X WHY CHRIST ROSE 1 FROMTHE DEAD What It Proved and What It Guarantees. " THE CORE OF THE GOSPEL Pastor Russell, In His Easter Sermon, Shows How the Errors of Pseud) Science Have Divided the Faith cf God People Into Many Denomina tion Explains the Doctrine of Ri: ' urrection as Presented by the Bibli The Soul, Not the Body, Comes Fori'.i. ' Brooklyn, N. Y .. Apr. 7. Pntr Russell of i.h Brooklyn Tabcr nacle prenehed In the Academy vt Music today t nearly twenty-live hundred hearers His topic w n h. "Why Christ Arose from the Dead;" fPASIOR. RUSSELL) be not risen, then la Aiir nronpMn1- vain, nnd your faith also vain; yen. and we are found false witnesses of God. Then they also which are fallen asleep In Christ are perish ed." (I Corinthians xv. 14, 15, 18.) He said: The faith once delivered to the saints by Jesus and the Apostles In respect ti the resurrection of the dead has been very generally lost Christian people profess a belief In the resurrection, he cause they find It stated In the Bible, yet they are continually In ditBcult. In their endeavor to make the Scrip tural teaching on the subject square with some of the unscrlptural theories received Into the Church, and Incor porated Into many of the creeds during the "Dark Ages." St Taul warned the Church against these human philosophies, and called them "science, falsely so called." which makes void the Word of God. These errors have been Instrumental In divid ing the faith of God's peop'e Into six hundred denominations, with stx nun drpd different professions. If God's people could all come back to the sim plicity of the Bible's teaching in re spect to the resurrection of the dead, all of these differences would speedily disappear. God's Word would be seen to be beautiful and harmonious, satis factory to the consecrated Intellect, as none of our sectarian creeds are. Really the doctrine of the resurrec tion of the dead has been repudiated by all denominations, not willingly, not intentionally, but perforce, as It were. An opposite theory received and In trenched In the minds gives no place for the doctrine of the resurrection, as the Bible presents It Consequently we have twisted the doctrine of the resurrection and recite. "I believe In the resurrection of the body." Yet even this perverted view of the Tesurrectlon Is not satisfactory to those who hold It They wish many a time that the doctrine of the resurrection were not In the Bible, so much dlf ference does It cause. For Instance how Inconsistent It seems that they should say. "I believe In the resurrec tion of the body," and then say, as many do, Dying Is but going home, get ting rid of the mortal flesh, and being freed from its limitations. If It Is blessing to die and get free from the limitations of the body, how could It be a blessing to be reincarcerated In the body, and be obliged to keep It through all eternity? Such Is the In consistency of the resurrection, how ver, from the general view The Bible Rssurreotion Reasonable, , There Is nothing Inconsistent In the Bible presentation of the resurrection Not from tho Bible, but from men. comes the suggestion of the resurrec tion of the body. The Bible Invariably referB to the resurrection of the smil. It is the soul that dies; as we read, "The soul that sinneth, it shall die." Adam was created a living soul, but his living soul enmo under the death sentence because he disobeyed God. It wns his soul that was redeemed from death, not his body "I will re deem thy life (look up the word life to see If It Is from the Hebrew word meaning noul, nnd If so. add the word oul after tho word life. In parenthesis) from destruction." Psalm clll. 4. To accomplish this redemption we rend that Christ Jesus "poured out Ills bouI unto death:" "He made His soul an offering for sin." Moreover, we are pnrtk'tiliirly told that It was the huiiI of Jesus tbnt was raised from the dead: "Thou wilt not leave My soul 'n sheol" St. Peter quotes this statement is prophetical of the resurrection ot Jesus, that Ills soul was not left In hade: Ood raised Jesus from the dead on the third day. With what body do they come? Is n totally different ques tion. Some of the dead souls. In the , resurrection, will come forth with splr it bodies, and others with human bod les, according to the Bible. But the Important point is, that It is the tout. the beinff, that comes forth, that Is res urrected not the body. If the mm dies, as the Bible declares, then mani festly the soul should be resurrected. The difficulty with us has been that we "have made void the Word of God" by our "tradltione." We receiv ed from the Grecian philosophers a tra dition which Socrates and Plato both advocated, namely, that when a hu man belnf diea h doea not really die. i r, a i The soul, It Is claimed, cannot die, but. whenever the- oul gets out of tho body, the hodr dios How strange It seems that we all. us intelligent, thoughtful beings, have accepted this heathen philosophy, without a word of Scrip ture for its support, and with hundreds of Scriptures to. condemn It! We can see how (ho heathen philoso phers might be led" to conjure up such a theory, because of their desire to be lieve iu a future'Jife.