HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1930-02-13, Page 6----"'"---4."—'"--"'"'•— 1of Jest=, bitterly attacking him for
this breaicingof the sec .1 custom. of
his nation. To eat with outcasts was
an unheard-of indiguity.
V. 12. Jesus defends his liberal
treatment Of this claspwith anal
Sunday School
Lesson
to the example of a physic en.
ebruary 16. Lesson V;1-395us Hea
ing and Helping—Matthew 9: 1-13, not go to people who are in sound
l• lax
ofessioalal defence. A doctor does
Golden Text, --Himself took our In-
firmitiea and bare our sickness,—
Matthew 8: 17.
ANALYSIS
X. THE HEALING OF THE MAN WITH
PARALYSIS, ch, 9: 1-8.
IT. Ti•IE .,ALL OF MATTHEW, c.,. 9: 9-13.
Ile rxoDucTIoN--The method adopt-
ed in Matthew is that of grouping the
#naterials presented to the readers $o
health anis who have no treed of his ,
skill. health,
on1,' will take
who are out of health, and who feel
their need of a euro, It is so also with
Jesus. These Pharisees thit.lc that
they are morally •nd Fptritt �•.ly whole.
1
They do not need any ono to help
them.. Therefore, Jesus mast go
those who will appreciate the bless-
ings which he has to give.
V. 13. Jesus further defends
scrip -
'
c him-
self by remindingof
•hick shows that God looks, not
a: to set forth the greatness of the tures
power and personality cf Jesus. After for mere ritual service, but for mercy,
the Sermon on the Mount we came to and goodness. The first of all laws is
the different stories of the remark- the law of love; and these poor, neg-
able works of Jesus,, revealing his l ebe dofsinve?s,7o areetehey isnotonwinios the
in
ooinpassion and authority. divine favor.
X, THE HEALING OF THE MAN WITH '
I -
PAPAIN St s, ch. 9: 1-8.
V.1. Another of the journeys whieh
--Jest's had made through Galilee is i
• over, and he returns to Capernaum,
:whist: had been his headquarters. He
'wishes to find time for rest and for
the instruction of his disciples. But
the report soon goes abroad that he is
back; and there is greater cc gerness
;to see and hear him.
V 2. The faith which is here men-
tioned an be better understood by
reading the narrative in Mar` 2: 11,
12, and Lake 5: 18-2G. Several of the
airk man's friends ;red determined to
bring him to this new healer, and
'
y .t n the crowd was so great that
they could not enter, they had gone to
the roof of'the hoose and let clown the
bed in front of Jesus. This 'short i
was the•result of their firm faith that
if ,Taus could only meet their friend,
all would be well, Faith is trusting
the goodness and powaes of Christ.
Jesus looks upon this sick pian and'
tells him not to be afraid, sinse his.
ins are forgiven. This was haidly
the treatment that was expected, since
to all outward appear 2nRosecoe W. Ball
ee the trouble {
was in the body. However, Jesus had' General Superintendent of the West -
looked deeper, and he saw that the j ern Lines, Canadian National Tele -
wan was troubled about his soul, and, graphs, Whose appointment as chief,
that the burden of his sins was rest- of the newly -formed commercial de
-
that
beenheavily upon hint.. His conseiel'tee partment of the telegraph• company
had been stirred, and the stalonrted.
:for has been aunouneecl by W. G. Barber,
cbetter life hads been started. cloth
could there be any peace as long as General Manager of the Canadian
this inner struggle with si - was con- National Telegraphs. MBalie will
Forgiveness, and the assur have jurisdiction throughout
ante of the divine love, were what the tem in regard to commercial affairs.
poor man really needed, at.d so Jesus His headquarters will be at Toronto.
gi ' his greatest of all blessings.
ves him this
V. 3. But Jesus has his foes, who y-.-----
heap scorn upon his weds. They evi-
0
lire ever on the watch, and they nowt �y
dently suggest that it is a simple
thing to tell a man that his tins are
forgiven, since no one can test its before the American Association for
truthfu.,:ess. There is no change in
the body to indicate that a change bust, From the
atlas of the sea there' the retetreAdvancement af Science. c i Only r.,
taken plate. Besides that,eit is,G they jshort cabled account was sent to this
fay, the special privilege of God to From the mountains cometh a moan, country and we quote, therefore, the
forgive sin, and it is, therefore, blas- From the forests of France a frantic h as id appears ithe New 'York
hemv for a man to assume this cry, speech p ick a groan.
power. From the sky a sir Times.
