Contenta. No. 1. Back Again to work. A 2. The Plan of the Church in a Stuman life. 3. Some of the moral Issues of the Political Campaign. 4. Obligation. By R. Collyer. 5. Drought in Nature and in stuman life. • Nothing But Leaves. Series on the Passing and the Permanent 7. I. Religions and in Religion. 4. 11. Theologies and Theology 9. The Two Harrests. By R. Collyer. 10. III. The Universe. 11." Faring Toward Sunset." 12. The Stuman Jesus more Helpful to the Religious Life than the Deified Christ. 13. The Century of Wonder. Twentieth Century: A Prophecy. 14. 15. 5. Prayer. By R. Collyer. 16. I. Kan. 17. K. Bibles. 18. II. Gods and God. 17 Tevo Emigrants. By R. Collyer. 20. III. Saviors. ૨૫. વા (2.1. Prayer! 23. The Good Twenty Mine. By A. Collyer. 24. X. The Churche 25.XI. Stells. 26. XII. Heavens. 27. The Resurrection Life. 28. We Would See Jesus. By R. Collyer. 32. The Loneliness of Jesus. 34. The Price of June. 35. go a-fishing. Stall of Fame, or Qur Debt to Great Mene. 36. Man and the Animal World. 37. Elijah 's Complaint and Cure. By R. Collyer. 38. A Plea for a Restful Life. 39. Vacation Religion. Published Weekly. Price $1.50 a year, or 5 cents single copy 'Some great cause, God's new Messiah" MESSIAH PULPIT NEW YORK (Being a continuation of Unity Pulpit, Boston) Entered at the Post-ofice, Boston, Mass., as second-class mail matter Christianity the Science of Manhood. 187 pages. 1873 $1.00 The Religion of Evolution. 253 pages. 1876 Life Questions. 159 pages. 1879 The Morals of Evolution. 191 pages. 1880 Talks about Jesus. 161 pages. 1881 Belief in God. 176 pages. 1882. Beliefs about Man. 130 pages. 1882 Beliefs about the Bible. 206 pages. 1883 The Modern Sphinx. 160 pages. 1883 The Evolution of Christianity. 178 pages. 1892 Is this a Good World? 60 pages. 1893. Paper BACK AGAIN TO WORK. I FIND my text in the tenth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, one clause of the thirty-third verse,-" Thou hast well done that thou art come." "The man without a country" could have found very little pleasure in travel. He had no point of departure, no place where his heart was anchored, and to which he might return. I have always found —if I may use a phrase that sounds like an Hibernicism — that coming back again was the pleasantest part of going away. I hope that all of you have been away during the past few months. I congratulate you on your coming back and facing once more the tasks, the labors, taking up once more the burdens of life. I am sorry for you if there are any here who have not been able to go away. Those of us who have been have brought experiences, memories, inspirations, that are a solace to us when we stop and think, that are rest when we are weary, that are life and impulse when we face the labors that await us. Some of you, perhaps, have been in the mountains. You have looked unto the hills, as did the Psalmist, from whence he felt that divine help came. You have sat in their shadows. You have felt that here was something strong, something mighty, something enduring. I have pictures of mountains that are to me a perennial possession. I remember Rainier or Tacoma. I love the latter name,- the grandest mountain I have seen in all the world; perhaps impressing me so because I could see it all, from base to summit, green with its grasses and its trees half-way up, white as it kissed the blue of the heavens, with its thousands of feet of altitude. I may never see it again; but the |