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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62223 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62223)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Plain Parochial Sermons, by James Slade
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Plain Parochial Sermons
- preached in the Parish Church of Bolton-le-Moors
-
-
-Author: James Slade
-
-
-
-Release Date: May 25, 2020 [eBook #62223]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLAIN PAROCHIAL SERMONS***
-
-
-Transcribed from the 1831 C. J. G. and F. Rivington edition by David
-Price, ccx074@pglaf.org
-
- [Picture: Public domain book cover]
-
-
-
-
-
- PLAIN
- PAROCHIAL SERMONS,
-
-
- PREACHED IN
-
- THE PARISH CHURCH OF BOLTON-LE-MOORS,
-
- BY THE
- REV. JAMES SLADE, M.A.,
-
- _VICAR OF BOLTON_, _AND PREBENDARY OF CHESTER_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON:
- C. J. G. AND F. RIVINGTON, ST. PAUL’S CHURCH YARD.
-
- 1831.
-
- * * * * *
-
- BOLTON:
- PRINTED BY J. GARDNER.
-
- * * * * *
-
- TO THE CONGREGATION
- OF THE PARISH CHURCH OF BOLTON,
- THESE SERMONS
- ARE INSCRIBED AND DEDICATED,
- WITH AFFECTIONATE REGARD,
- BY THEIR PASTOR AND FRIEND,
-
- J. S.
-
-
-
-
-ADVERTISEMENT.
-
-
-THE author has been repeatedly urged to print a volume of his Parochial
-Sermons; and perhaps he owes some apology to those friends, whose kind
-advice, on this head, has been for years neglected. He was apprehensive,
-that the interest, excited by his discourses from the pulpit, would not
-be adequately revived by their appearance in print; or at most, that they
-would be impressive only upon those who had heard them: and he moreover
-thought, that the christian world was already provided with more than a
-sufficiency of such publications. However, whether these opinions be
-well founded or not, he has been at length prevailed upon to defer to the
-wishes and judgment of others.
-
-It is almost needless to observe, that the Sermons were written without
-any, the most distant, view to publication; they pretend to nothing, but
-the simple and earnest inculcation of christian principle and practice;
-and as this is the author’s sole object, so does he pour forth his humble
-prayer, that what, by God’s help, he has planted and watered, may, by
-God’s blessing, be increased to the glory of His own great name, and the
-edification of His Church.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
- SERMON I.
- AWAKE THOU THAT SLEEPEST AND ARISE FROM THE DEAD.
-
-EPHESIANS v. 14.—Wherefore He saith, Page 1
-Awake thou that sleepest, and arise
-from the dead, and Christ shall give
-thee light.
-
-[Preached January 10th, 1830, 1st
-Epiph., {vii} and at Chester
-Cathedral, August 1st, in the same
-year.]
- SERMON II.
- THE UNSEARCHABLE RICHES OF CHRIST.
-EPHESIANS iii. 8.—The unsearchable riches of Christ. 20
-
-[Preached January 9th, 1831, 1st Epiph.]
- SERMON III.
- THE DESTRUCTION OF THE FLOOD.
-GENESIS vi. 7.—It repented the Lord, that He had made man 38
-upon the earth and it grieved Him at His heart; and the Lord
-said, I will destroy man, whom I have created, from the face
-of the earth.
-
-[Preached February 6th, 1825, Sexag.]
- SERMON IV.
- THE PRESERVATION FROM THE FLOOD.
-GENESIS vi. 8.—Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord. 56
-
-[Preached February 13th, 1825.]
- SERMON V.
- DO THIS GREAT WICKEDNESS AND SIN AGAINST GOD,
-GENESIS xxxix. 9.—How then can I do this great wickedness 76
-and sin against God?
-
-[Preached March 6th, 1825, 3rd Lent.]
- SERMON VI.
- ON THE JOURNEY TO EMMAUS.
-LUKE xxiv. 32.—And they said one to another, Did not our 95
-heart burn within us, while He talked with us by the way,
-and while He opened to us the Scriptures?
-
-[Preached April 13th, 1828, 1st Easter, and at Chester
-Cathedral July 12th, 1829.]
- SERMON VII.
- IF THEY HEAR NOT MOSES AND THE PROPHETS.
-LUKE xvi. 31.—If they hear not Moses and the Prophets, 114
-neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the
-dead.
-
-[Preached June 1st, 1823, 1st Trin.]
- SERMON VIII.
- PERFECT LOVE CASTETH OUT FEAR.
-1 JOHN iv. 18,—There is no fear in love, but perfect love 134
-casteth out fear: because fear hath torment; he that feareth
-is not made perfect in love.
-
-[Preached June 16th, 1822, 2nd Trin.]
- SERMON IX.
- HUMBLE YOURSELVES UNDER THE MIGHTY HAND OF GOD.
-1 Peter v. 6.—Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of 154
-God, that He may exalt you in due time.
-
-[Preached June 19th, 1825, 3rd Trin.]
- SERMON X.
- THOU ART THE MAN.
