oy MURDER BRINGS FEAR Christ's Deeds Arouse Guilt — (Eélior’s note:— The {0l- |der for the beheading of John, dowing material rela:ing to wiih ef Christin ‘Béscstine National Council of Churches ) " By R.H. RAMSEY am details surrounding | murder of John the Baptist | wee miraculously fed (Matthew during the winter of A.D. 29 |14:13-21), the rist , As Jesus’ fame grew, Herod |icism and unbelief directed to- Antipas, who had given the or- ward Jesus and His message e———— Know What The Bible Teaches And ff thy hand offend thee, cut it off: it is better for thee to enter into life maimed, than having two hands to go into Hell, inte the fire that never shall be quenched: where the worm dieth not, and the fire fs not quenched. And if thy Post offend thee, cut it off; it is better for thee to enter halt into life, than having two feet to be cast into Hell, into the fire that never shall be quenched; where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched. thee, pluck it-out: it is better for thee te enter into the Kingdom ef God with one eye, than having Two eyes to be cast into Hell fire, where their Worm dieth not, and the fire fs hot quenched. (Mark 9.43 to 48). For God so loved the world, that He gave His only. begotton Sen; that WHOSO- EVER believeth on Him, should not Perish: (go into Hell). but have everlasting life. (John. 3.16) way, the Truth and the life; No man cometh unto the Father but by me. (John. 14-6). “.......We must be saved; (Acts 4-12), Protos eee - “Fall, G. A, l L ii 1 ras F It Z He i il life. had culminated in the death of became fearful that this person | John the Baptist. The multitude tomorrow's Sunday School les- (Jesus was none other than John |that had gathered at Bethsaida son is based on copyrighted |t'e Baptist the Di- (Though ic to hear Christ teach represented convinced that Jesus /the largest number of persons jwould come and slay’ him, the gathered together on any one) fame of Christ's deeds of mercy im the U.S. and is used by jaroused in Herod a guilty con- | istry. |science; yet Herod R self, unable to repent and thus occasion during all of His min- By the time Jesus had taught : all day long, the throng was The cqnins verses of today’s his great opportunity passed| hungry. Instead of telling them lesson, Matthew’ 14, relate the away forever. At the time when the 5,000\or to go and eat and then re-| turn, Christ took five loaves of bread and two fishes from those present and, by miraculous pow- er, continued to break-these and pass out food until all had eaten | |to forget their hunger and fast, and were filled. fed, both physicially and spirit- ually, Christ sent the discriples Galilee in a small boat and went up on a mountain to pray. During. the night a sudden storm— to which the Sea of Gal- flee is exceptionally prone -blew up, and the disciples were hard. af'>at, let alone make any head- way toward either shore. Utter- ly exhausted, and lacking stren- gth to contin_> the battle against the wind afd the waves, the disciples were very close to And ff thine eye offend said; — I am the Come and hear more of the “Old time Bible Are Ml : ac! al ewe - i FF drowning when Christ suddenly appeared to them, walking across the unruly waters of the sea. Now the disciples were doubly afraid: of their own fate and thinking that the Christ they saw was but a ghost. But Jesus calmed their fears to such ex- tent that the impulsive Peter asked to be allowed to walk upon the water also. , His Lord said, “Come,”’ and without hesitation Peter yielded his will to the will of the Lord. He placed his frail, feeble hu- man foot upon the wave, and he did not sink; he was upheld and FORGOTTEN ANYTHING - 2227727727272722? 