objections. No other method could be devised so calculated to despoil the heart of its finest sensibilities, to blunt the moral sense, and render the unfortunate child, a thoughtless devotee of pleasure. The manner of the parent may indeed be varied, according to the subject of instruction. But with an aspect always cheerful and inviting, he should never fail to check every disposition in his charge, to trifle with what is momentous and solemn. He should, if possible, excite in them a spirit of inquiry, and a laudable curiosity. But I need not enlarge on this topic. Every sensible parent understands what kind of fireside conversation with his children, is best calculated to delight and inform them. It is far more necessary to inculcate assiduity and perseverance in this labour of love. For he who would realize complete success, must diligently study the best means, and be observant of the most favourable opportunities, of performing it. We must consider it an object worthy to employ not only his leisure moments, but some portion of his thoughts, amidst even his most serious avocations. He must be a man of prayer, and look to the Father of all spirits, to succeed his endeavours to form aright the deathless minds intrusted to his care. AMICUS. ON OBEDIENCE TO MOTHERS. From Nott's Sermons for Children. "THINK not that there is no harm in disobeying your mother. God requires you to obey both your parents, to honour your mother as well as your father. When you disobey your mother, you are also disobeying and offending God, your Maker and Preserver. He shows how he regards this sin, when he says, 'The eye that mocketh at his father, and scorneth to obey his mother, the ravens of the valley shall pluck it out, and the young eagles shall eat it. "There seems even a greater guilt in disobeying your mother than your father. Think of it. You are disobedient to her, who took the kindest care of your help-. less infancy, who supplied all your wants, who nursed you in all your sicknesses, and who was thinking, as she took care of you, that if God preserved you, you would presently be her comfort and her helper. Do you think she will now bear it easily, that you show that you have no love to her? Or that you only love her when she is doing something to please you? Do you think she will bear it easily that you have no regard to God-that you show no prospect of a good life and a happy eternity? Oh can your kind and tender-hearted mother bear to see you getting ready so fast for an eternal lying down in misery?---Oh I remember one companion of my childhood, who not only mocked at his erring father, but scorned to obey his kind and pious mother, and how, even while a child, he broke away once and again from the bosom of his family, and was once and again compelled to return to the roof of her whom he scorned and refused to obey, and how at last he turned a swearing, drunken vagabond, and died not full twenty years old, away from home-away, I fear, from Christ. I would not feel the anguish that mother's heart has felt for worlds. "If your mother be a widow, hear me yet another word. God pities both you and your mother.--He regards the fatherless and widow, and you may wait, and ought to wait with your mother upon the loving kindness of God. He is now your Father, and her Husband. Take care, lest by your unkindness and disobedience you displease Him, who has promised to care for her and you. Take care that you do not so displease him that he shall presently leave you to follow your own ruinous way, while he still shows in his holy habitation that he is the God of the widow. And if your mind ever wings itself away when you are alone, to that cold and silent grave where your father's body lies mouldering and mixing with the carth-think if he were with you, how his heart would suffer, and how his voice would chide you, should he see you troublesome and scornful to your mother. For the Christian Herald. ISRAEL DELIVERED. I. THE morning shone brightly o'er Egypt's rich plains, II. While the hard chains of bondage the Hebrews oppress, III. But when the destroyer withdrew from their land, IV. But ah! proud oppressor, thy heroes of pride, And thy captives though compassed, redemption shall sing: V. They pursue ;-and the bondmen of Israel had fled, Scarce beyond the wide plains where their cattle were fed, Of chariots and horse 'mid the gleaming of spears. VI. They gaze for a moment in silent dismay, And each look asks affrighted, "what means this array?" "O God, our Deliverer!" instinctive they cry, And instinctive the speed of pursuers defy. VII. Their strength was unwasting, their triumph seemed near, VIII. But ah! how like visions these hopes fled away, IX. For a moment they stood,-and then cast a wild glare A thick cloud rolling on, told the foe was at hand. X. Ah! then was a moment of keenest despair; 14 XI. "Go forward, my people," JEHOVAH commands, XII. As a star to the sailor 'mid ocean's wild roar, So hope smiled again on this desolate shore; And adoring they march through the deep swelling tide, XIII. But where is the foe who exultingly cried, "I'll pursue-overtake-and the plunder divide ?" Where wave his proud banners,-where gleams the bright spear, Which but now filled these thousands with death-chilling fear? XIV. The floods have returned, and the proud swelling wave Sweep the horse and his rider anon to the grave; XV. Now silently rolls the blue surge of the deep XVI. No longer he sighs for the battle's wild roar: XVII. Here lies the proud steed with his nostril spread wide, XVIII. All the heroes of Egypt promiscuous lie, And the winds to their mem'ry still mournfully sigh, XIX. Then the daughters of Judah, with timbrel and dance, SUNDAY SCHOOL FACTS AND ANECDOTES. Bishop of Gloucester.