-2 Samuel xii. 7.—And Nathan said to David, Thou art the man. 172
-
-[Preached July 14th, 1822, 6th Trin., and at Chester
-Cathedral July 6th 1823.]
- SERMON XI.
- THE WAY OF THE LORD EQUAL.
-EZEKIEL xviii. 25.—Ye say, the way of the Lord is not equal. 189
-Hear now, O house of Israel; is not My ways equal? are not
-your ways unequal?
-
-[Preached October 10th, 1824, 17th Trin.]
- SERMON XII.
- THE NEW MAN.
-EPHESIANS iv. 24.—That ye put on the new man, which after 209
-God is created in righteousness and true holiness.
-
-[Preached October 13th, 1822, 19th Trin.]
- SERMON XIII.
- THE WEDDING GARMENT.
-MATTHEW xxii. 2.—The kingdom of heaven is like unto a 230
-certain king which made a marriage for his son.
-
-[Preached October 31st, 1824, 20th Trin.]
- SERMON XIV.
- WALK WORTHY OF THE LORD, BE FRUITFUL AND INCREASING.
-COLOSSIANS i. 10.—That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto 252
-all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and
-increasing in the knowledge of God.
-
-[Preached November 9th, 1823, 24th Trin. and at Chester
-Cathedral, August 20th, 1826.]
- SERMON XV.
- THE WORD OF THE LORD PRECIOUS.
-1 SAMUEL iii. 1.—The word of the Lord was precious in those 271
-days; there was no open vision.
-
-[Preached December 9th, 1827. 2nd Advent]
- SERMON XVI.
- DISTINCTIONS TO BE MADE ON THE DAY OF JUDGMENT.
-MATTHEW xxiv. 40.—The one shall be taken and the other left. 290
-
-[Preached December 12th, 1824, 3rd Advent.]
- SERMON XVII.
- GOD MADE MAN UPRIGHT; MAN MAKES HIMSELF MISERABLE.
-ECCLES. vii. 29.—Lo, this only have I found, that God hath 310
-made man upright, but they have sought out many inventions.
-
-[Preached August, 1828, and at Chester Cathedral, June 28th,
-1829.]
- SERMON XVIII.
- THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD REVEALED TO THEM THAT FEAR HIM.
-PSALM xxv. 14.—The secret of the Lord is with them that fear 329
-Him; and He will shew them His covenant.
-
-[Preached November 19th, 1826, and at Chester Cathedral,
-July 29th, 1827.]
- SERMON XIX.
- RESIST THE BEGINNINGS OF EVIL TEMPTATION.
-PROVERBS iv. 14, 15.—Enter not into the path of the wicked, 349
-and go not in the way of evil men. Avoid it, pass not by
-it, turn from it, and pass away.
-
-[Preached October 10th, 1830.]
- SERMON XX.
- THE LOVE OF CHRIST FOR THOSE WHO DO THE WILL OF GOD.
-MARK iii. 35.—Whosoever shall do the will of God, the same 366
-is My brother and My sister and mother.
-
-[Preached February 3rd, 1828.]
- SERMON XXI.
- ON SEEKING OUT THE WORKS OF THE LORD AND PRAISING HIM.
-PSALM cxi. 1, 2.—I will give thanks unto the Lord with my 385
-whole heart; in the assembly of the upright and in the
-congregation.
-
-The works of the Lord are great, sought out of all them that
-have pleasure therein.
-
-[Preached November 23rd, 1828.]
- SERMON XXII.
- DILIGENCE AND PERSEVERANCE IN THE CHRISTIAN RACE.
-PHILIPP. iii. 13, 14.—Brethren, I count not myself to have 404
-apprehended; but this one thing I do, forgetting those
-things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those
-things which are before, I press toward the mark for the
-prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.
-
-[Preached March 28th, 1830, and at Chester Cathedral,
-September 5th, in the same year.]
-
-
-
-
-SERMON I.
-AWAKE THOU THAT SLEEPEST.
-
-
- EPHESIANS v. 14.
-
- _Wherefore_, _he saith_, _Awake_, _thou that sleepest_, _and arise
- from the dead_, _and Christ shall give thee light_.
-
-IN this chapter the Apostle has been reminding his Ephesian converts of
-the state in which they were, before they had received and obeyed the
-call of the gospel. The people of Ephesus were highly endowed, in the
-world’s estimation, not only with riches, but also with talent and
-learning, and refinement; with all the arts and ornaments of civilized
-life. And yet, how does St. Paul describe them in the 8th verse? “Ye
-were sometimes darkness;” how in the 12th? “For it is a shame even to
-speak of those things which are done of them in secret.”
-
-Here, you observe, we have a remarkable declaration from the mouth of an
-Apostle, that a people, however talented and learned, were still wrapt in
-the mantle of darkness, with regard to their real good and happiness;
-with regard to their religious and moral condition. Whatever nature had
-done for them, to whatever eminence they had been raised by art or
-industry, they were left far short of the object which it concerned them
-most to attain—an acquaintance with God, a knowledge and practice of His
-law; a peace with Him and with their own consciences. So far were they
-from this, that their characters were stained with the most debasing
-vices; their secret sins were too abominable even to be mentioned.
