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The hymn beginning:

Jesus, Thy blood and righteousness My beauty are, my glorious dress: 'Midst flaming worlds in these arrayed, With joy shall I lift up my head,

was written by Zinzendorf, whose culture and piety appear so conspicuously in the more than two thousand hymns which came from his pen. It was suggested by a picture in the Düseldorf Gallery, "Ecce Homo," representing Jesus crowned with thorns. From the pathetic face above he turned to the legend beneath: "All this I have done for thee; what hast thou for me?" The vision and the question led him to adopt for his life motto: "I have but one passion, and that is He, and only He." (Text.)

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Christ's Fulness—See.

CHRIST'S LOVE

Cyrus, the Persian, loved Lysander, one of his great generals, so much that, it is said, he exprest his readiness to melt down his throne of massive gold and give it to him.

But Christ, our King, left His throne for the love of the humblest soul. (Text.)

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Christian Currents—See.

Christian Experience—See.

CHRISTIAN FULNESS

A Christian is an unfailing spiritual Niagara, not a cow-track pool to be drunk dry by a thirsty sunbeam.—

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CHRISTIAN HONESTY

A Chinese Christian ferryman, poor in money but rich in faith, one night ferried a man over the river. After throwing the cash for his fare into the bottom of the boat, the passenger departed hurriedly. The Christian went to pick up the money and found a magnificent pair of gold bracelets which the man had dropt. He tied up his boat and tried to find his passenger, but he was lost in the crowd. According to the Chinese law, he could keep the bracelets, but he did not feel comfortable in doing this. He went to the preacher and together they took the bracelets to the mandarin, and later it was found that a wealthy Chinese had been robbed and the man who dropt the bracelets was a thief. The owner received them very thankfully and gave the mandarin a small reward for the finder. The incident imprest the official very much. "I have never seen or heard anything like this," he said. "Your religion must be a true religion and your God a loving God, thus to influence a poor man to give up wealth for conscience sake." He praised the boatman, who went to his poor, damp, mud hut on the bank of the river with a contented mind.

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CHRISTIAN SPIRIT, THE

The King of Italy displayed a truly royal spirit when he went to the earthquake region at Messina and Reggio, and personally assisted the sufferers. An account in the press says of this:

The King has made himself dear to all his subjects, especially to those in the earthquake zone, by his prompt and personal aid in times of disaster. This makes plausible a story told by his companions to-day, who say that as the royal pair and the crowd surrounding them made their way through the ruins a man pinned under a great block of stone and supposed to be dead raised his head, repeated the cries of acclaim and dropt back dead. (Text.)

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Christian, The, and Christ—See.

Christian Travelers in Foreign Lands—See .

CHRISTIAN UNITY

The Rev. John Fawcett, D.D., wrote the hymn, "Blest be the tie that binds"—perhaps the noblest hymnic expression of Christian brotherhood; and the author is himself one of the best examples of its sentiment. Brought to God by the Methodists, under the ministry of Whitefield, he joined that body, and became later pastor of a Baptist church in Bradford, England, and finally was settled at Wainsgate. Receiving a call to succeed the celebrated Dr. Gill in London, he had his goods packed ready for removal, when his loving people gathered, weeping, to say farewell, which so touched him and his good wife that he said, "I will stay; you may unpack my goods, and we will live for the Lord lovingly together." This experience, it was, which led the author to compose the now popular hymn. (Text.)

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