic m The intermittent tne d Tt Bapeist Clhireh There will be a combined vice of church and Sunday School at First Baptist Church Sunday morning. Rev. John Trickey is te predch both Reruing and even- | ing, vary Baptist Church Drotne Lk Light" is the subject of the, sermon which Rev. Paul B. W. Gelatt, the pastor, will pteach al the morning service of Calvary Baptist church tomorrow. In the evening his sermon is to be or "Feasting With Singers." 7 Services at hoy Tabernacle tomorrow are to ba.conducted by the pastor, J. T. Bail Grace Lutheran Worship at Grace . Lutheran ClLurch Sunday, will be conducted by Rev. A. C. Hahn, the pastor. Oshawa Pentecostal Holiness Pastor G. Legge ' will pave charge of the services at Oshawa Pentecostal Holiness Chyreh, Sunday. Christ Anglican Services at Christ Anglican Church tomorrow are to be con- ducted by Rev. R. B. Patterson, the rector. Knox Pres Rev. Duncan Munro, the pas. tor, will have charge of both mor- ning and evening worship at Krox Prespyterian Church, Sun- day. Holy Trinity Services at Holy Trinity Church Sunday, are to be con- ducted by Rev. 8. C. Jarrett, the rector. St. 's Anglican Services at St. George's Angli- can church tomorrow are to he conducted by Rev. Richard Ash- croft, of Toronto, who is to be in charge of the parish during August. "Abert | United Ni OM. Alger will preach at is to be the speaker. Simcoe Street United "Strength and Beauty" is the subject of the sermon whica Rev. J. 8. 1. Wilson will preach at the morning service of Simcoe Street United Church tomorrow. In the evening his subject will be "Mur- ihe and Mary, A Study in Con- trasts." Union, Services : United services of King Strost United and. St. ,Andrew's United Churches will be held in St. An- drew's United Church tomorrow morning... Rev, C. E. Cragg will be in charge and by special re- quest will: preach. on '"Commun- ism, Past and Present." The evening service will be in the King Street United Churth and the special speaker for the occa- sion will be Rev. L. C. Fletcher, B.A., B.D, recently of Japan and a son of Rev. Dr. Fletcher, form- erly of this city. Christ Science "Spirit," 1s the subject of les- son sermon. for First Church of Christ Scientist, Sunday morning. Northminster United Sunday morning at Northmiu- ster United Church a represen- tntive of the Ontario Prohibition Union will preach. He will also speak in the aftersoen at the North Oshawa appointment. Centre Street United Rev. C. J. Felton, M.A; or Ir- vicgton, N.J.. will preach at both services of Centre Street United Church, Sunday. Gospel Tabernacle Regular worship will be held at the Gospel Tabernacle tomor- row. - The Church World-Wide - It is with universal sorrow that the death of Archbishop Nathan Soederblom is reported. As head of the Lutheran Church in Sweden, he has filled a large place. He has moreover, exerted a world-wide his re- markable talents, friendliness and untiring energy. He has been called "the Protestant Pope," one reason being that no clergyman has equalled him in finding open doors of welcome and influence in all the Churches outside of Rome. He preached in Canterbury Cathedral in 1926; was . persona grata with the Cal- vinists at Geneva; opened his cathedral in Stockholm in 121 to the Baptists, when they were niceting there as a world-conven- tion; and was the high-light of the Universal Conference on Life and Work which met also in Stockholm. He had been a pro- fessor of Comparative Religion and had the ability to see and appreciate the best in all the Churches. At the Lausanne Con- ference in 1927 he and Bishop Prent took the leading parts, his obility to speak most of the len- guages was of great value. . * - In the American news the three largest Methodist Episcopal churches are sald to be Pirst Chureh, Los Angeles, with 4,500 inembers; Lakewood, Clevéland, with 4,278, and Metropolitan in Detroit, with 4,044 members. The ministers of these churches | in order are Rev. Elmer E. Helms Rev. Marcellus B. Fuller, and Rev, Merton Joiniad out that the four sons of Dr. G. Campbell Morgan are to sup AT his Hpnod at the Taber- byterian Chureh, Phila- dag August. They are Rev, P. Campbell Moran Jt Winnipeg; Rev Kingsley J gan of Monticello, boron: Howard M. Morgan of Lexington, and Dr. F. Crossley Morgan of Augusta, Georgia. Dr. Len G. well-known Baptist minister of Atlanta, Georgia, is predching for Dr. Haldeman in First Baptist Church, New York. He has had year in the South fons. In Chicago there are: 266 Roman The Baptist Young People's Union of America eid, 'an' en- y in Wi asulngton D. ." Rice. It is also | ©© Service was held on Sunday night when Dr. George W. Truett of Dallas, Texas, delivered probably the greatest sermon of his life on