-
-Thus we see how little the instructions and advantages of this world have
-to do with reforming the conduct, or amending the depraved heart of man.
-And what was true in this instance, is true in all; there is no teaching,
-there are no rules of prudence, no maxims however wise, no manners
-however polished, that can cleanse the heart of its natural
-unrighteousness, and curb its natural propensity to evil: give what you
-may, educate as you may, man, if left to his own wisdom and strength,
-will remain what he is by fallen nature, a weak, a wayward, and a wicked
-being; an enemy to holiness and to God. There may be a shew of wisdom
-“falsely so called;” there may be a refined conversation and a polished
-outside; but there will always be uncleanness remaining within. The evil
-principles may wear a dazzling veil, and the vices may be clothed in
-fashionable garments, but they will be evil principles and vices still.
-
-There is but one means by which the darkness of nature can be scattered,
-and that is by the light of God’s truth; but one means by which the evil
-spirit of the natural man can be cast out, and that is by the Spirit of
-God. The blessed Jesus came into the world to reclaim and redeem it from
-the grossness in which it was sunk; to open a new scene of things; to
-impart a new life; to banish the thick cloud of error and of sin, in
-which the world hopelessly and irrecoverably lay; and to raise it to the
-knowledge and service, the favour and blessing of an offended God. This
-is the description of the happy effects which the gospel is intended and
-fitted to produce; “the people that walked in darkness have seen a great
-light; they that dwell in the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath
-the light shined.” {4} All, without the gospel, are in this miserable
-condition, whatever they may think of themselves: all who sincerely
-embrace it, are enlightened and happy, however poor and humble, and of
-whatever else they may be ignorant.
-
-Poor and humble did I say? It is to them, that this light is the most
-easily, and frequently, and effectually communicated. The prosperous and
-the great too often resemble the wealthy Ephesians, “having the
-understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God through the
-ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart;” {5}
-revelling in the self-sufficiency of their earthly comforts, proud of
-their acquirements, fond of their own way, they disdain to be taught the
-humbling truths of the gospel from a fellow-creature like themselves: and
-often has the minister of the gospel to be thankful to his Lord and
-Master, that, when he finds his message rejected and despised by his
-wealthier hearers, it still makes its way into the hearts of some of the
-poor: grieved he is indeed, that those, who ought to know it best and
-love it most, should be so deluded by worldly vanities and follies, as to
-continue, amidst all their advantages of education, in spiritual darkness
-and death; set against the messenger, because hating the truth of his
-message: yet, is it a comfort to him, sincere and unspeakable, that he
-meets with more success among the ignorant, as they are called, and the
-children of the poor: that there he finds wisdom, “the wisdom which is
-from above;” and there he finds friends among the friends of God.
-
-It was so in the Apostle’s day; and with some bright exceptions, it has
-been the same in every day: “For ye see your calling, brethren, how that
-not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble are
-called; but God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound
-the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world, to confound
-the things that are mighty: and base things of the world, and things
-which are despised hath God chosen; yea, and things which are not, to
-bring to nought things that are: that no flesh should glory in his
-presence.” {7}
-
-All these observations have been made, to connect and explain the first
-word of the text, _wherefore_; “wherefore, he saith, awake thou that
-sleepest and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light.”
-Inasmuch as it is impossible for thee to know and to please God, to
-attain unto holiness and happiness, to save thy soul, by the light of
-nature, (for nature is in fact, of itself and for such a purpose, no
-light at all,) turn to the way, which is opened to thee by the shining of
-the Sun of Righteousness; to that one way, which is opened alike for all
-mankind, rich and poor, learned and unlearned; turn to thy Redeemer, in
-humble faith and hearty desire, and “He shall give thee light:” learn of
-Him and He shall teach thee all that thou needest to know: seek of Him,
-and He shall guide thee into all righteousness and truth; lean on Him,
-and He shall support thee, through all the course of thy earthly
-pilgrimage; and conduct thee in peace and safety to thy journey’s end.
-
-“Wherefore, he _saith_;” there is no particular passage in the Old
-Testament, in which these words of the text are found; but they seem to
-allude to several expressions of similar import, in the prophecy of
-Isaiah. In the 26th chapter, there is a passage which describes the
-deliverance of God’s people from a state of degradation, both political
-and spiritual, under the figure of a resurrection from the dead: “Thy
-dead men shall live, together with my dead body shall they arise. Awake
-and sing, ye that dwell in dust; for thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and
-the earth shall cast out the dead.” {8} And again, in the 52nd chapter:
-“Awake, awake, put on thy strength, O Zion; put on thy beautiful
-garments, O Jerusalem, the Holy city; for henceforth there shall no more
-come in to thee the uncircumcised and the unclean; shake thyself from the
-dust; arise and sit down, O Jerusalem: loose thyself from the bands of
-thy neck, O captive daughter of Zion: for thus saith the Lord, ye have
-sold yourselves for nought; and ye shall be redeemed without money:” {9a}
-a powerful call upon the Jewish people to cast away their transgressions,
-through which they had been brought into a state of grievous captivity,
-and to throw themselves on the Lord’s mercy, and return to the Lord’s
-service, that He might break their bonds asunder, and visit them with His
-salvation. One more passage there is, to which the Apostle clearly
-alludes, in the opening of the 60th chapter: “Arise, shine, for thy light
-is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee. For behold, the
-darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but the
-Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen upon thee.” {9b}
-Here the prophet foretels the glorious dawn of gospel light, and calls
-upon the Church to arise and behold it, shining from afar; to behold it
-with the eye of faith; to look forward to that Saviour, that great
-“fountain for sin and uncleanness,” which the law and the prophets did
-all with one voice proclaim. The prophet adds, “And the gentiles shall
-come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising.” The first
-coming of the gentile world was visible in the footsteps of the wise men,
-who came “from the east to Jerusalem,” {10} to worship the infant Jesus:
-and ever since our Lord’s return to the heavens, the gospel has been
-preached to all nations; and accepted, more or less, by the kings and
-potentates of the earth.
