ie sii a hye Ve r THe, LIBRARY 270 |. J/12s : | THE SEA AND THE CHURCH : TINA THER MUTUAL RELATIONS AND DEPENDENCE. AN ADDRESS, DELIVERED AT EASTON, PENNSYLVANIA, ON TUESDAY, JULY 27th, BEFORE THE ALUMNI OF LA FAYETTE COLLEGE, PRECEDING COMMENCEMENT, BY REV. CHARLES J. JONES, PASTOR OF THE MARINERS’ CHURCH, CORNER OF, MADISON AND CATHARINE . STREETS, NEW YORK. PUBLISHED BY REQUEST OF THE ASSOCIATION. Ares vee TUT1LE Wew YORK: THOMAS HOLMAN, STEAM PRINTER, CORNER CENTRE AND WHITE STS. 1858. ENTERED, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1858, by CHARLES J. JONES, In the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN BOOKSTACKS ADDRESS. ‘(A hundred thousand welcomes ! I could weep, And I could laugh ; I am light and heavy : Welcome ! Absence, with all its pains, Is by this charming moment wiped away.’’ FreLttow Auumni,—The kind Providence which has trans- ferred me from the position of Alternate to that of Principal, and which makes it alike my duty and my privilege to greet you on this interesting occasion, is to me a source of gratitude and joy. Twelve years have passed away since, with my class- mates, I finished the curriculum of college studies, and bid fare- well to college scenes. I then became an alumnus of La Fayette, a member of this Association. As such, I have ever cherished an affectionate remembrance of my Alma Mater, and have often yearned for the opportunity to return, and revive the associa- tions of those pleasant times, when class-room and corridor re- sounded to our voice and tread ; and when, in the college chapel, we were wont to call upon the God of our fathers, and invoke the strength necessary to meet the. onset of opposing forces in the distant future.’ You will bear me witness to the interest and zeal with which: we:anticipated the battles of life in those mimic contests, of which the admiring or reproving world was our own Literary Society ; and the arena, our Washington or Franklin Hall. What was then the future, has now become the past. But Memory, the enchantress, with her magic wand, evokes “From the shadowy past, The forms that once have been ;” and, to-day, familiar faces pass before us. Some in the vigor of a useful and honorable manhood, and some in the cerements of the grave, beckoning us on to the goal of future conquests, or pointing to the narrow house appointed for all the living ; +t some aspiring to worldly honors and emoluments, and some striving for a heavenly crown; some seeking the meed of human tongues, and some waiting for the Saviour’s “ Well done. /” Where are they now? Some are battling nobly in the world’s conflicts, and some have reached their final home. “ Alas! Like the bright dew-drops in the grass, They pass’d away.” A few are here, met to revive the past—to cluster around the lap of our fruitful mother, and recount the blessings derived from her care and instruction. We are here to renew our filial vows—to assure her of our ripening affection, and of our determined effort to be worthy of her love. We meet to quicken our Christian graces, and, by a mutual interchange of thought and feeling and fraternal sympathy, to gird ourselves anew for the conflicts of life. We are here to greet and encourage each other—to spend an hour, and pass on and mingle again with the busy bustling world. That hour I am to occupy—a winged hour, freighted with important interests, and waiting to fly, with its burden of good or ill, to the bar of the Eternal God. How shall it be spent ? Did my ability correspond with my desire, the theme should be worthy of its heaven-born messenger, adapted to the occa- sion, and meet for the approval of our final Judge. But, alas! I fear that, in all these, it will come far short of my own standard even; how much more, then, of His, whose “judgments are unsearchable, and His ways past finding out!” The theme selected for this occasion is, “THe SEA AND THE CHURCH—THEIR MutuaL RELATIONS AND DEPENDENCE.” The subject may appear a novel one for an alumni address. Yet is it by no means destitute of a literary character, or so barren of classical allusion, as to be wanting in interest to this Association. It is, however, in the estimation of the writer, and notwithstanding its novelty, a subject of vast practical importance, both to the world and to the Church. And, though it may be somewhat difficult to discover, at first sight, the 5 almost invisible link in the chain of divinely arranged sequences, by which the Sea and the Church are indissolubly joined in the providence, as well as in the purpose, of God; I am prepared to show the existence of such a connection. And not only so ; it is capable of demonstration that they are related ¢o, and dependent on, each other. The sources whence the evidence is derived are History and Revelation. Both these I have freely consulted ; and, though I have no desire to deprecate criticism, I may state in the out- set, that the arrangement is alone claimed to be original. The facts I have gathered from every source, as the bee gathers honey from every flower. As the hieroglyphs of a former civilization, when rendered legible by the light of modern sejence, have revealed to us much that was otherwise enveloped in obscurity, or entirely unknown ; so, by the brightness of the revealed word, and the scattered rays of historic light, we may be able to trace, even on the trackless waters of the great deep, the stately steppings of a covenant keeping God. To both these sources must we go for information. Nor shall we go in vain. But to trace this relation and dependence abd origine, we must ascend the stream of history almost to its source. We must visit ancient routes of commerce, tread the streets of deserted cities, wander amid ruins of former greatness, and wend our solitary way among desolated temples of religion and art, where splintered frieze, and shattered architrave, truncated column, and broken plinth, and fallen capital, strewed thick in the pathway, invite to contemplation ; where mementoes of luxury and art, of beauty and loveliness, of Titanic effort and decorative taste, are mingled with the desert sands. There is something mournful, I admit, in thus treading upon the debris of nations, and wandering in the graveyards of the desolate past. But it is useful, though mournful. There are voices, inaudible to some, that float upon the air. There are invisible characters written upon these relics, which the eye of the soul perceives and appreciates ; epitaphs, which the passing stranger may run and read. But, hear we, amid these ruins of empire, any sigh of the 6 ocean? Read we aught, among these relics of the past, that pertains to the history of the Sea? Yea, verily. The sea- shell, whose living occupant has deserted it for centuries, sings not more faithfully and mournfully of its ocean home, than these emblems of departed greatness tell of the triumphs of the Sea. They call up, in panoramic array, the busy throngs that once crowded their marts, as Luxor and Karnac tell of the merchants who were princes, and the traffickers, who were the honorable of the earth. They tell of the commerce that once enriched them; of the ships that lined their quays, and dis- charged the products of other climes upon their shores; of artificial roads centring there, and forming so many avenues by which wealth was brought to the nation’s coffers ; of the palatial residences, that lined those broad ways; of the out- skirt villages ; of well cultivated fields and rich harvests ; of gigantic water-works, and endless canals; and of all the appliances of luxury and wealth with which cities are always associated. But, powerful as weird Fancy is, and ready as she is to restore the massive structures to their pristine grand- eur and beauty, we depend not on her magic wand. We need not her airy nothings to instruct us, while we may invoke the shades of a Clio, and read from her pictured scroll enough to convince us of the existence of the connection of which we speak. Before consulting the historic page, however, let us glance for a moment at the relative position of that large portion of the earth’s surface, which we call the Sea, or Ocean, and mark its importance, in the economy of nature, in the general, before we examine its influence on the nations in particular. The simple fact, that near three-fourths of the superficies of our planet is covered with water, is enough to convince us of its importance and value ; since this proportion of water to the land is an exhibition of that divine wisdom, that never errs. Reasons, for this apparently disproportioned allotment of sea and land, God has not given, and, yet, such reasons must exist, seeing that the carth was prepared for man, and, being prepared, was pronounced in the councils of eternity to be “very good.” That testimony, God, in his condescension to human weakness and ignorance, has permitted to be corrobo- T rated by the voice of Nature, who, in all departments of her active economy, while absorbing the riches of the Sea, notwith- standing its storms and devastations, its wrecks and floods, echoes back the plaudit of Jehovah, and proclaims it very good. Yet, how does it appear to uncultivated humanity ? To barbaric eyes, it presents itself as a formidable barrier to all outside intercourse. To the Egyptians, in their early history, the Sea was an unclean thing, and they who traversed its wide waste of waters, unharmed, were considered haters of the gods, whose daring was only permitted to go unpunished long enough to secure their destruction, and with whom it was sacrilege to hold any communication. Plato declared the Sea to be “the schoolmaster of all vice and dishonesty.” The Latins held the maxim : : ‘¢Qui nescit orare Discat navigare.” Science, however, has robbed the Sea of many of its terrors, and presented it to us in an entirely different aspect. The Sea is now known to have its uses, and ‘to teach its lessons. It is the great fertilizer of the land, the equalizer of heat, and the regulator of climate. In connection with the sun, it fills the bottles of heaven, and thus prepares the rain for the “green herb,” and the “dew for the tender grass.” It purifies the atmosphere, and aids in sustaining animal life. By giving force and direction to the winds, it facilitates the inter- course of man with man. It thus becomes a great moral instructor, teaching mankind, by