The Commoner JANUARY 1922 i iv. &9- t 7mm . r jp . - . ? vith maturifr-rletjrttamj, not cjoud jthe skjes of the young. , Jt would be likertfee$g :ong meat to the Jpfaitf to introduce, ip,o arly-j the truths which, though they seem soae.mn, .urnishi the substantial Joys, of older hearts,, , ; The opening mind of a child must first know the gladness that comes with receivjng before jt can understand how much, happlqr o;ne,is who, by giving, brings brightness into Una lives of others. The child learns gratitude as 'its heart is poured cut in thanks for the remembrances that have been saved for this blessed days,, The mem ory of Christmas? seasons long, Ago , makes us realize how little,. it takes to make little hearts overflow with thankfulness. , , ,' ' CHRIST'S LOVE FOR CHILDREN The children are entitled to all the happiness they can contain at this festive season of ,the year, for they' celebrate the tijrth of One who1 lifted the child to the highest eminence it has ever occupied. No one else has so fully ap preciated the power of the child. It was Chrlpt who humbled the pride of the wise and prudent by revealing to babes the truths that the older ones sometimes fail to learn. It was Christ who made the innocence, the open-heartedness and the, trustfulness of the child the basis of the Christian's hope "Ex-' cept ye be converted, and become as little chil dren, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven." (Matt. 18:3'.) . i . To those who are grown, the Christmas sea son offers unlimited invitations to test the prom ise that more blessedness it to pb derived from giving than from receiving. In tlie family, af fection protects all from disappointment needs are gratified, wishes expressed and" unexpressed find fulfillment on this day and wants are an ticipated. Parents are happier than the children and the children themselves passingfrom recip ients to donors begin to learn the great lesson of life, namely, that happiness, ;as -well as. great ness, is measured by service that life is esti mated by its , overflow rather than by its in come. THE DAY OF UNIVERAJL. .kjSHIP But Christmas .Day is too large , tb be limited to the family circle or to be ' donfined Within the radius of the fireside. The measureless af fection of the Father, manifested in the gift of. His Son, and the boundless love that prompted the Saviour's sacrifice touch -the hearts of all who have taken Christ's native upon them, and the anniversary of His birth furnishes an oc casion for the expression of gratitude. At this season every, worthy charity makes its stongest appeal, and tho Christmas dinner is enjoyed in proportion, as those who dine have remembered others besides themselves others to whom they are not obligated except as the sense of kinship binds each to all. There should bo no hungry people at any time, least of all on Christmas Day. Christ did not confine His attentions to the deserving. His salvation was for all and He revealed to man a Father who "maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust." Many of the misfortunes that overtake men are unde served afflictions that are in jio sense a punish ment for sin. Even the punishment that comes as a just retribution for sin sometimes opens the way whereby the strong may help the weak. If thine enemy hunger, feed him. THE GREAT FACT IN HISTORY But Christmas turns our thoughts to larger subjects than physical needs. The wants of the body are imperative and brook no delay, but the Master who was touched- by the hunger of the multitude taught that the bread of life was more important than the loaves and fishes; the Bame great Teacher who blest a cup of cold water pointed us to the priceless valife of tho "water of life. No one so exalted little acts of kindness, and yet no one so understood relative values or so emphasized the great things of life. Christmas is to us a sacred day because it turns our thoughts toward the Great Fact in his tory and to the Growing Figure of all time, and our gratitude for what He has brought into our Jives should make us consider the large methods by which we may be able to make partial pay ments on the incalculable debt we owe. May we not find one outlet for our devotion in a defense of His deity and In resistance to those who would curtail His claim to authority? purely at this season they should speak in sub dued tones who Question His super-natural char acter, discredit the' evidence of His Sonship, reject the miraculous in Hid .Ufo and dis pute the fact of His resurrection. Could a mere man have so impressed 'a world? if ao wiiy ave, not other, men en inralled succeeding generations