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Mary has never learned to obey." "I'm sure I make her mind me, Mrs. D." Mrs. D. shakes her head with a mournful face. I know you think I don't correct her when she is disobedient; but if you were to see me whip her SOMETIMES; I punish her as severely as I dare to." "That is what I complain of, my dear sister; that you do not exact uniform obedience; believe me, it is practicable, and that alone can render government easy." A LEARNER.

OLD FASHIONED PREACHING.

EXTRACT FROM A SERMON ON COVETOUSNESS,

he walked from street to street, and from place to place, round about the city, and said nothing else; but "There are yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be destroyed." There is no great odds nor difference at least in the number of words, nor yet in the sense or meaning between these two sermons; "There are yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be destroyed;" and these words which I have taken to speak of this day: "Take heed and beware of covetousness.' For Nineveh shall be destroyed for sin, and of their sins covetousness was one, and one of the greatest; so that it is all one in effect. And as they are alike

BY LATIMER, PREACHED BEFORE KING ED concerning the shortness, the WARD, A. D. 1550.

LUKE XII.

"Take heed and beware of covetousness."

Take heed and beware of covetousness: - take heed and beware of covetousness: take heed and beware of covetousness. And what if I should say nothing else, these three or four hours (for I know it will be so long in case I am not commanded to the contrary) but these words, "Take heed and beware of covetousness."

It would be thought a strange sermon before a king to say nothing else, but cavete ab avaritia. "Beware of covetousness." And yet as strange as it is, it would be like the sermon of Jonas, that he preached to the Ninevites; as to the shortness and fewness of the words. For his sermon was, "There are yet forty days to come, and Nineveh shall be destroyed." Thus

paucity of words, the brevity of words, and also the meaning of purpose; so I would they might be alike in fruit and profit.

For what came of Jonas' sermon? what was the fruit of it? "At the preaching of Jonas they believed God?" Here was a great fruit,a great effect wrought. They believed God. They believed God's preacher, God's officer, God's minister, Jonas, and were converted from their sin. They believed that, as the preacher said, if they did not repent, and amend their life, the city should be destroyed with n forty days

This was a great fruit! For Jonas was but one man, and he preached but one sermon, and it was but a short sermon, as to the number of words, and yet he turned the whole city, great and small, rich and poor, king and all.

We are many preachers here

in England, and we preach many long sermons, yet the people will not repent nor convert; This was the fruit, the effect, and the good that his sermon did, that all the whole city, at his preaching, converted, and amended their evil living, and did penance in sackcloth. And yet in this sermon of Jonas is no great curiousness, no great clerkliness, no great affectation of words, nor of painted eloquence; it was none other but, "Yet forty days and Nineveh shall be destroyed;" it was no more. This was no great curious sermon, but was a nipping sermon, a pinching sermon, a biting sermon; it had a full bite, it was a nipping sermon, a rough sermon,and a sharp biting sermon.

Do you not here marvel that these Ninevites cast not Jonas in prison, that they did not revile him, nor rebuke him; but God gave them grace to hear him, and to convert and amend at his preaching. A strange matter, for so noble a city to give place to one man's sermon!

Now England cannot abide this, they cannot be content to hear God's minister, and his threatening for their sin, though the sermon be ever so good, though it be ever so true. It is,

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a naughty fellow, a seditious fellow, he maketh trouble and rebellion in the realm; he lacketh discretion."

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is anything quick, or do sharply, then he is a foolish fellow, he is rash, he lacketh discretion. Now-a-days if they cannot reprove the doctrine that is preached, then they will reprove the preacher, that he lacketh due consideration of the times, or that he is of learning sufficient, but that he wanteth discretion. "They say what a time is this picked out to preach such things! he should have a respect and a regard to the times and to the state of things, and of the common weal.” It rejoices me, sometimes, when my friend comes and tells me that they find fault with my discretion, for by likelihood, think I, the doctrine is true; for if they could find fault with the doctrine, they would not charge me with the lack of discretion or with the inconvenience of time.

Now I will ask you a ques

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tion I pray you when should Jonas have preached against the covetousness of Nineveh, if the covetous men should have appointed him his time? I know that preachers ought to have a discretion in their preaching, and that they ought to have a consideration and respect to the place and the time that they preach in; as I myself will say here what I would not say in the country. But what then? sin must be rebuked, sin must be plainly spoken against. And when should Jonas have preached against Nineveh, if he should have forborne for the respect of the times, or the place, or the state of things there?

From the Journal of the Institute at Flushing.

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'SIR- Should the following lines meet your approbation, they will need an explanation. I was observing to one of my friends, that we could derive religious instruction from every event and every object. He then stated to me the following fact. "I had never seen turf or peat burn, and one Sunday evening as I was going to view a beautiful prospect, I observed a piece lying on the ground; thereupon neglecting the scene, I took it up, carried it home, and placed it upon my fire." He then challenged me to derive a moral from it, and to embody it in rhyme, and here you have result.

'T was evening; and each dying ray
Had tinged the scene with paly light;
While linger'd yet the parting day,
As if to welcome in the night.

Yon brilliant orb his course had done,
But still the landscape far and wide
Was bright; and with its radiance shone
The hill and vale and river side.

The gathering western clouds were riven, And from the pass the twilight stream'd, As if some rays escaped from heaven, Down through the gorgeous vista beam'd.

The scene in beauty thus arrayed,
To pensive meditation wooed;
And there through winding paths had strayed
A youth in contemplative mood.

