W'ffY" V'lW 1$. ST" NOVEMBER, 1914- 1 he Commoner 9G dustrial system wo have that so unfairly dis tributes the rewards of toil. If, on the con trary, I find that it is not the fault of the sys tem but the fault of the father; if I find that instead of spending his income upon his family he spends it upon himself in such a way as to lessen his value as a husband and father, I ask what equity thero is in our courts if they will compel the return of a few dollars borrowed from a' neighbor and will not require a man to live up to the sacred obligations of husband and father. But suppose it is a widowed mother who is de pendent upon a boy's wages, what then? Should she suffer? No. Neither bhould the burden fall upon the child. The time will come, if it has not already arrived, when the able-bodied men of a community will be willing to bear any burden that may be necessary to supplement the income of one so situated the time will come, if it has not already arrived, when they will be ashamed to throw such a burden upon a helpless child to the' impairment of its own future and . of its ability to meet the responsibilities of life. There Is one other excuse, namely, that the boy will not go to school. Before giving him up, let us make one more effort. I would take him to a wood pile, a large wood pile, and put him to work with a dull ax. When he has labored long enough to know how hard it is to accomplish anything with such an ax, I would give him a sharp ax, and then when he was thoroughly ac quainted with the difference between the two, I would tell him that the difference between meet ing life's problem with a trained mind and an untrained mind is even greater than the differ ence between cutting with a sharp ax and a dull one. "But I apologize for dwelling so long upon the mind. As I said in the beginning, this is not aptf to be neglected. It only remains for me to remind you before passing to the third branch of my subject, that a body, however perfect, and a mind, however thoroughly trained, will not suffice. A man may be even more dangerous to Bociety because of his education if the energies ofbpdy and mind are not projperly directed, An ighjorant scoundrel can do less harm than an edujbated one-and- he can be caught more quick-ly-.When ,wei provide, therefore, for universal education, It is with, the .expectation that the heart as well as the head will be developed. And now we come to the most important part of the subject the development of moral char acter. We measure men by moral standards; we know them by their heart characteristics. If moral character id the matter of supreme im portance, upon what foundation shall wo build it?- I know of no foundation for a moral code except a religious foundation. I am aware that in saying this I enter a field of controversy, but -it has been so long since I .said anything that no one objected to that a little opposition does not embarrass me. I know of no moral standard de serving of the name which was not built upon religion. And even if it were possible to find a moral standard whose foundations go down so deep or extend back, so far that a religious basis for .it could not be- found, no such system will be possible in the future. Unless some great catastrophe shall destroy all that man now knows, there will never be found in the ages yet to come a group of men anywhere capable of formulating a moral code whose ideas on the subject of morals will not have been colored by the sermon on the Mount, so all-pervading is the , thought of the Nazarene. There are some who believe that materialism furnishes a basis for morals; I cannot agree with them. There are others who believe reason to be a sufficient guide, but I call you to witness that in most of us the foundations of character are largely laid before our reasonb are mature. The law fixes the age of twenty-one as the period when the young man's reason can be trusted, but who would dare to wait until his boy was twenty one before impressing upon him the moral prin ciples that guide one's life? Look back at your own lives and see how little you have added in the matter of moral principles since you were grown. I confess that I cannot find much in my own life for which I can claim credit I acknowl edge my indebtedness to Christian parents, a Christian home, a Christian church, and a Christian environment. That you may refresh your own memories I venture to. refer to things that entered into my life at an early age. My mother so impressed upon my youthful mind and heart the objection to swearing that when I entered school at the age of ten I found myself unconsciously with drawing from the crowd when boys began to wear, and I have never overcome my aversion to an oath. Whenever I hoar a man swear now, the inclination returns to got out of the rangd of his voice. I venture the assertion that thoso who do not swear can in nine cases out of ton trace the fact to the teachings of mother or father, My father hated gambling no man more so. With him it did not matter what the form of gambling was, whether the stakes wore large or small, or whether one won or lost. He believed that gambling overthrow God's law of rewards, and before I was fifteen years old I had become imbued with his belief on the subject, and I have nover abandoned it. To my father and mother jointly I am indebt ed for my belief In total abstinence. I "do not know how young I was when 1 first signed the pledge. If I wore compelled to guess I would say that it was the day when I first learned to write my name, although I may have signed with my mark before that. All I know on the subject is that I have never failed to sign the pledge when I could induce others to sign it, and 1 stand ready while I live to sign it again and again if, by doing so, I can influenco any one to give up the use of intoxicating liquor. Here are three things which have exerted an influence upon my life and all of them became controlling influences when I was young. The fourth thing to which I refer has been oven more potent. I became a member of the church at the age of fourteen, when I was only two-thirds as old as one must be to sign a deed. Did I know anything about creeds? No. I was not only too young to have any knowledge of creeds but I have been too busy since that time to give the matter much study, and I see no prospect of leisure at this time. In fact, I am almost afraid to take a deep interest in creeds for fear it might disturb my domestic relations. My fathor was a Baptist. and, at the time of my birth, my mother was a Methodist but she afterwards joined tho Baptist church with my fathor. I joined tho Presbyterian church, first tho Cumberland and afterwards took my letter to the Presbyterian church because there was no Cumberland church where I attended college, My wife's father was brought up a Presbyterian but became a Methoj dist, and my wife entered tho Methodist church before wo married but afterwards joined the Presbyterian church with me. In