May 1, 1904 I shall drink of, and be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with?” As not every one is worthy to be invited to such participation, so also not every one who is invited will so appreciate the privilege as to participate in this matter joyfully and gratefully. Let us each resolve and say to the Lord, as did James and John, “Lord, we are able’—we are willing. By thine aid we will come off conquerors and more than conquerors. THE NEW WINE—THE JOYS OF THE KINGDOM Our Lord declared that he would no more participate in the fruit of the vine until he would drink it new in the kingdom. The thought is not that he would drink new or unfermented wine in the kingdom with them, but that until in the kingdom the new or antitypical thing represented in the wine would not be fulfilled. When the kingdom shall come all the sufferings and trials of the present time will be past, the treading of the winepress, the wine making, will all be over, and instead the wine shall be that of joy and exhilaration, representing the joys and the blessings beyond imagination or expression that will be the portion of all those who truly have fellowship with ZION’S WATCH TOWER (143-147) our Redeemer in the sufferings of this present time and also in the glories that shall follow. The kingdom time is very close at hand now— certainly 1800 years and more nearer than it was when our Lord spoke these words—and the evidences of its steady inauguration are multiplying on every hand. Our hearts should be proportionately rejoicing in anticipation, and we should proportionately be faithful in the present time in the drinking of the cup of sorrow, suffering, shame and contumely, and thus testifying of our love and our loyalty. Following this was the discourse which has blessed so many of the Lord’s people down through intervening centuries recorded by John. (chapters 15, 16, 17) Then they sang a hymn and went out to the Mount of Olives—to the Garden of Gethsemane and to fresh trials upon all of the disciples. So it has seemed to us that with every recurrence of the Memorial season, and every fresh symbolization of our pledge to the Lord, come fresh trials, fresh testings, fresh siftings upon the Lord’s people. Who shall be able to stand? Let us hold fast the confidence of our rejoicing firm unto the end, hold fast the faithrul Word, hold fast the exceeding great and precious promises hold fast to our Passover Lamb, our Deliverer! Vout. XXV ALLEGHENY, PA., MAY 15, 1904 No. 10 VIEWS FROM THE WATCH TOWER POSSIBILITIES OF A EUROPEAN WAR Newspapers and magazines are discussing the possibility of the Russo-Japan war eventuating in a world-wide war. It is eencrally conceded that it would be the part of wisdom for Russia to back down and sue for peace proposals, but equally certain that the pride of that great nation will hinder such a course. If, therefore, the land fighting should go against Russia it ig surmised by many that her diplomacy would manage to bring on a general war, in which her own defeat by little Japan would be measurably lost sight of in the glare of still more momentous conflicts. Matters have this appearance. though they may not reach such a culmination very soon, Meantime the great nations are preparing for emergencies especially Great Britain, France and Germany. Naval warfare is steadily undergoing a radical change: the prospect is that the great battleships will soon be of little value under the new conditions. The new models of fighting craft are the autohoats and the submergible-boats. The latter can be sunk completely under water—100 feet if desired—in six seconds, and can thus travel toward their opponents unobserved, and can discharge torpedoes at close range and be gone. England has about twenty of these boats nearly completed and a large numher ordered. France has more, and by the close of this year she will have at least thirty. These boats carry gasoline for fuel—cnough for a 400-mile journey, and require but small crews. They would, of course, operate near a harbor or in conjunction with larger vessels. The auto-boat can be operated by one intrepid man, can travel twenty miles an hour and in the dark could creep close to a great ship and attack her with a torpedo. A large, swift ocean liner could carry twenty or thirty of these little auto-boats and make great havoc—in the night or in a fog. Experts are speculating on the possibilities of these two new craft and conclude that no port would be secure against them —that four-million-dollar battle ships with hundreds of men aboard could be sunk almost instantly and without a sight of their enemy. Others still believe that air-motors will soon come into prominence and be used in