for so many cen- R iVJ feSj?7. has Christinas no rivalswhy was Bethlehem's the only manger-cradle? --y a-8r rm, w,ttJS7 THE SKEPTIC IS SILENT low?d Sf PMC m4ay rmi6ulG the Magll fflft fol thfiv Jn f?r in 8crch f,th0 Messiah?, but they will not quarrel with, their own chi drenT on the morning of this glad day. They may call Christ a myth when He rebukes them in the onliness of the library, but they will be silent ' ftwi? h fTEST, W?S the childrei acclalm th HftftSS ? HIS bLr,9,n lhfl sInlessness of HiS Hf? and in the sublimity of Hjs death. Christmas furnishes the thoughtful an 6c- SSJ"!. t0 r.tvIe.w &! hiBtoy, of mankind and to note how the teachings of Him whoso birth we' celebrate have, softened the harshness 0 ancient laws, introduced mighty reforms and moulded the manners of mankind. For a thousand years 110 really great improvement has been wrought 'u ""J iurujr 01 me worm that is not in har mony with His philosophy. Whenever His Gospel has been carried and f His words have been heeded man has been on nobled, his purposes purified and his possibil ities enlarged. Whether the pupil bo an individ ual, a nation, Or all the world. His counsel has been equally helpful and the beneficence of His wdrd equally demonstrated. To the individual Ho has brought not only salvation, but security; not only 'a consciousness of sins forgiven, but a code of morals to be em bodied in the life. To the nation He has brought a knowledge of the exalting power of righteousness and of the invincible strength of truth. His philosophy,' though simple enough to be understood by the unlettered, surpasses in its depth and breadth the learning of the schools, THE LESSON THE WORLD IS LEARNING The world Is just now learning that His yoke is. as easy' for all mankind as it is for tjie individr uaj and, that His burden is, the only burden that , is. light. The devil's burden has grown so heavy that the world is compelled to lay it down, after' i has staggered up to the every verge of the- abyss of universal bankruptcy. , rAt the time of the writing of this Bibje talk we do pot, know what Christmas message the Arms Conference will issue to the world, but 'enough ha,s already tjeen done to make Decemr ber 25, 1921, the happiest Christmas since Christ was. born. There 'Is joy enough-for old; and1 young,- ,L"et everything that hath breath, praise the Lord for the. Gift of His Son. " - A 3000-YEAR-OLD TRUTH FOR . 192? By WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN BIBLE, TEXT -LESSON FOR JAN. 1 (I Kinffs 12:12-20.) So Jeroboam and all tho people came to Reha boam the third day as the king had appointed, Bay ing Gome to me again tho third day. And the Icing answered tho people roughly, and forsook tho old men's counsol that they gave him; And spake to them after the counsel of tho young men. saying, My father made your yoke heavy, and I will add to your yoke; my, father also chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you with scerplons. , , , . .. Wherefore the Icing hearkened not unto the peo ple: for the cause was from the Lord, that he might perform his ' saying, which tho Lord spake by Abijah the Shllonite unto Jeroboam the son jpt ' So when all Israel saw that the. king hearkened not unto them, the people answered the king say ing. What portion have we in David? neither bayo we Inheritance In the son of Jesse: to your tents, O Israel: now see to thine own house, David. So Israel departed unto their tents. .... ... But as for the children of Israel, which dwelt In the cities of Judah, Rehoboam re'ned Over them. Then king Rehoboam sent Adoram. who was over the tribute; and all Israel stoned him with stones, that ho ded. Therefore, king Rehoboam made aneed to get up to his chariot, to flee to Jerusalem. So Israel rebelled against' the house of David U And came to pass, when all Israel heard that Jeroboam was como again, that they sent and cJllod liim unto the congregation, and made him i nvr all Israel: there was none that followed SSSi J!S of David,' but the tribe of Judah' only. Before taking up our talk for today it may not he out of place to spend a moment on the beginning of the new year. New Year's Eve and New Year's Day have, from tirne immemorial, heen singled out from all the rest of- the year for special observance. Thn machinery of Father Time is so exquisitely tamtotZe pass from the old year to the new without a jolt or jar. Only the hands of the clock furnish evidence of the change that takes Siace when a year Is added to the days that are' gone and la new. year opens with its unstained PaA?'such a time people are wont to gather the mirthful for rollicking