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...... * v ; ?*- > - ., ^ ; > , v r sS&%Y v; - * ' J . v' -f * mtmmmmmmmmmmmmmammnammmmmaBmmmmmmmmKmmammmmmmmrnm *' A SERMON FOR SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCCURSE BY THE REV. A. B. SIMPSON. * Snl>.i??ct: The Manifestation of the King? The ltecogniiion?Lord of the Temple ?The Children's King?Curse of the King?The Sceptre of the Kingdom. New York City?The following sermon was preached Sunday by the worldfamous head of the Christian and Mission^ ary Alliance, the Rev. A. B. Simpson. His subject was "The Manifestation of the King," and his text was: Tell ye the daughter of Zion, Behold thy King cometh unto thee meek, and, sitting upon an ass, and a colt, the foal of an ass.?Matthew S 21:5 Jine time naci now come wnen tne j>ora Jesus was to be publicly manifested as the son of David and the King of Israel. Hitherto Ke had refused the demands of the multitude, who, after His Galilean mira% cles, had tried "to take Him by force and make Him a king;" but now as the end draws near it is proper that He should literally fulfil the announcements of ancient propnecy. and for a brief moment, at least, appear as the heir to David's throne and the answer to all the Messianic hopes of * % Israel. I. The Recognition of the King. It was strange that the first to recognize Him as Israels King should be two blind beggars. That which the rulers of Israel, with all their wisdom, failed to comprehend, was discovered by poor old Bartimeus and his blind companion. Calling Him by His Messianic name, they cried, as the procession pressed by, "Jesus, Thou Son of David. . have mercy on us!" When Jesus heard that name He instantly ordered the procession to halt, and, calling them to Him, granted their petition like a king, bidding them receive their sight and follow Him in the way. So still it is ever true, "Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and revealed them unto babes." The wisdom j of the world and even the culture of theological science have blinded men to the vision of God, and it is the lowly and often illiterate to whom the Holy Ghost reveals "the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven*' and the blessed hopes of the coming once t more of our glorious King. ; How did these blind men know that .Tpsub was thp Son of David? With their inner senses they felt after Him until they found Him. It is so still that the hungry heart finds the Saviour. Reaching out in * oift darkness and sense of need, groping ;for One who we feel can meet and satisfy our need, we press our way toward the light even as the blind man, who, while he jcannot discern the obiects before him, can isee vaguely at least the glare of the light and press closer to it. Even so we can press toward God, and He will meet the > 'seeking soul and reveal Himself in the vislion of light and love even as He did to fchem. ? Seeker for Christ, follow the light vou !have and He will give more as you follow Jon, and you, too, will hear Him say, "Receive thy sight, thy faith hath made thee whole." H. The Manifestation of the King. An' dent prophecy had foretold the coming of the King of meekness, truth and love, and His triumphal entry into Jerusalem was a striking fulfillment. Zechariah especially had literally described the scenes portrayed in this chapter. "Rejoice greatly. O daughter of Zion, shout, 0 daughter of Jerusalem, behold thy King cometh unto thee. He is just and having salvation, lowly and riding upon an ass and upon a colt the foal of an ass." (Zechariah 9:91. For the first time in His earthly ministry,* our Lord permits Himself to be borne by the beast of burden, which had always been recognized as the bearer of kings. Riding upon a little colt never ridden be4 fore, draped with the garments of His disciples as they walked beside, and accompanied by the mighty multitude surging up from the city at this, the Passover time, when the population of Jerusalem was multiplied tenfold, He slowly descended from Bethany toward the city. At every step the enthusiasm of the crowd grew higner. Cutting down branches from the palm trees they strewed them in the way, and even their garments they flung in homage at His feet, while their voices rose to a mi'ivkfTr cKnut aa tliMr pripfi in t.ViP lancu/ice JAJAgUVJ C-'WUK v?