-
-And, as the prophet called on the people of old, to awake and arise and
-turn to the coming light, so St. Paul invited and animated his converts
-and their brethren, to awake and behold the glory of the Lord, after it
-had been fully revealed to the dark and sinful world; and so do the
-ministers of Christ, in every age, call upon their hearers to arouse from
-their benighted and lost condition, and let this light shine upon their
-understandings and hearts, and direct them in the way of life and
-salvation. For grieved are we to say, that notwithstanding these bright
-beams of grace and truth have been so long pouring forth their splendour
-upon the earth, yet are there many dark corners; and many eyes awfully
-closed against the light: and still more grieved are we to say, that even
-in the land where these beams have shone brightest, even in this land,
-vast numbers yet remain total strangers to their enlightening influence
-and converting power: numbers who have had the benefit of being educated
-under the gospel, who have witnessed its happy effects; who have seen
-what it has done for their relations, or friends, or neighbours, have yet
-ungratefully and disdainfully turned away from the heavenly light, and
-“walked on still in darkness;” have sided with the world and Satan and
-sin, and resisted the salvation of their souls.
-
-O, that they could be brought, O for the grace of God’s Holy Spirit to
-bring them, to listen to the warning words of that merciful Saviour, to
-whom, if they now continue to despise Him, they will one day lift up
-their hands in vain: these are His words, “if the light that is in thee
-be darkness, how great is that darkness.” {12} If, after all the
-gracious offers of pardon and life, which thy Redeemer has made thee, by
-His own mouth, and the mouth of His messengers, thou still choosest
-unforgiveness and death, going on in the heedlessness of thy impenitent
-heart, and wantoning in sin, how dreadful is thy condition! how
-infinitely more dreadful, than if the voice of mercy had never sounded in
-thine ears. Be convinced: let the love of thy Saviour work upon thee;
-let the love of thine own immortal soul move thee to fly unto Him, the
-great, the only, the everlasting Redeemer. Leave thy way of misery and
-ruin, and turn to Him for comfort and deliverance. Turn, while thou hast
-the power; the night is fast coming. Thou knowest not how many more
-sabbaths, how many more invitations and warnings, will be vouchsafed:
-many thou hast had already; enough of them thou hast already slighted.
-Come, ye that are strong, for the strong are often laid low; come, ye
-that are young, for the young are not always spared; come, ye aged, for
-your hour of trial _must_ be nearly run out. Come all, while ye may, to
-the Lamb of God, for acceptance and for blessing: there is no safety, and
-no hope in any other: and no hope in Him, when the door is once shut; “we
-pray you, in Christ’s stead, be ye reconciled to God.” {13}
-
-The text says, “Awake thou that sleepest;” it means, awake from the sleep
-of sin; and very fitly is the state of the sinner compared to a state of
-sleep: he is quite insensible of his true, his awful condition; he fears
-not, perceives not, the doom that is awaiting him. Satan has bound up
-his senses; the eyes of his understanding are closed, and his knowledge
-of good and evil is utterly prevented. He is to the spiritual world,
-what the sleeping man is to the natural, unconscious of what is going
-forward to his advantage or his injury. Speak to him of mercy, he hears
-not: “sing him one of the songs of Sion,” it is all in vain: speak to him
-of divine wrath, of eternal punishment; to what purpose, while his ear is
-closed? The whispers of conscience, the counsel of friends, “the tongues
-of men or of angels,” are alike unprofitable, while a deep sleep is cast
-upon the soul.
-
-And there is a further resemblance: the sinner dreams, of happiness
-arising from worldly prosperity, from plenty and pleasure: and as the
-brain of a poor or disconsolate man, in a state of sleep, is often filled
-with ideas of such things, and he awakes and finds them sadly untrue;
-awakes from his pleasant dreaming to his state of drudgery and
-discomfort; so is the sinner often constrained to feel and confess, that
-his notions of happiness were no better than a dream; that they were
-unsubstantial and unreal, promising much and bringing little: still he is
-unconvinced; pursues his course of trifling, his disappointed dreamings,
-till at length he awakes in another world, and thoroughly perceives the
-wretchedness of his condition, which it is then too late, impossible to
-change. From this dreadful, fatal sleep of sin, the gospel is designed
-to rouse us: and I pray God, that our conscience may be effectually
-alarmed and awakened; that we may be alive and active in perceiving and
-following “the things that belong unto our peace!”
