. Christian herald and signs of our times. HOW TO WARM THE WORLD. A Sermon Preached by Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage, , at Washington, D. C, on theText: Psalm 147 : 17, Who can stand before his cold?. HE Almanac saysthat Winter isended and Springhas come, butthe winds, andthe frosts, andthe thermometer,in some placesdown to zero,deny it. ThePsalmist lived in a more genial climatethan this, and yet he must sometimes havebeen cut by the sharp weather. In thischapter he speaks of the snow like wool,the frost like ashes, the hailstones like mar-bles, and describes the congealment of low-est temperatu
. Christian herald and signs of our times. HOW TO WARM THE WORLD. A Sermon Preached by Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage, , at Washington, D. C, on theText: Psalm 147 : 17, Who can stand before his cold?. HE Almanac saysthat Winter isended and Springhas come, butthe winds, andthe frosts, andthe thermometer,in some placesdown to zero,deny it. ThePsalmist lived in a more genial climatethan this, and yet he must sometimes havebeen cut by the sharp weather. In thischapter he speaks of the snow like wool,the frost like ashes, the hailstones like mar-bles, and describes the congealment of low-est temperature. We have all studied thepower of the heat. How few of us havestudied the power of the frost? Whocan stand before his cold ? This chal-lenge of the text has many times been ac-cepted. October 19th, 1812, Napoleonsgreat army began its retreat from hundred and fifty thousand men, fif-ty thousand horses, six hundred pieces ofcannon, forty thousand stragglers. It wasbright weather when they started fromMoscow, but soon something wrathier thanthe Cossacks swooped upon their army of Arctic blasts, with icicles forbayonets and hailstones for shot, andcommanded by voice of te
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