The first letter of each of the following responses will form a comparative statement distinguishing between certain kinds of trust and confidence. [3] The number in brackets indicates the number of words in the answer.
1. That in which a poor man may walk, thereby elevating him over a fool. [1]
2. A double possession, not to be desired, when having them causes offenses which would lead to an unhappy future. [5]
3. The nation whose kingdom was rent from its first king and given to a neighbor of his. [1]
4. Something the will of God may cause a child of God to do because of well doing. [1]
5. A specific day which, by God's reckoning, is deemed inferior to the day of one's death. [1]
6. Something quite vehement, prepared by God, that caused a wayward servant to faint. [2]
7. A specific number of days that is deemed inferior to a single day in the courts of God. [1]
8. That which little, when accompanied with the fear of the Lord, exceeds even in great amounts because of its accompanying trouble. [1]
9. Something royal a gentile queen was deprived of after refusing to do the king's bidding. [1]
10. Something specific that wisdom excelleth, as well as all things that might be compared to it. [1]
Answers to these questions will be found in the next issue of Christian Treasury. R. Erisman