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Complaints from without,

Constitution of the Students of Bethany College,

Consumption,

222

286

563

Conversations at the Carleton House.-Family Culture, 49, 119, 171

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Family Culture.-Conversations at the Carleton House, 49, 119, 171

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Montague, Elder Philip T., to Elder Thomas M. Henley,

Moral bearings of Geology,

Mormonism,

Mystery of Mesmerism and Somnambulism explained,

MVay James, Trial of,

567

197, 270

190, 358, 418, 460, 497, 538

139

282

NEWS from the Churches, 38, 89, 141, 186, 236, 273, 320, 376, 431

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Our Colleges,

Owe no man any thing,

PARENTAL Example,

Past, the Present, and the Future,

Peck, Elder J. M.,

Plea of the American Home Missionary Society,

Police Regulations of the Students of Bethany College,

Popery, Aspirations of,

Population of the United States,

446, 502
95

192, 324, 432, 527,572

557

96

190

178

140

85

72, 253, 412

422

285

496

429

Power of Prejudice,

Prayer,

Preface,

523

179

3

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Reformation, scriptural,

471

276,571
288

95, 239

85

234

528

311

142

407

Review of Beecher's article on the import of baptidso,

159, 201, 247

Rhemish Testament,

132

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Sermon on Debt,

Signs of the Times,

Sin unto Death and the Sin against the Holy Spirit,
Solemnity in Public Worship,

Spirit of God,

Stevenson, Rev. W. W., an Address delivered by,

Success of the Gospel,

Synagogue Worship,

295

177

181

85

533, 550

481

570

342

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PREFACE.

We now commence the twentieth volume of our editorial labors.Through the kind providence of our heavenly Father, not one month in so many years has passed without our regular issue of a new missionary. At the close of the present volume we shall have issued more than a million of monthly numbers. These, of course, have done, and are doing, something in the great moral change which is incessantly going forward in this community. This, however, is but a single item in our editorial labors.

And when we think of the sermons that are preached-the discussions that are in progress-the tracts that are issued, and the volumes that are circulated on the great subjects of religion and morality, wo are no little astonished at the labors, and means, and instrumentalities that are requisite to the demands of society in this great moral regeneration now advancing with every pulse of life in every part of the civilized world.

The human mind seems to need the incessant stimulus of new ideas, of thought, and motive to raise it above the ordinary level of mere animal enjoyment. Man is naturally indolent, and requires some impulse from without to rouse him into action. His appetites and passions will sometimes do this; but the range of their activities is very limitted compared with that of his intellectual and moral powers. The Press, together with the facile and abundant means of social intercourse, keep the energies of all employed, who have either a mind to perceive, or a heart to feel the important duties of human life and the high destiny to which man is born under the reign of the Messiah.

The constant developments of the Periodical Literary, and Religious Press, when well conducted, minister continuous edification and comfort to the intelligent, and exert a powerful and happy influence in the formation of human character, and in elevating the standard of public taste and moral excellence.

If there be any one subject more than another the peculiar burthen of this age, it is the subject of Education in its various departments, and in all the ways and means of its advancement. The civilized world is just awaking to this subject. It is about commencing one grand crusade against ignorance and vice-against irreligion and profanity. It is now a demonstrated proposition that the only effectual

preventive of atheism, anarchy, and misrule, is a rational and moral education. Morals neglected, and intellectual development is a public calamity.

If, then, the volume for the year 1842 be distinguished by any one subject more than another, it is intended that it shall be for its devotion to the subject of Education, domestic, scholastic, and ecclesiastic.

Next to this is the subject of Ecclesiastic Organization. Within the whole precincts of the progressive reformation of this age, there is nothing more at fault than the whole affair of church organization. We have the words 'co-operation,' ‘organization,' and 'order' in con stant employment; but who has evinced a practical understanding of them in reference to the public interests of a great community? The calls upon us for a full investigation of this subject are imperious as well as numerous. It must have its full share of our attention in the

present volume.

The signs of the times are also more and more imposing. That we are approaching some great crisis in human affairs is daily becoming more and more the persuasion of many intelligent and devout professors. These, of course, together with disquisitions on Prophecy, will still command a portion of our attention. But the past is the best pledge we can give for the future. We annually learn to promise less, and daily study the philosophy of doing, rather than of saying what we intend to do.

A. CAMPBELL.

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