Zurich Herald, 1941-06-26, Page 6LI,
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SUNDAY
SCHOOL
LESSON
} LESSON XIII
tESSONS FROM THE EARLY
CHURCH—I .Cor. 3;145
GOLDEN TEXT — For other
/oundatian can no man lay than
,ghat which is laid, which is Jesus
11'ihrist. 1 Cor.
,THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Time --The date for the writing
lef the first epistle to the Corin-
thians has been variously placed
"e,t between 57 and 59 A,D.
( Place ---The famous Greek city
of Corinth was on a commanding
ilposition at the southern extrem-
jte of the narrow 'isthmus which
ieoined the Peloponnesus to the
lenainland of Greece, often called
the "Bridge of the Sea," the caps-
' 01 of the Province of Acltaia.
Paul and Corinth
Paul was finding some grown-
up Christians behaving like ehil-
'elren in the Church at Corinth, and
he writes this chapter to correct
such a situation. It will be to
our advantage here to summarize
briefly Paul's relationship to the
Church in this great city. The
Apostle probably went to Corinth
in the autumn of A.D. 50. Ori-
ginally he had intended this visit
to be a comparatively brief one,
but, as a result of the direct lead-
ing of the Holy Spirit, Paul re-
mained for probably eighteen
months. There is reason to be-
lieve. that the Apostle passed
through in Corinth a period of
severe mental struggle, out of
which he carne with the resolve
to preach more simply and plain-
ly than ever. The Church which
Paul founded here was brought
forth with much travail; and he
ever looked on it as peculiarly his
own. Around his relation to it,
Some of the most perplexing ques-
tions of his life cluster, and out
of it grew some of his most im-
portant teaching.
A Rebuke to Corinthians
I Car. 3:1. "And I, brethren,
Could not speak unto you as unto
spiritual, but as unto carnal, as
unto babes in Christ. 2. I fed
you with milk, not with meat;
for ye were not yet able to bear
it: nay, not even now are ye able;
3. for ye are yet carnal." The
Apostle felt that all his preaching
-would do no good if he talked
about spiritual things to men who
were unspiiitual. They were
Christians, real Christians, babes
in Christ; but there was one dead-
ly fault—they were carnal --they
allowed the flesh to dominate in
their lives: The carnal state might
be described as a state of pro-
tracted infancy. A babe cannot
help himself, and that is the life
of many Christians. They make
their ministers spiritual nurses of
babes, keep then occupied all the
time in nursing and feeding them
on the Word of God. "For where-
as there is among you jealousy
and strife, are ye not carnal, and
do yet not walk after the manner
of men? 4. For when one saith,
I atm of Paul; and another, I ani
of Apollos; are ye not men?"
these Corinthians were not walk-
ing according to the Spirit of
Christ, but they were conducting
themselves just as plain, ordinary
men of the world, a conduct which
was characterized by jealousy,
and then, as always, by strife,
followed at last by division. It
seems as though the Corinthian
Church broke up into factions,
each one of which took a different
apostle as its supposed head and
teacher,
All God's Fellow -Workers
5, "What then is Apollos? and
what is Paul? Ministers through
whole ye believed; and each as
the Lord gave to hint. 6. I plant-
ed, Apollos watered; but God gave
the increase. 7. So then neither
is he that planteth anything,
neither he that watereth; but God
that giveth the increase." Paul
declares that he and Apollos and
other gospel messengers are mere-
ly servants belonging to God, and
that it is absurd for the Chris-
tians at Corinth to divide into
parties, saiyng that they belong
to men whom God has sent to
serve them. These servants of
God each have performed a task
which the Lord assigned they
have different tasks but are un-
ited in their. aim and purpose, the
advancement ofthe Church. 8,
"Now he that planteth and he
that watereth are one: but each
shall receive his own reward ac-
cording- to his own labor." The
rule of the reward is not the tal-
ents or gifts, nor the success of
God's servants, but their labors.
