HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1940-01-11, Page 6Sunday
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LESSON 1
THE C,BRISTIAN'S CONFES-
SION OF FA1TH--'-Matthew
16: 13.28
11°12INTF.1? TEXT, Matt. 16: 13-24.
GOLDFN TEXT- than art the
Christ, the Souof the living
Matt. 1d:16. •...•.. SETTING
THEl.l•mt4ON IN ITS SE
A.D. 210, in the
tlt'lyd : i.,ti ,.f the Galilean min-
tPlace. --At t,, near Caesarea
Philippe le the noethe .11 Part of
at:ti lie. ,
+r- outher!1 foot-hille
!' - -
:
Mount li un'Hvr,non,
For eve- „reed one-half years
'ioaet enkla''l (lieelcllee have liv-
ed. shat a a '::eii and prayed and
_ „r The Croce
..::E^ii 10,10_ is only
resenes : this was one c31
•l,*. „ t,.,; eeisleaj hours in all our
a•;(,, ,ehe,e, if_ this group of
die ip , ,l . S 1ailk fi to realize his
deity toed tlti ;iaitship, there was
3, time to attempt to bring such
a conviction to another group.
13. Now w+leu Jesus came into
the part el Caesarea .Philippi. he
;asked his disciples, saying, Who
•;10 men sav that the Son of man
i? 14. And they said, Some say
John the Baptist; Fame Elijah;
and others, , Jeremiah, or one of
the prophets. In their answer to
his first oueetiOP is given their
indicatiOt1 of how greatly the gen-
erality of the people respected the
1laster. They had only good to
say of hila. 15. He saith unto
then, Thit who say ye that I atm?
16. And Simon Peter answered
and said, Thou art the Christ, the
Son of the living God, The word
''Christ" is1 the Greek translation
of the Hebrew word
which weans "anointed."
Founding. of the Church
17. And Jesus answered and
saki unto him, Blessed art thou,
Simon '.Sar -Jonah: for flesh and
blood hath not revealed it unto
thee, but my Father who is in
heaven. 'There was no sudden rev-
elation granted to Peter. The rev-
elation wa.; made possible by Pet-
er's ever deepening knowledge of
the Lord Jews Christ. All the facts
,of Christ's life are available for
men, but not all men recognize him
as Christ. 18. And I also say unto
thee, that thou art Peter. This is`
the name which the • Lord Jesus
gave to Stenon, son of Jonah, at
the very beginning of Peter's com-
panionship with the Lord. And
apou this rock I will build my
church. This one of the most dis-
puted, discussed passages of the
New Testament, Here we have
the fi:•st mentien of the church
in the word of God. Is this not
the coerert interpretation" Is it not
that Christ is the chief cornerstone
of the church, that believers *are
c
--... -._1,'1010
As Soldiers of First Canadian Division Left for Overseas
111 � i4$ k za ,
>.y•,s* L�� '�`kyk2x�'`:try.
:s� a
f is
warctatwssFrL't. �0`:p.: n•,vs,,.
Herr Is a view of the after deck of ones eflthe
huge tltrans ort. s 1 avi
as aunt's new army, overseas. The picture was taken
cornerstone. Petar himself 1e a
stone in this heavenly structure.
And the gates of Hades shall not
prevail against it. The correct in-
terpretation of this may be that
the gates of Hades shall not swal-
low up the church.
"Tell No Man"
19, I will give unto thee the
keys of the kingdom of heaven;
and whatsoever thou shalt bind
on earth shall be bound in heaven;
and whatsoever thou shalt loose
o11 earth shall be loosed in heav-
en. The conditions of salvation are
divinely stipulated—the conditions
that we must become living sures
and members of the new spiritual
rare. `20, Then charged he the
disciples that they should tell no
man that he was the Christ. Un-
til the disciples' own views of his
Messianic work were g-reatly COT-
rected, any statement by them that
he was the Messiah would do more
harm than gi ocl. It would have
brought Jesus prematurely into
open antagonism to the Jewish rul-
ers. 21. Prone that time began Jes-
ue to show unto his disciples, that
he must go to Jerusalem, and suf-
fer many things of the elders and
Chief priests and scribes, and be
killed, and the third day be raised
up. 22. And Peter took him, and
began to rebuke him, saying, Be
it far from thee, Lord; this shall
never be unto thee. These words
were said to Christ out of love
for him, but as the apoetle Paul
reminds us, love can often be at
fault unless it is united with wis-
dom.
.How To Be True Disciples
23. But he turned, and said un-
to Peter, Get thee behind ole, Sat-
an; thou art a stumbling -block un-
built un a spiritual house, resting tiling. of r thou
h niindes but the things the
as they d e or. him who is the
men. Peter was here a trap set 1
to catch Jesus. Christ now informs
•
the disciples that they too, if they
are to be followers of his, must
live a life of self-denial, and prob-
ably a life ]narked by suffering.