- and leeouse they had no revel itloii froitf God resectlu! a rftture lifev-, TheyMherCfure tried; their best to convince themseKes that mun-rvtlly r-oe not die-tbat bo man can die. The Bible theory Is the very reverse' of 'this, uamely. that a man Is not n-.erelx ? body', that be is a soul, a thinking. Sentient being. Neither Is he a bodiless being, and Indeed he cauuot be a bein at ail without a body. Ills body way change, as science declares t does rradually. hour by hour, until complete change Is effected lu seven e:rs. Thus a mau. a soul, a sentient belug. may in a we or liny yean nave siougn- tHl off gradually sufficient matter to ive composed seven bodies. But the moment the s'ouehlug off of this dy- ng matter nnd the substitution of Uv- ug matter ceases, we have death; and its soon as the body dies the soul dies that Is, the Intelligent being ceases. There can be no thinking without a brain, no breathing without lungs, no maintenance of life In any sense of the word without a body. This would have "beCh a total de struction of the soul had not God spe cially provided, as the Prophet de clares, that He would redeem man's life (soul) from destruction, through the redemptive work accomplished by Jesus In giving Ills soul an offering for man's sin. and thus making possible man's resurrection from the dead. It is In consequence of this Divine provision through Christ for a resur rection of humanity that the Scrip tures speak of death as merely a fall ing asleep for a time, to wait for the new body In the resurrection, rather than to speak of us as dying as th brute beasts. Tho word sleep implies that in the Divine purpose a future life Is intended, and will eventually be given. "But Now Is Christ Risen." St Paul does not lenve the matter of Christ's resurrection undecided. He positively affirms that. "Christ Is risen from the dead." and that thus risen. "He Is the First-fruits of those thut slept." which Implies that when He was raised the others still slept Jesus slept a part of those three days, from the time He died until the Father raised Him from the dead, from hades, from sheol, from the tomb, on tho third day. He, as the First-fruits of the sleeping ones, is an example ana a guarantee of the fulfillment of the Divine prom ise, thot "there shall be a resurrection of the dead, both of the just and of the unjust" It behooves us to take a decided stand, either with the Grecian philoso phers and their theories, or with the Bible, The two are In conflict nnd whoever attempts to hold both Is In confusion. If the dead are not dead, then no human being Is dead. And if no one is dead, how could there be a resurrection of the dead? The Inconsistency of the theory held respecting the resurrection of the body has Invited a very reasonable and just criticism. The skeptic asks. "How could the body be resurrected, after it has gone to dust and after the dust has been scattered to tho four winds?" They tell us of a grave that was open ed near an apple tree, and It wns found thnt a root from the tree had entered the coffin andpractlcally absorbed the corpse, from which it had produced thousands of apples, which In turn had been shipped to various parts of the world, some of the poorer grades being fed to bogs, whose hams were cured and sent abroad and thus passed into other human beings, to become parts of still other human bodies. The question Is a proper one, but it Is an unanswerable one from the standpoint of our former mLsbelief and our poor attempt to combine human phlloso pliy and Dlvlno Revelation. But such a question brings no con sternation to the BIblo student who follows the Scriptures alone. The Scriptures never speak of the resurrec tlon of our bodies. They do tell of the resurrection of the soul, and that In the resurrection God glvetu it (the soul) a body as it pleaseth Illm. How reasonable It will be for the world to be awakened In practically the condition In which they went down Into death! And these will experience. If willing and obedient, a gradual res urrection or raising up to the Image and likeness of Father Adam In bis perfection. But some In the resurrec tion will receive spirit bodies like unto the angels, and some like unto the body of Christ In His resurrection, which Raul of Tarsus beheld "shining above the brightness of the sun at noonday." The class that