affording facilities for a constant interchange of commodities and benefits, their mutual dependence and obligations, and their relations to each other, as members of one great family, having a common parentage, a common inheritance, common wants, and a common destiny. It may be well, before proceeding further, to define the words “ Sea” and “ Church,” as used here ; inasmuch as I mean somewhat more than is generally supposed to be included in these terms. You will pardon me, I know, if I seem to have assumed poctic license in this matter ; because, if the boundaries of the domain, which I conceive to be embraced in these expressions, 8 be but fully understood, there can be but little fear of any one being led astray by them. By the “Sea,” then, I mean not only the body of waters so ealled, that | “ Original Unmarr’d, unfaded work of Deity, That roll’d the wild, profound, eternal bass Tn Nature’s anthem.” but I include, also, al/ that appertains to it, viz., its navigation, its commerce, its wars, its discoveries, its wealth, its influence, and its hardy men; for by all these agencies, the Sea, like the Earth, in the Apocalypse, has helped the woman—the Church— to her present dominion and power ; and by these, consecrated to, and concentrated on her, by the grace of God, must her final conquests be won. | So in the words “ the Church,” I include more than the idea of ecclesiastical relationship. I do not confine the term to a mere body of believers, any more than I confine the word “Sea” to a mere body of waters ; but include under it all that pertains to the best interests of man; all that tends to the im- provement of the race in the advancements of civilization and social intercourse, the extension of the area of true knowledge and of personal independence, or individual and popular liberty, and the dissemination of the truth of God, as it shines in the face of Jesus Christ. Aliis verbis. Its indirect, as well as its direct, influence on the Gospel of Christ. That the Sea and the Church, taken in this sense, are related fo, and mutually dependent on, each other, I presume none will deny. Nay, more. In every well stored mind, the two must be so intimately associated, as to make the impossibility of dis- sociating the one from the other far greater than that of per- ceiving their relations and dependence. The Church looks upon the Sea as a powerful auxiliary in the extension of her dominion, and of the Redcemer’s glory, among the nations. And the Sea acknowledges itself to be dependent for its triumphs, for the successful execution of its mission, on the refining, elevating, and sanctifying influences of the Church. So that the evangelization of the globe is the resultant of these two mighty forces. And, in the words of another, on a kindred subject, it may be truly said : 9 “The heathen nations have learned, and are learning, to associate the one with the other. The impression is fast becoming fixed in the faith of the world, that the two are, in fact, blended, and are to be blended; that where the one prevails, the other will prevail also ; and that if men will have the one, they must welcome to their bosoms, also, the other. The great fact can not be concealed that, where Christianity prevails, there, also, civil liberty prevails; that there the highest point has been reached in navigation, in manufactures, in legal and medical knowledge, in the arts, in the spirit of enterprise and adventure. Whether these things may be valued or not, the fact is seen and admitted. * * * * There is no impres. sion that is more certain to become established among the nations, than that, for some cause, Christianity, refinement, the arts, the sciences, and the influences of the press, have a mys- terious, but certain, connection. Every year tends to confirm this impression ; every missionary that we send out confirms it ; every ship that visits a barbarous coast; every press that we establish among the heathen ; every book that we print and circulate there, tends to confirm it.”-—BaRrne’s Miscellany, vol. 2, p-.109, 110. | “Art thrives most Where commerce has enriched the busy coasts ; He catches all improvements in his flight, Spreads foreign wonders in his country’s sight, Imports what others have invented well, And stirs his own to match them, or excel. Tis thus reciprocating, each with each, Alternately the nations learn and teach ; While Providence enjoins to every soul, An union with the vast terraqueous whole.’’-—CowPrrr. History, which is but a record of God’s providences, reveals clearly the fact, that, in the providence of God, the Sea was very early associated, in the minds of men, with their religious ideas. The skill and daring exhibited by those who ventured on the treacherous sea, and gave themselves up to the sport of the capricious winds, were considered evidences of the exist- ence of the Divine in man. Hence, the people of the early ages, the Egyptians excepted, and they only for a time, did honor to the bold adventurers, who launched forth upon the 10 unknown and trackless deep, by enrolling their names among the gods. Nay, more. They caught the splendor of their brilliant achievements—brilliant even in that heroic age; and, that coming generations might not neglect to do them honor also, they gave them a grateful apotheosis, by studding the baldrick of night with star-jeweled constellations, called after their names. These acts of a gratified and wondering people do most assuredly certify to their high appreciation of the wanderers of the Sea. Do we find any basis for a like appreciation of the character, condition, and influence of the sailor of the present day ? Our superior light will prevent our ascribing to the seamen, as a class, the attributes of the Deity, it is true. But shall we not acknowledge their preéminent usefulness? We may not esteem the sailor a demi-god ; but let us not forget that he isa . man—and a man, too, of boundless influence for good or ill. By way of pointing out the importance attached to the Sea; -and its navigators, let me simply premise the fact, that the mariner can be spared from no department of human knowledge. If taken from History, they leave a chasm no class of men can fill; for the path of empire has been over the Sea. The dominion of the Sea enabled Spain and Portugal* to divide the world between them ; the one taking all to the west, the other all to the east, of a meridian line, mutually agreed upon, and running from pole to pole, one hundred leagues west -of the Azores. The possession of the Sea, at a subsequent date, gave to the previously obscure people of the Netherlands, the superiority over both Spaniards and Portuguese; secured to them the rich commerce of India, and (after wresting their own territory from the very waves) enabled them to hurl defiance in the face of that puissant monarch, Charles the Fifth, in the very noontide of his political greatness.t And the present proud * Emmanuel, of Portugal, by a bull of the reigning Pope, was styled ‘‘ Lord of the Navigation, Cenquests, and Trade of Ethiopia, Arabia, Persia, and India.” —Lusiad, p.: 84. + “Their geographical position was, in many respects, disadvantageous ; but they triumphed over all the difficulties, and defended themselves against all the 11 position of England and America is but a convincing proof of the truthfulness of the apothegm of the renowned Themistocles, the admiral of the Grecian fleet : “Qui mare teneat, Eum necesse est rerum potiri.” Take from history the record of the conquests and discoy- eries, the rise and fall of cities and nations, the changes in the routes of commerce, and all the improvements on the earth’s surface, which have resulted from the energy and influence of the sailor, and you will be astonished at the blank. Why, you must remove from the map of the world the entire continent of America, and submerge more than four-fifths of the islands of the Sea. You must blot out the record of the Pelasgic migra- tions; of Etruscan civilization ; of Tyrian explorations and colonies ; of the Grecian conquests; the Periplus of Hanno ; the commercial glory of Carthage; the extension of the Roman power; the Punic wars; the celebrated voyage of Nearchus ; the founding of Alexandria; the adventures of Eudoxus, of Cyzicus ; the exploits of Hippalus (the Columbus of the later Ptolemean age); the rise of Venice and Genoa ; the commercial grandeur of the medieval republics ; the voyages of Columbus and Cabot ; the long wars of the Netherlands; the passage of the Mayflower; AND THE COMMERCE OF THE WORLD. exposures of their situation. Their territory was contracted, but they applied an enlightened genius and a laborious perseverance to its enlargement, and the ocean, itself, was pushed back from its shores to make room for their multiplying millions. They had not, on all their surface, the requisite materials to build a boat, but every sea was shaded by the canvas of their costly merchantmen, and swept by the cannon of their exulting navies. In the time of Sir Josiah Child, which was several years after the British Navigation Act had begun to operate effectually in checking and reducing the power of Holland, the Dutch were still in full possession of the trade to Russia, Greenland, Portugal, Spain, Norway, Ireland, Scotland, the East Indies, China, Japan, the Mediterranean, South America, New York, and, through New York, the British American colonies, to a considerable extent. “ Wolland, being not so big as one of our shires in England, containing not above twenty-eight miles in length, and twenty-three in breadth, have increased the number of their shipping to at least ten thousand sail, and to that number they add, in a manner, daily, although the country itself affords them neither materials, nor victuals, nor merchandise, to be accounted of, toward their setting forth.”’—Honvr’s Merchants’ Mag., May, 1841, pp. 398, 399. inl YERSITY OF RARY LLINOIS CHAMPBIGN 12 The four great enterprises of the present day, and for which this nineteenth century will be justly famous in all coming time, viz., the exploration of the Dead Sea; the opening up to commerce of the ports of Japan; and the introduction, among that exclusive people, of the steam engine and magnetic telegraph ; the surveying of the route for a ship canal, without locks, to connect the Atlantic Ocean with the Pacific ; and the union of England and America, by means of the transatlantic telegraph cable ; all these have been, or are yet, in progress of accomplishment by the men of the Sea.