. V. 5. Jesus reao.s their sceptical and Speaking on the alleged- sifts of
critical ng clear.
thoughts, and wishes to make ash science, Dr. Milliken tookk up one by
everything He asks them who- one the outstanding' accusations
they it is easier to say, "Thy sins be "�Z'hy saciified life's p gins' scientific research, and to
forgiven thee," or to say, "Arise and and hes
1 of them on behalf science, Walk." Of course it is easier to say,a I
� b
Dead
ur
ADAMSON'S ADVENTURES---.•,B'y Q. Jacobsson .
•
0
Will
e seienee aucl simply because it has had
y,� 3i'�T survival vain=:
. " `lt will iti�uPpear like the clino-
M .ni From �a1 hen the condi-
tt survival
America's Most Renowned ii
Scientist Says, "It Will Also
Keep the Race from
Overcrowding and
Starvation"
Tasty Recipes
Artichoke .Soup
Regnired: Two pounds of arti-
chokes, three onions, one :pint of
milk,, and one pint of water, Trash
well, peel, and cut up the artichokes,
then boil for one hour with three
thinly sliced. onions. Season with
pepper and salt to taste, add ono tea-
spoonful of ,sugar, then put through
a sieve. Ada 'lien the pint of milk, a
little 'whipped cream or a knob' of but -
tor. Heat up again hi readiness to
serve and add -some chopped parsleY
before serving.
Celery Soup
Required: One good head of 'TelerY
(only use the outer sticks, keeping
the heart for table use with cheese),
three small onions chopped up fines
about a teacupful' of cold potatoes,
one .pint of Milk, and one pint of
water. Boil the potatoes; and celery
till tender enough to put through a
stele, Acid some celery salt, pepper,
and about a teaspoonful of sugar
when you add the milk.
Potato Soup
Required: Six onions, six large po-
tatoes, one pint of milk, one pint of
water. Cut the Onions and potatoes
into slices and boil together until
they are wel pulped, so that they are
tender enough to put through a sieve.
Add the pint of milk just before they
are put through the sieve, then sea-
son with parsley, pepper, salt, - and
sugar.
Last of all, as an admirable supper
dish or nightcap ou a cold winter's
night, comes the onion soup. For this
boil your onious in salted water,
strain and cut up. Save half the
water they have been boiled in, add
as much milk again. Thicken with a
dessertspoonful of cornflour and a
knob of butter. Season with pepper
and salt to taste and serve piping hot.
To Prepare Crumpets
There are two essentials to observe.
One is that the buttering must be
clone before heating, and the other
that while they are getting hot iu the
oven they must be completely cover-
ed so that none of their own steam
can escape. Never toast crumpets.
Place them in little piles of three or
four, with the allowance of butter on
each one, upon large buttered sauce
ers. Cover n'ith grease -Proof paper
and put other saucers on the top of
each pile. The moisture thus kept
withhold your judgment until alt the
available evidence is in.'
"Now the new evidence born of
agog tvhe, and only w new scientific students is to the et
tions 'which have given Sect that it is highly improbable that
value have disappeared, and those I thavee is any sub,atomic appreciable
anforiit f
of
conditions are disappearing now,1
primarily because of changes in the to tap anyway; in other words, that
world situation `being broughtcabout henceforth.
e me it who
oy ame livg ing i cefear
by the growth of modern
t -
"To the charge against science that ists may some day touch off the fuse
she has deadened and routinized la- and ours too` this star-dust�nmaytagoehomehof
and
henceforth sleep in peace with the
consciousness that the Creator has
put some fool -proof elements into His
handiwork, and that man is powerless
to do it any titanic physical damage
anyway.
Regrets "Craze for the New" 1 in will keep them soft and the butter
"Dr. Milikan admitted that there is, will soak in evenly.
Dr. James Laver, in London Chronicle bor and taken away the joy of crafts -
A prediction that science will save nansbip,' Dr, Millikan replied:
Science Has Man
the world from war and its future in "'A Sci superficial ce H dance Freed Mr.
at Ford's
habitants from starvation, was made 1
factory might seem to justify it, but
by Dr. Robert A. Milliken, world- i to the man who can see beyond his
famed physicist, who, it will be re- nose it is a different picture that un -
membered, is a former Nobel Prize folds Aitself:
reads I history, the machine
winner, in his presidential address age has actually freed, educated and
inspired mankind, not enslaved it.