Is promised a resur rection ;.i spirit bodies Is the Church Ihe saintly few who walk In the foot steps of Jesus. The begetting of the Holy Spirit which conies to these changes their nature from earthly to spiritual. If they are faithful to their covenant their resurrection will be to glory, honor and Immortality, as explained by St Paul In the context, saying. "It Is sown In weakness. It Is raised In power; It Is sown In dlshon or, it Is raised In glory; It Is sown an animal body. It Is raised a spirit body." This Is a description of the resurrec tion which God has promised to all the members of the Body of Christ which Is tho Church. St Paul de clares that the members of this Body fall asleep, to awaken In the glorious morning of the New Dispensation. But he adds. "We shall not all aleeo" some will oe alive ana remain uu the second coming of Jesus. These, however, will not take precedence over the sleeping ones. for. "The dead Christ shall rise first; theu we which re alive and remalu "shall be changed lu a moment. In the twinkling of an eye, because "flesh and blood cannot Inherit the Kingdom of God." As the death of Jesus was absolutely necessary as 'fha iitonlng price for hu man sin. so fhe'resnrrectloo of Jesus was absolutely necessary, thut He might' uot remain, dead through' all eternity, but be glorified, and, In due time, come ngalu to effect the resur rection of His Church and, subse quently, the awukenlng and uplifting of nil the families of tho earth. - Hearkefl to the special promlso made to the Church: "Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the First Resurrec tion; on such the Second Death hath no power, but they shall be priests of God, nnd of Christ, and shall reign with Ulm a thousand years." (Reve lation xx, C.) Also note the promise of tho world's resurrection: "There shall be a resurrection, both of the just and the unjust" (Acts xxlv, 15.) Again, "They that have done evil" shall come forth, that they may enjoy a resurrection effected by "Judgments," disciplines, chastisements, which will develop In them character; and the glory which will be attained will be perfection a raising up to all at first nossessed by Father Adam, lost through disobedience, and redeemed by the precious blood of Christ John v, 28, 20, R. V. "A Kind of First-Fruits." Every Sunday Is a memorial of the resurrection of our Lord from the dead, and If a proper conception of tho Master's resurrection were kept In mind we would not think of quarreling with the expression "Easter Sunday." But alas, this name Easter is asso ciated with heathen philosophies and idolatries, which did so much to make the Word of God of none effect; and the fact should be noted that It is the name of a Greek goddess. The com promising spirit induced some of the early Church to admit the heathen philosophies and to commlnglo with these the inspired teachings of the Bi ble; but now there Is the loud call to true Christians to rid themselves of science and philosophy "falsely so called," nnd to return to the Biblical simplicity of the Divine Revelation. Of this Revelation alone St Peter declares, "It Is able to make you wise unto salvation," and to "give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified." And again, "The Word of God is sufficient, that the man of God may be thoroughly furnished unto every good work." Let us today, then, rejoice In nim who died for our sins and who rose on the third day for our Justification. Let us rid our minds of the foolish thought that He did not really die. that He only teemed to die that when the Roman soldiers crucified Illm. He sim ply got out of nis body, laughed at y.j b w. them and said. "I have not died at al I could not die; you could not kill Me. oaiiI J 1lni HA1I AAll l rtSlF lr 1 1 1 HID Let us remember rather the Divine Word on the subject: "Christ died for our sins": "He poured out His soul unto death"; "Ho made Ills soul an of fering for sin." Lot us remember tho assuronce of the Bible that eventual ly "lie Fhall see the fruits of the tra vail of His soul and shall be satisfied." Let us rejoice also in the assuranco of the Apostle that Ills soul was not left In hades, sheol, death, but that God raised Illm from the dead on the third day. . Not an Additional Proof. If Christ did not die. then the death peualty upon Adam and bis race has not been met Those who claim that lie did not dlo, that merely Ills body died, are illogical. They profess to be lieve that Jesus accomplished for us a redemptive work, that Ho died. "The Just for the unjust." If Christ, the Redeemer, "poured out His soul unto death, and If His resurrection meant the recovery of Ills soul or being out of death, wherein Is the logic iu the declaration of some that It Is not thus with the Church