* For these exploits, a mythic age would, doubtless, have given them a niche in the Pantheon, and have ranked them with the gods. Concerning such men, may we not ask, with Eschylus : “Who, for the palm, in contest high shall join ?’ Or who, in equal ranks, shall stand?” And what, I ask, is Mythology, stripped of the demi-gods of the Sea? Without Jason and the Argo; Orpheus and his lyre ; Perseus and the Gorgon head; Theseus and the Minotaur ; without Castor and Pollux ; Neptune and Thetis ; Achilles and Ulysses; Phrixus and Hellé; without these, and a thousand others, what is Mythology? Who were the Argonaut, but the sailors of the Argo ? Orpheus, at the music of whose lyre “stones and trees were moved, rivers ceased to flow, and savage beasts became mild.” Orpheus, whose sweet strains made even Pluto relent, and Tartarus give up its prey ; and who is said to have “ excelled all the world in genius and knowledge,’t was one of these very sailors. In the Classics, you will say, “ We can certainly dispense with the sailor.” Letussee. Take from the domain of classic liter- * Since the above was written, the tidings have flashed upon us from Trinity Bay, N. F.: “August 7, 1858.—The telegraph cable is successfully laid. The Agamemnon has landed her end of the cable, and we are now receiving signals from the telegraph house at Valencia.” The spirit which actuated those engaged in this important enterprise, is mani- fest in the following dispatch from the Commander of the Niagara: “God has been with us. The telegraph cable is laid without accident. To Him be all the glory. We are all well. Wm. L. Hupson.” T Vid. Larcuer’s (Votes on Herodotus. London, 1844, vol.i., p. 303. 13 ature the name and the fame of Cadmus, who gave letters to Greece; the Iliad and Odyssey of Homer ; the severe Iambics of Archilochus; the neids of Virgil; the Tragedies of Eschylus, who himself took part in the sea-fight of Salamis ; the Medea and Heraclide of Euripides; all based on the exploits of the men of the Sea. Take these, I say from classic literature, and what a gap is made! Again, take from the pages of general literature all that pertains to the Sea, in the writings of Plutarch, of Ptolemy, of Aristotle, and of Pliny the Elder (who was in command of a fleet at the time of his death); the Telemachus of Fenelon, and that great epic of the Sea, the LIusiad, by Camoens, for many years a sailor, and all that pertains to voyages and discoveries. Take these away, and what remains is a disjointed mass, of but little interest or worth. You will bear me witness, I know, when I say that in Bio- graphy there would be a wide, wide blank, if the names of heroic men, who have gained honor and distinction for themselves upon the Sea, were left out. If such names as Columbus and Cabot, Vasco de Gama and Magellan, Hudson, Drake, and Frobisher, Smith and De Vries, Cook and Kane; if these were left out, we should have but the skeleton of Biogtaphy, without muscle or integument or show of life; or, to be histrionic, “the play of Hamlet with Hamlet left out.” And oh! what confusion would accrue to Geography, if the name of the sailor were extinguished from the headlands and bays, the promontories and gulfs, the islands and straits, that are now called after their discoverers ! Theology itself, the science of God, can not be dissociated from the mariner. And though the Sea has given to us one great heresiarch, Marcion, the mariner of Sinope, the antidote was presented by Hippolytus, the Episcopus Portuensis, who, at the Ostia, in the third century, wrote against all heresies, and dispensed the Gospel of Christ to the men of the Sea. Do you accuse me of attaching too much importance to these sons of the deep? Am I overrating their value to the Church and the world? I state only what will be found to accord with the facts of history. And I ask, if they, who have soared into the heavens with Newton and Arago, or descended into the crypts of the earth, with Miller and Silliman ; or, who have 14 explored the fields of science with Davy and Henry ; if, I say, these are entitled to our esteem, then we may not withhold it from the sons of the Sea, whose researches on their own element have entitled them to be considered the benefactors of the race. If we honor a Herschell, because he has, through long and wearisome nights, directed the far-seeing tube to the heavens, and gazed into the depths of space, until some nebulous mass in the ezthereal profound has been resolved into systems of worlds, should we not, also, honor the hardy mariner, launching forth into unknown seas, and, through tedious days and sleep- less nights, cleaving, with venturous keel, waters before un- whitened by a sail; and who pierces, with daring prow, the mythic cloudland of the West, until clusters of islands open to the sight, and another hemisphere is given to the world ? But to return. Let me invite you to contemplate, for a brief season, the arrangements of Divine Providence, by which the Sea is made anciliary to the Church of God. The first instance, based on reliable authority, is that record- ed in the Books of Kings and Chronicles, in which the seamen of Tyre are found associated with the servants of David and Solomon, in the procuring of the material for the construction of the Temple of God, which was erected on Mount Moriah, by King Solomon. We read in the Word of God (1 Kings, ix. 26-28), “And King Solomon made a navy of ships in Ezion- -geber, which is beside Eloth, on the shore of the Red Sea, in the land of Edom. And Hiram sent in the navy his servants, shipmen that had knowledge of the Sea, with the servants of Solomon. And they came to Ophir, and fetched from thence gold, four hundred and twenty talents (over a hundred millions of dollars), and brought it to Solomon.” Here, then, is an account of the very incipiency of the navy of Solomon ; through the agency of which he was enabled, subsequently, to amass such wealth, that, in his reign, silver was “in Jerusalem as stones,” and “was nothing accounted of.” Here, too, are men found ready to hand, who are called “shipmen that had know- ledge of the Sea,” and who accomplish a difficult foreign voyage to a port, or ports, in the Indian Ocean, to whom they are, evidently, no strangers, and bring back, for religious purposes, ‘ 15 an almost incredible amount of wealth, which, in the aggregate, must be counted by thousands of millions. Who are these men, whose influence is such, at this early day, as to secure an alliance with Israel, in the very zenith of her national glory? The people with whom Solomon, as well as his illustrious father, found it desirable to be associated, in order to carry out the purpose of God, could have been no obscure and uncultivated or barbarous race. The nation who supplied that wise king with artificers in metal, with raftsmen and pilots, and “ shipmen who had know- ledge of the Sea ;” who laid the world under tribute to maintain, its commerce ; whose vessels were models of beauty, built of the firs of Senir; with cedars of Lebanon for masts; oaks of Bashan for oars; ivory from Chittim for benches; and “ fine linen, with embroidered work of Egypt, for sails ;” and who was replenished and made glorious in the midst of the Seas. Such a people must have been already far advanced in the arts of civilized life, and in the possession of no ordinary facilities for extended intercourse. And such, indeed, were the Phoeni- cians. A reference to their early history carries us as far back, in the estimation of some, as the dispersion of the races at Babel, and identifies them with the Hycsos,* or shepherd kings, who were expelled from Egypt, and whose name Philition (or Philistine) is found inscribed on the pyramids of Egypt; and who, after their dispersion, under the names of Phoenicians, Pelasgi, and Cyclopes, peopled the shores and islands of the Mediterranean Sea, and were, subsequently, driven forth from Tyre and Zidon, from Athens and from Carthage, and, finally, came to the shores of this land, “ where traces of their build- ings, and, it has been supposed, of their costume, as represented in Egyptian sculpture, have been discovered.’’+ It is not my purpose here, however, to discuss the origin of * “These were their first kings, and were desirous to extirpate the Egyptians. These people were called Royal Pastors: Hyc, in the sacred tongue, being a King, and Sos, in the vulgar tongue, a Pastor.” * * * “ Their power was prior to Joseph’s. Probably on this account the Egyptians were averse to shepherds.” * * * “Diodorus, in Photius, tells us many of these were followers of Cadmus to Greece ; also of Danaus.”—Witiiams’ Prim. His. L. 3. passim. t Vid. Pyramids of Gizeh, vol. ii., p. 181. . 16 this wonderful people, whose genius and enterprise, whose endurance and independence, distinguish them as the master minds of the ancient world. It is sufficient to show, that the scripture history represents them as associated with the chil- dren of God at an early day, and as known to them for their prowess before the conquest of Canaan. They claim to have come from the Persian Gulf, and located themselves on the Syrian coast more than two thousand years B.C. They there founded Zidon, a maritime city, holding the second place, in point of antiquity, in the world. It was known as the “Great Zidon,” in the days of Joshua (xi. 8, xix. 28); and in the allotment of the tribes, as the boundary town of Asher and Zebulon. Subsequently, Tyre, the “ daugh- ter of Zidon,” was colonized, and, in the race for preéminence, soon outstripped the parent city, and became herself the mother of nations ; having scattered her colonies on the isles of the Aigean, and all along the coast of Western Asia (where they built Ephesus, Miletus, Phocea, and other cities), and on the northern and western shores of Africa, as far south as the Gambia. About the time of Moses, “long before the beginning of classical history,” they are said to have founded Gades* and Tartessus (v. Tarshish), on the coast of Spain. Of the Tyrians, it is said, that they were “ great merchants, great warriors, and great philosophers, and such expert navigators, that antiquity assigns them the honor of inventing the “cynosura,” or Pole Star, which, from them, was called “Pheenice.” They far surpassed all other ancient nations in commercial enterprises ; and we are not without very strong reasons for supposing that they owed much of their greatness to the possession of the mariner’s compass, notwithstanding the invention of that instrument, like that of gunpowder, and the art of printing from movable blocks, is supposed to be of modern date. And this is the people to whom, in the providence of God, Solomon was indebted, next to God, for the elements of his own greatness ; and by whom he was aided in constructing the first temple ever erected on this earth, and dedicated to the worship of the Living God. * See Anct. G'eog., sub voce. 17 ‘ You can not accuse me of giving undue prominence to these men of the Sea, seeing that they occupy so large a space, both in the historic and prophetic writings of the Old Testament, where they are spoken of as “ situate at the entry of the Sea.” “A merchant of the people for many isles ;” and their city, “the merchant city,” whose merchants were princes, and whose “traffickers were the honorable of the earth.” She “ heaped up silver as the dust,” and “ fine gold as the mire of the street,” through the instrumentality of a commerce, which prophecy declared should be “holiness to the Lord” (Isa. xxiii. 