^ o O of an old prophetic Psalm, "Hosannah to the Son of David, Hosannah in the high-. ?8t."' But His own demeanor was in strange contrast to all these scenes of tumultuous excitement. Truly, He came as the King ^ , of meekness, lowliness and love. This became still more apparent when the city suddenly burst upon their view, and the sight of it drew from Him an outburst of sorrow and compassion, and amid all that pageant of popular acclamation He gave way to bitter tears and lamentations over the certain doom which He saw impending upon the scenes that lay spread before Him in all their glorious beauty. But the procession swept on, and in a little while He entered the city and the Temple. His triumphal entry into Jerusalem was the foreshadowing of that glorious time when He shall come again as Israel's long expected Messiah and take His place upon the throne of David, never again to leave it. It is also typical of His entrance upon the throne of the individual heart when we receive Him as our Lord and King. The.little foal on whom no man had sat before is the exquisite type of the heart that gives Him its exclusive affection. He comes to reign, not a6 tyrant, but as a King of gentleness and love in all the attractive attributes so finely set forth in the ancient: picture that we are considering. He does not come to repress, but to, satisfy. He does not dominate us as a desr: pot, but He meets, all the'needs and longings of our" being, and so blends with" our nature and our will that, we- become His willing subjects and the very partners of His kingdom and His throne. Have we thus received Him and known Him as our King*i '? * * *'"* 3 III. The King of Zion and the Lord of the Temple. Immediately upon entering the city He passed through the gates of the Temple, and repeated the miracle of its cleansing which had formed the /first chapter of His early Judean ministry. 'The difference between this miracle the former is that then He called it His Father's house; now "My house." Ke was now taking the position of being Himself the Lord of the Temple and the true theocratic Head of the kingdom. A little later the phrase was changed again. As He left that Temple after His solemn warnings and judgments pronounced against the false rulers and leaders of Israel, He declared "Your house," Mine no longer, "your house is left unto you desolate and ye shall not see Me again until he shall say blessed is Ha that cometh in the name of iV - T J 79 tne xjoiu. The cleansing of the Temple "was occasioned by the abuse which was made of its courts by a class of money brokers and cheap traders, who took advantage of the people's desire for silver change in order to pay the half shekel offering which was required of every one entering the Temple, and out'of this there grew up a regular business and a large class of men who, at exorbitant rates of usury, supplied the silver exchange to the worshipers as they crowded into the courts without having provided themselves with the requisite coin. Another class of tradesmen in like manner filled up another part of the court with their filthy stalls for the supply of doves and other animals for the sin offerings and burnt offerings of . the^ daily sacrifices. These also were sold aV exorbitant prices for the convenience of the worshipers, but really for the gain of the dealers. The 6ame high place He still claims in th? Church of God and the individual heart. The abuse of the Temple courts 6t J old have, alas, been more than paralleled in the history of Christendojn. It -was the j sale of indulgences in the time of Luther for the enrichment of the ecclesiastical parties that brought about the Reformation. The kind of sin here described is not secular business in its own place, but. th? doing of things in the name of religion which are prompted by mercenarv motives. The preaching of the gospel for the sake of i gain, wrong financial methods in support- j in? the church, the desecrating of the j house of God by social and secular enter- I tainments and methods of raisin? money J which appeal to the selfishness and frivol- j ity of man, and the using of Christianity j in any way as a cloak of covetousness, as j an advertisement of business, as a means of social preferment or secular pain?these are things which are so common on every side of lis that me hearts of many of God's children have been filled with humiliation j and sorrow, and moved to earnest prayer ' for the coming of the King once more to cleanse His Temple aind purge from His church these shameful profanations. * The second cleansing of the Temnle would seem to suggest that before the Lord's coming there, is to be a profound work of sanctification among the