pleasures and the serious for prayer. Tho difforonce between tho - tWO KrOUDS'-tlfl to Rnnin nrttnt. & mnHnr- of atra rue young eagerly greet the days as they come, . & f r all of life la before them. Opportunity is the fereat word that they see written In glowing letters ,oh ' tho dawn opportunity to bo Im proved. Hope, rather than mfcmory, holds sway and their joy finds expression in youthful ways. AN APPEAL FOR GUIDANCE The older ones, In proportion to their age, recall opportunities unimproved, days wasted, and possibly,, errors that have loft doop scare. There. is, also a feeling of aolicitudo that mis leading paths may he shunned and" that: tho coming- year may contain more to mako retro- - speotion satisfying. While tho gay mako merry until tho midnight hour- calls forth a glad welcome to tho" new year, the sohor, increasingly impressed with the flnitenoqs of man and the infinite power and wisdom and lovo of God, look to tho Heavenly Father as tho only source from which enlight enment can como. Thoy appeal for guidance ' during every waking moment of the coming year, Experience has taught them haw Imfaflfllblo it is, to judge which moment will bo rlchesl in fruitage; they have learned -how Impossible' it Is to eqtimale tho consequences of a slngjo act. Trivial events sometimes bocomo epoch making, while things seemingly great dwindle into in significance. Happy are those who early learn their own need of prayer, and through prayor open their hearts to divine suggestion. - ' And New Year's Day is; more thm any other day., the time for salutation and expressions of -good will. It is a gloomy soul that does not re spond on this day ,to the summons of friend ship. If there Is any warmth In the hoart, it radiates in, the greetings that are at their flood on New Year's Day, ' " 'ONE FUNDAMENTAL JIESOLVE Formerly John Barleycorn reaped Jlii? social harvest on tho first day of the year. Ho offered his services as caterer to those who operieil-their homes to New Year guests and many a young man displayed a volubility that increased -until . it. was lost in Indistinctness, the number of hi calls being limited only by his power of, locomo tion. If thp Eighteenth Amendment has lessened for some the attractions of Now Year'dl Day, it has for a stUl larger multitude dejtfr&ujld th unpleasant reflections that come with.' pile clos- - ing days of the year' and made It possible foy' more families to face the future wfthbutfear. It will be easier also to keep the new-ypsolu-tions that this anniversary calls forth, As it is impossible for any, one 'to know all I of the easily begetting sins against which old I and young fortify themselves by resolution, I- will, not try to enumerate them or even.suggest a partial list. Whatever these resolutions may be, they rest in part or in whole- upon,' on fundamental resolve which Includes all good resolves, viz.: ' "God helping me, I shall so conserve all my . powers of body and mind and so consecrate my ' life 10 purposes high and noble that I may render the maximum of service to my fellowmen and be content to draw from society a reward , commensurate wijth tho good I may be able to do." If this introduction seems long, please, re member that New Year's comes but once .a year and" that the offense cannot, therefore, be re peated for at least a twelvemonth WEALTH CANNOT INSURE WISDOM Our Talks for the new year take us back to the Old Testament and we shall have an op ' portunity to trace God's methods of dealing with a "chosen people." We shall consider from week to week characters great and small, noble and ignoble, and learn how from the beginning it has been true that the "wages of sin is death." Nowhere except in the Bible do wo find por trayed so vividly and so abundantly the just retributions that follow wrong doing; nowhere are the rewards of righteousness shown to bp more swift and more sure. We begin with Rehoboam, the only son of Solomon, arid we wonder how one so wiso could have a son so foojish so far as known the sole contribution which he and a thousand wives and concubines made to the peipetuation of the race. Rehoboam had all the advantages that a youth of his day could have. His father's reign was conspicuous because of its prosperity; wealth poured in Upon his kingdom, and the heir-apparent had everything that the worldly-wise think necessary for a favorable environmept. But the son' taught the lesson so frequently repeated before and since, that neither a great " ' i ! ! f . ri i . ' '. m ', n ' to '' h if ) . ; . h ' ilif ; 1 f i v ' ;'i ' ' ;??' ! ' ,' ' fe -MU . 'i, i xt tojjakfe!ittuU .L&ksJis&MAtfi.ri'-