18). What is still more remarkable of this people, is the fact, that, though they flourished so abundantly while maintaining friendly intercourse with the people of God, and, perhaps, in some sense, even with Jehovah Himself (see 1 Kings, v. 7-12). Yet, when they lifted up their voice against His chosen, and, in their pride, joined with their persecutors, God lifted up His hand against them, and their commercial greatness ceased. For it is written : “ Because that Tyrus hath said against Jerusalem, Aha, she is broken that was the gates of the people; she is turned unto me; I shall be replenished, now that she is laid waste. Therefore, thus saith the Lord God; Behold, I am against thee, O Tyrus, and will cause many nations to come up against thee, as the Sea causeth his waves to come up” (lzek. xxvi. 2and 3). “ Because thy heart is lifted up, and thou hast said, [ am a god, I sit in the seat of God, in the midst of the seas ; yet thou art a man, and not God, and thou shalt die the deaths of them that are slain in the midst of the seas” (lzek. XXVili. 2). | I have spoken of Tyre as among the first of navigators, and as associated, more particularly, with the people of God. But, in looking at the influence of the sailor on the destinies of the world, it must not be forgotten that navigation counts its heroes among other nations, who have moved into the front ranks of civilization and human progress, e. @., B.C. 2000, Semiramis carried her conquests as far as the Ganges, and returned, as did Nearchus, at a later date, down the Indus to the Indian Ocean. Even Semiramis, therefore, owed her greatness, in some measure, to her fleet. B.C. 1600, Cecrops migrated from Egypt and founded Athens. 2 18 From the Institutes of Menu, the most celebrated code of Indian laws, civil and religious, we learn that an extensive commerce was carried on in the Indian Ocean one thousand two hundred years B.C., and regulated by law. B.C. 1600, Sesostris, the Egyptian, built, on the Red Sea, a fleet of four hundred sail, for the purpose of conquering the maritime regions of Africa, and subjugating India. He sub- dued, by force of arms, Ethiopia, Arabia, Lybya, and the greater part of Asia, and then invaded Europe. About the year 1263 B.C., Jason, a prince of Iolchos, fitted out an armed galley, with a crew of fifty men, and sailed for Colchis, to bring back the Golden Fleece, which is generally believed, when stripped of its mythological character, to mean, simply, to secure some portion of the riches of that country, which resulted from their trade with India.* The commerce of India, in those days, was brought through Bactria, and the northern provinces of Persia, and floated down the Oxus into the Caspian Sea. On reaching the western shore, it was carried across the Caucassian range, and, on the waters of the Phasis, was borne down to the Black Sea. I will not detain you by recounting the voyage of the .4rgo, and all its incidents. Yet, it may be well to say, that its connection with the advancements of that age was similar to that of the Spanish caravels, under Colum- bus, in 1492. It was simply a pioneer movement—a voyage to a seat of ancient commerce. B.C. 617, Pharaoh Necho sent a fleet of the Phcenicians from Arsinoé, down the Red Sea, to circumnavigate Africa. *«“The original facts on which this mythological story is founded, can not now be recalled ; but it is generally supposed to represent some bold commer- cial expedition, that overstepped the previous discoveries of its age; or, more probable still, the series of enterprises, by which Greek maritime knowledge was extended to the furthest shores of the Euxine.”—See Branpr’s Ency. of Lit. and Art, sub. voce. “A due mixture of fable, in a case like this, is a proof of genuine antiquity ; yet, as many fables in antiquity unquestionably arose from the ambiguities of language, some attention is due to the ingenious conjecture which supposes that the story of the Golden Fleece had its origin in a misconception, or a play of words—the word which signifies wealth, or a treasure, in the Phoenician language (malon), resembling that which, in Greek, means a fleece (mallon). Phoenicians probably had a share in the expedition ; and the pilot, Anczus, is said to have been of that nation.”—Vid. Larp. Cyclop. His., vol. i., p. 15. 19 They accomplished the task, and, in the third year, entered the pillars of Hercules. Fifty years later, Darius sent a fleet down the Indus, from Cabul to the Indian Ocean, and up the Red Sea, to Suez. At a still later date, Grecian enterprise, under Alexander the Great, sent a fleet of two thousand sail from the Punjab Territory, down the Indus to the Persian Gulf ; than which, no expedition, in ancient or modern times, has effected more magnificent results. It is said to have produced a greater revolution in the knowledge of the globe than any other event in history. But, B.C. 480, just one hundred years before Alexander made the conquest of the East, the Persian monarch meditated the destruction of Europe, and planned an expedition to the West, which, if it had succeeded, would have crushed out liberty and the fine arts all over Greece, and, in its stead, inundated Europe with Oriental luxury and despotism, and thus would have prevented the subsequent spread of the Greek lan- guage in the East, which became so universally the vehicle of communication for the precious Gospel to the nations. Xerxes invaded Greece by land and sea, having the largest armament, as is supposed, ever assembled in the world. It is estimated at about one million men, and one thousand four hundred vessels of war. Thirty extra troops were added to each of these vessels. The Persian naval commanders were little versed in nautical affairs, and many of the crews were inland men. The Grecian fleet numbered, all told, three hun- dred and eighty sail. But they were manned by seamen, who had passed most of their lives amid the dangers of the Aigean, and who had been baptized unto liberty a thousand times by the saucy white caps of the Adriatic. The rival fleets met in the Bay of Salamis, at daybreak, on the 20th of October. The onset was terrible, not less so, really, than that of the land forces, on the devoted band of Leonidas, at Thermopyle ; and the destruction as swift ; for, before the evening shadows were thrown from the Corinthian acropolis, the Persians and their allies were routed, and the beaks of the Grecian galleys crowned with victory. Then was the oracle fulfilled, and the “wooden wall of the Triton-born goddess ” was “impregnable.” Then “brass engaged with brass, and Mars reddened the Sea 20 with blood.” Then “the far-thundering son of Saturn,’ and “benign victory,” brought “a day of freedom to Greece.”— Hropotvs, vill. 77. “Twas then that Athens the foundation laid Of Liberty’s fair structure.”—Ptur. Vit., p. 96. Thus, though indirectly, was the cause of God again benefited by the men of the Sea. Or, in other words, the Sea and sailor were chosen of God to work out His designs, and preserve Europe intact from the emasculating curse of Oriental tyranny and bondage ; that it might be free, in His own good time and way, to receive and disseminate the Gospel of Christ. Again, in the history of the world, the Sea is called on to act the pioneer for the Church; to be a sort of John Baptist, to “prepare the way of the Lord.” I refer to that remarkable sea-fight off the Promontory of Actium, in which the forces of Octavius Cesar met the combined fleets of Mark Antony and Cleopatra, on the 2nd of September, in the year 31 B.C., and gained the victory over them. Do you ask, What connection had this sea-fight with the Church of Christ ? Simply this: Rome had gone on in her career of conquest, until nation after nation had yielded to her armies, and her standards were planted on every shore, from the Euphrates, on the Kast, to the island of Britain, on the West. But there was one dead fly in the apothecary’s ointment—one obstacle to perfect tranquility in the empire of Rome. Mark Antony, having married Octavia, the sister of Augus- tus, afterward repudiated her, and publicly married Cleopatra, the celebrated Queen of Egypt. As a result of this conduct, the dissembled friendship, which had existed between Octavius and Antony, terminated. Hach made preparations for war. Their forces met in Mare Ionium, off Actium, where the sailors of Rome gained a brilliant victory over a superior force. That victory secured peace ; a peace in which the Temple of Janus was closed, an event which had occurred but twice before in seven hundred years ; first, in the reign of Numa Pompilius, and, second, after the first Punic War. But, above all, the result of that fight was, the peace in which Christ, THE PRINCE OF PEACE, was born. 21 Strange! some will say, that the agency of the sailor should be required to bring about this glorious event. I grant it strange, but not more strange than true. It is but a striking evidence of the fact, that God “Plants His footsteps on the Sea.” Again, when, in the passage