This brings the humblest on a
level with the most exalted. 9,
"For we. are God's fellow-workerst
ye ate God's husbandry; God's
building." God needs men to
carry out His purposes. For the
distribution . and application of
Christ's finished work on the
cross, God depends on men,
10. "According to the grace of
God which was given unto tee, as
a wise ritasterbuilder I laid the
foundation; and another buildeth
thereon, But let each anan tatse
heed how he buildeth thereon."
Datil was not enly a laborer but
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Behind a barbed wire fence, "somewhere in the Dutch East Indies,'
lie row on row of drums of gasoline, coveted by Japan. Preparing for
any eventuality, East Indian Dutch have augmented defense forces. Man
n foreground is an Air Raid Precautions worker sprinkling neutralizing
solution during anti -gas drill.
an architect. To him was reveal-
ed the whole plan of the building
and to prescribe the way in which
it should be carried out. 11. "For
other foundation can no man lay
than that which is laid, which is
Jesus Christ."
12. "But if any man buildeth•
on the foundation gold, silver,
costly stones, wood, hay, stubble;
13. Each ,man's work shall be
made manifest: for the day shall
declare it, 'because it is revealed
in fire; and the fire itself shall
prove each man's work of what
sort it is." 'The judgment of
Christ is here set forth symboli-
cally as a fire, as only one `aspect
of fire, namely its testing power,
its ability to discern the perman-
ent from the transitory, the false
from the true. It is a fire that
will test whether a building will
really stand or not. It is Christ
who puts the final approval or
disapproval upon a man's work.
14. "If any man's work shall
abide which he built thereon, he
shall receive a reward. 15. If any
man's work shall be burned he
shall suffer loss: but he himself
shall be saved; yet so as through
fire." If all that a Christian has
done here on earth is finally
shown to be worthless, still, when
all of his. works are consumed by
the fire, he himself may yet be
saved as by passing through a
fire.
Blind Streets .:_,
More Popular
Blind or dead end streets, once
shunned by cities which enjoyed
the reputation of being well-plan-
ned, are now considered useful
and desirable in residential dis-
tricts, according to a survey re-
ceived by the advisory committee
or the Montreal Planning Depart-
ment.
epartment.
This kind of street was unpopu-
lar in the past, according to the
survey, chiefly because it could not
be used for through tra!fie pur-
poses and did not provide u -turn
facilities for • automobiles a n d
trunks.
DE)SIRABLE FOR R,ESIDENCIOS
The survey further adds that, if
properly located and adequately
designed, blind streets are recog-
nized as desirable for residences,
chiefly because they are free from
thenoiseand hazards of busy thor-
oughfares.
The advisory committee was in-
formed that many other Canadian.
and American cities have repealed
regulations once prohibiting blind
streets and others tolerate them
under conditions.
Montreal has almost 100 dead-
end streets and this situation is
to be studied by the advisory com-
mittee.
THIS CURIOUS WORLD BIZ 1st Oa:
CO PR. 1933 BY NEA SERVICE, MO.
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THE closer to the eine the earth is;'the faster it travels along ;its
orbit, and, since it is at'its nearest point during the winter months
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MOVF 5 A:457EER
IN ITS ORIBeir FROM
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THEREFORE, THE
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THE YEAR EQUALLY.
THE I N eVAL-
r-i M MARCH '115
SEPTEMBEF . 15 A FEN
DAYS LONGER
G Bening r r e
.(No. 17)
PLANTING FOR PORCHES
The planting around the house
porch should receive the special
attention of the home ground de-
veloper. When the porch is along
the . front or side, the manner in
which itis planted directly affecte
the appearance of the house, A
porch so located and used .for
outdoor living requires a planting
that gives the occupants a degree
of seclusion, although this cannot
be the major purpose of the plant-
ing if the general appearance of
tate house is to be considered, The
porch planting is subject to close
inspection and should be of a type
that is attractive as viewed from
the porch.