nor with the world T If Jesus did not go to Heaven when ne died If He went Into hades. Into the grave, Into sheol, into death, who has the temerity to say that others go direct to Heaven or Hell or Purgatory? Let us be consistent. The wages of sin Is not Purgatory, nor a Hell of tor ture, in some far-off place. On the contrary, 'The wages of sin is death." The Redeemer died and rose; and this la the assurance, that He who raised up Jesus from the dead will raise us up also, by Jesus, through nis spirit and power; and not only so, but also the world of mankind, all who were Involved In the death sentence upon the first man. Therefore, the entire world Is In cluded In the death payment made by the Great Redeemer, that "As by man came death, by a man also shall come the resurrection of the dead; for as all In Adam die, even so all in Christ shall be madtt alive." Dut, says the Apos tle, wh'.'.e every man who will come Jtito Christ shall be made alive, each will come forth "In bis own order." Tho Christ company shall come forth flrst-"the Church of the First-born, whose names are written In heaven." Afterwards will come those who will become Ills at, or during, nis pres enceduring the thousand years of Ills Kingdom glory. The opportunity of that thousand years will mean to every man tho privilege of coming into fellowship with the Redeemer and King, Emmanuel. Whoever will ac cept the opportunity will receive the blessing of an admission to Messiah's family. As the Apostle says, they will become Ills. Under Ills heavenly guidance and blessing and regenerat lng influence, all such may attain agalu to a full Image and likeness of God. lost In Eden, redeemed at Calvarr. RAILROAD MUST INSTALL CULVERT Bur Won at Ashland to Protect ' Farmers' Lands', :, , '. FLOOD CHANGES THE ASPECT. Report of Commissioner Clarke WW Mow Be Acceded to Since Recent In undation Judge Munger Sentences Postmaster Corbin. Lincoln, April b. The Burliiigtou load will be compelled lo make ut loast oue change when it restores its line between Ashland and Sioux City, in 1308 Commissioner Clarke investi gated a petition to make a solid grade between the Platte river and Fremont and reported adversely. It appears that certain landowners eust ol the track did not desire a culvert at one point, as they figured the railroad em bankment would protect their land from flowage of water from the west. Commissioner Clarke reported in fa vor of a culvert, but the railroad com pany failed to put one In. The matter did uoj come to the attention of the commission again until the recent Hood and then the railroad company was porced to dynamite Its embank ment to permit the water to flow through. Now tho railway commission has notified the company that when its tracks are restored it must construct a culvert at this point of sufficient ca pacity to admit the passage of the water which seeks an outlet at that point. Board of Health Report The state board of health has Issued bulletin No. 1. This shows the board Bince its organization In 1891 has Is sued a total of 4,454 certificates to nracticc medicine In Nebraska, Of this number 154 were practicing physl clans who were not possessed of dl plomas, but under the provisions ot the law were granted permission to practice. Tho' last of these permits was Issued in 1895. Of the total per mlts Issued 1.111 wero issued the first year the law was in operation, 1,221 have removed from the state after re ceiving permits and 210 have died, leaving 3,171 certificates In force at the present time. Of these, 2,327 are of the so called regular school, 473 eclectic and 371 homeopath. Of the total number who have taken the ex aminations of the board, 325 have failed to pass. Daring the year 1911. 13,987 male children were born, 12.832 girls, all but slxtv-nlnc of the births being addi'.lons to the white popula tion. There were 293 sets of twins l m,d three sets of triplets. There were f 8 - d fce I ' during the fiscal year. The report shows there were 1 1,556 marriages per formed and 1.714 divorces granted. Prizes for Best Corn Yield. Canh prizes aggregating nearly I, 000, to be awarded through the Unl verslty of Nebraska college of agri culture to any hoy In the state raising the best yield of corn from Blngle acre plots, will be given by the South Oma ha Stock Yards company. While the lules of the ontcRt have not yet been formulated, the general plan will be to offer first, second ond third prizes foi the best yield grown In each of the (ountles in the state and first and sec ond prizes for the best yield in the entire state. Winners of the county prizes will be eligible to take part In the stote contest. Munger Sentences Corbin. Judge T. C. Munger In the federal court sentenced Fred A. Corbin, re cently convicted of embezzlement while serving as postmaster at Reyn olds, to serve three years In the fed eral prison at Leavenworth. McCook Case Heard In May. The state railway commission eel May 3 as the dato for hearing the com plaint of the citizens of McCook against the Nebraska Telephone com pany. It Is alleged the telephone com pany is charging too much for the ser vice rendored. Autoists May Pm Through Nebraska. Omaha. April 8.