Routine labor plays a part in all our
lives, and an attractive part, too, it
it is not overdone and if there is
leisure. for something else.
"'Even the few routine men who
feed the machines in Mr. Ford's fac-
tory are less routinized and have
shorter Hours by far than the. dumb
agricultural drudge who hoed pot 1
"For -what did we die?" these ,voices
emprise?
Must we forever behind death's mask
Be mocked by falsehood
of iencer�
eget ,toes for twelve hours a day, thtoug
pleaded not guilty. He denied that 1 all the history of the world before
science is materialistic. ? the machine age appeared.
To the, charge that science has; "'Looked at in the large, I do not
multiplied the tools of destruction, i think there. can be the slightest ques-
that she has made war more deadly, j tion that the only hope this world
more legible and less heroic than it, has of maintaining in the future a
used to be, Dr. Milliken replied that suitable balance between population
every scientific advance "finds ten � and food supply is found in science:
times as many new, peaceful and cots- I "'That, in the last analysis, is man-
kincls greatest problem. Its solution
tractive uses as • it finds destructive , ,
'Thy • i be forgiven• since none
tell whether it is fu}filled or not, u "Will never to us come the rest of
if one says, "Rise and walk,,' then, i ?
Unless the patient does this the heal -1 peaceMust Times fruition be dust?
ers reputation is gone. 1 Will the day never come when her -
V. G. Jesuss-;ogles the miracle on the i rocs shall cease,
roan's body in order to convince them; Aird swords and spears shall rust?
roltat 'tis claim over the spiritual iia, OI ye vrho still hold life's emprise,
ture is valid. One who can heal thus
vonderfuliy,must have been authority
to forgive sins.
V. '7. We do not wonder that the
people were greatly astonished, but
probably they did not realize that the
greatest object which Jesus had in,
view was to give this man, not only a
healthy body, but also a pure heart.
IL THE CALL OF MATTHEW, ch. 9: 9-13.
V. 9. This is the call of the man
whose name is associated with this
gospel, and it shows how unconven-
tional were many of the methods of
Jesus. 'Matthew belonged to a very
unpopular class of people. The tax-
gatherer is never very much liked.
Out in Palestine, at this period, the
burden of taxes was very heavy,
oppressed by
on
peoplepp
tm p
the con p
grievous exactions. It is no 'wonder I
that the publican, or tax -gatherers
were a marked class, and that they I
were ruled out of most respectable so -1
ci=ty. The publicans wee associated t
with the sinners, see 1Vlatt. 11: 19;
Luke Iii: 1. When Jesus proposed to
Select one out of this despised folk for
Itis intimate friend, it called forth
the ,
scorn and contempt among
gious classes.
V. 1.1. It would seem straige to us
if uninvited guests were to enter the
house of another man and talk fa-
miliarly with those who are present,
but this was quite common in. the east.
The Pharisees evidently
the disci came in an
And guide humanity's trend,
Regard our moanings and our sighs,.
So strife and war shall end."
_ -Oliver Hezzelwood.
however, 'one regrettable tendency in
modern life for which science is
probably to some extent at least, re-
sponsible:
"'I refer to the craze for the new
regardless of the true, to the demand
for change. for the sake et' change, re-
gardless of consequences, to the pre-
sent-day widespread worship of the
bizarre, to the " cheap extravagance
and sensationalism that surround us china or glass will give it a In
on every side, as evidenced by our polish.
newspapers, our magazines, our itovBlack stockings will not lose any of
els,our drama, our art in many ofcolor instockings
gs wash if they areo
their
its forms,dour advertising and even allowed to soak for several hours in
our education.' e warm water to which a little 1.urpen-
"Regardine these as transient ao- tine has been added•
companiments of the stupendous rate
of change that modern science and A Useful Polisher
its applications have forced on mod- Get an old broom, Polisher
away any
ern life,' and believing that what he hairs that Id remain, and bind sow -
termed the presentevispirit of revolt 'is eral pieces of old cloth • round the
in part an inevitable reflex of the broom head.
Finally, finish with a covering of
old, soft velvet, and fasten into place
with headed nails. This saves you a
lot of back aching moments.
TRY TURPENTINE
A little turpentine mixed with
whitening will remove dirt and grease
from marble. Allow the paste to re•
main on the marble for a few min•
utes, then wash off with a warm,
soapy lather. Rinse with clear cold
water.