Open or Secluded
Plans for the completed plant-
ing frequently include a good
proportion of evergreen material
valued for its year -'round form
and color. It is not meant that
this part of the planting should
consist entirely of such tree forms
as arbor vitae, yew, juniper and
chaniaeeyparis. These tend to
give the planting a; stiff appear-
ance when used to excess. It is
better to use then only for the
required tall accents, adding such
shrubbery evergreen as the Jap-
anese hollies (ilex), evergreen
barberries, Carolina rhododen-
dron, andromedas, cotoneasters
and evergreen azaleas to form the
mass of the planting.
Deciduous flowering shrubs of
refined habit have an important
place in combination with these
evergreens in an informal plant-
ing of considerable size. The
small deciduous flowering trees
such as dogwood, flowering crab-
apple and cherry should be used
more than they have been to
frame the porch and give it shel-
ter, shade and seclusion without
the undesirable tendency to hide
the house behind a foliage screen.
Vines trained on a trellis offer a
means of introducing further va-
riety to the planting in a form
affording desirable seclusion.
Are You Capab �.'
ht Art Emergency?
Do You Know What To Do?
Nurse Advises You On Sud-
den Sickness In Your House-
hold
Doctors and nurses are always
busy people, writes a nurse. If
is therfore important to have some
knowledge of what to do In •cer-
tain emeegencies should a doctor
or nurse not be available.
What w:oulid you do if a member
of your household complained of
abdominal pain with sickness and
slightly raised temperature?
Put hint or her to bed with a
covered hot-water bottle and give
nothing (not even milk) to eat or
drink except water or diluted
orange juice. Don't give any open-
ing medicine until you have had
medical advice. A dose of castor
oil or any aper1eut may lead to
severe complications if the trouble
is connected with the appendix,
for example.
What would yon do if a member
or your household gets scalded or
buirnt ie. some way?
Cover the afflicted part with
strips of clean linen wrung out of
a solution of bicarbonate of soda
end water or cold tea. If the area
affected is large, keep the patient
at rest Lying down covered with
blankets and with two covered hot-
water bottles. A drink of coffee
or tea may be given or, in. the
case of a child, give glucose in
warm, diluted orange juice.
Haw would you treat a deep cut.
Wculd you apply ointment or 'not?
You should not apply ointment
as this may tern the cut septic.
Bathe the cut under cold running
water, then bind it firmly with
clean linen ar gauze. Use a sling
to rest and raise the part it pos-
sible.- Later, when bleeding has
stopped, soak off the linen in water
berate applying fresh. Small cuts
do well with the ready made dress -
Ing ctbtaivabte in tins consisting of
lint and plaster. The mare air a
out can have the bettor for heal-
ing, but dirt must be kept out, so
a covering for housework, etc., will
be needed. It the eut is severe
stitches nay be necessary.
"SWEET SIXTEEN'S" DIARY
As refreshing and tonic as the
Sweet Laurel guns it advertises,
the new half-hour dramatic pro -
t
tam, "Diary of Sweet Sixteen,"
is now being staged by Wrigley's
each Thursday night at $ (DST)
over CFRB. It's something en-
tirely different in radio enter -
tab -in -lent. Penny Matthews . the
heroine, sweet sixteen and always
in a pickle, is a real true-to-life
girl who tells all to her diary,
But what she commits to its ,
pages does not remain a secret.—
it is dramatized over the air --
and oh boy! do the teen-agers
lap it up. Penny's troubles with
her teachers, with the new
glamor -number down the street,
with her mother who doesn't ap-
prove of many of her plans, with
her best girl friend and with
prospective dates . . . reflect the
thrills and disappointments of all
young people of that age who
aren't either "dopes" or "jerks."
Adults listen, too, and smile wist-
fully in recollection of how sad
and serious things used to seen
at sweet sixteen,
* * *
"MAKE MINE MUSIC"
Another musical treat heard
along the air lanes these nights,
conies from CKOC in Hamilton—
when at 11.30 a restful interlude
of semi -classical and popular
musical comedy works is featured.
This change of pace after an eve-
ning of dramas, dance tunes, and
heavy -going newscasts, is fast be-
coming a favorite spot on the
dial for Canadian listeners. Tune
in Make Mine Music from 1150
on the dial, and enjoy a good-
night spot of music that pleases.
