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now, if I had a thousand souls,-yes! I feel if I had ten thousand worlds of souls, and they were all sunk as black and deep in sin as Sodom, or the Jews, or any Gentiles,yet I can so fully believe in the precious blood of atonement, that if they will repent and go by faith to that precious fountain of blood, I firmly believe it will wash them all as white as snow, and make them all meet for glory. Oh! the real enjoyment, even in anticipating everlasting life! no angel tongue can tell it; but feeling it fills my soul. I am led to exclaim, 'Oh, the depth of the wisdom and love of God.""

Many owned him as their guide to Christ, and numbers more will hail him in the kingdom as their spiritual father. The star of the working man of Lambeth will shine with an effulgence among those whose whole time was dedicated to the Lord, yet accomplished less. He died suddenly on November 1st, 1852, having been violently thrown down by an infuriated bullock, while on his way to his labour of love. He passed away amidst the lamentations of Lambeth poor, and his fellow-leaders; but he reached the glory where sorrow and sighing are fled for ever away. "Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth: yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labours; and their works do follow them."

My readers who are office-bearers in the church, elders and deacons, or class-leaders, Sabbath-school teachers, district visitors, would do well to peruse the stimulating story of Father Reeves' Life. They cannot rise from its perusal without feeling ashamed of their poor services, little sacrifices for, and lack of interest in, the cause of Christ and the salvation of souls. Brethren, let us be aroused! Let us live to the Lord, and make our offices fruitful in a rich harvest of souls won to Christ. This man wrought ten hours

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a-day, from his seventh to his seventieth year, for his daily bread, yet acted as a class-leader for thirty-four years, and accomplished much for Christ and the well-being of his fellows! Believing brother or sister in the ranks of toil! "go and do likewise." Measuring duty by such a case, let my readers who have more time and means at their disposal, do what they can. How many talents have you to answer for

when the Lord comes to reckon with you?

"Talk not of talents; what hast thou to do?

Thy duty be thy portion--five or two.
Talk not of talents; is thy duty done?
Thou hadst sufficient, were they ten or one.
Lord, what my talents are I cannot tell,
Till thou shalt give me grace to use them well;
That grace impart; the bliss will then be mine,
But all the power and all the glory thine."

CHAPTER VI.

LEONHARD DOBER, THE POTTER.

"Son of man, all my words that I shall speak unto thee, receive in thine heart, and hear with thine ears. And go, get thee to them of the captivity, and speak unto them, and tell them."-EZEK. iii. 10, 11.

"He is a freeman whom the Truth makes free,
And all are slaves beside."

THE MORAVIAN CHURCH, or Church of the United Brethren, has ever been, with very rare exceptions, a community of useful Christians in humble life. More of the "illustrious obscure" have arisen out of its ranks than from any other Church in Christendom. Though oppressed by civil power, few in numbers, and poor in worldly substance, more missionaries of the cross have gone forth from them than from any other branch of Christ's Catholic Church. Their origin

is in the evangelization of Bohemia; their history is the bloody pages of persecution, both previous to, and after the great reformation of the sixteenth century. Huss and Jerome of Prague were their Protestant martyrs as early as the times of Wycliffe. But the modern history of the United Brethren dates from 1722, when a few poor refugees, descendants of the ancient Brethren, arrived on the estate of Count Zinzendorf, in Lusatia, Germany. This generous nobleman, "whose praise is in all the churches," gave them liberty to settle and build a village. It was a dreary place, covered with timber, and far from another inhabited locality; but the men of God persevered, and, before the winter, had their abode ready for habitation. They dedicated the place solemnly to God, and called it Herrnhuth, which means, the Lord's providential care. The community was formed entirely of refugees from Moravia, who escaped from the most bitter and heart-rending persecutions to which they were there exposed by the Jesuits.

Ten years after their settlement at Herrnhuth, and when they numbered only six hundred individuals, and all poor, they began missions to the heathen, which, in the course of ten years more, had formed stations in forty places, and in a circle comprehending the West Indies, Greenland, South and North America, Lapland, Algiers, Guinea, Cape of Good Hope, Ceylon, and Egypt. Almost every man in the whole community considered himself ready to go on a mission if required. They did not fear obstacles; travelled on foot, or worked for their passage in vessels; learned languages at the loom, or other labour; lived for the Lord, and rejoiced to be spent in his service, and in winning souls to Christ. They were full of faith and of the Holy Ghost.

Their first mission was to the Island of St. Thomas, in the West Indies, and began in 1732. It originated in an inter

view with Anthony, a negro from that island, at Copenhagen, who professed anxiety for his soul and for the salvation of his benighted countrymen. Count Zinzendorf was moved, and laid the matter before the Brethren. The appeal was successful, and two young men volunteered to go.

LEONHARD DOBER was one of these. He was born at Munchroth, in Swabia, May 7th, 1706, and educated by a pious father. He came to Herrnhuth in his sixteenth year, where he was converted. He was a potter to trade. Strong faith, ardent piety, uncommon self-denial, and indomitable perseverance, characterized him. In assigning reasons for

his offer he thus addressed the Brethren: "I formed the resolution that, if another brother should be found willing to accompany me, I would offer myself to be a slave, in order to tell these poor beings what I knew and had experienced of the love and grace of our blessed Saviour; for I am fully persuaded that the word of the cross, though preached by the weakest of his followers, must have a divine influence upon the souls that hear it. As to myself, my earnest desire was, that should I even be of benefit to none, I might thereby show my love and obedience to our Lord and Saviour. I leave my proposition to the decision of the congregation, and have no other reason to urge it but this,—that I think there are yet souls on that island who cannot believe because they have never heard."

What devotion and philanthropy are here! How strong and enthusiastic must have been Dober's love to his Saviour, to evoke such a resolution! Nor was it ephemeral. He actually sailed, in company with David Nitshman, for St. Thomas, on October 8th, 1732, where they arrived in December. While pondering their course of procedure, mode of subsistence, and opportunities of preaching, they were unexpectedly invited to reside in the house of a planter, to whom

they had carried a letter containing a recommendation quite unknown to them. Next Sabbath they met the negroes, read a letter from Anthony at Copenhagen, and discoursed on "This is life eternal, that they might know thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent"—a passage which occurred in the epistle. They explained their object in coming, and invited the swarthy sons of Africa to accept the Saviour. The negroes clapped their hands with joy, and welcomed the glad tidings. Thus encouraged, they laboured from week to week, not without much opposition from the white inhabitants, and from many of the negroes, and many trials from the climate. David Nitshman left in 1733, and Dober remained alone. Now a new trial met him, for his trade as a potter was of little service, and Nitshman, whose work as a carpenter had supplied both their wants, was gone; but God provided for him. The governor of the island offered him the situation of tutor in his family, which for a year he held. After an illness in 1734, he felt that his time was too much occupied by his tutorship, and obtained a dismissal. Working for his bread and water (he seldom had anything more), he laboured "in season and out of season" to win souls to Christ. Nor was his effort fruitless. "He that goeth forth, and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him." When Count Zinzendorf visited the island in 1739, he found eight hundred regularly attending the ministry of the gospel. In 1749 they amounted to several hundreds more. This was the beginning of a work which in the course of a century, numbered upwards of forty thousand converts to Jesus Christ!

Leonhard Dober returned to Europe in 1734. His stay on the island was short; yet he had baptized four negroes, and left many under instruction. He was the father of

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