Nebraska, however, we usually attend the Methodist church because it is more convenient to our homo. We have three children; our oldest Is an Episco palian, our second a Methodist, and our third a Concregationalist. And we - have six grand children, through whom we hope to connect our selves with other branches of the Christian church. You see how embarrassing it would be for me to lav too much emphasis upon creeds, but I have a firm hold upon tho principles which underlie all the churches. I have defended Christianity around the world, but I have never made a-speech upon religion that could not be made with equal propriety in any church calling itself a Christian church. When I say that morals rest upon religion, I use the word "religion" in Its broadest sense; I use It as Tolstoi used it when he defined re ligion as tho relation that man fixes between himself and his God, and he added that morality is the outward manifestation of this inward re lation. One cannot build moral character without a plan of life, and he can only plan a life when he understands that the world is built upon a plan. The first fact that confronts a man is God. We have given the atheist too much latitude. We have allowed him to ask all the questions while we have taken upon ourselves the burden of answering. Why not take turn-about in ask ing and answering? The Christian begins crea tion with an all-wise, all-powerful and all-loving Creator a sufficient cause for all that may come after. Where does the atheist begin? Ask him, and his trouble begins. Can he go farther back than matter and force? Can he explain the origin of either matter or force? Is it not more satisfactory to begin with God and reason down than to begin with inanimate clay and reason up? If the atheist insists that ho cannot believe in God until he can fully understand such a being, I reply that his own logic will drive him to suicide. Why does the atheist desire to live when he does not understand tho mystery of his own life? One need not understand the sun to believe that there is a sun and to enjoy the bene fits conferred by the sun's rays. He need not understand electricity to enjoy the incandescent light, to ride on the trolley car, or to be stricken down by the lightning. Why not apply to re ligion the same common sense- that wo apply to other things? The atheist knows as little as the Christian does of the mystery otlife, the mystery of lo;o jandlho mystery of patriotism, and yet b lives, ho loves and Is patriotic. He know as llttlo of tho mysteries of tho food ho cats, the water ho drinks and the air ho breathes; and yet his ignorance does not prevent his making us of all tho gifts of tho Hoavonly Fathor, whose oxlstonco ho denies. Lot tho young man who Is building character, discard at onco tho absurd theory that it is a sign of mental wcaknoss to admit tho limitation of tho "human mind, or to confess his flnitonessln tho presence of tho Infinite. Lot him recognize his responsibility to his Creator for evory thought and word and deed. Lot him make It his chief purpose, as it should bo his highest pleasure, tcr soek to know God's will concerning himself and to do it. Lot him bring himself into harmony with the divine plan and ho will not need the "Thou shalt noty of tho law to restrain him. Next to the belief In God I would place the accoptanco of tho Biblo as tho word of God. I need not prcsont arguments In its support; it claims have boon established tho burden . of proof is upon thoso who reject it. Thoso who re gard it as a man-made book should be challenged to put their theory to tho test. If man made the Biblo, ho is, unless ho has degenerated, able to make as good .a book today. Judged by human standards, man is far better prepared to write a Bible now then ho was when our Biblo was written. Tho characters whose words and deeds are recorded in the Bible were members of a single race; they lived among the hills of Palestino In a territory scarcely larger than ono of our counties. They did not have printing presses and they lacked tho learning of tho schools; they had no great libraries to con sult, no steamboats to carry them around the world and make them acquainted with the va rious centers of ancient civilization; thoy had no telegraph wires to bring them the news from the ends of tho earth and no newspapers to spread before them each morning tho doings of the day before. Science had not unlocked nature's dobr and revealed tho secrets of rocks 1)elow and stars above. From what a scantily supplied store house of knowledge thoy had to draw, compared with tho unlimited wealth of information at man's command today! And yet these Bible characters grappled with over' problem that confronts mankind, from tho creation of the world to eternal life beyond tho tomb. Thoy have given us a diagram of man's existence from tho cradle to the grave and thoy htfve set up sign posts at every dangerous point along tho path. We turn back to the Bible for tho Ten Commandments which form the founda tion for our sfatute law and for the Sermon ori tho Mount, which lays down the rules for our spiritual growth. Tho Biblo gives us tho story of tho birlh, tho words, the works, the cruci fixion, the resurrection and the ascension of Him whoso coming was foretold in prophecy, whosef arrival was announced by the Angel voices, sing ing Peace and Good-will the story of Him who' gave to the world a code of morality superior to anything that the world had known before or hag known since the story of Him who Is the grow ing figure of all time, whom the world Is accept ing as Saviour and as the perfect example. Let the atheists and the materialists produce a better Biblo than ours, if they can. Let them collect the best of their school to be found among tho graduates of universities as many as they please and from every land. Let the members of this selected group travel where they will, consult such libraries as they please, and em ploy every modern means of swift communica tion. Lot them glean in the fields of geology botany, astronomy, biology and zoology, and then roam at will wherever science has opened a way; let them take advantage of all the pro gress in art and in literature, in oratory and ii history let them use to the full every Instru mentality that Is employed in modern civiliza tion; and when they have exhausted every source, let them embody the results of their best intelligence in a book and offer it to the world as a substitute for this Bible of ours. Have they tho confidence that tho Prophets of Baal had in their God? Will they try? If not, what excuse will thoy give? Has man fallen from his high estate, so that we cannot rightfully expect as much of him now as nineteen centuries ago? Or does the Bible come to us from x source that is higher than man which? , . But our case is even stronger, Tho opponents of the Bible cannot take refuge in the plea tfcwt man is retrograding. They loudly proclaim that man has grown and that he is growing: still. They a , ,i &, 'fiLi