43 '6 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat., Feb. 18, 1965. Traditicn and Christian Duty After the multitudes had been | |meeds more —Matthew 14: et ae ne : traditions of their own. Such hypocrisy and knavery, accord-| MEMORY VERSE:—“The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to Salvation Army Reappraises Its Place In Modern World and a man could get drunk for|army may be worth today. Each LONDON (AP) — Facing its|a penny. Toughs threw mud,|coyntry has its own national | the Salvation | stones and fireworks at Booth’s budget, and balance sheets are to the other side of the Ses of /ar'ts Jeeus, was whet Isaiah had im mind in his prophecy (Is- aiah 29:13). The ceremonial un- | cleanness of which the Phari- | sees and ecribes complain is a. matter, moral unclean- | ness — the breaking of the Com- : pressed to keep the small boat). waments — is more to be . By GODFREY ANDERSON 100th birthday, “|Army is making a reappraisal | meetings. of its role in the modern world.| A Booth—Major Fleur Booth, | try. The long-ter:.. strategy of sav-,| great-granddaughter of William! One big sideline in Britain is ing souls and exposing evil s0-| Booth—is in charge of field the Salvation Army Assurance cial conditions remains the training and practical evangel- Society Ltd. short-term tactics istic work at the William Booth! Then there's the Reliance ; | International Training College, Bank, which exists mainly to Poverty—at least in Europe! sprawling complex of build-| facilitate Salvation Army finan- North America—is not the great problem it was 100 years || ondon , kitchens are no a longer needed for the near-| * | starving. But ‘other social prob- lems are still around and some of them are worse than ever— are being changed. jings at Denmark Hill, South cial business. There's the Sal- |IN 69 COUNTRIES | plies Ltd., wihch allocates all The Salvation Army is active its profits to the army's central | in 69 countries, including 11 in| funds. | Europe. It uses 162 languages; The Salvation Army Fire In- for preaching the Word. It! surance Corporation Ltd., sells operates from about 18, cen-| policies to the general public as tres, including more than 2,000' well as writing insurance on all eect ei AE nearly in man debris of broken hc-2es, welfare’ state doesn't people gemmgnted of the need fer calve-| Says Swedish-born Commis- | sioner Erik Wickberg, chief of Lf ryt d g § B | published annually in each coun- | | vationist Publishing and Sup- non-Christian lands. Nearly, Red Shield services provide ILLUSTRATED SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that Charlottetown Bible Chapel 235 Cumberland St., at Longworth Ave. i 11:00 a.m.—Bible Hour and Sanday School 3 ioseee 8:4 p.m.—J by Mr. Stabr slides, part 3: _ “Calvary and the Tomb’’, a study of the two sites in Jerusalem claimed for the death and burial of Christ. “The Old Book - - - The New Birth -- the Precious Blood > + + the Blessed Hope” SPRING PARK UNITED CHURCH Dunkirk & Kirkwood Minister: Rev. Clayton C. Lewis Organist: Mrs. Ron H. Atkinson Director: Mr. Roy M_ Smaliman 390 a.m.—Sunday Church School 9: 11:00 a.m.—Nursery 11:00 aam.—'‘THE REDEEMING GOD" . Jr. Choir: ‘“‘Royal Banners Of The Cross 7:00 p.m.