people j of God answering to that first cleansing i of which we read so fully in the early j chapters of the Acts of the Apostles. Still more fully does it apply to the in- i dividual experience of the Christian, j Here, too, there is a second cleansing j which the Lord comes to bring when He j Himself enters the consecrated heart, not j only saving, but sanctifying and separating > us unto Himself in a deeper sense than we can possibly know, even in the early joy of conversion. Have we received this second cleansing? IV. The Children's King. This was not an ordinary crowd, where the children always love to be in front, but it was a J genuine outburst of heaven inspired love i and loyalty that made them cry, "Hosan- j nah in the highest." For the Lord Jesus j Himself bore testimony to the genuineness of their praise and indeed gave it the highest place over all others as He poted the ancient Scripture, "Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings Thou has perfected praise." Others might join in the acclamations because of the contagious influence of an excited multitude, but theirs was "perfect praise." As usual the Pharisees were ready to scorn their juvenile enthusiasm, but the Lord Jesus was also ready to vindicate them as He had once before. Let us never forget that Jesus is the children's Kincr. By and by. when we welcome Him to His heavenly throne, we shall j find that a vast proportion of that ransomed crowd will consist of little children. Let us train our little ones to know Him and crown Him as their King. > The word used here in their childish praise is the Hebrew word "Hosannah." It is not quite the same as Hallelujah, the usual expression for worship and praise. Literally it means "Lord save us." Our Hallelujahs must begin in Hosannahs. Even the i children, too, must learn that they are i sinful children, and that they also require | His cleansing blood, and only as they ac- j cept it and honor it will their Hosannahs become Hallelujahs, and the Lord pro- j nounce their homage "perfect praise.* V. The Blessing of the King. Immediately after Christ s triumphal entry into Jerusalem and His cleansing of the Tem-i pie, we read these significant words, "and the blind and the lame came to Him in the Temple and He healed them." Purification ak-ava lpndc nn tn nnwer. The cleans- i ing of the Temple was followed by the \ healing of the sick and the revelation of ! the great and good Physician. So, still, it i will be found in our personal experience.' I This was not a momentary gleam of divine j beneficence over a dark and suffering \ world, but Jesus Christ is 'the same yesterday, to-day and forever. "And- warm, sweet, tender even yet A present help is He And love has still its Olivet And faith its Galilee. The healing of His seamless robe Is 0/ our.beds of pain. We touch Him 'mid life's pain and strife And we are whoje again." But, of course, all this awaits its perfect fulfilment in that happier time when the : King shall come to His own again "and j the ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to Zion with songs and everlasting I joy upon their heads; they shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing ! shall flee away." ; j Then, when this earth is purged of all 1 iniauity, will it be also true the inhabitant j shall no more say. "I am sick, and the people that dwell therein shall be forgiven ! their iniquity." VI. The Curse of the King. But the 1 j King has not only blessing, but also judg- j [ ment in His mighty hand. The only mira- i j cle of judgment recorded in all the life of j Jesus Christ immediately followed these i ! incidents. It was the cursing of the bar- ! ren fig tree, to which He came seeking ; fruit and encouraged to expect it by the j luxuriant leaves that covered its branches: , but lo! there was "nothing but leaves, j and He pronounced upon it the "withering : words t at left it leafless and dead. This was, of course, a type of the fruit- ' less nation that He had already referred ! to under the parable of the Barren Fig Tree, and it forecasts the solemn judgment I that awaits every professed follower of ; Christ who shall meet Him at last with j empty hands and fruitless life. But there is a beneficent aspect, even in ( the curse of the .King. It tens us of One j that has the power to consume and destroy j the things which we are unable to cast out j of our lives. There are fig trees of sinful i habit and physical disease which our hu- j man strength cannot throw off alone. Ob, j