of years, Turkish arrogance and bigotry, like that of the Persian of old, had arrayed its forces, and gathered its strength, for the purpose of blotting out Christian civilization from the map of Hurope, and flooding it with the religion of the Mohammedan imposter, in 1571, Christian sailors met them in the Gulf of Lepanto, and over- whelmed them with defeat, thus breaking the right arm of Saracenic power, and preserving Europe from the curse of the Moslem. But for this, the crescent would have triumphed over the Cross, and the glorious light of the Reformation, then just breaking upon the moral darkness of the world, would have been obscured, in all probability, for centuries to come. All honor, then, to the hardy sons of the Sea, whose valor, and energy, and persevering effort secured, by the grace of God, both to Europe and America, that freedom of thought and freedom of action they enjoy this day! In 1588, seventeen years later, British seamen met the very forces which, under Don John, had defeated the Turk at Lepanto, and which, under the appellation of the “ Invincible Armada,’ came to inflict as great a curse on England—to bind the subjects of “good Queen Bess,” as she was facetiously called, to the behest of a foreign potentate, and kill Protestant- ism in its stronghold. The skill and bravery of the sailor were again called into requisition, and, in the providence of God, the wind and Sea fought with them for Elizabeth, as the stars, in their courses, fought with Zebulon and Naphthali, for Deborah of old. “The storms of heaven (says the historian of that period), the boisterous Sea, the valor of Christian sailors, and the fire of Antwerp,” saved old England for liberty and God. One more fact, that indicates the mutual relation and dependence of these two great forces, is seen in the direction which commerce has taken since the Reformation, in the six- teenth century. All the commerce of the world, at this day, as 22 far as the Sea is concerned, is in the hands of Christian nations. Outside of a direct revelation, no brighter evidence of the purpose of God, in relation to the spread of the Gospel, by the men of the Sea, could possibly be given than this. Nor is this all. The commerce of the Sea, the carrying trade of the world, is not only in the hands of nominally Christian nations, but, also, nominally Protestant nations. France may be deemed an exception to this statement, but her commercial marine is comparatively small beside that of Great Britain and the United States, and the Dutch and Scandinavian ports of the North of Europe. In our own land, we have, on the Atlantic seaboard—to say nothing of our Pacific coast, now springing up into importance—a coast line of twenty-four thousand miles, and a merchant marine, which exceeds in tonnage that of Great Britain, with all her colonies. And who are they, I ask, who have now access ¢o, and influ- ence among, the formerly exclusive Celestials ? Who will have the ruling influence in the affairs of China, Japan, and India, and the Isles of Oceanica, for a century to come? Who, but the nations who are now considered in the very vanguard of civil and religious liberty, and who, in the providence of God, have been the conservators of, and are now to be the dissemi- nators of the Word of God? The white wings of a Christian commerce are fitly represented by the Angel of the Apocalypse, flying in the midst of the heavens, bearing the everlasting Gos- pel. Is it not strange, then, that the Church of God should have allowed the right-hand of her power to hang useless at her side, until almost paralyzed? To drop the figure, is it not unaccountably strange that the Church of Christ, to whom He gave the command, “ Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel,” should have refused, until within the last half century, to avail herself of so valuable and efficient an auxiliary, as that which is found ready to her hand in the men of the Sea? A question may arise here, and I may as well anticipate it, viz., Is this marvelous arrangement, this wondrous adaptation of means to an end, merely fortuitous, or is it in accordance with THE PurRPOSE oF Gop? —TI answer, There is here no chance; no fortuitous concurrence of events. We should be warranted in saying this from what we 23 know of God, though we had no distinct and clear revelation on this subject. But He has not left us to doubt and conjecture in a matter so grave as this. He has expressly declared His purpose to use the sailor, and to make the Sea the handmaid of the Church of Jesus Christ. “To the law, then, and to the testimony.” The trump of God gives no uncertain sound. Our inquiry will carry us back to the time when the world and the Church were both shut up within the wooden walls of a ship— not by chance, but by a divine command ; not instinctively drawn together by a common desire for safety, but led by inspiration, and inclosed by the hand of God Himself: for God shut them in. The ship, then, and the Church were identical, and the Sea bore up the frail vessel on its mighty palm in safety, as if calmly conscious of the value of the precious trea- sure intrusted to its care. The Sea is still loyal to its Creator ; still obedient to His command, as when He gave to it its decreed place, and shut it up with bars and bolts, to restrain it from transgressing its divinely-appointed limits; and as when: it yielded to the Saviour’s “ Peace, be still!” Another event in the history of the children of God, asso- ciates the Sea very closely with the Church, and that, too, by divine command. I speak now of the passage of the Red Sea, when, at the bidding of Jehovah, the mighty waters rolled. back. He commanded, and the “floods stood upright as a heap: the depths were congealed in the heart of the Sea.” “The waters were a wall unto them on the right hand and on the left.” The Israelites passed through dry shod, which the Egyptians essaying to do, were drowned. “He blew with His wind, the Sea covered them ; they sank like lead in the mighty waters.” As He used the Sea, so He declares that He will use the men of the Sea, as the ministers of His grace to the nations. This is left beyond all possibility of doubt by the express promises of His own Word, which form a connected chain, from the days of Jacob to the conversion of the world. You have all read, doubtless, that remarkable prophecy in the forty- ninth of Genesis, in which the Patriarch, with prophetic fore- sight, perceives the subsequent history of his own descendants to the remotest generations. Concerning two of the tribes, Zebulon and Naphthali, he said: “ Zebulon shall dwell at the 24 haven of the Seas; and he shall be for a haven of ships; and his border shall be unto Zidon” (Gen. xlix. 18) : and “ Naphthali is a hind let loose: he giveth goodly words” (xlix. 21). In the reiteration of this promise, or prophetic disclosure, by Moses, two hundred and forty years afterward, as recorded in Deut. (xxxill. 18, 19, 23), it is said: “ Rejoice, Zebulon, in thy going out; and, Issachar, in thy tents. They shall call the people unto the mountain; there they shall offer sacrifices of righteousness ; for they shall suck of the abundance of the Sea, and of the treasures hid in the sand.” And, “ O Naphthali, satisfied with favor, and full of the blessings of the Lord.” Seven years after the death of Moses, the people having taken possession of the land, under the leadership of Joshua, it was divided unto them by lot; nine tribes and a half on the West of the Jordan, and two and a half on the Hast. Here we see the fulfilment of that proverb, “‘ The lot is cast into the lap, but the whole disposition of it is with the Lord.” For the lot was cast, but God so controlled the lot, as to evince the truthfulness of His own promise, and carry out His own purpose. ‘The lot of Zebulon fell to him at a place where was a “haven for ships,” including the beautiful bay of Acre, at the foot of Mount Car- mel. Joshua says (xix. 10): “The third lot came up for the children of Zebulon, according to their families, and their border went up toward the Sea.” The boundaries of these two tribes are then given. Josephus says: “The tribe of Zebulon’s lot included the land which lay as far as the Lake of Gennesaret, and that which belonged to Carmel and the Sea” (Ant. v. 1. 22.) The Hebrew Rabbi Schwarz, who labored many years to dis- cover the true boundaries of the tribes, says: “The whole pro- phecy of Jacob always refers to the possessions in the Holy Land; and the plural 5%" Seas, says plainly that Zebulon should have the coasts of two Seas in his territory, which would then give us the respective shores of the Mediterranean and Chinnereth.” The southern boundary line of Zebulon went, therefore, westward from the lake of Gennesaret to Mount Tabor, then ran further to Doberoth, thence northerly toward Shion, thence to Mount Carmel, to the River Kishon, to the vicinity of Akko (or Acre). At the northeast, Zebulon extended to Tanchum, thence the line ran westerly to K¢ttron, 25 thence it extended in a long and narrow strip to the vicinity of Zidon. So that a small part of this territory touched the Med- iterranean ” (Schwarz Geog. Pales, pp. 179 and 180). This learned geographer, says again Zidon Rabba, the Great Zidon is at present called Saida, and is a small, pretty town, with a small harbor. Without the town is shown the grave of Zebu- lon, son of Jacob, whom the Arabs call Scheik Saida, Chief of Zidon ; this would argue that the town belonged to Zebulon ” (Ibid, 193). And again: “ Asher’s territory was West of Naph- thali, and had, therefore, nearly the whole coast of the Mediter- ranean, from Carmel to Zidon, only that Zebulon had a narrow strip on the Sea coast, as already stated above (p. 204). Here, then, is evidence that the Jews were intimately associated with the earliest navigators, and if the promise means anything, they were not idle spectators of the stirring scenes enacted in the harbors, and along the quays of Tyre and Zidon. Moses had exhorted the sons of Zebulon, in view.of their advantage, to “ rejoice in their going out, and declared that they should call the people unto the mountain, and offer sacrifices of righteous- ness,’ and ‘suck of the abundance of the Seas,” in other words, they should aid in establishing spiritual worship, setting them- selves the example, and should derive their wealth from the commerce of the Seas, as New York, and Liverpool, and Lon- don do, at the present day. Another remarkable feature in this prophecy is to be noted, because we shall have need of it to explain some things, which, in their fuifillment, look back to this germ of thought, planted in the, Hebrew mind thousands of years ago. I mean the declaration of Jacob, with reference to Naphthali, viz., that “ He giveth goodly words,’ or what is now known to us as the eveyyedvor of the Greeks, the Hvangelium of the Latins, and the Gods-spel, good speech or tidings, of the Saxon, contracted into our word “ Gospel.” Now is the great truth indeed before us. Zebulon is to “ rejoice in his going out ” from his haven “of the Seas” (in his “ships,” doubtless), and Naphthali is to be employed in carrying the Gospel. Let us see whether this is a mere fanciful exposition, or whether God, in His wisdom, has revealed the means of arriv- ing at its fulfillment; or, has God accomplished anything that, in its detail, corresponds to these promises. 