A few drops ofturpentine added to
the 'rinsing water when washing
ones !" I alone, and there are thebestHeade it rapid changes taking place an our
"'Explosives and fertilizers are
basically the same, and even explo-
sives find a dozen peaceful uses to
one warlike one,' he said. 'Public
thinking is misled by the fact that a
horror makes better news than a
wheat crop. One man blown pain-
lessiy to atoms gets more news space
than a thousand men dying by inches
from disease.
Peaceful Arts Exceed Warlike
"'Steel does indeed make bayonets,
but it also makes plowshares and
'railroads and automobiles and sewing
machines and threshers and a thous- as lie admitted made by scientists
d other things whose uses consti themselves, was declared by Dr. Mil
for believing that in the long run times *because of the rapid growth of
can be solved, is suflicieut to warrant fence' Dr. of h r said he was
the fullest stimulation df both the not greatly disturbed by this:
biological and the physical sciences „,The actualmethod by which
that can in any way be brought science makes its changes is becont-
abottt,' ing better' understood; he said.
"Sub Atomic" Forces Denied "'The demand for the ,saner popu-
"The charge that science is `giving lar books upon it is continually in -
children matches to play with' by pre -
creasing. The remedy is, iu part at
paring to tap 'enormous stores of least, in undersremedy it better.
sub -atomic energy which weak, ignor- "'As soon :s the public learns, as
ant, confused, sometimes visions man it is slowly learning, that science, uni-
i
)las not the moral qualities to control
voisally recognized as the basis of
d direct to useful ends,' a charge, our civilizaztion, knows no such thing
as change for the salve of change; as
soon as the public learns that the
method of science is not to discard
the past, but always to build upon it;
as soon as it discovers that iu science
truth once discovered always. retains
truth; in a word, that evolution,
growth, not revolution, is its method,
it will, I hope,' begin to banish its
craze for the sensational, for the new
"When one loses a leather grip it's lutiona
a case of hide and seek."
— By BUD FISHER
MguqAY "(CO BROADCAST AN OPERA of
I AuTo NoIRNSoTdi Y
tute the strongest existing diverter
of human energies from the destrue-
liken to be without foundation.
t<
"'Science regards it as her chief
five to the peaceful arts.'
"'In my judgment, war is now in 1 Sanction y onto deter
men from does
process of being abolished, chiefly by
this relentless advance of science, its not
her succeed
even with her de -
most powerful enemy. It has existed
in spite of religion, and in spite of always too constrain t n toreplace
place
philosophy, and in spite of social panicky,acting
The
regardless of,the true, and thereby
ethics, and in spite of the Golden g ea informed, ee ratioplosions, including the atone for one of the sins into which,
Rule,ecsince the days of the cave manarerldwWar, have been mental, not the very rapid growth of science may
accordance -with the eve World you then to , tempted it''.,,
because in acehave thiol
philosophy of modern ,physical. She would ask Y
began to converse e` --
MUTT AND JEFF
fit
Marr, YOUR'.. B'%:oADCAsTIMG SiATtonl IS ii
INTES:�CP:ING WM-I EVERY STATION 'Al
APAE.R\cA. tvE PRMST A Alosr
NOISE
VIRA-rs WlRoNC\
NO'IJ� 6CNTs?
-PAWN orf CATuRc-.1b
A tObTOP-c(C`C 'DACE. WEDNESDAY
`(OUR STATION 'BRoADcAST A tAmsG
GALLOPING 011f VON Re F. rib
fin:AY YOU HAD A Te No%
Sots 'B`! A coNc2ETe
tvltANG MAC RINE.
'yuck,, ro o RctieS AS)
cl.ASSlCAb MvstC
O�NI.y-+ OR WE'LL
I�.€.VO
`lout;~ 7
t"lcemel
6EN'tteMEN,,
X WILL
ST(ClC "1`C ,
ol?NESTRAS,
fresq
.
e -_
Cooking Cakes
When cooking small buns or calces
in the gas oven, you will find them
less likely to burn if the tins are well
sprinkled with ground rice instead of
being greased.
"Yes, my daughter eloped."
"I suppose you will forgive the
young . couple?"
"Not until they have located a place
to board."
An Hour of Classical Static
NE L0 EVERY Bray. 'i'ou WILL. NOW
LtSTEt3 -co -n-Ie swEC'r iii' Ri7 LII<C
Mush OF -Me oeI Y a cticslTQ?A
of ,BASS DRUMS m1'r,ic pooh~
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mac, C� ,
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