-
-The text says further, “Arise from the dead;” from the death of sin; from
-the state of misery and ruin, in which ye insensibly lie. Here is
-another significant figure: the impenitent sinner is not only plunged
-into a condition of helpless wretchedness, but he has no energy to
-recover from it, no quickening or effectual desire of better things; no
-more perception of spiritual interests, of heavenly objects, than a
-corpse has of the natural world. When once the breath has left the body,
-the busiest scenes of earth can affect it no longer; nothing can “charm
-the dull cold ear of death:” when the breath of a divine life is not in
-the soul, when the new-creating spirit of God is not received and
-cherished, the beauty of holiness and the all-important interests of a
-spiritual and eternal world produce no effect upon the forlorn
-understanding and the deserted heart: no representations of spiritual
-truth can move the heavy ear of a besotted and determined sinner; none,
-while he is resolved, so to remain: not even the voice of the Son of God,
-“charm He never so wisely.” Till the heart be moved to repentance, till,
-the faculties of the soul are recovered from the fascination of stupor
-and sin, no living impression can be made, even with all the force that
-truth can carry. How often do we find this to be the case! how often
-does the sinner acknowledge the justice, the certainty, the necessity of
-what is urged upon him, but without any alteration in his character;
-without any effectual or lasting alteration. His heart is unchanged: the
-slave of sin; dead in sin; not alive or open to the force of truth, to
-the doctrines of righteousness or salvation.
-
-Infatuated sinner! thine own conscience accuses thee; thou believest that
-there will be a world to come, a world of recompence, and yet thou
-turnest not to prepare for it; pray, when thou fearest; pray, when thou
-thinkest of these things; cry earnestly to thy Saviour, that he may
-deliver thee from this “gall of bitterness and this bond of iniquity;”
-pray for the convincing, converting, life-giving Spirit, that He may “set
-thine heart at liberty” from the thraldom of sin; and thus enable thee to
-listen to the call of the gospel, and turn thy feet in earnest to the
-Redeemer of thy soul. For if thou listenest and turnest not, “dead thou
-art while thou livest;” and when thou diest, eternally dead; dead to all
-comfort and happiness for ever; dead in a world of woe.
-
-But if we will (and God grant that we all may) awake and arise, “Christ
-will assuredly give us light:” “He is the true light, which lighteth
-every man that cometh into the world;” {18} ready to shine upon every
-soul, to lighten it in darkness and quicken it in death. Believe in Him,
-and live in Him, and the clouds of ignorance shall be scattered away; and
-the drowsiness of the soul shall be cast off; and the cold heart of the
-natural man shall be warm with life again. In the midst of this world’s
-temptations and trials, troubles and perplexities, we shall see our way
-clear, our way to the heavenly Jerusalem; a brightness, the brightness of
-God’s presence, will be resting upon our souls; the world sees it not,
-but we shall see and enjoy it every hour: dark things will be made light,
-and “crooked things will be made straight, and the rough places plain:”
-we shall be living above the world, for “our life will be hid with Christ
-in God:” {19} cheerful we shall be when nature is sad: inspirited when
-nature is languishing; full of praises and thanksgivings when nature is
-mourning.
-
-Say, Christian people, have ye never seen the triumph of faith over
-nature’s weakness and Satan’s power? have ye never, in the hour of trial,
-witnessed that the Saviour was near? never observed the fainting spirit
-animated and sustained? never beheld the closing eye, of the dying saint,
-beaming with heavenly fire; and the pale features lighted up with the
-smile of satisfaction and composure and peace? If ye have not, the dying
-Christian will shew you these things—go to his bed, and learn the lesson;
-go, and catch the hope, that “Christ will give you light.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON II.
-THE UNSEARCHABLE RICHES OF CHRIST.
-
-
- EPH. iii 8.
- _The unsearchable riches of Christ_.
-
-THERE is no passage, in the whole range of Scripture, in which the
-benefits and blessings of the gospel are more strikingly and fully
-represented, than by these few words: it is elsewhere described as the
-“pearl of great price,” as “the treasure that fadeth not away,” as “the
-true riches;” but here, as if in addition to the former descriptions, it
-is called, under the direction of the Holy Spirit, “the unsearchable
-riches of Christ:” impossible for men, impossible for angels to search
-out and discover its full excellency and value. The more it is examined,
-and the more it is experimentally known, the more is the believer
-convinced of the propriety and truth of this description; without a deep
-enquiry indeed, without a vital experience of its blessedness, it is not
-for any one to understand even the nature of its transcendent riches; to
-the world at large they are known only by name: but the sincere
-Christian, who makes them his own, is brought to admire their
-inexhaustible fulness; and to perceive, how utterly they extend beyond
-his comprehension, how highly they are removed above his loftiest
-thoughts and his most ardent imagination: “eye hath not seen, nor ear
-heard, neither have entered into the heart of man the things which God
-hath prepared for them that love him.” {21} They lie entirely out of the
-reach of the natural man; and even the spiritual man does but imperfectly
-understand them.
