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and does not exist in America; indeed, nowhere is scientific study pursued with such assiduity and research as in the divinity schools of Scotland. In 1887 he came to America and figured prominently at the annual Chautauqua meetings. At Northfield he delivered in its first form the now famous address on "The Greatest Thing in the World." He also lectured on his travels in Africa, and subsequently published these lectures in book-form under the title " Tropical Africa." Two years ago Australia was favoured with his latest "peregrinity," as Carlyle would put it, in answer to a pressing invitation from some of the students of the Australian universities.

During the winter months the students of Glasgow and Edinburgh have still had the genial presence of the gifted scholar and scientist among them. On week days he is to be found in Glasgow teaching science, and on Sundays he is in Edinburgh preaching Christ to the students. He has the gift of utterance as of writing; and his tall, lithe form, his easy manner, his clear voice under full control, his thoughtful attitude and fresh statement of truth, make him acceptable as a teacher to young men. His spoken style is terse, nervous, restrained, always interesting and, like his written style, flooding his brilliant sentences with a stream of sunshine. The burden of his message is always the same, it never varies. "To become like Christ," he says, "is the only thing in the world worth caring for, the thing before which every ambition of man is folly and all lower achievement vain."

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THE SOUL'S ABBEY.

COME, soul of mine, within the abbey stand—
Thy wondrous Westminster--and meditate
On memories of mortals, good and great;
Leave evermore what anxious cares have planned,
And deeds performed at selfish pride's command;
Enter the walls invisible, and wait,

Where urns and cenotaphs commemorate
Sublimest lives. Behold, on every hand,
Thy statued seekers of true glory's goal,
The pure, undaunted haters of the wrong.
Here ever, too, let passing years enroll
New names on tablets of the wise and strong.
Worship not men, but find for duty, soul,
Thy inspiration from this noble throng.

-William Farrand Livingston.

WHAT IS A CHRISTIAN?

BY PROFESSOR HENRY DRUMMOND, F.R.S.E., F.G.S., LL.D.

YOUNG men are learning to respect more perhaps than ever young men have done the word "Christian." I have seen the time when it was synonymous with cant and unreality and strained feeling and sanctimoniousness. But although that day is not quite passed yet, it is passing. I heard this definition the other day of a Christian man by a cynic-"A Christian man is a man whose great aim in life is a selfish desire to save his own soul, who, in order to do that, goes regularly to church, and whose supreme hope is to get to Heaven when he dies." This reminds one of Professor Huxley's examination paper in which the question was put "What is a lobster?" One student replied that a lobster was a red fish, which moved backwards. The examiner noted that this was a very good answer, but for three things. the first place a lobster was not a fish; second, it was not red; and third, it did not move backwards. If there is anything that a Christian is not, it is one who has a selfish desire to save his own soul. The one thing which Christianity tries to extirpate from a man's nature is selfishness, even though it be the losing of his own soul.

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Christianity, as we understand it from Christ, appeals to the generous side of a young man's nature, and not to the selfish side. In the new version of the New Testament the word "soul" is always translated in this connection by the word "life." That marks a revolution in popular theology, and it will make a revolution in every Young Men's Christian Association in the country when it comes to be seen that a man's Christianity does not consist in merely saving his own soul, but in sanctifying and purifying the lives of his fellowmen. We are told in the New Testament that Christianity is leaven, and "leaven" comes from the same root word as lever, meaning that which raiseth up, which elevates; and a Christian young man is a man who raises up or elevates the lives of those round about him. We are also told that Christianity is salt, and salt is that which saves from corruption. What is it that saves the life of the world from being utterly rotten, but the Christian elements that are in it? Matthew Arnold has said, "Show me ten square miles in any part of the world outside Christianity where the life of man and the purity of women are safe, and I will give Christianity up." In no part of

the world is there any such ten square miles outside Christianity. Christian men are the salt of the earth in the most literal sense. They, and they alone, keep the world from utter destruction.

There is only one great character in the world that can really draw out all that is best in men. He is so far above all others in influencing men for good that He stands alone. That man was the founder of Christianity. To be a Christian man is to have that character for our ideal in life, to live under its influence, to do what He would wish us to do, to live the kind of life He would have lived in our house, and had He our day's routine to go through. It would not, perhaps, alter the forms of our life, but it would alter the spirit and aims and motives of our life, and the Christian man is he who in that sense lives under the influence of Jesus Christ.