the subjeet, "I will follow." With strong arguments and earnest pleading he urged the vast mul- titude of people to "Fol low and make Christ Lord of all." The next meeting will be in Min- neapolis, a LJ + In the Anglican churches of 'Australia the first Sunday in July wags devoted to the Church Mis- stovary Society. Over ome hun- dred clergymen in New South Wales exchanged pulpits and gave special. addresses. Rev. John Dykes of the Presbytery of Murrumbidgee. in New Sbuth Wales, was oongratulated by the Moderator 'of the Assembly on passing his 91st birthday, Arch- deacon Hancock of Melbourne Leld a service at the unemploy- ment camp at Broadmeadows. Only fifty out of 750 accepted his invitation to be esent. Rev. John A. Hunter, B.D. of Rock- hampton, Queensland, is the new Moderator of the Assembly in Queensland. He is a native of that state and helongs to a fam- fiv which has shown zeal for t'.e Church. His father was an elder and lay-preacher; his brother is a professor in the Presbyterian College, Dunedin, N.Z.; four hose) are elders, and his sister 3 the wife of a minister, The erator took a post gradeate course in = Scotland and won a Scholarsnis open to the three ' e Tos The Oulton Methorists of Eng- land Sasteq Rev. John Ford Reed to the President's ' chalr Hix grandfather, Willjam Reel, was Teferred to by "BMly Brav's" | blographer, as the greatest man among the Bible Christians. They 'e'ected him as their President 'three thnes. Next to him was Willlam Bryan Reed, father of tho President now in office, and 1a" still living at the age.of 96. Hn founded the Ho Rdsthi] sine ollege, 'Bideford, and was fiov- ernor for 26 years. The whole family 1s ed with culture il ho Somn i o began Sraaching h at h rs to the rare hen 44 Wh - Cotto. year. Me. by as it completes the arrangements preparatory 8 the Union of the three Method nominations. In the ove Methodist Church, the President stated that the doors would be for | women to enter the vihodist ini; There would be this sii that of men, 'that in the case of a woman-mini- uter becoming married, resigna- tion would follow. Her action would be tantamount to jemtextng ( another rv House, cumbriden, who 1s at present preaching in the Eaton 'Memorial Church, Toronto: The 'Ststioning Committee 'found that 800 changes of ministers in cir- cuits were to be effected. This great interest, because it will reach the end of steps ledding to the full arrangements for the re- union of Methodism, in ths Old Country. This canference 'will be culled in history, "The Union Conference";. that of 1932, "The Cniting Conference," .when the official ceremony will be held; and in 1933 it will be "The 1ini- ted Conference." It is hiited that Rev. J. E.' Rattenbury, who for twenty years was in the Wast London Mission, 'will be the first president. . The . Eucharistic . Congress which meets next year in Dublin, Ireland, is being planned for in every detail, Recently the Pal- e<trina Choir of boys, belonging ty the Pro-Cathedral there, has been singing the hymns which will be used at the Congress. Craphophone records are being made, in order that choirs throughout the country can prac- tise them and be as one when they assemble for the great event, Off cial badges for those partici- pating in the Congress hive ar- rived in the United States. They are distinctively Catholic and Irish, being based on the famous Cross of Cong, a fine examole of Irish ecclesiastical art. At the Convention of the Catholic Wo- men's League in Charlotteiown PEL, Mrs. W. J. McIrtyre of that city was elected president. A new Roman Catholic cathedral will be bufit in Hamilton, Ont. Bishop McNally has just returned from Rome, and building permits have been {issued for the first part of the structure, costing half a million dollars. It will cort, when completed $1,000,000, ond occupy a prominent position in the western part of the city, not far from McMaster Univer- sity. Prophets, But Not Inspired Few utterances by prominent pub- lic men in Great Britain have at- tracted such wide attention in re- cent years, or caused so much dis- may as the following words of Sir Arthur Keith, of the Royal College of Surgeons, famous British anthro- pologist, in his address as Rector of University : "Nature keeps her human orchard healthy by pruning; was is her pruning- hook. We cannot dispense with her services. This harsh and repugnant forecast of men's future is wrung from me .