j?r'JfjjwTn k- DECEMBER 23, 1910' pwn l: - k Christmas Thoughts little THE GREAT GBFT Christmas Is herethe season of giving. Tho ;tle ones are all oxnontnUnn. to,, i,., i i... with wonder and delieht. nnnn th ,. i. of toys from which Santa Claus is supposed to draw when he starts on his annual round. Their wants have been communicated to him in letters or through parents, and there will be disap-' pointment throughout Christendom if the stock ings are not filled to overflowing. Nor is tho giving confined to the children; older ones take advantage of the season to exchange remem brances, and what is still richer in reward to give where no return is expected. How far beyond calculation are the effects oX the giving which the day inspires, and how all these gifts pale into insignificance in comparison with the great gift, the Christ, in whose honor the day is celebrated! Little did the disciples imagine, with all their adoration, what a revolu tion the Savior was to work with His gospel of love and forgiveness of sacrifice and service. The inward regeneration which has been effected in millions of hearts has shown itself in a multitude of ways. While tho followers of other religions have, except where they have borrowed from the Christian nations, made little progress the ideals of the Nazarene have been winning their way, gradually but surely, carry ing civilization in their wake. One doctrine, namely, that service is the measure of great ness that life is to be estimated, not by what we take out of the world but by what we put into it this doctrine alone is sufficient to re form both individual and nation life. Jesus, by precept and example, taught the divine truth that Jt is more blessed to give than to receive, and by so doing brought happiness within the reach of all. If our happiness depended on what others do for us, life would be full of disap pointment, but when it depends on what we do for others we cannot bo miserable, unless-we shut our eyes to the opportunities about us. tThe ideal controls the life; it will transform a,,.man, a community, a country, a world, and Christ's ideals are conquering and will conquer- -and in this bloodless warfare the vanquished share the advantage with the victors, for all are gainers. LOVE'S FESTIVAL Christmas is love's festival. Set apart for the commemoration of God's gift of His Son it has grown into a great holiday which is observed throughout Christendom by rich and poor alike. Even those who refuse to take upon themselves the vows of any church are constrained to join in the beautiful custom which makes both par ents and children look forward to this day with pleasant anticipations. For weeks before De cember 25, busy hands are at work, tiny savings banks are gathering in their sacred store, and eager expectancy is written, upon the faces of. the young. To the boys and girls, Santa Claus is a sort of composite donor who monopolizes the distribution of presents and who, reading "the minds of his little friends, rewards the good (and all are good just before Christmas) with the very toys that they themselves have selected, while the older ones learn by experience that it is more blessed to give than to receive. Back of Christmas and the Christmas present is love, - and the broad, brotherly love taught and exem plified by tho Nazarene Is not content with the remembrances which are exchanged as tokens of affection between members of the family and between intimate friends; it Is compelling a widening of the circle to include the poor and the needy though not of kith or kin. What an Instructor love Is! How it develops the one of whom It takes possession! It is the mightiest Influence known among men. When once It is awakened it dissolves all opposition. Dr. Parkhurst, the New York clergyman, in Illustrating the difference between force and love said (quoted from memory) that force is the hammer which can break a block of ice Into a thousand pieces but. leaves each piece still ce, while love is the ray of sunlight which, though acting more slowly and silently, melts the ice At this season of the year our thoughts turn to the contemplation of the new degree of love revealed to the world by Jesus. To love between members of the family and love be ween fr ends He added an all-pervading love that includes every member of the human race. Even enemies SSS beyond the bounds of this love, for The Commoner. ShnSSHV1?18 au nott8lronS enough to break hrSthJS?8 W UnIit0 cach 8on of God t0 a hIs Tf t ' i L0V0 ,s not 8tunI(1." says Tolstoy. Li!nfD0Wn ? US Ur (,Uty t0 our fol,owB and it will some day rule tho world. Forco in money which the intellect employs, sometimes for good, sometimes for harm. But greater than J i nV(V th0 wcanon of the heart. It is a sword that never rusts, neither docs it break. n? u? ,wun8 at it leaves are life-saving, not .life-destroying. No armor can withstand it and no antagonist can resist It. But why try to define this love or to measure its scope? Paul the apostle, in his first epistle to the Corinthians, describes it In language to which nothing can bo added and from which nothing can bo taken. Let his words suffice: "Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not love, I am becomo as sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal. And though I have the gift of prophecy, and under stand all mysteries and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. And though I bestow all my goods to feed tho poor, and though I give my body to bo burned, and have not love, it profiteth mo nothing. Love suffereth long and is kind; love onvieth not; love vaunteth not Itself, Is not puffed up, doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil; rejoiceth not in inqulty, but rejoiceth In tho truth; beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things. Love never faileth; but whether there bo prophecies, they shall fail; whether there bo tongues, they shall cease; whether there bo knowledge, it shall vanish away. For wo know in part, and we prophesy in part; but when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall bo done away. When 'I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I am become a man I put away childish things. For now we seo through a glass, darkly; but then face to face; now I know in part; then shall I know even as also I am known. And now abldeth faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest of these is love." (From an editorial by Mr. Bryan in The Commoner.) REAL GREATNESS Christ has given us a measure of greatness which eliminates conflicts. When His disciples disputed among themselves as to which should be greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven, Ho