26 The two tribes of Zebulon and Naphthali are mentioned ~ again by the Prophet Isaiah, (ix. 12), in which, having fore- told impending calamities, he comforts them in these words, viz.: ‘‘ Nevertheless, the dimness shall not be such,as was in her vexation, when, at the first, he lightly afflicted the land of Zebuion and the land of Naphthali, and afterward did more grievously afflict her by the way of the Sea, beyond Jordan, in Galilee, of the nations. The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light: they that dwell in the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath the light shined,” 7. e., These people, whose extreme northern location had exposed them to the incursions of their enemies, and to direct inter- course with idolatrous people, and whose “going out” from their “haven of ships” had brought them into contact with those whose moral character was not calculated to benefit them, are assured that their spiritual darkness and affliction shall be relieved by the coming of Him, who is the light of the world, and “the Sun of Righteousness.” ‘Tt was in this benighted and degraded region (says Dr. J. A.. Alexander, in loco), that Christ first appeared as a messenger from God ; and, in that appearance, we are expressly taught that this prediction was fulfilled.” When we turn to the life of the Saviour for the evidence of this, we read (in Matt. iv. 12-22) as follows : “Now when Jesus had heard that John was cast into prison, He departed into Galilee ; and leaving Nazareth, He came and dwelt in Capernaum, which is upon the Sea coast, in the borders of Zebulun and Nephthalim: that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias, the prophet, saying : ‘The land of Zebu- lun, and the land of Nephthalim, by the way of the Sea, beyond Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles ; the people which sat in dark- ness saw great light; and to them which sat in the region and shadow of death light is sprung up.’ From that time Jesus began to preach, and to say, ‘Repent: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.’ And Jesus, walking by the Sea of Galilee, saw two brethren, Simon, called Peter, and Andrew, his brother, casting a net into the Sea: for they were fishers. And He saith unto them, ‘ Follow Me, and I will make you fishers of men.’ And they straightway left their nets, and followed Him. 27 And going on from thence, He saw other two brethren, James, the son of Zebedee, and John, his brother, in a ship with Zebe- dee, their father, mending their nets; and He called them. And they immediately left the ship and their father, and fol- lowed Him.” What clearer evidence of the true import of the prophecy, or what more complete fulfillment could be looked for than this? It is literally fulfilled. 'The men of the waters are here the chosen ones, who are to go forth as the pioneers of divine truth, and proclaim the Gospel to all the world. “ Not many mighty, not many noble are called, but God hath chosen the weak things of this world to confound the mighty, and things that are not to bring to naught the things that are, that no flesh may glory in His presence” (1 Cor. i. 26, 27, 29). The Evangelists tell us that Jesus “began to teach and to preach by the Sea side.” And here it is declared that the men of the waters were the first trophies of divine grace under the preaching of the Gospel, for “ they immediately left the ship and their father, and followed Him.” And what is very re- inarkable, of the twelve whom He chose, seven of the first eight named were fishermen. Five of them, viz., Peter, Andrew, James, John, and Philip, were of the tribe of Naphthali; and two, viz., Nathaniel and Matthew, were of the tribe of Zebulon. The two tribes, of whom it was said, of one that he should “rejoice in his going out,” and of the other, that he should be the bearer of the Gospel, and “ full of the blessing of the Lord.” Should the question arise, Are we to consider this act of Christ’s as symbolical of the fact, that the Church, in after ages, is to follow His example in this matter? The answer is given in the promise of God by the prophet (Isa. Ix. 5), twen- ty-five centuries ago. When he was describing the latter day glory of the Messiah’s kingdom, and the extension of His Church among the nations, he adverted to the means of its accomplishment by saying : “ Because the abundance of the Sea shall be converted unto Thee, the forces of the Gentiles shall cqme unto Thee. Or, when the abundance of the Sea—or the multitude of the Sea—shall be converted unto Thee, then the forces of the Gentiles shall come unto Thee.” Lest I should be considered as giving a forced construction 28 to these phrases, “ abundance of the Sea,’ and “forces of the Gentiles,” I prefer giving you the language of one who can not be accused of having any design save the expounding of the text. Dr. J. A. Alexander (in loco) says: ‘“We may safely infer that it was the intention of the writer to convey the whole idea, that the Gentiles should devote themselves and their possessions to the service of Jehovah.” Of the conver- sion, he says: “The conversion here predicted has the same sense as in English, viz., the conversion of the property of one to the use of another. And of the whole prophecy, he states : “The most natural interpretation of the verse is that which makes it a promise of indefinite enlargement (7. e., of Christ’s kingdom), comprehending both the persons and the riches of the nations.” The Chaldee paraphrase renders it : “Then shall be transferred to thee (7. e., the Church) the wealth of the West.” The AUX Xess teordoieoe Oalaocons”—* riches of the Sea.” Barnes, on Isaiah, says: ‘‘ The idea is, that the wealth possess- ed by distant lands—lands beyond the Sea, or surrounded by the Sea, should be devoted to the Church of God, an idea denoting the great prosperity of the Church, when all lands should come under the influence of the truth.” My own understanding of this passage is, that in the latter days our Redeemer “shall have dominion from sea to sea,” and that the wealth, the influence, and the multitudes of the men of the Sea, shall be converted to the service of God—all to be used in the spread of the Gospel; and that through the dis- semination of the truth, by these agencies, it shall be received among all nations, and Christ be glorified as they flock—lke doves to their windows—into His Church. For Isaiah describes the ships of Tarshish, or of a foreign commerce, as first, or in the front rank, of those who are to bring the sons of the Church “from afar, their silver and their gold with them.” Presuming that these truths will be reccived without a shadow of a doubt, as to their truthful exposition, I might well rest the matter here. But it will scarcely do to presume that so large an audience as this does not contain some who do not embrace the truth. There are some, too, doubtless, who, while they do embrace the truth, may yet consider this exposition fanciful, and forced to sustain a preconceived theory. 29 To such I can say, if there be any, [ have no interest in sus- taining any theory that is not in accordance with Truth and Holiness; and more, I can afford, in this matter, to throw this exposition entirely out of the account, to cast it to the winds, and then can prove, to a demonstration, if you please, the utter impossibility of the conversion of the world without the agency of the men of the Sea. I speak reverently : God can do what He will, and send by whom He will send ; but while the present order of things remains, the sailor can not be dispensed with. If the time should ever come, when every rope-yarn is replaced by a wire thread, and every yard of canvas by a cubic foot of steam, or a Leyden jar,* the vessels must still be officered and manned by human agents, and they must be the witnesses for God among the nations. The only question to be discussed, therefore, is—as a glance at the map will show——not “Shall we use the sailor?” We must use the sailor: we can not send our missionaries, but the sailor must carry them. Navigation is essential to the spread of the truth. Even Virgil, a heathen poet, declares that the approach of the “ Golden Age”—a period answering to our Millennium—would be characterized by an enlarged commercial intercourse ; but that, after the establishing of that felicitous reign, there shall be no more need of the trafficker by Sea. His language is: 3 “ Pauca tamen suberunt prisce vestigia fraudis, Que tentare Thetim ratibus, que cingere muris. Oppida que jubeant telluri infindere sulcos. Alter erit tum Tiphys, et altera quae vehat Argo Delectos heroas: erunt etiam altera bella, Atque iterum ad Trojam magnus mittetur Achilles. Hine, ubi jam firmata virum te fecerit etas, Cedet et ipse Mari vector: nec nautica pinus Mutabit merces: omnis feret omnia tellus.” B. Iv. 31—39. At present, however, the question is—I repeat it—not “ Shall we use the sailor?” or “ Is the sailor an auxiliary in this work ?” * Since the above was written the secret of compressing Electricity has been dis- covered. A small mortar was fired, by the inventor, at the rate of a hundred shots a minute, without flashing, smoke, or noise. The same power can, it is claimed, be adapted to every system of mechanical invention, and is destined to supersede