-
-These unsearchable riches it was the province of St. Paul especially to
-declare unto the gentile world, that is, unto the world at large, when
-the offer of them had been rejected by the Jewish nation: in consequence
-of which blessed communication to the gentiles, the knowledge of them was
-conveyed, in process of time, to our favoured land.
-
-Many learned persons have believed, that St. Paul himself preached in
-this island; of this, however, there is no certain evidence; it is enough
-for us to know, that we are partakers of the benefit of his preaching,
-that the sound of the gospel, which he sent “forth into all lands,” has
-long ago reached us; and that we are now in the full enjoyment of this
-inestimable privilege. He declares, in the chapter, before us, that
-Jesus Christ, by express revelation, made known to him the great mystery,
-the unfathomable purpose of His mercy; “which in other ages was not made
-known unto the sons of men, as it is now revealed unto the holy Apostles
-and Prophets by the Spirit: that the Gentiles should be fellow-heirs, and
-of the same body, and partakers of His promise in Christ by the gospel.”
-Unto me, he says, “who am less than the least of all saints, is this
-grace given, that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable
-riches of Christ. And to make all men see what is the fellowship of the
-mystery, which, from the beginning of the world, hath been hid in God,
-who created all things by Jesus Christ.” {23}
-
-You perceive here the object of the Apostle’s preaching; it was, that all
-mankind, we among the number, might be brought acquainted with the
-glorious scheme of eternal redemption, and be made partakers of its
-unspeakable blessings. And is there a heart so cold, as not to beat with
-gratitude, in the remembrance of such mercy; as not to take an interest
-in such a testimony of divine love? If we knew no particulars respecting
-it, the very announcement and promise of an infinite treasure, of a
-treasure in the mansions of eternity, were sufficient to awaken our most
-profound attention: it often does so, when carried by the missionary to
-the heathen and the stranger; they, who never heard before the good
-tidings of salvation, are arrested by the voice of the messenger, and
-hang upon his lips with a longing anxiety, and receive his message to the
-comfort of their souls: and can we remain unmoved by such considerations;
-we, who know the purport of the heavenly message; we, who profess to
-believe that it is sent for our everlasting salvation from sin and death;
-to reconcile us to an offended God, to deliver us from the intolerable
-bondage of Satan, to make us happy while we live, happy when we die,
-happy for ever in another world, in the kingdom of heaven? Though the
-mercy is too great to be adequately understood, though “the love of
-Christ passeth knowledge,” shall this prevent us from contemplation and
-enquiry? shall we not rather, on this very account, entertain a more
-fervent desire to understand and know, of this mystery of goodness, all
-that is possible to be known? Whoever, indeed, has not this desire,
-cannot take any lively interest in the revelation which he professes to
-believe, cannot have sincerely embraced it; knowing, as he does, the
-subject and purpose of the gospel, he is in a worse situation than many
-an ignorant heathen; his heart more hard and unimpressible; his eyes more
-closed against the light; his affections more difficult to be roused and
-engaged. May the Lord touch the heart of all such heedless professors;
-or the very publicans and sinners, the darkest and most despised of the
-earth, will “enter into the kingdom of heaven before them.”
-
-Hoping that we all are deeply concerned in this important matter, that we
-do place a most exalted value on the riches of Christ, and earnestly
-desire to partake of them, I beg that we may enter together, with humble
-minds and spiritual desires, into some examination of their nature and
-excellency; and enquire in what respects, and for what reasons, they are
-unsearchable.
-
-1. In the first place, what is the foundation of all our blessedness and
-all our hope, as the redeemed and adopted children of God; as brought
-from a state of enmity and rebellion, into favour with Him; as having any
-claim upon His mercy; any prospect of recovering our lost happiness, of
-saving our souls alive? What, I say, is the foundation on which we
-expect these marvellous acts of grace? It is, that the everlasting Son
-of God left “the glory which he had with the Father before the world
-was,” {26a} and “took upon Him the form of a servant,” {26b} the nature
-of man: it is, that the “Word, who in the beginning was with God and was
-God,” “was made flesh” and came and “dwelt among us, full of grace and
-truth.” {26c} Here then, in the very outset, is unsearchable mercy; the
-immensity of the divine Redeemer’s condescension and love! Who can
-search, who can understand it? “It is higher than heaven, what canst
-thou know” of it? Admire thou mayest, and adore and love; but it is
-beyond the stretch of thy created powers to conceive, beyond the capacity
-of any creature. The great truth is revealed and the work is
-accomplished; and here thou must leave it, in humble faith and
-overwhelming emotion.
