| (Continued from 
        page 522.) “There is but one other remark in this peculiarly 
        vindictive and intemperate effusion which is worthy of notice: 
        ‘Gentlemen, your Society for Meliorating the Condition of the Jews 
        should be disbanded. The maintenance of its officers is not a 
        sufficient incentive to its support.’ “In reply to this gentlemanly insinuation, I 
        will only add, that the whole expense of officers to carry on the 
        operations of the Society is about $600 annually, and that this includes 
        the compensation for editing an able and valuable monthly periodical of 
        some 3,000 subscribers. The officers who have been named, beside about 
        thirty more, work for nothing and find themselves; and I hesitate 
        not to say, that for economy in the payment of its officers, and 
        self-denying disinterestedness in gratuitous labours on its behalf, the 
        ‘Society for Meliorating the Condition of the Jews’ may safely challenge 
        a comparison with any other one of the religious institutions of the 
        day.’ “Philo-Israel.” The opportunity is a fair one for a very few 
        additional words on Ludwig’s alleged grounds of quarrel, which are 
        these:—1. The name of the Society is insulting to the Jews;—2. Its 
        method is erroneous;—3. Its spirit is bad;—and 4. Its labours are 
        fruitless. Ludwig himself would probably excuse us from saying 
        any thing further about motives, and the “support of officers.” Nor, 
        indeed, as to the other points <<602>>have we any expectation of satisfying 
        Ludwig, or the slightest wish to do so. This “Christian minister,” 
        we take it, belongs to a kind of Christians who are multiplying with 
        singular rapidity in our day, and the highest attainment of whose 
        Christianity is to salute Christ civilly across the street, when they 
        are most bent on degrading his person, and office, maligning his truth, 
        and slandering his friends. May God ever save us, and the cause we love, 
        from their smiles and fair speeches. But, as we said, there are a few 
        things which, for the sake of others, may as well be explained.  
          We are informed by a gentleman, thoroughly 
          acquainted with the subject, that when the founders of this Society 
          applied to the Legislature of this State for an act of incorporation, 
          they had selected a name expressive simply of their design to 
          evangelize the Jews, and that the present name was imposed, for 
          whatever reason, by the Legislature itself. The reason probably was, 
          that the way in which the Society at that time intended mainly to 
          operate, was by means of an agricultural settlement in this country; 
          and were that most preposterous scheme now resumed, especially if in 
          the shape of an Industrial Domain, there are “Christian ministers,” we 
          presume, of the gospel according to Charles Fourier, who would then 
          consider our name just the thing, and no “insult” at all. For our own 
          part, we should have preferred the name originally contemplated, 
          although Mr. Herschell of London, we recollect, would rather have it
          as it stands. And that may suffice 
          for the name.
Then for the method, the “Christian 
          minister” thinks the true plan would be “to apply the doctrines of the 
          gospel more and more to social questions.” But what if the Jews don’t 
          believe the doctrines of the gospel any more than the “Christian 
          minister” does? How, then, shall either they or he apply them, or 
          concur in their application by such as do believe them, and believe, 
          moreover, the faith of them to be essential to the salvation of any 
          man, be he Jew or “Christian minister?” The Society is fully 
          determined to adhere to Paul’s method.
Another grievance, and that which more than 
          anything else seems to have stirred Ludwig’s passions, was the 
          statement by one of the speakers that a large portion of the Jews of 
          this country—(we did not observe that he said, “the large 
          majority”)—are “practically infidels.” All such imputations Ludwig 
          treats as “false—scandalously false,” and asserts on the contrary that 
          “the Jews search the Scriptures more, even the New Testament of our 
          Lord; they are more earnest in prayer; they are more constant in the 
          recog<<603>>nition of the Divine Mercy; as a body, they abound  far more in 
          the fruits of the spirit, than the American Christians!”—From this, it 
          is apparent enough to what spiritual school Ludwig 
          belongs. For “a Christian minister,” his tastes must be rather 
          peculiar. A man with him is all the more a Christian, the less he 
          believes, and the more he hates Christianity.