how glad we are sometimes to have a God who is "a consuming fire," and from'whose 1 presence Satan, sin and sickness flee away, i He tells us we may enter into His de- i structive power against these things and i j hand over to His flaming sword adver- j saries and obstacles too great for us to overcome. "I am so glad," said a little child once, ! "that I have a God that can shake the j world." Our. Christ .is pot ail soft audi easy benevolence. Back of His gentleness i is an arm of might and a holiness as j inexorable as the lightnings of the sky. j Oh! sinner, whatever?.,else you dare, heware of "the wrath of the Lamb." . i j VII. The Sceptre of the Kingdom. In., the closing verses of our lesson, chapter 21, verses 20 to 22, the Lord reveals the?, secret of His own power and tells the ! disciples how they may share it also, The secret of it is faith. "If ye have faith and doubt not, yc shall not only do this which is done to the fig tree, but, also, .if ye shall say unto this mountain, be thou removed and be thou - cast rito; the sea, it shall be done; and all things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive." And so He passes I over to us His sceptre, and tells us that i we may exercise the same omnipotence of faith through which He wrought His 1 ! mighty works. It was by faith that lie , ; overcame and became for us "the Author j | and Finisher cf cur faith." But we may I exercise the same faith, too. Some tinv* ! I in that coming kingdom we shall be like | Him and exercise a power over the uni- | I verse of Cod. of which, could we ful.v j realize it now, wc would be amazed and | j appalled. But He is training us now in the j use cf this mystic sceptre, and teaching j I us the lessons of that faith of which He j mce said, "All things are possible with God, all things arc possible unto him j that believeth." We have but touched its borderland, i beloved. There are great continents of faith and power and prayer for us yet to explore. "Lord, teach us to pray," help our unbelief and give us "the faith oi GoV ~ * " " - r. . t - iK.' ' v ... - j A QUICK RECOVERY. A Prominent Ofllecr of the Tteheocit* Write# to Thank Dean'* Kidney PilJ# [ For It. Mrs. C. E. Bunignrduer, a local officer j I of the Itebeccas, of ^ ^,LJLWVvyA? Topeka, Kans., Room | I nue, writes: "I used--! ? Doan's Kidney Pills j a during tlie past yearJ Arj^ ? for kidney trouble and.j ? kindred ailments. 11 it|lra|la | was suffering from | ^';5 pains in tue hack anu 4 headaches, but found 3 ^||p | j gradually disappeared,|vj:^^^^| ^|V | i endorse your remedy." I (Signed) MRS. 0. E. rtUMGARDNER. A FREE TRIAL-Address Foster- ! Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. 1". For sale by all dealers. Price, 50 cents. & ' '' Advertising as a Fire Art. As an illustration of the Japanese advance in the art of advertising can anything be more complete ihan this? "Our wrapping paper is as strong as the hide of an elephant. Go.:ds forwarded with the speed of a cannon ball. Our silks and satins are as soft as the cheeks of a pretty woman, as beautiful as a rainbow. Our parcels fire packed with as much care as a young married woman takes , of her husband." (At39-04) I Sweatiog, Blistering licking, Tired Feet CURED IN ONE NIGHT BY ROYAL FOOT WASH. Removes odors of feet, arm pits, etc. Stops chafln*. 25c at druggists or postoaid from EATON DRUG CO.. Atlanta. Ga. Money back if not satisfied. Write for sample. A 25c bottle will be sent for 10c to any one sending names of five peraons afflicted as above. WAY GETlQAKEDl / '/// / /*"ttN ? ifess, CLOTHING,1 JJlEJr? 1/ VAi I UACnatrtum mlmepyovnt HA5Dwf"sTOM? LOORrOft ABOVE TOA08 M#? fiOKARt * IMlTATlONi catalog jts rare SHOWING FULL LINC OF GARMENTS AND HATS. A. J. TOWER CO., BOSTON, MASS.. U.S.A. TqytR CANADIAN CO . I TO.. TORONTO. CANADA. The home mending society, recently proposed by a Chicago clergyman, will certainly find its work cut out for it In almost any contemporary community. Minor quarrels patched neatly at short notice. Matchmakers who belong to the society will doubtless be held responsible for all repairs in home circles of their-individual con* trivance. WORLD'S'FAIR ST. LOOTS. Louisville and Nashville Railroad. If yon are going to the World's Fair you. want the best route. The LAN. is the shortest, quickest and best line. Three traias daily. Through Pullman' Bleeping (^rs and Dining Oars. Low Bate Tickets - soldfdaily. Get rates from your locai agent and ask for tickets via L. A N. Stopovsb Allowed at MAMMOTH CAVE. All kinds of information furnished on application to J. G. HOLLENBECK, .? Diet. Pass. Agent/Atlanta, Ga. ? NEARLY DONE. "How long has the minister been preaching?" whispered the strangei who had wandered into the church and sat down away back. "About thirty years. I believe." re plied the other occupant of the pew. "That being the case," rejoined the stranger. "I'll stay. He must be* nearly done."