The pathway of life ; Intended to lead the young and the old into paths of happiness, and to prepare them for a holy companionship with him whose kingdom is as boundless as his love . or until there was no other pauperism to torture. Billions ofdollars spent in wars to destroy men, who will furnish the statistics of the value ofthat precious blood that was shed to save us ? THE GRACE OF GOD. One of John Bunyans great books is entitled Grace Abounding. It is allof grace that I am saved has been on the lips of hundreds of dying boy Sammy was right when, being examined for admissio


The pathway of life ; Intended to lead the young and the old into paths of happiness, and to prepare them for a holy companionship with him whose kingdom is as boundless as his love . or until there was no other pauperism to torture. Billions ofdollars spent in wars to destroy men, who will furnish the statistics of the value ofthat precious blood that was shed to save us ? THE GRACE OF GOD. One of John Bunyans great books is entitled Grace Abounding. It is allof grace that I am saved has been on the lips of hundreds of dying boy Sammy was right when, being examined for admission into Churchmembership, he was asked: Whose work was your salvation ? and he answered:** Part mine and part Gods. Then the examiner asked: What part did youdo, Sammy ? and the answer was: I opposed God all I could, and He did therest. Oh ! the height of it, the depth of it, the length of it, the breadth of it—the grace of God ! Mr. Fletcher having written a pamphlet that pleased the king, the king offeredto compensate him, and Fletcher answered: There is only one thing I want, andthat is more grace. Yes, blood-bought readers, grace to live by and grace to die by. Grace that. PAUL BEING TAKEN AWAY FROM PRISON TO ROME.—i^w^w a Painting by Bonn (359) 36o THE PATHWAY OF LIFE. saved the publican, that saved Lydia, that saved the dying thief, that saved thejailer, that saved me. But the riches of that grace will not be fully understooduntil heaven breaks in upon the soul. An old Scotchman who had been a soldierin one of the European wars, was sick and dying in one of our American one desire was to see Scotland and his old home, and once again walk theheather of the highlands and hear the bagpipes of the Scotch regiments. Theiii^dit that the old Scotch soldier died, a young man, somewhat reckless but kind-hearted, got a company of musicians to come and play under the old soldierswindow, and among thi instruments was a bagpipe. The instant that themusicians began, th


Size: 1407px × 1775px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidpathwayoflif, bookyear1894