\... Crushing replies were instantly forthcoming from every quarter, and these might be summed up in the words of Sir Herbert Barker in The Daily Mail, who character- izes the statement as "one of the mest dangerous ever made by a man of science , . . a perversion of the hard incontrovertible facts." of the intellectuals of Great Britain are to be found on the side of the militarists to-day. The metaphor of the pruning- book is a sgriking one, but it is utterly misleading. As several have been quick to point out, war is not a pruning-hook. A pruning-hook is used to op off the feeble and use- elss branches so that the strong and useful may Rrow stronger and more useful. War is the exact opposite of all that, and might better be des- cribed as a scythe which mows down everything in its path. It is even worse than that, for it actual- ly picks out and destroys the very Swher of the nation's manhood and out! The dismal doctrine of the British scientist was echoed by at least one kindred spirit in the New World when General Smedley D. Butler delivered that oratorical salvo to the sons and daughters of Bunker Hill. He, too, seems to have appropriated a prophet's mantle. be sure to come, he declared. Not in our day, perhaps, or in our child- ren's duy. But they would come. And he undertook to tell the ladies and gentlemen of Charlestown just when wars would end : "They would end when the men of Charlestown should be willing to let other men butcher their women and trample on their. little children." 1t was the professional war-maker speaking, the dunderheaded militar- ist trotting out arguments that were threadbare even before went ont of fashion. And sq Isaiah was mistaken, after all, in his great dream. When he which men should beat their spears into pruning-hooks he was speaking out. of his turn. He ought to have known that spears were pruning- hooks already and did not require to be taken to the smith for any alter- | the ation. He ought to have recognized that bayonets and big guns and poison gas were ordained of God to veed out the unfit and super- sons and daughters of 'men 8 orchard of - human life. 'yet the vast majorities Ja-day pa > nasions which best deserve ve are still inclined to be- the word came to io days Usyiah, king of J ai the word of the Le ut what sane person in any ry would really claim heavenly h (or even earthly inspiration e perverted word which came. to + Arthur Keith 8 Aberdeen, or li pl hl cB he y er. af Bun: r Hill, in the year of our Lord conference is looked upon with | It is gratifying to note that so few Wars would | hood flintlocks | so confidently foretold a day in| THE PRESIDENT'S. (IP - LAST MESSAGE While death was waiting to usher him into eternal life, Dr. "Laue Paluer Brooks thought of his stu- ents. He had been president of Baylor University, in Texas, for twenty- nine years, and his last class was soon to gradua?s. With numbing hand he had signed their diplomas, and now, while there were a few moments left, he . want: ed to send them a message of faith and cheer. It was read to 'them during the graduation exercises, af- ter his own graduation. The message will be as cheering tomorrow as to-day, and is well worth repeating. These are Dr. Brooks' words as they are quoted by the Associated Press: "I stand on the border of mortal life, but I face eternal life. "I look backward to the years of the past to see all pettiness, all tri- viality, shrink into nothing, and dis- appear, "Adverse criticism has no mean- ing now. Only the worth-while things, the constructive things, the things that have been built for the good of mankind and the glory of God count now. "There is beauty, there is joy, and there is laughter in life--as there ought to be. "But remember, my students, not to regard lightly nor to ridicule the sacred things, those worth-while things. Hold them dear, cherish them, for they alone will sustain you in the end. .And remember, too, that only through work, and, oft- times, through hardships, may they be obtained, "But the comp ion of bl and sweetness at the last will glorify every hour of work and every. heart- ache from hardship. "Do not face the future with tim- idity or with fear. Face it solidly, courageously, joyously, Have faith in what it holds, "My own faith as 1 approach cternity grows stronger day by day. The faith I have had in life is pro- jected into this vast future toward which I travel now. "I know that I go to an all-pow- erful God, wherever He may be. 1 know He is a personality who created man in His image. Beyond that I have no knowledge--no fear --only faith."