?Tit-Bits. ; ^^Sfi ~ Glove Wearers. "It. is ? peculiar fact that the Southerners have small hands. I rarely sell a size over 10, and the average sizes are from 7 to 9. In the North the average size is from 10 to 12. Another peculiar fact is that east of the Mississippi I sell the dressed kids, while west of the river, even in St. Louis, the demand is for mochas. I very seldom sell a smooth ly dressed glove west or me Mississippi. Stylos have changed, cities have charged, Milwaukee has changed and men have changed during the 22 years I have been selling gloves. I have travelled out of Milwaukee fourteen years and never before was interviewed about the business. Among the cowboys the gaunlet formerly reigned supreme, and nothing [could be sold them but a finely dress[ ed gauntlet of the best buckskin, [ which is plain, but as carefully made I as the finest imported - kid from France. The cowmen are extremely particular about their gloves, and wear cut a good many pairs. They i are as particular about their gloves as the Northerner is about his white shirt or stand-up collar."?Milwaukee Wisconsin. FITS permanently cured. No fits ornervousnes? after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRe8torer,82trialbottleand treatise free Dr. B. H. Kli> x.Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. The present population of Peru does not exceed 3,000,000. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine !!or coughs and colds.?X. W. 8A3tu?L, Gcefkn Grove, N. J., Feb. 17,190D. Manila girls carry -water in bamboo cylinders. JAPAN'S CONSTITUTION. ?How It DIlTers From the Constitutions of Occidental Nations. There is an important difference between the constitutions of Western nations and that of Japan. The former are the outcome of popular uprisings against the tyranny of rulers?in other words, of a demand, as of natural right, by the people. Consequently, even in monarchical Europe, constitutions are drawn in .such terms as to lay the greatest stress upon popular rights, while at the same time curtailing the power of the sovereign. The Japanese constitution, on the other hand, emanated from the Emperor, the iiountainhead of all power. Before the people dreamed of popular rights or of a Parliament, the Emperor had already marked out the grand policy of establishing constitutional government in the future, because of his evident desire and purpose to elevate the country to an equal place among the civilized nations of the world, not only because he wished it, but also because that course was in strict accordance with the national policy b^ueathed by hi?: ancestors. Following that policy, our constitution was drawn up with close adherence to and careful preservation of the fundamental principle of the Imperial Government from time immemorial. In form, however, it is similar to Western "constitutions, with this difference, that the text of our constitutions contains only the fundamental principles of state?namely, the prerogative of the Emperor; the rights and duties cf the people; the powers of Parliament; the powers ar.d duties of ministers of state and Judiciary and finance. These are all embodied in seventysix articles. Matters of detail, such,. for example, as provisions relating tc the rules and proceedings of Parliament, the laws for the election of members, the national budget, etc., are separated from articles enunciating fundamental principles, and are embodied in laws supplementary to the constitution and enacted at the same time.?The Century. Famous for Catchy Titles, The Pall Mall Gazette useu be famous for the catchy titles of its leaders. J. Nicol Dunn, editor of the Morning Post, who used to be connected with the Pall Mall Gazette, L lot fhc nut as to UC9 1CV.CUHJ ivi, wv ???>vt ? how these titles were found. Every morning there was an assembling of the staff, and each member would write on a slip cf paper his suggestion for the day's leader. The slips were c'ollScted in the office top hat, and after a discussion the most striking was selected. One day, as Mr. Dunn tells, the selected slip contained the words: "Can't think of a title to-da^'," which ingenious title duly appeared at the head of the leading article. 