Te Kopara 35

Te Kopara 35


[3] Te Kopara, Number 35, Gisborne, 15 September, 1916.

‘Iti te Kopara, kai takirikiri ana i runga i te Kahikatea.
Although the Bellbird is small, he plucks at the Kahikatea. [cf Nga Pepeha 908]

PASSING OF THE EARLIEST ELDERS.

Bishop [Leonard] Williams Enters Upon the Long Sleep.

During August news came that the Bishop was sinking, and it was not long after that we heard that he had entered upon the long sleep. He died as an elder; but when the affliction reached his heart he died rapidly. Our thoughts go back to the old times, the times when darkness covered these islands, the times when all we did was done in darkness.

Te Kopara 34

Te Kopara 34


[3] Te Kopara, Number 34, Gisborne, 15 August, 1916.

‘Iti te Kopara, kai takirikiri ana i runga i te Kahikatea.’
Although the Bellbird is small, he plucks at the Kahikatea. [cf Nga Pepeha 908]

THE GREAT WAR (III)

One thing for which we must praise God now is that we live in a state of peace without disturbances when we are receiving accounts every day of distant battles in which two or three thousand are dying in a single day. We are now in the second year of the war and there have been fifteen ships full of men from here to take the places of those of us who have fallen.

Te Kopara 33

Te Kopara 33


[3] Te Kopara, Number 33, Gisborne, 15 July, 1916.

‘Iti te Kopara, kai takirikiri ana i runga i te Kahikatea.’
Although the Bellbird is small, he plucks at the Kahikatea. [cf Nga Pepeha 908]

THE GREAT WAR

In the June edition of Te Kopara we spoke of the great war in which the enemy is invisible. The enemy is Satan who seeks to get all people as his slaves and to abandon God who made us, so that we become God’s enemies, until we come to that time when Satan will be cast down by God and we will enter with him into the oblivion in which he will be done away with.

Te Kopara 32

Te Kopara 32


[3] Te Kopara, Number 32, Gisborne, 15 June, 1916.

‘Iti te Kopara, kai takirikiri ana i runga i te Kahikatea.’
Although the Bellbird is small, he plucks at the Kahikatea. [cf Nga Pepeha 908]

THE GREAT WAR.

The thing most people want to hear about now is the conflict being carried on on the other side of this round world, in Europe, Asia and Africa. Many members of our families are engaged in it, some have died, some have returned wounded, and some are going to take the places of those who have fallen. No war in the past has been like this. Not the former armies; the number of men engaged is exceedingly great. Formerly wars took place on land or on ships sailing on the surface of the sea. Now we see other ways being used by those intent on killing people. Some, like taniwha dive under the surface of the sea to fight there. Some fly like birds in the air dropping things to kill people, things that cannot be avoided.