 Now, at the risk of renewing the agitations of Ludwig’s bosom, 
          we deliberately reaffirm what was only incidentally alluded to by Dr. 
          D. No reader of the Jewish Chronicle will suspect us of any 
          wish to strengthen the wicked prejudices from which Israel has so long 
          suffered, and still suffers even in this land. We are well aware of 
          their many noble natural qualities, and social virtues, and lose no 
          opportunity of holding these up to the public eye. But for all that we 
          will not, in order to please the Jew, flatter him to his eternal ruin.
          Ludwig’s eulogium proves nothing but his own melancholy 
          incompetence to judge of such matters. Whatever “zeal of God” yet 
          survives in Israel, is a zeal “not according to knowledge;” while the 
          general aspect of their spiritual condition is precisely what prophecy 
          of old declared it should become, and what all Christian missionaries 
          in all the ends of the earth declare it to be—barren, desolate, and 
          “very dry.” Indeed, next to the numerous instances of conversion to 
          the faith of Christ, by far the most encouraging symptom of the case 
          is this—that candid and devout Jews, and some even who are not so 
          candid and devout, admit this severe testimony to be true. What, for 
          example, would have been Ludwig’s emotions, had he heard it 
          asserted that in one of the largest synagogues, as it is the 
          wealthiest and most fashionable in the world, “there are not six or 
          seven young men who are well acquainted with their sacred writings?” 
          But that, according to the present Chief Rabbi of England, was the 
          amount of Bible and Talmud “searching” in the Duke’s Place 
          congregation, London, in the year 1846; and the London Jewish 
          Chronicle “perfectly agreed with the Chief Rabbi’s observation!” 
          Or, what if Dr. D. had said, that the Israel of our day “can lay no 
          claims to the title of a religious community?” Well, the 
          Occident of Philadelphia had confessed only a little before, that 
          that dreadful fact has “become perfectly evident!” And a very sensible 
          correspondent of that magazine in May of last year thus describes the
          Ministers of the Synagogue:—“In this country, where we have 
          about sixty Hazanim, perhaps there are not more than ten among them, 
          that could answer the most plain or simple question about their 
          religion!”—Poor Ludwig!
 
And now, with regard to Ludwig’s anxiety 
          to see the fruits of <<604>>our labour, we certainly adopt the principle 
          embodied in one of the resolutions passed at the late anniversary, 
          viz., that the duty of the Church of God in this thing does not at all 
          depend on the measure of increase which God may be pleased to give; 
          and we therefore cordially sympathized in the admiration expressed by 
          Mr. Pomeroy, of Maine,* for the steadfast spirit of Mr. Schauffler of 
          Constantinople, who, amid all the discouragements of his “very hard 
          field,” remains unwearied at his post. A similar trial of faith is the 
          common experience, not of Jewish missions alone, but, (as the several 
          Missionary Boards well know,) of gentile missions also. And, 
          considering that it is only three or four years since this Society, 
          after its first great reverse, has fairly addressed itself to its 
          appropriate work of preaching Christ’s unsearchable riches to 
          Israel, we assert with confidence, that very few missionary 
          enterprises, whether in the Jewish vineyard, or on heathen ground, 
          have been favoured with a larger degree of spiritual success than that 
          which already cheers our faith, and animates our hope of yet greater 
          things. And in making this comparison, we do not even take into the 
          account the many peculiar difficulties with which the Society has had 
          to struggle. If, then, Ludwig’s objection is good for anything, 
          it is, to say the least, equally valid as applied to the other kindred 
          institutions of the time. Are we uncharitable in thinking that this 
          “Christian minister,” notwithstanding his disclaimer, meant it to be 
          so applied? 
			
		 N. Y. Jew. Chr. |