* * *
GILBERT AND SULLIVAN
Geoffrey Waddington, one of
Canada's most able music direc-
tors, has returned to the CBC net-
work for another series of son -
Certs of the Gilbert and Sullivan
light operas for the saran -tee
months.
Me. Waddington started as
youth, conducting radio orches-
tras -- and has 'Waved the baton,
oyer the orchestras heard in many
of the outstanding shows on the
Canadian chain. His latest series
heard each Tuesday sight
the popular favorites from t e
works of the immortal British
composers, Sir William Gilbert
and Sir Arthur Sullivan.
* *
NOTES AND NEWS
The familiar "Yoo-h0000, Mrs.
Bloom!" echoes again over NBC's
red Network each morning at
11.80 o'clock.
The neighbourly "Goldbergs°
are returning to the network
where they originated nearly 12
years ago for a new daily series
to be heard in place of the serial,
"Lone Journey,"
Lovable characters in the true-
to-life story of a Manhattan Jew-
ish family are Molly, Jake, Rosie,
and Sammy, who rose from a
lower East Side tenement to a
Park Avenue apartment, In pri-
vate life, Molly is Gertrude Berg,
who originated, writes and directs
the series.
* * *
A versatile and commuting
singer is WBEN's tenor, John
Priebe, who has been signed for
his seventh appearance this sea-
son with the Boston Symphony
Orchestra August 14th in Stock-
bridge, 'Mass.
Mr. Priebe is a member of
WBEN's Candlelight Singers who
filLs concert dates between Mon-
day evening broadcasts at 7.45
o'clock. The August 14th date
will be the fifth time he has sung
Beethoven's "Missa Solemnise'
under the baton of Dr. Serge
Koussevitsky,
eight o'clock, and will feature all
QUICKSILVER
HORIZONTAL
1 Latin god of
commerce.
7 He is the
messenger or
— of the
gods (pi.)
13 Assumed
name.
14 Rodf
ornament.
16 Conscious.
17 Examination
18 Strikes,
20 King of
beasts.
21 Myself.
22 Full.
24 To suffice.
25 Musical note.
26 Moor.
27 Senior
(abbr.).
29 Pair (abbr.).
31 Custom.
32 Turf,
34 Vestige.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
T
R
E
N
POMP
QOUNDE
L
E
D
39 Pound (abbr.)
41 Unplowed:
42 Half an em.
43 Sound of
surprise•
44 Musical 'note.
46 To splash,
51 Form bf "a."
52 Helps.
54 Icy rain.
55 To discharge.
57 To shoot at
59 Males.
60 Chief.
35 Violently. 61 His winged
36 Scolds cap,
constantly. 62 His winged
38 Sweet potato shoes.
E
T
M
A
R
T
S
r
SE
18 Dispatched.
19 Street (abbr)o
22 Revokes.
23 Tester.
25 A —•- is
called by his
name.
26 Pertaining to
focus.
28 He is a ---
god.
. 90 Cattle farm.
31 Pale.
33 To stop up.
37 Undermines.,
40 Saline
solution.
43 Tempers.
45 To prepare
for printing.
47 Charity. •
48 Golf term,
49 Canvas
shelter
50 And.
51 Mohacnmedait
noble.
52 Snake.
53 Mineral
spring.
55 Age.
56 Beverage.
56 EIectric
term.
60 Plural (abbr )
VERTICAL
1 Door rug.
2 Fragrant
oleoresin.
3 To succeed.
4 Feline animal
5 Plural
pronoun.
6 To bark.
7 Wrestler's
throw.
8 Sun deity
9 Shoemaker's
tool.
10 Deposited.
11 To languish.
12 Measure
15 Chum
POP --Rhine Wine
I r ee/G IaAD rnNOUGl-I ot=
`1"1-11$ WE- COULD. irAT
TI1F- .N6 MY N N 3
-TIM5!
By J. MILLAR WATT
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