- If the movement htarted by the publicity bureau of th Commercial club of Omaha Is success ful, Nebraska and Omaha will be In eluded In the 1912 tour of eastern au tomohlllsts. The tour replaces the Glldden affair, which was discontinued last year. Manufacturers and eastern owners liave planned a tour from New York to Denver, but their routings call for tho run being made through Kan sas from Kansas City, entirely Ignor ing Nebraska, despite the fact that Nebraska boasts of as good roads as any middle western state. Managet Parrlhh of the publicity bureau has taken up the question of routing with the New York manager and has asked that the Itinerary be changed to In elude Nebraska. Commercial clubs In the state will be asked to get In cor respondenc with the New York of flee and urgo tho route to be changed to Include Nebraska. 8hot While Hunting Duck. Grand Island, Neb., April 8. Alfred Schultz. a young man residing with his parents In this city, received large, gaping wound In the side of his face from the accidental discharge ol a gun while on the Platte rlvr hunt ing ducks. The gun lay In the bottom of the boat and was discharged through the agency of a dog Jumping Into the boot. GENERAL FRED D. GRANT. Son of famous Civil War Leades, Who Was Forced "" By Illness to Take a Rest. Photo by American Prs Association. ANTI-LIQUOR PARTY TO H0LDCONVENTI0N Will Meet In Oes Moines April 18 to Name Candidates. Des Moines, April 6 The Prohl bitionlsts ot Iowa will hold their party convention in Des Moines, April 18, to select names to complete state prim ary tickets. The Prohibitionists thla year are en titled to representation on the prim ary ticket, having polled the necessary 2 per cent of the total votes cast at the last general election. Determined that the party go into the primaries with a complete ticket, the state cen tral committee appointed R. H. Will lamson, John W. Leedy and W. Sopher, all of Oukaloosa, to canvass the names of the party leaders and se lect suitable men as candidates for all offices from United States senator to township. The selected ticket will be ratified by the convention. Delegates to the national Prohibition convention to be held in Atlantic City In July will be elected at the conven tlon. One of the .most Important Items of business which will be transacted at the convention will be the election of a state chairman to succeed Mayor C. Durant Jones of Perry, whoso resig nation was requested and accepted at a meeting of the state central com mittee Feb. 15. Death of James H. Fair. Ida Grove, la., April B.-James II. Fair of Arthur, this county, died after a brief Illness of pneumonia. He waa one of the most prominent of pioneer citizens, coming to this county In 1878. He leaves a widow and seven children. Thomas Hayne la Dad. Ida Grove, la , April 6. Thomas Hayne died at the home of his daugh ter, Mrs. Rarncy Johnson, and the body was taken to Marshautown ror Interment. Mr. Hayne was one or tne first settlers of that section. He leaves widow and three children. CONDENSEDNEWS An adverse report on the house steel tariff revision bill was submitted by the senate finance committee. A resolution empowering the house Judiciary committee to employ every means possible In Investigating tne o called "money trust" was adopted. The committee was given the power of a court. Rev. Dr. Isaac K. Funk, head of the Funk & Wagnalls company, publishers, and well known as an author ana uhychlc Investigator, died at his home In Montclalr, N. J., after an attack of smite Indigestion. He was seventy- three years old. Criminal prosecution by the federal irovernmeiit against the Chicago nut ter and ecg board and the Elgin board of trade was reported as the aim of an Investigation being conducted through agents of the department of commerce and labor. GeorK and liwrence Ulldahal, sev enteen and fourteen years old, of Rock ford. III., are In a critical condition as a result of eating pancakes contain In ars'-nlc. The food was prepared bv tho boys' mother, Mrs. Emma nil dahal. An Inquiry Is being made Into .he woman's mental condition. As the result of the negotiations now In progress It Is stated authorlta lively the government has substantial hope of reaching an agreement with the International Harvester company for Its disintegration under the Sher man anti-trust law, and thus avoiding a prolonged fight In the courts. A battle between several hundred striking Bilk mill operatives and forty deputy sheriffs and policemen oc curred outside the ForBtmann t Huff man silk mill at Garfield, N. J., the striken raining bricks and stones at the guards and the Utter using their cluba and revolvers. Sli arresta were it "' S made. WORKERS WANT . FREE SPEECH San Diego Restricts Operations of Industrial Labor Body.'