steam, requiring neither machinery nor combustion for its successful operation. j 30 No! The question is, Shall we use the sailor as a sanctified agent, or as an unsanctified one? Shall we use him to pull down the strongholds of Satan, or to build them up? to aid the missionary, or to obstruct his labors? to hasten on, or to retard the glory of the Millennial day? It is true that, as a mass, the men of the Sea have set an ex- ample to the heathen ill befitting the representatives of Chris- tian lands. But is not the Church in some sense to blame? “ He is only a sailor,” and “ You can do him no good,” are expressions that have often frustrated Christian effort, and led the poor sailor to feel “ Refuge fails me ; no man cares for my soul.” It is almost incredible that the Church should have so long ignored so useful a class of men, and a class, too, so well fitted, above all other men, to be the bearers of good tidings to all the nations of the earth. Look for a moment, if you please, in conclusion— I. At the adaptedness of these men to the missionary work ; and, II. At what has really resulted from the efficient labor of afew; and then say what will be accomplished, by the grace of God, through these men, should they all become men of God, heirs of the Kingdom, and heralds of the Cross of Christ : First, then, their adaptedness to the work of missions. They possess, as a class, all the necessary qualifications of the missionary, save one. They lack one thing, viz., the new heart ; the regenerating power of the Holy Ghost. I speak now of the class. ‘There are many noble and honorable ex- ceptions. Does the missionary need to practice self-denial? The very occupation of these men is self-sacrificing. They have sympa- thies, affections, tastes, like other men ; but these are of neces- sity sacrificed by their calling, which requires them to leave home, the school, the Church, and all the pleasant amenities of life behind, and isolate themselves, for a season, from their fel- low-men ; and it is done cheerfully. There are no gloomy re- pinings at the hardness of their fate. They have independence of spirit like other men, but they yield even this to the disci- pline of the ship. Does the missionary need courage? Sea- men were never considered wanting in this. Difficulties do 31 not appall them. They live in the midst of these, and are trained from childhood to surmount them or endure. ‘They never say “I can’t:” that sentence has no place in the sailor’s vocabulary. They try. They have energy and enterprise, traits of character which, together with a noble daring, have ever allied their possessors to the gods. Witness a Columbus, a Bartolomé Dias, a Magellan, and a De Vries, a Hartstein, a Lynch, anda Maury. And are not the names of Paul Jones and Perry, of Warren and Rodgers, of McDonough and Deca- tur, of Nelson and Jervis, and a thousand others, the very synonyms of bravery itself? Is obedience to a divine command and to human instructions necessary? ‘These men have learned, from their first essay at seamanship, to “obey orders if they break owners.” Their practice is implicit obedience to all legitimate authority. Is money wanted? They are proverbially prodigal of their money, generous to a fault, always benevolent, and what is more, on account of their extreme credulity, are as easy of access as any men on the face of the earth, if approached in the right way. But above all other indications of their fitness to share in the great and self-denying work of missions is, first, their acquaintance with the language of the globe, and, second, that by virtue of their very occupation they are self- sustaining men. It is by no means a rare thing to find a sailor speaking from two to seven different languages—not always in grammatical exactness, I admit, but well enough to convey an influence for good or ill that shall be coéxtensive with eternity itself. Now let this self-sacrificing spirit, this cheerfulness and independence, this familiarity with danger, this energy and enterprise, this obedience and credulity, and this knowledge of language, be but sanctified and set apart to the service of God, and there are no more efficient helpers in the service of Christ under the sun than these very men of the Sea. Let the Church avail herself of these living epistles that may be (literally) known and read of all men. Let her labor for the conversion of the sailor, if she would be “adorned as a bride for her husband!” By way of illustrating God’s purpose with regard to these men, in the future, let me refer you to what He has done by a few, in the past, and what He is yet doing in the present. You will 32 then be ready to admit, I doubt not, that, in accordance with His own promise, He has made them “fishers of men.” In order to measure fully the influence of even one man, it is necessary to take in, at a glance, all his relations and depend- encies for time and for eternity. If this immense grasp of intel- lect, this limitless extent of conception, be necessary for the full estimate of the influence of one man, who shall estimate the influence of an entire class, whose destiny it is to compass the globe, and whose energies are world-wide in their application? Alas! The effort is vain. Yet, because we can not fathom the depths of this vast ocean, shall we refuse to launch forth upon its surface? wy yevorro! Let it not once be! For though sailors have long been enveloped in a moral night, during which the Sun of Righteousness has obscured His beams, we have, nevertheless, many bright stars, by which to direct our course ; morning stars, which have heralded the coming day. Among these John New- ton, the sailor preacher, shines out with no ordinary brightness. He was the son of a sailor. At seven years of age he was called to mourn the loss of a pious mother, whose heart was daily poured out in prayer for her darling boy. At eleven, he went to sea, and entered upon a career of sin and folly that more than once came near proving fatal. At nineteen, he sailed for the coast of Guinea; there he left the vessel, and for two years suffered from sickness, hunger, neglect, and cruelty, being for a time a servant of slaves. But affliction did not soften his heart. On. his return voyage to England he was a bold blasphemer and an avowed infidel. So wicked was he, that at one time the crew, wicked as they were themselves, considered him a Jonah, and determined to throw him over- board, to appease the storm. He survived, however, reached home, and rose to the position of master. Subsequently, while in command of a slave ship, he was awakened to a sense of his lost condition as a sinner. He was brought low after this by affliction, and, on recovering from his sickness, studied for the ministry, and became Curate of Olney, whence, after near six- teen years of faithful ministry, he was removed to the city of London, and took the pastoral charge of the church of St. Mary Woolnoth, which he retained until his death in 1807, a period of twenty-eight years. 33 Among many trophies of grace, which God gave him as seals to his ministry, may be mentioned the Poet Cowper, Thomas Scott, the author of the Commentary on the Bible, and Claudius Buchanan, the devoted missionary to the Hast. Mr. Buchanan wrote a sermon, entitled the “ Star in the East,” which was published in England. A young man on this side of the Atlantic read it, and was fired with zeal for the salvation of the heathen world. He induced others to feel with him for the spiritual wants of the destitute. That young man was Adoniram Judson; and his companions, Samuel Nott, Samuel J. Mills, Samuel Newell (husband of Harriet), James Richards, and Luther Rice, gave themselves to Christ, to go to the benighted of heathen lands. “It has been freyuently said that the world is indebted to these young men, at Andover, for the formation of the A. B. C. F. M” (Life of Judson, vol. i. p. 44). Thus may the influence of Adoniram Judson, and of each of his noble and self-denying wives and companions, in that far-off land of spiritual darkness; the faithfulness and missionary zeal of Buchanan; the sweet influences of the poems and hymns of Cowper; and the lucid, instructive, and practical Commentary on the Sacred Scriptures by Thomas Scott, all be traced to the influence, and sanctified energy, and Christian faithfulness of a converted sailor, a pious, devoted man of the Sea. Near the close of the life of John Newton, that noble fisher of men, God raised up another son of Neptune, whom he designed sending “far hence to the Gentiles,” to proclaim to them the unsearchable riches of Christ. John Wilson, the son of a sailor, a captain in the New- castle coal trade, went to. Sea at an early age, and rose in his profession, till he shipped as mate of an East Indiaman. He left her in Bengal, and entered the country service as master. By his intrepidity, while in that capacity, he succeeded, by bringing seasonable supplies, in rescuing the entire British army from famine, and saving the whole Carnatic to English rule. Being taken prisoner afterward by the French, he experienced twenty-two months of refined cruelty in chains ; but, on an exchange of prisoners, was released. He remained in the country a season, for the purpose of trade, and, in a little 3 BA while, amassed a fortune, on which, having returned to England, he retired and purchased a cottage at Horndean, in Hants. All this time he had “no hope,” and was “without God in the world.” His character was that of an unbeliever. God, however, needed a man for a particular purpose, and, by divine grace, made Cap- tain Wilson “willing in the day of his power.” Having brought him to a saving knowledge of Christ, the Lord called him to labor, and he, like Paul of old, asked, “ Lord, what wouldst thou have me to do?” About the time of his conver- sion, a band of faithful men and women, in London, became deeply interested in the inhabitants of those beautiful isles of the Southern Ocean, and, while Captain Wilson was asking that important question, “ Lord, what wouldst thou have me to do?” these Christian philanthropists were making the no less important inquiry, “ Whom shall we send ? and who will go for us ?” Captain Wilson solved their difficulty, by saying to them, “ Here am I, send me.” “ With great modesty and diffi- dence, but with a decided purpose, he intimated, that