-
-2. We may consider, in the next place, the preciousness, the value, the
-efficacy of the incarnation and sufferings of our Redeemer. All the
-attributes of the Godhead are perfect and infinite; His holiness and
-justice, as well as His mercy. Man, by transgression, fell into a state
-of unholiness; his nature became corrupt; his understanding debased, his
-affections and passions and desires all sinful; as such he could not
-possibly be accepted or blest by the infinitely holy God, by Him “who is
-of purer eyes than to behold iniquity:” he became, to borrow the language
-of men, vile and hateful in God’s sight; he resembled Satan and the
-wicked spirits, who fell, for their transgression, from the heavens. And
-so, with regard to justice; the infinitely just God could not, without
-some means of atonement or satisfaction, shew favour to a disobedient,
-offending, rebellious creature; it was contrary to His essential
-character and nature so to do: nor can we form any true idea of the value
-of that sacrifice, on the part of another, which could be held sufficient
-to reconcile the great Jehovah to a creature “laden with iniquity:” the
-displeasure being infinite, the distance and separation between God and
-His creatures infinite, the sacrifice must be infinite also, and
-exceeding the bounds of our comprehension. And yet, strange to say,
-though the means of the sinner’s re-admission, to the favour and blessing
-of a holy and just God, must of necessity be beyond our powers of
-conception, there are persons, who object to the Christian doctrine of
-the atonement, solely on the ground of its being incomprehensible. But
-we, my brethren, “have not so learned Christ;” we are ready to bow with
-thankfulness to the revelation of the great Jehovah, by whose
-unsearchable wisdom and mercy the plan of our redemption was formed: we
-are ready to acknowledge with reverence, that “great is the mystery of
-godliness; God was manifest in the flesh.” {29a}
-
-3. Intimately connected with this consideration is the recollection of
-God’s exceeding love towards us, in that “while we were yet sinners
-Christ died for us.” {29b} In our very state of guilt and rebellion it
-was, that He came into the world; that He did and suffered so much, “to
-seek and to save that which was lost.” Suppose that man had never
-transgressed; and that God had sent an angel, to shew him the way to a
-happier and higher condition, than that in which he was created: this
-would have been an act of free and undeserved mercy; but that He should
-have sent His beloved Son, to “suffer for sins, the just for the unjust,”
-{29c} to be born and to tabernacle in a world of guilt and sorrow; to be
-exposed to rejection and scorn, to indignity and cruelty; to endure the
-conflicts of Satan and the bitterest agonies of death; this was indeed an
-act of love, surpassing the bounds of thought; a mystery of goodness
-“into which angels desire to look,” but cannot penetrate. Every
-believing soul must be overpowered by such a contemplation; must be lost
-in wonder, love, and praise.
-
-4. Nor can we learn the manner or degree, in which our merciful Lord is
-at this moment bestowing blessings upon His Church, and upon every
-individual believer. When He ascended up to heaven, His work of
-mediation was not finished; He then took upon Him the office of
-interceding for His people in all ages: presenting their prayers, and
-desires, and all their services, for acceptance at the throne of grace;
-pleading His merits for them; observing all their necessities and wants;
-and sending His holy spirit and His holy angels, to minister to their
-infirmities: not a wounded spirit, but He is still ready to bind up and
-heal; not a sigh from a contrite heart, but He knows and answers; not a
-child of ignorance, but He is willing to instruct; not a returning
-prodigal, but He meets; not a prayer or thanksgiving, not a godly thought
-or wish, of a sincere worshipper and pious servant, but He accepts and
-blesses: He is ever with us, though unseen; with us by His providence and
-grace; “about our bed and about our path;” pouring his benefits upon us,
-temporal, and spiritual: yea upon all His people, at every moment of
-time, throughout the whole world. We are lost in this mystery of
-mercy—we can but believe, and gratefully apply the benefit to our souls.
-
-5. And what are the privileges of Christ’s redeemed people? What their
-present state, what their glorious inheritance? How unsearchable both
-the one and the other! The humble believer, the repenting sinner, the
-sincere and faithful servant derives, from the fountain of mercy which is
-opened unto him, a perpetual stream of increasing satisfaction and
-delight; he finds, that “there is no end thereof;” that it is a fountain,
-which he never can fathom. The sense of pardon and reconciliation with
-God affords a comfort to his soul, which flows the more abundantly, the
-longer he dwells upon it; as he journies onward in the way of salvation,
-his hopes are more enlivened, and his fears more calmed; even when he
-began to walk with his God, he felt that all around him was joy, and
-deemed his recompence in this life amply sufficient; but, at every step
-he advances in communion with his God and Saviour, he perceives more and
-more that “His ways are ways of pleasantness and all His paths are
-peace;” {32} and this experience will be enlarged the longer he lives,
-even beyond his present anticipation. The word of God has fresh stores
-for him every day; of knowledge, of comfort, and of grace: the Spirit of
-God has fresh supplies; to succour his infirmities, to elevate him in
-prayer and meditation, to guide him in perplexity, to strengthen him in
-trial, to console him in trouble and affliction, to raise him above the
-world, and place his affections in heaven. Thus will his joy in the Lord
-increase, till he comes to the end of his pilgrimage: and, in the end,
-the riches of redeeming love will be infinitely enhanced: who shall
-number or declare them? Which of us can now understand the preciousness
-of a Christian’s hope, the comfort of a Christian’s peace, at that hour,
-when his soul is struggling for departure? Who can now enter, as the
-dying man does, into the vast difference between the bright hope of being
-saved, and the gloomy fear of being lost; between the prospect of being
-for ever with the Lord, and the dismal foreboding of the terrors of the
-evil one? We have now but a slight conception of the feelings and views,
-in that momentous hour; but we shall one day know: God grant that the
-knowledge may be peace!