.1 ' ,'DRE HEADING SOUTHWARD. Five Hundred Unemployed, at Meet ing In San Francisco, Decide to March to San Diego Number Will Increase to 1,000. San Francisco, April 8. At a meet ing of the unemployed here it was de elded to send a marching delegatloo of 500. many of whom are members ol the H ' tstrlal Workers of the World, to San Diego. Officially the march haa not the sanction of the Industrial Workers of the World. Spokesmen of the unemployed said they had received assurances from Sacramento and Stockton that their marching strength would be augment ed to 1,000. The march is made with full knowledge of the policy adopted at San Diego of turning back all In? dustrlal Workers of the World mem bers at the county line. A manifesto Issued by the San Dlegq Free Speech league says the league is making the flight to spread open shoj propaganda. The question of hlghet wages and shorter hours has been eliminated temporarily In the nortfc west by the stand of the strikers on the sole Issue of recognition of th Industrial Workers' organization. San Diego has been beset by the free speech agitators since January Posses of police, special deputies and citizens assert they will meet the re' lnforcements now headed southward t.nd drive them back before they entet th city. The enactment of the antl street speaking ordinance last Decern lior precipitated the San Diego warfare- EAGLE NEARLY KILLS HUNTEF Feathered Fighter Puts Up Hot Fight Before Going to His Death. Glens Falls, N. Y., April 8. Mlltot Stelves of this city was badly lnjure4 In a fight with a bald eagle near Norta Creek lumber camp. He waa rescued by a fellow lumberman and la unde the care of physicians. , Stelves came upon two eagles d vourlng the carcass of a calf, and shot one of them. Before he could reload bis gun the other eagle attacked hlna, The eagle, although one of Its wing was broken, was getting the better oi the battle when a hunter killed tha feathered fighter with a club. Tk4 bird weighed seventy-five pounds aal measured nine feet from tip to tip. KING VICTOR SUPERSTITIPU3 Believes He VMM Be immune From a sassination Only by Three Escapes. Rome, April 8. Since the attempt ' assassination of the king the pollc precautions for the protection ot hit majesty have been much Increased. King Victor Emmanuel, like all Itaa lans, Is superstitious, lie 18 cos vinced tho police are more or less us less and feels he will acquire lmm nity from assassination only by escaj lng three times. His grandfather ea aned thrice and died a natural deal. Ills own father was killed on the third attempt. Therefore King Victor Em manucl does not expect to die In be! unless he has two more escapes. ITALY'S TR00PSREMAIN IDLI Advance Into Interior of Turkey la Hot Season Impossible. Rome, April 8. The departure ol Premier Glolittl for his country home near Turin Is taken to belle the report that Italy Is on the point of enlarging the sphere of hostilities against Tur key. An advance Into the Interior It impossible during the hot season, aai the garrison at Tripoli Is Idle. Gen eral Caneva has ordered the ordinary dally drill or the fleet, which has r turned to home ports. Mrs. Lorlllard Took Her Own Life. New York, April 8. The oorone has cloned the inquiry into the death of Mrs. Dieckman Lorlllard, who waa found hanging in her apartments la the Holland house on March 16. IU found that the evidence clearly showed she met death by her own hand. Tfca suicide's farewell note was read b the coroner. It reads as follows: "I do this by my own free hand, be cause I am tired of this world. Na one Is to blame In the least." Jury In Vermllya Case Disagrees. Chicago, April 8. The Jury In the nse of Mrs. Louise Vermllya, charged with murdering Richard T. Smith, a railroad man, was discharged by Judge Sullivan, after the members of th Jury had" Informed the court thej could not agree upon a verdict. The Jury had been ont eight hours when It was discharged. The Jury from the time the first ballot waa taken stood nine to three for conviction, It was said, and not a man wavered In hit opinion. Sentenced to Be Shot. Salt Lake, April 8.-Jullus Sirmay, convicted of murdering Frank Karrlck, a fourteen year old boy, was sentenced to be shot May 22. Karrlck discovered Sirmay robbing his house. When th boy attempted to call for help, Strnay bot him.