if the Society could not find a better conductor—which he wished and hoped they might—the service should not be impeded for lack of nautical skill, and that he was ready, without other reward than the satisfaction resulting from the service, to devote himself to the work, with whatever inconvenience to rt ut might be attended” (Mem. pp. 101, 102). There, indeed, spoke out the true sailor—the true Christian sailor. And they did send him. He took command of the good ship Duff. Gave himself, and more than two thousand five hundred dollars, to the mission, and “embarked once more on the deep, not to increase his substance, but to seek souls redeemed by the blood of the Lamb.” On the 10th of May, 1796, the Duff having on board thirty-six missionaries for the South Seas, and twenty-two officers and men, most of whom made profession of living under the influence of Christian prin- ciples, hoisted the missionary flag, bearing three white doves, with olive branches in their mouths, to the breeze, run her top- sails to the masthead, and stood out to sea on her mission of love. The missionaries were left at the different islands, and were blessed in their work. ‘Twenty-two years of privation, and hardship, and disappointment, and patient waiting, brought 35 the looked-for success. At the end of that period, King Pomare built the largest church edifice in the world, at Tahiti, and called it the Royal Mission Chapel. It was seven hundred and twelve feet long, and fifty four feet wide, having three pulpits. An audience of six thousand persons were assembled at its dedication. In 1825, Mr. Tyerman wrote, “ In twenty- one islands not an idolater remains,” twelve thousand could ‘read intelligibly, three thousand children were under instruc- tion, twenty-eight houses of worship were in existence, and eleven organized churches, with two thousand communicants, and eight thousand persons who had been baptized. The Sab- bath was scrupulously observed, and prayer-meetings were com- mon. Here, then, are results to which we can triumphantly point, when we hear the oft-repeated expression, “ He ts only a sailor.” For it is not to be denied, that a large share of these benefits is to be attributed to the self-denial and devotional zeal of the sailor. It has been very pertinently asked, by the biographer of Captain Wilson, “Who would have looked for a commander of a Christian mission, in an impious and infidel sailor, chained in a prison at Seringapatam? Who would have expected to have found tie man who returned from India, contradicting and blaspheming the faithful leader in the missionary cause (see Mem., p. 29), within five years afterward, on the quarterdeck, in the midst of prayer and praise, carrying the everlasting Gospel to the isles of the Pacific Ocean ?” A very remarkable result of Captain Wilson’s conversion, which was itself a result of the faithfulness of a pious sea cap- tain, yet remains to be told. We have seen that the existence of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions may be traced back to the pious efforts of the converted sailor, John Newton, and, strange to say, we can trace the origin of another extensive missionary enterprise, in this land, to Captain Wilson, of the ship Duff. Dr. A. Alexander states, that a copy of the narrative of this voyage was conveyed, by some one, to a village in Western Pennsylvania, in which was neither a church nor settled pastor. It went from house to house, and was extensively read. In one of the families was a bright, intelligent boy, whe, though net 36 then pious, determined, after reading the memoir, that, if he should ever become pious, he would go as a missionary to the heathen. Shortly afterward the town was visited by a mis- sionary, a revival followed, and “conversions occurred in every family, without an exception, in which the little volume had been read.” Among the first, was the boy of good resolutions. That boy is now Hon. Walter Lowrie, Corresponding Secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, ‘¢ Whom none name but to praise.” “He commenced a course of preparation for the work of the ministry, and of a missionary. Circumstances, which he could not control, just as he was concluding his studies, gave an entire change to his subsequent life, but without in any degree calling off his mind and affection from the heathen world” (Sketches from Life, p. 422). He consecrated his first-born son, John C. Lowrie, to the work. He went to India, and, while there, laid the foundation of missionary operations in Northern India. A second son, Walter M., whose praise is in all the Churches, went to China and became a martyr to his Christian zeal; a third son was “baptized for the dead,” and is now breaking the bread of life to the degraded millions of the Celestial Empire. The names of Walter Lowrie and his missionary sons will ever be among the sacredly cherished in the record of Christian heroes. Yet these are but some of the fruits of the consecration to God of that noble son of the Sea. One might well pause here, and exclaim with Virgil’s “Sinon” (though in a different spirit), “4b wno disce omnes.” But I can not forbear mentioning yet another illustration of the eminent usefulness of the sailor, when his soul is enlisted in the cause of Christ. About the time that the spirit of God was convincing Captain Wilson of “righteousness, temperance, and a judgment to come,” He was also moving on the hearts of two brothers in Scotland, who were sea captains, and bringing Robert and James Haldane to the feet of Christ. James became a preacher of righteousness, at the age of twenty-six, and in the market-places and streets, and on the hill- sides of Scotland, this young sailor preached Jesus Christ, and 37 Him crucified, and that, too, at a time when religious Scotland, the land of Knox and the Covenanters, had relapsed into a cold and formal condition, that unfitted them for the reception of the simple truth, as it is in Christ. Thousands, however, among “the common people,” heard the earnest sailor “ eladly,” and many were brought to distrust themselves, and rely solely on the blood and righteousness of Christ, for pardon and peace. Robert, the elder brother, sold his immense estates at Airthrey, for $350,000, intending to establish'a mission in Bengal, at his own charges, and to enter personally upon the work. But the Kast India government, at that time, refused to admit him and his companions into the territories under their control. He then devoted all his wealth to the education of young men for the ministry, of whom hundreds are now, doubtless, preaching “glad tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.” He made a visit to Geneva and Montauban, at a period when the reformed doctrines taught by Calvin, that illustrious expositor of divine truth, had fallen into contempt, and although an ignorance of the French language, and the coldness of the professors, were difficulties in his way, yet, as he had never learned to say, “I ean’t,” he tried to bring the “ true Evangel” home to the hearts of the students of theology he found there. To this end, he formed a Bible-class among them, in the Semi- nary, and, like another Aquilla—“ Expounded unto them the Word of God more perfectly.” His earnestness and faithfulness were blessed of God, and followed by a revival of pure and unde- filed religion, in which Merle d’Aubigné, the historian of the Reformotion, Rey. 8. R. L. Gaussen, Theological Professor at Geneva; the eminently successful and evangelical preacher Adolphe Monod, of Paris, Messrs. Malan, Galland, Pytt, Empi- tiez, and many others, who have been the master spirits of the Evangelical Church of France, during the present century, were, by the Holy Spirit, converted to Christ. Robert also purchased the Edinburg Circus, and converted it, and several similar places of amusement in the larger towns of Scotland, into tabernacles, or independent places of worship (Bib. Rep. 1852, p. 683). While James, whose resources were compara- tively slender, threw his whole soul into an energetic scheme of 38 itinerant lay preaching, which extended over the whole face of Scotland, and to its farthest and least frequented islands (Ibid, 681). Captain Haldane used to preach upon the side of Calton Hill, and elsewhere, in his blue coat and bright buttons, with his hair powdered and tied behind ; when his field ser- mons were announced by the town drummer, and delivered sometimes in the teeth of magisterial authority, and even of military force (Ibid, 682). Of these two faithful and pious seamen, an English writer says: “ He who had measured the depth and intensity of that eranitic resistance, which the Scottish Church (now cold and dead), opposed to the introduction of the truth, was at no loss for instruments fitted to overcome it. Like those iron-headed steamers, which are now employed in Polar navigation, to plow their way through field, and floe, and pack ice, these two gallant, stately, and formidable vessels, with their prows sheathed in heaven-proof armor, and the fire of the Spirit in their bosoms,” plowed their way through the ice of indifference — in which the Church had been so long bound. The immediate proximate result of the labors of these two devoted brothers, was, that Scotland was moved to her very centre by the lever of Evangelical truth, in the hands of these men. Who shall compute the sheaves which, in the great harvest day, will be gathered from the seed sown by these faithful, zealous, and self- denying men of the Sea? But we need not go to England or Scotland for examples, while we have so many in our own day and land, aye, and in our own Churches, too. While I speak our own seamen are scat- tering the Word of God in every land, and on every Sea. These lips have, during the past year, preached the Gospel to sea- men, representing sixty different nationalties, and speaking more than a hundred and fifty different languages, many of whom have given the best possible evidence of their interest in Christ, in the laborious efforts they are putting forth, for the conversion of the world. I have, in my possession, volumes—not pages— but volumes of correspondence on this subject, going to show their zealous coéperation in the work of disseminating the Gospel of Christ among the nations of the earth. Yet how few, even in the Church of Christ, think enough of