re buked them and said, "Let him who would be chiefest among you be the servant of all." Service is the measure of greatness; it always has been true, it Is true today, and It always will be true, that he is greatest who does tho most of good. And yet, what a revolution it will work in this old world when this standard becomes the standard of every life. Nearly all of our controversies and combats arise from tho fact that we are trying to get something from each other there will be peace when our aim is to do something for each other. Our enmities and animosities arise from our efforts to get as much as possible out of the world there will be peace when our endeavor is to put as much as possible into the world. Society will have taken an immeasurable step toward peace when It estimates a citizen by his output rather than by his income and gives the crown of Its appro val to the one who makes the largest contribu tion to the welfare of all. (From "The Prince of Peace.") HUMANITY'S SEARCH FOR PEACE All the world Is in search of peace; every heart that ever beat has sought peace and many have been the methods employed to find it. Some have thought to purchase it with riches and they have labored to secure wealth, hoping to find peace when they were able to go where they pleased and buy what they liked. Of those who have endeavored to purchase peace with money, the large majority have failed to secure the money. But what has been the experience of those who have been successful in accumulating money? They all tell the same story, viz., that they spent the first half of their lives trying to get money from others and the last half trying to keep others from getting their money, and that they found peace in neither half. Some have even reached the point where they find difficulty in getting people to accept their mon ey; and I know of no bettor indication of the ethical awakening In this country than the in creasing tendency to scrutinize tho methods of money making. A long step In advance will have been tafcen when religious, educational and charitablo Institutions rofuno to condono Immoral methods in business and leave tho possessor of Ill-gotten gains to learn tho lonolluoss of life when ono proforn money to morals. Some have nought peace In social distinction, but whether thoy havo boon within tho charmed circle and fearful lost thoy might fall out, or outside and hopeful that they might got In, thoy havo not found peaco. Some havo thought, vain thought! -to find peaco In political prominence; but whether office comes by birth an In monarchies or by election as In republics, It does not satisfy a solflah am bition. An office Is conspicuous only when few can occupy It. But few In a generation can nopo to bo tho chief oxocutlvo of tholr city, stato or nation. I am glad that our Hoavoniy Father did not make tho peace of tho human heart do pond upon tho accumulation of wealth, or upon tho securing of social or political distinction, for in either cauo but fow could havo onjoyod It, but when Ho made penco the reward of a con science void of offonso toward Clod and man, Ho put it within tho roach of all. Tho poor can secure It as easily as tho rich, tho social out cast as freely as tho leader of society and tho humblest citizen equally with thoso who wiold political power. (From "Tho rrlnco of Peaco," an address delivered by Mr. Bryan on varioua occasions.) THE DOCTRINES OF THE XAZAIU3KI3 Tho tokens of lovo and afTectlon exchanged during tho Christmas season are small when compared with tho great gift brought to hu manity by tho meek and lowly Nazareno in whoso honor Christmas day Ik observed. To tho Christian, Jesus camo as an unspoak ablo gift, His faco Illumined by a divlno radi ance, His life surrendered In fulfillment of a divlno plan, His resurrection fixing In tho firma ment a star of hope that shall never bo dimmed. But even those outside of the church, as well an its members, share In the benefit which hu manity has received from tho example and teach ings of tho Man of OalHlee. In a letter written to a friend, Thomas Jeffer son analyzed the doctrines of Christ as thoy re late to man's conduct toward his fellows, saying: "His moral doctrines, relating to kindred and friends, were more puro and perfect than thoso of tho most correct of the philosophers, and greatly more so than those of tho Jews; and thoy went far beyond both in Inculcating uni versal philanthropy, not only to klndrod and friends, to neighbors and countrymen, but to all mankind, gathering all Into ono family, under tho bonds of love, charity, peaco, common wants and common aids. A development of this head will evince the peculiar superiority of the sys tem of Jesus over all others. Tho precepts of philosophy and of the Hebrew code laid hold of action only. Ho pushed his scrutinies Into tho' heart of man; created his tribunal In tho region of his thought, and purified thp waters at tho fountain head." Thoso who accept Jesus as the Son of God and worship Him as such, can attribute tho mar- . velous spread of His gospel to a supernatural forco behind It; thoso, however, who dlsputo His divinity must find In tho doctrines them selves an explanation of their increasing hold ' upon the human heart. No language that can be employed by pen, no words that can be spoken by the tongue, can exaggerate tho Influence which Christ's philosophy has already exerted upon tho race, or estimate Its futuro power. Between the doctrine of might and tho doc trine of right; between the principle that pro pagates Itself by tho sword and the principle that grows through the perauaslvo influence of Its own Intrinsic merit; between tho grasping, over-reaching spirit that enthrones self and sac rifices all else to Its own advantages and the gen erous, manly recognition of the rights of others; between a measure of greatness that estimates a man by what ho has absorbed from society and that which estimates men worthy In proportion as they do service and diffuse blessings theso differences surpass comprehension. If Jesus had left nothing but tho Parables, His name would havo been Imperishable In lit erature; if He had bequeathed to posterity noth ing but tho simplicity of his speech and tho Irre sistible logic of His argument, Ho would havo had a permanent place among tho orators of tho world; if He had given to the world nothing but tho commandment, "Thou shalt lovo thy neigh bor as thyself," enforced as it was by His own example, this one gift would have been sufficient to outweigh all the wealth of all the world; If He had left no record but the Sermon on the Mount, It alone would have made His natal day (Continued on pago 7) o .i-vj-