Now, there is nothing that a young man wants for his ideal that is not found in Christ. You would be surprised when you come to know who Christ is, if you have not thought much about it, to find how he will fit in. with all human needs, and call out all that is best in man. The highest and manliest character that ever lived was Christ. One incident I often think of and wonder. You remember, when He hung upon the cross, there was handed up to Him a vessel containing a stupefying drug, supplied by a kind society of ladies in Jerusalem, who always sent it to criminals when being executed. And that stupefying drug was handed up to Christ's lips. And we read, "When He tasted thereof He would not drink." I have always of the most heroic actions I have ever read of. one very small side of Christ's nature. He that a man wants. Paul tells us that if we live in Christ we are changed into His image. All that a man has to do, then, to be like Christ, is simply to live in friendship with Christ, and the character follows.

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But it is only one of the aims of Christianity to make the best men. The next thing that Christ wants to do is to make the best world. And he tries to make the best world by setting the best men loose upon the world to influence it and reflect Him upon it. In 1874 a religious movement began in Edinburgh University among the students themselves, that has since spread to some of the best academic institutions in America. The students have a hall, and there they meet on Sundays, or occasionally on week days, to hear addresses from their professors, or from outside eminent men, on Christian topics. There is no committee; there are no rules; there are no reports. Every meeting is held strictly in private, and any attempt to pose before the world is sternly dis

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couraged. No paragraphs are put into the journals; no addresses are reported. The meetings are private, quiet, earnest, and what soever student likes may attend them. That is all. It is not an organization in the ordinary sense, it is a "leaven."

In all the schools it is the best men who take most part in the movement, and among the schools it is the medical side which furnishes the greatest number of students to the meetings. Some of the most zealous have taken high honours in their examinations, and some have been in the first class of university athletes. It is not a movement that has laid hold of weak or worthless students whom nobody respects, but one that is maintained by the best men in every department. The first benefit is to the students themselves. Take Edinburgh, with about four thousand students drawn from all parts of the world, and living in rooms with no one caring for them. Taken away from the moral support of their previous surroundings, they went to the bad in hundreds. It is now found that through this movement they work better, and that a greater percentage pass honourably though the university portals into life. The religious meetings, it is to be observed, are never allowed to interfere with the work of the students.

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The second result is to be seen in what are called university settlements. A few men will band themselves together and rent a house in the lower parts of the city and live there. They do no preaching, no formal evangelization work; but they help the sick and they arrange public concerts, and contribute to the amusement of their neighbours. They simply live with the people, and trust that their example will produce a gooceffect. Three years ago they printed and distributed among them ves the following "Programme of Christianity": "To bind up broken-hearted, to give liberty to the captives, to comfort all th mourn, to give beauty for ashes, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness." I suppose there are few of us with broken hearts, but there are other people in the world besides overselves, and underneath all the gaiety of the city there is not a street in which there are not men and women with broken hearts. Who is to help these people? No one can lift them up in any way except those who are living the life of Christ, and it is their privilege and business to bind up the broken-hearted.

I want to urge the claims of the Christian ministry on the strength and talent of our youth. I find a singular want of men in the Christian ministry, and I think it would be at least worth while for some of you to look around, to look at the men who are not filling the churches, to look at the needs of the crowds who throng the streets, and see if you could do better with your

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than throw yourself into that work. The advantage of the ministry is that a man's whole life can be thrown into the carrying out of that programme without any deduction. Another advantage of the ministry is that it is so poorly paid that a man is not tempted to cut a dash and shine in the world, but can be meek and lowly in heart, like his Master. It is enough for a servant to be like his Master, and there is a great attraction in seeking obscurity, even isolation, if one can be following the highest ideal.

With regard to the question, how you shall begin the Christian life, let me remind you that theology is the most abstruse thing in the world, but that practical religion is the simplest thing. If any of you want to know how to begin to be a Christian, all I can say is that you should begin to do the next thing you find to be done as Christ would have done it. If you follow Christ, the "old man" will die of atrophy, and the "new man" will grow day by day under His abiding friendship.

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NOT COMFORTLESS.

BY REV. EDWIN C. L. BROWNE.

THE night approaches, yet the way before us
Is wild and long, and fears our hearts oppress,
A tender Voice calls from the darkness o'er us,
"I will not leave you comfortless."

The night grows darker, and around us ringing
We hear the cries of weakness and distress;
Yet over all is still the sweet Voice singing,
"I will not leave you comfortless."

The wind grows bitter, and the rain is falling;
O Christ is this the path of holiness?

"Bear up! bear on!" the heavenly Voice is calling,
"I will not leave you comfortless.

"This thorny way, and weary,

I before you

With feet unsandalled for your sake did press.

The Father's watchful eye is ever o'er you,

Nor will I leave you comfortless."

Thus ever sweetly, with the tumult blending,

This benediction, as a soft caress,

Is through the heavy cloud from heaven descending,

"I will not leave you comfortless."

Oh, might we, patient Lord, learn Thy endurance,
So know Thy peace and win Thy rest!

Our weary hearts still wait the dear assurance,
Thou wilt not leave us comfortless.

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