Produced by An Anonymous Volunteer
QUESTIONABLE AMUSEMENTS AND WORTHY SUBSTITUTES
By J. M. Judy
Introduction by George H. Trever, Ph.D., D.D. The manuscript of This book was not submitted to any publisher, but was put in its present form by JENNINGS & PYE, for a friend of the author. Address. Chicago: Western Methodist Book Concern, 1904.
INTRODUCTION.
By George H. Trever, PH.D., D.D.
Author of Comparative Theology, etc.
A BOOK on "Questionable Amusements and Worthy Substitutes" is timely to-day. Such a grouping of subject matter is in itself a commendation. Possibly we have been saying "Don't" quite enough without offering the positive substitute. The "expulsive power of a new affection" is, after all, the mightiest agency in reform. "Thou shalt not" is quite easy to say; but though the house be emptied, swept, and garnished, unless pure angels hasten to occupy the vacated chambers, other spirits worse than the first will soon rush in to befoul them again.
The author of these papers, the Rev. J.M. Judy, writes out of a full, warm heart. We know him to be a correct, able preacher of the gospel, and an efficient fisher of men. Having thoroughly prepared himself for his work by courses in Northwestern University and Garrett Biblical Institute, by travel in the South and West of our own country, and by a visitation of the Old World, he has served on the rugged frontier of his Conference, and among foreign populations grappling successfully with some of the most difficult problems in modern Church work.
The following articles aroused much interest when delivered to his own people, and must do good wherever read. In style they are clear and vivid; in logical arrangement excellent; glow with sacred fervor, and pulse with honest, eager conviction. We bespeak for them a wide reading, and would especially commend them to the young people of our Epworth Leagues.
WHITEWATER, WIS., March 2, 1904.
PREFACE.
"QUESTIONABLE Amusements and Worthy Substitutes" is a consideration of the "so-called questionable amusements," and an outlook for those forms of social, domestic, and personal practices which charm the life, secure the present, and build for the future. To take away the bad is good; to give the good is better; but to take away the bad and to give the good in its stead is best of all. This we have tried to do, not in our own strength, but with the conscious presence of the Spirit of God.
The spiritual indifference of Christendom to-day as one meets with it in all forms of Christian work has led us to send out this message. "Questionable Amusements," form both a cause and a result of this widespread indifference. An underlying cause of this indifference among those who profess to be followers of Jesus Christ, is lack of conviction for sin, want of positive faith in the fundamental truths of the Scriptures, too little and superficial prayer, and lack of personal, soul-saving work. Is the class-meeting becoming extinct? Is the prayer-meeting lifeless? Is the revival spirit decaying? Is family worship formal, or has it ceased? However some may answer these questions, still we believe that the Church has a warm heart, and that signs of her vigorous life are expressed in her tenacious hold for high moral standards, and in her generous GIVING of money and of men.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Questionable Amusements and Worthy Substitutes
- 2: It is used for the nicotine that is in it
- 3: Tobacco not only causes an excretion of mucus from the mouth
- 4: Gause writes The intellect becomes duller and duller
- 5: Tobacco blunts the moral nature
- 6: And conscientious person may stand
- 7: Disgraced his Christian family
- 8: During the cholera in New York City in 1832
- 9: And handed the articles to the pawnbroker
- 10: ' South Milwaukee has five thousand inhabitants
- 11: And the saloonkeeper put her out
- 12: Lawmakers who will stand for the abolition of the saloon
- 13: Hardy called back above the roar of the storm
- 14: The professional gambler has his den
- 15: Monaco is about eight miles square
- 16: The speculating gambler became a deserting embezzler
- 17: But every professional gambler plays cards
- 18: Becoming more orderly and rhythmical
- 19: The modern dance destroys intellectual growth
- 20: The occasion of a waltzing reception
- 21: And Christian spoke against the theater
- 22: And not become equally contaminated
- 23: The theater deals with the spectacular
- 24: That every effort at reforming the theater
- 25: But the theater is a concrete institution
- 26: Or by the assimilation of truth itself
- 27: He has learned to convert drudgery into joy
- 28: The magazine corrects the newspaper
- 29: Four hundred volumes of pure science
- 30: Many must read on economized time
- 31: Social recreation is a necessity in a well ordered life
- 32: Of recreation from such gatherings
- 33: The average social is a failure
- 34: Or community brotherhood is patriotism
- 35: Insincerity mars and breaks friendship
- 36: And no man that imparteth his griefs to his friends
- 37: A wise man never flatters himself
- 38: Such was the friendship of Ruth and Naomi
- 39: What did Agassiz find on that tour
- 40: Here Robespierre attempted suicide to avoid arrest
- 41: And that it was rebuilt by King Ethelbert
- 42: Wesley put God first in his life
- 43: An excellent orchestra plays here daily
- 44: Washington monument ranks second
- 45: The tender associations of home never leave one
- 46: The intelligent family is not superstitious
- 47: Unselfishness in the home means thoughtfulness
- 48: And thus it is an unattractive home
- 49: 'How beautiful the thatch looks
- 50: The women of to day are overworked