--The Literary Digest. A Christian Solution To Present Problem In a statement to the Canadian press, Mr. A. J. Nesbitt, the senior nartner in the well known financial Louse of A. Nesbitt. Thomas and Company, urges more dependence on the Divine will in the present world depression. He maintains in all sincerity that "the moment this nation turns to God there will be a heaven-sent revival sweep this land, and the fear and distrust and hate now prevalent will give place 10 faith and hope and e; industry shall improve and prosperity and peace shall follow." Such a statement coming from one of the keenest business minds of the country cannot help but ar- rest the attention of all men how- ever interested they may be in their own business affairs; for to'advance in very positive terms, as Mr, Nes- bitt has done, the Christian rine of man's redemption through faith as the real solution for our present economic ills requires courage of a high order, and we, like countless thousands of others, respect and ad- mire him for the brave stand he has taken, and this notwithstandi the fact that the appeal will fi echo in the heart of every Tight thinking man. and pon i Lest we forget it would be well willy remind ourselves that is the basis of our moral ny that through its teachings the old "Ado- monic code of "an-eye-for-an-eye" was clanged to that of the "brother. | of man", the principle on which the British Em- pire has been built, All her institu- tions and her Hh constitution are upon it: is rived strength ha part of the | empires rH B Sinie of Secusity Fo neople stee ages in the est depths of slavery and Jper- stition, Kiven them fidence in a new ideal of national has made white 'men 'exile selves for the heat part of. their lives to the uttermost part carth so that the British be: respected ¢ 'he Christian duty. aol ions net closer otheriand, hecaut in accept the EE ty of autonomy adopte: the same uh combnon-- pits which ich; HR indgtlie. the real justice in oo the. teachings of Christ | self, ! 'Canada's man in 'common is Cheistin-de- i F of the | i All the Churches Bid You a + Huy Welcome Special music both Morning 4 incest. United Cech Sirengih and Aesety 7PM. Martha and Mary ; (A Study in Contrasts) Rev. j.5:1 Wilion will preach at boll Servieds 10 A.M.--SUNDAY SCHOOL BRIGHT, BRIEF, BENEFICIAL SERVICES . 4 with the rest of the world, is being tested. There is a strain every- where between self-interest and the interest of community; and there is only one standard by which the strain can be lessened and relieved ~--the standard of Christian brother- hood, as laid down in Mr. Nesbitt's timely and opportune appeal. Noth- ing less will suffice. Surely if right- eousness exalteth a nation it also exalteth . the individual. --Municipal Review of Canada. Summer Revelry By Frank Talbot Smith The wind is up, and on the hills the flowers : Dance with a happy motion to and fro; : The poplar wood before his coming cowers, And bends in sudden conster- nation low. The clouds are flying softly overhead ; y The sky is iike an azure ocean deep, Serene and calm, splendor spread, Unmindful of the great wind's boisterous sweep. in smiling Upon the air the tiny birds are And buffeted about with spor- tive glee; Like craft on swelling ocean tos- sed and thrown Labors from port to port the clumsy bee. The butterfly, on gay and gaudy wings, Paises 2 and flutters in the gold- Soin of {ne wind, a light and lovely thing, She dances at his bidding here and there. The waves are : dancing, glitter- ing in the sun, And merrily make music on the e Of the blue lake as on swift feet they run Upon the sand with low rever- bérant roar, All nature is in gay and festive Flowers, leaves and birds, the . 'water and the sky Make beautitul the summer soli- tade With motions, looks and sounds of revelry. August AUGUST She'll come at dusky first of White 4 Tover yollow harvests Upon hee dewy reisbe She shall bo beautiful and EE shall Ton on Sir anki in brows the woh wy ed "m know hor in the windrows, MS Take down her rusty scythe, Gore! asernacie I | Athol St, West' SUNDAY, AUGUST 9TH Services at 11 am. and 7 pm. © A"rveal treat awaits you at both services Holy Trinity Church ANGLICAN REV. 8. C. JARRETT, Incumbent, 80 Fairbanks St. | 8 am. -- Celebration of | Holy Communion, ; 10 a.m.--Sunday School | 11 a.m.--Matins and ser- i mon. Sermon. i The pastor will preach at | all services. Presbyterian Church Simcoe Street North and Brock Street REV. DUNCAN MUNRO, 84 Brock St. W., Phone 2554 | 9.45 om. -- Sunday | School ahd Bible Class | The Minister will preach | at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Everybody Welcome CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Paul B. W, Gelatt, Pastor 11 am~"Divine Light." 8 p.m~~Sunday School. 7 pm~-----"Feasting with Sinners." Mon. 8 p.m.--Young Peoples Wed. 8 pacprye Meet. Fri, 8 p.m,~Choir practice. | St. Georges | ANGLICAN i . Cor. Bagot and Centre Sts.. | [I CANON C. R. dePENCIEK, i M.A. i | Organist and Cholrmaster-- || ih Matthew Gouldburn, AC.LM. 1 10 a.m--Sunday School | 11 a.m.--Morning Prayer 7 p.m.--Evensong g,

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