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A medicine that has restored can prodnce proof of the fact mus is the record of Lydia E. Pinkha; cannot be equalled by any other: duced. Here is another case:? troubled w and painfu down_ pair j jBnotseem 1 ^ y Lydia E. J Sanative "V ^ l ? w ' Center St, 2 ?FBEE MEDICAL AJ Women would save time an write to Mrs. Pinkliam for advic< toms appear. It is free, and has right road to recovery. Mrs. Pinkham new violates her, and although she publishes women who have been benefite never in all her experience has sb the full consent, and often by sjm $5000 which wiU pro GENTLEMEf 20 years of i good reccfrd OUR SPECIALTY Disease Consults Write or call. A DRS. LEATHERM Cor. Marietta and Fort ORICHTOWS Sfl /W Shorthand Dept., B. C. Crichton, Bookkaeplng Dept., D. B. 8kn maker. Catalogue free. E. C. Crichton, Prep., Kiafcr Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. writing College, Louisville, Ky.,open thewnole yetCr. Students can enter any time. Catalog free. coNsnranoN ''r?'0T9T nine yeaiad auiferad with chronic eon. tlpatlon and during thia ?tme 1 had to take an injection of warm water once every* hear* before * W?'* ua?V,?H HVflWU VU Ui/ WW.VMt iAWVUiil A tried Cucmti, and today I am a well man. During. the nine year* before I used Caacareta I tattered nntold misery with internaT piles. Thanks to yon 1 am free from all.that this morning. Yon eaa use this in behalf of tattering humanity." B. p. Fisher, Eoanoke, 11L f ?0Wek >% wbWfywfwyy campy catmabtic 1 Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Teste Good. Do Good, j Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, ltc, 25c, 60c. Never 1 told in bulk. The genuine tablot stamped COC. [ Q naranteed to cure or yonr money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. f 33 mm SALE, TEH MILUM BOIES \Veakeyes, nee Thompson's Eye Water j * Mich., tells how she ' i ll of the womb and >i|B tins and misery by . jjl Vegetable Compound* m looks dark indeed when a woman; vay and she has no hopes of ever M ng a few months ago when I was ised by prolapsus or falling of the ^ knell to me, 1 felt than my sun had ? etable Compound came to me as \;|j b forces and built me up until my Ji;~| four months I took the medicine ';3p >>1 T om ca thanlrfn] fnT -.'sWSri 1U PUCUfiUU A mu UV mm rnm Y ~ se."?Mrs. Florence Danfobth, jjb [ so manj women to health and J9 it be regarded with respect. This 'yjSti m's Vegetable Compound, which : | medicine the world has ever pro-# . ;j|8 i Mrs. Ptnkham : ? For years I was -% .Vi ith falling of the womb, irregular 1 menstruation, leucorrhoea, bearing- ; '|M is, backache, headache, dizzy ana Igm [jells, and stomach trouble. kored for about five years but did --M 0 improve. I began the use of your | *|| and nave taken seven bottles of E>inkham's Vegetable Compound, ^ Blood Purifier, and also used the 9 rash and liver Pills, and am now If ood health, and have gained in flesh. W ink you very much for what you :jhb done for me, and heartily xecam<49^| 1 your medicine to all suffering ea"?Miss Emma Sntoeb, 218 East darion, Ohio. ^ DVTCE TO WOMEN.* J| d much sickness if they would 9 5 as soon as any distressing symp^ put tho"??uds of women on the' the confidence thus entrusted to JgHwf thousands of testimonials from 9 1 d by her advice and medieine, % 9 e published such a letter without icial request of the writer. .ii produce the original letters tod ftignatarw at ve their absolute gencineneM.. % ?. rinkheaa Medicine Oo^ Lynn, Km. i WE CAN CURE YOU? M successful practice is a pretty 8 , Don't yon think? J IS CURING "TO STAY CURED" 9 s Peculiar to Men. | tion and Examination Free. . ^ 11 correspondence treated confidential. AN & BENTLEY, 1 yth St*., Atlanta. Ga. Malsby & Co. i 41 Sooth Forsyth St, Atlanta, 6a. -|S Portable and Stationary Engines, Boilers. 9 Saw Mills 1 AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINES M Complete line carried in stock for asH IMMEDIATE shipment Best Machinery, Lowest Price* and Be*t Terat ^ V^rite us for catalogue, price*, : ^|| etc.. before buvin?r ? Dropsy i J .idaftk. f Removes all swelling; in 8 to? L days; effects a permanent care ->5?|H A in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment fij sriven free. Nothingcan be fairer JfigB ^ Write Dr. H. H. ureens Sons. * >**' Specialists. Bo* B Atlanta. sg. ":y^a|'53 Beet Cough Sjtup. tasiea Good. Use 9 ? Price 50c. ^ ^