-The circumstance of so dignified a personage as the bishop of Gloucester paying a visit to our Sunday school, kindly addressing the teachers and children, accompanying them on foot from their school room to the church, and preaching a sermon for them, has done much good to the cause of Sunday schools in our neighbourhood. We have had many encouraging circumstances among our dear children. Some of them, upon leaving the school and the town to go to service, have observed, they could willingly leave all but their teachers and the school. One girl being reproved by her teacher for staying away the preceding Sunday, said she had no shoes good enough to come in; another in the class said, "Well, if I had. no shoes to my fect, I would not stay away;" at the same time the shoes she had on were not worth two-pence: her teacher immediately gave her a new pair. We have had a very pleasing circumstance in a youth of about sixteen years of age, who joined our school about eighteen months since only knowing his letters, but who has made such progress in learning as to make one of the reading class at our last public examination. What is more satisfactory, he is become the priest of his family, where he conducts family worship with his mother, brothers and sisters, and the neighbours of two adjoining houses on the hill situate on the side of the Forest of Dean, where he lives. His mother, a widow, lately observed to our minister, “He, dear boy, is more than a husband to me." How would your heart be clated, could you witness the evening sacrifice of prayer and praise from this little group of foresters. The Obedient Girl.-One of our teachers was lately obliged to reprove a little girl for disobedience. He told her that "wicked children must never hope to go to heaven, and that if she continued to disobey her teacher, and sin against God, she never would go to that happy place." The child appeared much impressed with these thoughts, and during the remainder of the morning was attentive and obedient. When the other children were dismissed from the school, it was observed that the child still kept her place, and when told to go home, she sobbed so violently that the teacher was induced to ask her the reason. "O Sir," she said, "I want you to go with me, and tell my father that naughty people never go to heaven; for he swears so, I'm sure he'll never go there." The child was encouraged to go home, and to tell her father what the teacher had said to her. did so and we have the happiness of knowing that the reproof of this dear child, has been the means of checking the bad habit, and leading him to supplicate the mercy of that gracious Being, to whom, before this, he was not only a stranger, but an enemy. She The Duty of Prayer.-A teacher lately examining his class on the duty of prayer, one of his boys said, "Before he became a scholar he used to neglect that important duty; but, since he had attended the school, he regularly said his prayers." REVIEW. HISTORY OF THE CHURCH OF CHRIST, by the late Rev. JOSEPH MILNER, A. M. with additions and corrections by the late Rev. ISAAC MILNER, D. D. F. R S. Second American edition, comprising some account of the lives of the Authors, and an original Index. Boston, Armstrong: New-York, Haven: 5 vols. 8vo., pp. Vol. I. 401Vol. II. 409-Vol. III. 397-Vol. IV. 383-Vol. V. 406. AMONG the many causes of regret, which always present themselves when we compare what Christians are, with what they ought to be, is the very limited and imperfect knowledge which generally exists among them of the history of the church. The general outline which the Scriptures afford, is indeed remembered, but the suceeeding history of Christ's kingdom, her dangers and her deliverances, her blemishes and her glories, are either unknown, or recollected as a confused mass of events; without order in succession, and without any moral lesson in their aggregate impression on the mind. The only exception to this is, perhaps, the history of the Reformation, some parts of which at least, all Protestants know and can never forget. One reason for so disgraceful an ignorance of what cannot be known without the most important benefit is, doubtless, to be found in the works which profess to contain this kind of information. Most of them are voluminous-many of them confused-almost all of them coloured by prejudice if not stained by party bitterness. Besides this, the entire manner in which they treat the subject, though in its own nature so intimately connected with all that is holy in Christianity, is such as to repel the perusal of one who loves the truth, and feels the power of religion. Enmity against the Gospel has been fed, even to satiety, by the large displays of ecclesiastical wickedness. The wildest and the most visionary heretics have filled the historic page; and their follies, both in principle and practice, have been deemed worthy of a particular enumeration. The internal dissensions of churches have been minutely described. The intricacies and intrigues of Popery, and indeed of every secular system, which pretends to wear a religious garb, have been developed with a studious particularity. The connexion between the church and the state has afforded very ample materials of what is commonly called church history; and learning and philosophy have been much more respected than godliness and virtue."-pp. iii. iv. From this general censure, at least one body of Ecclesiastical History is wholly to be excepted. We refer to the work at the head of this article. This singular and indeed unprecedented production, proceeds upon grounds entirely different. Its great object, distinctly avowed and steadily pursued, was, to give the history, not of all such as professed to be Christians, but of living Christianity. This it has done, and in a manner which proves its author to have belonged to that company of regenerate men whose virtues, trials and triumphs, it was his chosen task to tell. The spirit which every where breathes in this work, is the spirit of primitive Christianity; in other VOL. IX. 86 |