With hasty step and solemn thought,
He had escaped the busy throng;
And, bending onward, would have sought
Where a dark river flowed along.

He would have climbed the distant hill,
To while away that idle hour,
To scan the valley deep, the rill,
The verdant plain and village tower.

He would have tried a loftier theme, When with the scene his feelings warm'd, And turned from hill, and vale, and stream, To Him who all so fair had formed.

But lo! a turf arrests his eye,
He hastes his straying feet to turn,
Passes the scene unheeded by,

And hies him home to see it burn!!!

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PARENTAL AUTHORITY. To any parent who wishes for something really excellent on the subject of education, and who is willing to bestow thought upon it,-to study it, -we know of nothing better than Miss Caroline Fry's Scripture Principles of Education. The book is not of a sufficiently popular character, to exert the widest possible influence, but intelligent parents who will read thoroughly, will derive very great advantage from the perusal of it. We give one extract as a specimen. EDS.

It is very common to hear parents say, or those who, as teachers, hold a parent's place, "I never require any thing of children without explaining to them my reasons for it; I wish them to obey me from the conviction of the propriety of my commands." And, again, with reference to matters of judgment and knowledge-" I always accustom children to think for themselves; to form their own judgment of what I communicate to them, rather than to receive it on my authority. I wish to encourage independence of opinion.

'Of such a principle of education carried into effect to the extent that I have often seen it, I desire, in a few words to represent the falseness and danger. And, first, I would say, it is con

trary to the word of God. A child is there required to obey his parents, not because he is convinced their commands are wise, but because "it is right." That is, to obey is right. In another place, he is told to obey his parents, not for the reasonableness of so doing, which he may or may not perceive, but because "it is pleasing to the Lord." These are some of many similar texts; in none of which do I see any such conditions or inducements to obedience appended, as are made use of by the parents alluded to above.

'Secondly, It is contrary to the method of God's dealing with the children of his own family; which as before stated, we have professed to consider as the surest guide and example for the treatment of ours; having the same nature to act upon, and the same end in view. God requires of his children an obedience beyond their understanding of his commands, and apart from their perception of the fitness of them. Doubtless, all his commands are fit and reasonable, and such as by their own excellence might bespeak obedience if understood aright. The Heavenly Father cannot err, the earthly parent may, consequent ly, the obedience of the child is limited by the maturity of his understanding as a man must act on his own responsibility, of course on his own judgment: but this affects not the period of education. I mean to show no more by this analogy, than that while obedience is due to a parent, it is due because he is a

parent, not because his commands are reasonable in the judgment of the child.

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And, thirdly, I think this principle is bad in the results it is likely to produce. Independence of opinion is not a grace: it is in many cases a vice. To the latest moment of existence, in the utmost maturity of intellect, on the most important matters, man cannot, in all cases, think for himself, but must believe what he is told on higher authority. And when all human learning shall have enlarged his mind, and heavenly knowledge been added to its stores, and others shall bow before him as the wisest of men; the greatest grace that can adorn his character, will be at last as it was at first, to feel that he knows nothing, and to receive as a little child the engrafted word." "If any man thinks, he knoweth any thing, he knoweth nothing as he ought to know." If such be the perfection of Christian character why begin the formation of it in a tone so different? To tell my child that I, his father, his tutor appointed by God and man to be his instructor, guide and governor, am to be judged by his imbecility, that he is to receive no opinion upon my authority—that he is to examine my opinions and judge for himself, that he is not to believe or do what I tell him, unless, I can approve it to his understanding;-if I wished to produce in manhood a proud free thinker, or a lawless infidel, this is the method I would use; but not if I desired to see in my child, an humble, believing, self

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'I lately heard a little girl say to a lady who was talking to her of her studies, "I think if I were under your care we should differ about the propriety of those books." "Then, my dear," replied her friend, as I am twenty years older than yourself, you would, of course, be wrong." The child was surprised and confused. She had been taught "to think for herself." I thought the lesson intended to be thus given was a proper one. Again; I heard a friend desire her little boy to lay down the poker he was raising towards the fire: he did not obey; but after many biddings, asked why. The mother said, "come here, and I will tell you a story of a little boy who burned himself by playing with the fire." I said to her, "Do not do that. Tell him a story now of a child who did not do as he was bidden; and teach him another time the consequences of playing with the fire."

God's garner to see how often the most useful of his servants are withdrawn from this field of their labors in the prime of life and usefulness." In the same manner God sometimes shows the richness of his paternal love, by leaving them still among us, to deliver their testimony in favor of walking in the Lord's paths. Who can, unmoved, see the servant of the Most High, after a long life devoted to his Master's service still pressing forward to his blessed goal with untiring step,-still laboring to draw others into his service, when at an age to lose all interest in earthly pursuits, and all affection for earthly objects.

Few scenes have made a deeper impression on my mind than an address I heard, years since, from the aged Bishop White of Philadelphia. The address was delivered before the children of the Orphan Asylum. On a pleasant Sabbath afternoon, I went a mile and a half from the city to the Asylum, a two story square building, which has a neat room in it fitted up as a chapel. The matron, with her neat plain dress, (for it is under the care of Quakers,) met us in the passage, and showed us a seat in the middle of the chapel. It was a long room, with a pulpit in the centre of one side. Here the Bishop was seated, and on his right hand were placed raised benches filled with the orphans, about 60 in number, and the REMINISCENCE OF BISHOP whole space at the left of the

WHITE.

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Some old writer says "It wonderfully shows the riches of

pulpit was filled with the sabbath scholars from the schools of the united churches. The ser

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