24. Then said Jesus unto his dis-
ciples, If any roan would come
after Hie, Let him deny himself,
`and take up 'leis cross, and fol-
low
•
ria
r
N O
OTES
NEvis
13y MADGE ARCHER
• , :,:;it' p.11l.. NI'.l and (,ti. Met-
rui:vlitau Auditions of to Air . •
8:0n p.m., NB(' and C'111.. a';•a-:r
and Sanborn flour . . 8:5'
NBC and CBI., One Mao's F'ulni!y ,
. ..u:00 p.t'.1 ('13S, :+:'11ti:ay t',.en-
iia:t hone , . - January 8th. 51 s:00
p.m., NBC and ('BL. Qtlalctr Var-
iety Show ... 8:10 5.111., NH(' and
(131.. Voice of Firestone with ((icit-
ttrd Crooks . , . January (1, at 5:45
a.m.. NB(; and CBC, 1'r.inle Minis-
ter .recipe Chamberlain speaking
on `Te War. its Progress and Fee
tttt•e" , 8:50 pen.. 'NBC and ('trig,
information Please , , , 10:00
t'B[.,, Toronto Synlphcrtic OvO'ICS tr:a
•,nnducted b3"1ir Ernest .MacMillan
January 10, e;30 p.m,. (.'Ill„
Percy Faith's Music , . - January 11.,
8:00 p.m.. CBL, bliss Trent's Child-
ren . . 8:30 11.m., CBL, "On Par-
ade" with His Majesty's Canadian
'Grenadier Guards' P,and .10. 15:00
p.tn.,('13L. Ming Crosby.
ON PARADE"
alejteetY's C:inadhm Greua-
dier Uua".l Bond le winning an
even greater radio following since
its 119W program, "On Purtllr", be-
gan over the Canadian network on
be-
gan
1'bt•� _!1113 . Fellings at 8:30 p.m.,
FST. "Ou Parade' is something:
•1'utto novel in the Dominion radia
•t -up. 11. is ;,rimarily a c nnbina-
:ion of military musil: and popular
•snlliss. twit, with t11' ;truest it
also embodies a clnizi feature,. A
chosen by lot pont among
dames sere i11 weekly from all over
the country. is asked by lung dist-
amp telephone to sole dm Myst-
ery Trim- of the Week. if he guess-
es (•or''—try the got` araalrable
1 rizr•.
Change in Programs
Iiignet 1letvs concerning An'leli•
e:au p ograans is still the rbdical
•'Mange In (:onnection with the
Chase ase am: Sanborn llonr and
"One \lairs Family." Starting on
;January 71.11, the Bergen-lt ,art y
Sby
Show gots oil a hall'. -hour
ulo
from 8:00 lo 8:",0 1r,ltt,, HST„ all'
other hail' of tine former hour being
taken up .b:: "One .Man's Family,"
On atltl after January '.lith "Miss
Trent's Children' will replac' ; the
American pt'of.rani, "05P, 11MTn11,A
!oily." 8:00 to 8130 prat..
TO BE HEARD
,i,nwiry' lith. 10:00 pant., NBC, the
:.igitt-.i:a'ai'yvvE4bllt boxing; bout be-
tween S'telio Bettina anti .']`red AP -
vs tori front Madison Square Gard-
en .. . Janna1'y tial. 1:55 p.r1.,
NBC
and ORD. M.eiropolii.atl Opera: Lily
Pons in 'Lalcmn' . 10:00 pen„
CBI,. NB(' yytupboh1Y eondueted by
iie1nat'ciintl Molutati , . Jan, 7, 3
Pau.. ('BS and (11=Teri, N. Y. Phil -
'harmonic. 111 1111-Telt0(1 ttwelty pro-
g.^tri enteinr+.ed by Igoe 31ratvinsk1
Me.
FARM...
COLUMN
PRODUCE FINE BACON
The national hog policy of the
Dominion Department of Agricul-
ture which has been in operation
for several years is now of partic-
ular value. In assisting Canadiau
farmers in obtaining bacon -type
foundation stock, the Department_
offers the services of its officials
throughout the country at specified
volute in the selection and shipping
of gilts of good bacon type, either
in individual or group shipments;
During the past few, years the
improvement effected in market
hogs in districts receiving ship-
ments of bacon type gilts with as-
sistance under t
e
• hBrood Sow ;Pol-
wbleb carried the vaugu.ard of Can-
1ig Canadian shores.
icy, of the Department, has been
impressive, and indicates that good
female stock of the right type is
:the foundation upon•which to build
a permanent bacon liog industry.