dropping explosives upon ships and cities and armies. . We are to expect great things—shortly. The passions as well as the ingenuity of men will ere long wreck present civilization according to the Scriptures. We recall our Lord’s prophecy of the days now near at hand, “Except those days were shortened there should no flesh be saved.” But, for the elect’s sake, they shall be shortened ;—the “elect,” Head and body, will assume the kingdom control at the right time to stay the awful anarchy which will follow the great war. The prospects for the immediate future are conceded on all sides to be more favorable for peace, because of the recent amicable settlement by Great Britain and France of differences between them which have long been a source of friction. The large navies of these two nations far outweigh all the combined navy power of the world. THE ESSENTIAL UNITY OF ALL RELIGIONS Rev, R. Heber Newton, D. D., of New York City (Episcopalian), in a recent article in The North American Review, proves to his own satisfaction, and doubtless to the satisfaction of many of his readers, that all the religions of the world are really one;—that they differ merely in proportion to their de grees of evolution. This is the view of “higher critics” and evolutionists the world over. It ignores and laughs to scorn the Bible teaching of Adam, Eve and the fall. (Rom. 5:12 and 1:21-28) It has no place for Jesus except as a great teacher like unto Confucius, Moses, Darwin, Spencer, and others, His work as Redeemer—as the «acrifice for man’s sins, by which alone reconciliation to God was possible—it entirely discredits. but ignores because a few “good people” still so believe. Doctor Newton likens the religion of the world to a great tree with many branches and sub-branches. Buddhism is a branch, Brahminism is another, Confucianism is another, Mohammedanism is another, Christianity is another—its various shoots and smaller branches representing the various sects and denominations of Catholicism and Protestantism. As usual, the wisdom of this world misses the mark it thinks it hits. It is Devildom that the Doctor sees as a tree with these many branches. In every branch it has a “form of godliness” to deceive men—to satisfy the craving originally a part of man’s nature when he was in the image of God—a craving which since persists notwithstanding the fall, though now through the blinding influences of Satan deteriorated into superstition and formality. Let us ask the Apostle Paul's inspired judgment on the subject. He tells us respecting these heathen worshipers that they worship devils and not God. ce his testimony in 1 Cor. 10:20, 21; 1 Tim. 4:1. When the Apostle would use a tree to illustrate the church, he pictured a very different tree and very different branches. This inspired account is found in Rom. xi. There his olive-tree represents not all nations, but the one nation of Israel, each Jew a branch, drawing strength and vitality from the root, namely the oath-bound covenant made with Abraham and his seed. The Apostle shows plainly that no other tree is recognized in the divine plan, and tells us that when the Jews rejected Jesus all the rejectors were broken off from the relationship the tree represented, and that only believers in Jesus were privileged to he engrafted to take the places of the broken-off branches, as members of the spiritual seed of Abraham.—Gal. 3:29. Our position as Gentiles he distinctly pictures as “children of wrath even as others”—strangers and aliens and foreigners —without God and having no hope in the world. (Eph. 2:3, 19, 12) How different the view of this modern Divinity Doctor from that of the great Apostle to the Gentiles! Mark the agreement of the Apostle John’s testimony. He says of the Christian believers and all the world outside,—“We know that we are of God, and the whole world lieth in the Wicked One.” (1 John 5:19) This reminds us of our Lord’s words to some of the nominal Israelites: “Ye are of your father the devil.” (John 8:44) Doctor Newton says:— “Religion develops the same great institutions in ditferent lands and ages which the varying religions of man vary indefinitely. “The Church, spelled with a capital C, was an institution of Chaldea, India and Egypt, millenniums ago, as it is of Italy and England and America today. The Buddhist felt toward his ‘order’ much as the Romanist feels toward his church. A sacred ministry, a class of men set apart for the divine offices of religion, would have been found of old in Babylon and Thebes, as it is found now in Rome and London. The pagan temple was the Christian basilica and cathedral, baptized with another [3365]
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