—Adult Study Group —"God And His Purpose”’ “You are Welcome to Worship with Us” St. Peter's Cathedral - The Ven. Archdeacon J. R. Davies, M.A., Rector The Reverend Canon E. M. Malone, M.A., D.D. Honorary Assistant Priest Miss Suzanne Brenton, Lic. Mus., Organist 30 six leprosaria, 10 insti-| Friday hoping to call on Soviet for the blind, 30 centres | Foreign Minister Andrei Gro- alcoholics, and 51 residence’ myko. Officials said Thomson officially went to Moscow to business ventures sign an Anglo-Soviet “cultural prospered, although no one agreement, but that this could - proximate figure of what the the Vietnamese crisis. career salvationists are “ eae ber wee dan entero spiritual well-being? A family needs a reli- and steadfast + pe . CONTRIBUTED TO THE CAUSE OF ~~ JoHN Ww Real state cy + CO "i a: i i i i f i i i ilps Hit The Salvation Army of E a ~ - SS Villa Avenu Major Ronald H. Wasker SEPTUAGESIMA Sunday: Directory Class—9:30 a.m. Sunday School—10 a.m. . | Holiness Meeting—11 a.m. Salvation Meeting—7 p.m. Friday: Young People’s Hobby Class—4:15 p.m. ' A WELCOME AWAITS YOU AT THE ARMY” CALVARY TEMPLE ~ : PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLIES OF CANADA Upper Prince Street Rev. C. K. Benn, Pastor L, Perry, Assistant Pastor 9:15 a.m. —Radio- Summerside Station 9:45 a.m.—Sunday School, Film Strip on Moses 11:00 a.2n.—Worship, “REMOVE NOT THE OLD LAND- MARK’ 7:30 p.m.—Evangelistic Service, L. Perry, Speaker Soloist: Gene MacLellan FULL GOSPEL.CHURCH.... | The Kirk of S. James The Reverend T. H. B. Somers, M.A. 8.T.M., Minister SERMON BY THE REV'D. DONALD M. QUIGG, BA., B.D. DISTRICT SECRETARY, CANADIAN SOCTETY. ia to Thee” (Tallis’s Canon) Anthem: “ Invisible, God only wise” ae 1 Chancel Choir m “THY WORD IS A LAMP UNTO MY FEET, AND A LIGHT UNTO MY PATH.” Central Christian. Church The "than | 3,000 welfare institutions, includ-| services, an army trustee com- es St peel yen em | services, an army truce Mrs. B. W. Patterson, Choir Director clinics. hostels homeless men and women, 66 employment | GOES TO MOSCOW va Peel eases called Septuagesima bureaus, 88 maternity homes| LONDON (Reuters)—George 8:45 am —Mattine nity hospitals, 145 children’s| ter vot at tor foreign. efteire. 9:45 a.m. eee ; 8\ter of state affairs, Baed Lie and homes, 30 boarding schools. 115\teft here by air for Moscow 11:00 a.m.—vebrant and Preacher: Thy Rev. John St. Paul's Anglican Church Established 1769 by Royal Foundation The Rev. F. Louis Elias, L.S.1., Rector and Choir Organist Director George A. Thompson, F.R.C.0.., (CHM) A.R.C.M 8:30 a.m.—HOLY COMMUNION (Laymen’s Corporate Holy Communion followed by breakfast at Parish Hall) 9:45 a.m.—SUNDAY SCHOOL, Junior, Senior, and Bible Classes 11:00 a.m.—S' and UNDAY SCHOO Crib Nursery. L, Primary, Beginners Classes, Subject: ““MAN NEEDS GOD” Anthem: Creator 7:00 p.m.—E GUEST “A HYMN OF PRAISE TO THE ”* by EH. Thiman. NENING PRAYER and SERMON PREACHER—THE REV'D J. B. HIBBITTS, M.A., Ph.D. YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND ja TRINITY UNITED CHURCH Chariottetown, P. E. L Ministers: Rev. Joho G. £. Ball, B.A. Rev. Gerald G Wyrwas, B.A.. B.D. Organist and Director: Mr. J. B. Herdman 9:30 a.m.—Bible Classes, Intermediate and Junior Depts. 11:00 a.m.—Nursery, 11:0 a.m.— Primary and Kindergarten MEN” Rev. John Bail "MISSING Anthem: “‘O Ye That Love The Lord” “COME AS YOU ARE AND SIT WHERE YOU PLEASE” “Fist Baptist Church Rev, Malcolm F. Harlow, B.A. B.D., Minister Mrs. V, L. Dingwell, Organist and Choir Directer 9:4 a.m—Sunday Schoo! for all ages 11:00 a.m—Sermon: “HOW TO STAY UP- RIGHT” Solo: Miss Ariene MacDonald * 7:00 p.m.—Sermon: “LIFE AT IT’S BEST” Anthem “The Lord’s My Shep- herd” (Crimond) 6:15 p.m—YOUTH INTER - DENOMINATIONAL FIRE- All young people invited. lay—Youth Pastors will conduct ’ Discussion: LOOKS AT SCIENCE AND A CORDIAL WELCOME AWAITS YOU <. - 7:30 p2m.— ,