'Phe use of good ,sires which usual-
ly accompanies the ownership of
good sows assures a supply of suit-
alble breeding gilts and of market
hogs yielding carcasses suitable for
both export and domestic demand.
Blackouts T .les -
lncreased Toll
The blackout continues to exact
a death toll on Britain's roads. The
Ministry of Transport has an-
MUST WORK TOGETHER
'Urging the need for organization
and spending a lot more time today
in thinking of ways to market pro-
duce, V. S. Millburn, Peterboro,
secretary of the Dairy Farmers'
Association in a recent address to
Prince Edward County Milk Produ-
cers' Association asked: "Whose
fault is it that conditions foie the
farmer are so bad? Is it the I Gov-
ernment's, or the manufactu::'er's?
No. It's oiir fault — yours and mine
— and it is our job. to find out
what to do about it."
"We need legislation to level
production out," he said, "but we
can't get it until we get down to
work and organize. talk, think and
work at our plan till we can speak
with one voice and the people will
knmv what we want and will sup-
port it.".
As Nazi Sailors Abandoned Scuttled Liner "Columbus"
nounced that highway 14talities
November totalled 926, an in-
crease of 513 over November',
1038. Of the accidents respoalss
ible for these deaths; 6'74 oculr-
red during the blackout.
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
Fergu
By Wiiiiam
.son
WITH LC7/VG LEGS
HAVE LO/VG /1/454W
Eu -r NOT ALL LO6Va
nPEGxE,O E, DS
HAVE LO/VLEGS.
ABOUT
350,000
• SQUARE
MI LES
QF THE
t.3Nrf£,c
STATS
ARE
UNDEF-LAIN
WITH ONE
OR MORE
VEINS OF
WORXABLE
COAL,
Ti 4c- NAME _.es
DINOSAUR" J
MEANS
TLi/8LE 1,/Z'/,
AND EACH
DINOaAUR HAS
A NAME (USUAL' -`1
LATIN) WHICH 15
DESCRIPTIVE OF
THAT PARTICULAR,
ci2ATU F.E..
a
10-10
OPR. 1937 We 1,11A 5E51111, INC. 641,
AS is the case with the animals or today, the prehistoric atlinials
all bear scientific names that are cies cript v os theme insel es. The
name of the gigantic, lumbering
Tjtlar'd. ' The carnivorous Tyrannosaurus is translated as "Tyrant
Lizard," while the creature known as Monocionius, or "Single
Horn," had, as its 310010 suggests, a single spike on its head.
NEXT: Are there any icebergs in the northern Pacific ocean?
TRIGERATOPS
"TH2 .KAVIED FACE••
1
s
ggORIZONTAL
1 Pictured
composer of
J'Swanee e
River."
12 Billiard rod.
13 To liberate.
-14 Point.
16 To jump.
18 Encounters.
19 Tramp.
20 Sound
reasoning.
21 Mortise tooth.
23 Spanish.
25 To seesaw.
27 Musical note.
28 South Africa.
29 Measure.
30.One who
gapes,
32 Neuter
pronoun.
33 Ability.
34 Court.
35 Valuable
property .
37 Some.
38 To abound.
40 Crude.
SONG WRITER
Answer to Previous Puzzle
A
43 Frosty.
45 Small
depressions.
48 To accomplish.
49 Soap
substitute.
51 Nay,
52 Kimono sash.
54 Chaplets.
56 Beverage.
58 This --- mu-
sician played
at 2 years. 9 Southeast. .
59 His songs were —.10 Sue collar. ane.
a huge11
VERTICAL
1 To court.
2 Wild duck.
3 Pair.
4 Half (prefix).
5 Chooses by
ballot.
6 Born.
7 To grow
plump.
8 People of
Caucasus.
1
12 His tunes are
— folk
songs.
15 He died in
17ltalian river.
19 Hourly.
22 Nullified.
24 To jabber.
26 Snaky fish.
27 Substance to
curdle milk.
31- Tiny veyctable
33 Golf crevice.
35 Beast, se
36 s ashio,,.,.
39 lvlales.
40 Plant group.
41 Lntrl ne. . •
42 Therefore.
44 Fish,
46 Short letter.
47 Oceans.
49 Data.
50 Mooley 1: 10.
53 The sou;.
54 hleasui'c c f
area,
55 Soueii
Carolina.
57 Electric, t.:':11
in this dramatic picture, satiate of the German lushly' liner
Columbus are shown going over the side of the blazing liner into wait-
ing lifeboats after her captain ordered her scuttled rather than let the
waft 'fall into the hands of the Royal Navy,
Care for Sleep -Walk ing
A +.-,1010••• 1010...... , . ,-�' t
1 -ti Ak
e you WALK 1N
YOUR '$LEGP,
COLONEL ,
n
By J. MILLAR WATT
1