-
-And if we die in peace, then shall we be more than ever convinced of the
-truth of the text; we shall then perceive, how little we comprehended, in
-our mortal state, of the blessedness of the saints at rest, of “the rest
-that remaineth for the people of God.” And, at the resurrection, other
-scenes will follow, with more abundant tokens of confirmation: who can
-conceive the happiness of rising with the just; of hearing with joy the
-trumpet of the archangel; of beholding, with an eye of rapture, the
-beaming of that glorious morn; of meeting the smile of a compassionate
-Judge and Saviour; of being called to His right hand, “come, ye blessed
-of my father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of
-the world:” {34a} what mind on earth is equal to these things?
-
-And then will succeed the consummation of our felicity, “the new heavens
-and the new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness;” {34b} the enjoyment
-of the presence of God and the Lamb; the personal sharing of the service,
-the honour, and the delight of angels and archangels, through all
-eternity. Of this we cannot pretend to form an estimate in our mortal
-condition; while the veil is hanging before our eyes; the holy Spirit, by
-many a sublime image, lifts our imagination as high as it can be carried;
-but still, the representation must be feeble, when compared with the
-glorious reality; after all that has been said, if we arrive at the
-heavenly city, the appearance will be new, the happiness new to us all.
-Unsearchable it is now, unsearchable it will be then; a wonder of love
-that will never be satisfied, a mansion of glory that will never be
-completely surveyed.
-
-But we shall doubtless behold, on seeing “face to face,” more of the
-fulness of the riches of Christ; shall penetrate further into that
-mystery of divine love, which planned the merciful work of our redemption
-before the foundation of the world; shall see more of the meetness of the
-Saviour’s sufferings; of His mighty conquest over sin and death; of the
-greatness of His kingdom and the “majesty of His glory.” We shall then
-see and admire that now invisible bond, by which the whole company of the
-Lord’s servants and people, heavenly and earthly, have been sustained and
-kept together: how men below, and saints at rest, and angels in heaven,
-have been bound in spiritual union, through all the ages of time; how the
-vast multitude of holy creatures in the universe have felt a common
-interest and benefit in their blessed Lord. {36} When they are all
-assembled together in adoration round His throne, we shall know more of
-this endearing bond; it will then be manifest, and be perfected for ever.
-
-I need not attempt to go further; certainly none of us will deny the
-unsearchableness of the riches of Christ. Certainly every one of us is
-ready to exclaim, O that I may be partaker of them; all this world, nay,
-a thousand worlds are nothing in comparison. These riches are now
-offered to you: they are waiting your acceptance; receive them with all
-your heart, and they are yours; you do not expect them to be forced upon
-you; you do not expect this happy portion without choosing it, without
-prayer and without striving for it; ask earnestly, seek diligently, and
-it shall be yours; your inexhaustible treasure, in time and to eternity.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON III.
-THE DESTRUCTION OF THE FLOOD.
-
-
- GENESIS vi. 6. 7.
-
- _It repented the Lord_, _that He had made man upon the earth and it
- grieved Him at His heart_; _and the Lord said_, _I will destroy man_,
- _whom I have created_, _from the face of the earth_.
-
-THE expression in the former clause of the text has, to some persons,
-afforded matter of surprise; and certainly the language is remarkable;
-representing the Almighty as repenting of the work of creation, and
-grieved at the heart, not merely on account of the wickedness of man, but
-that he was ever made. Yet the language, when properly considered, is no
-more remarkable, than that of numberless other passages in Holy Writ; it
-is stronger perhaps; it may carry the customary mode of speech somewhat
-further; but that is all. We are perfectly aware, that the Godhead is
-incapable of being affected and changed by contrary passions, as we are;
-the purpose of Jehovah is fixed, upon the basis of infinite wisdom, from
-everlasting to everlasting; nothing can occur, of which He was previously
-ignorant; nothing to afford any grief or uneasiness; “known unto God are
-all His works from the beginning of the world;” {39} and it is impossible
-for us to interpret the text, or any similar phrase, according to the
-sense in which we understated such words, when applied to creatures like
-ourselves.
-
-It was absolutely necessary for the inspired writers, in describing the
-nature and dealings and dispensations of God, to have recourse to such
-terms, as we are in the habit of using towards one another. His constant
-observance of us is represented by saying, that the _eye_ of God is upon
-all our ways; His gracious readiness to answer our prayers, is
-represented by saying, that His _ear_ is ever open: but who ever supposes
-that eye or ear, or any bodily parts, are possessed by the Godhead? So
-neither are we to impute to God, who is a pure spirit, any bodily
-passions; though He is said to love and to hate, to be angry and to be
-pleased. Of course it only means, that the effect of any particular
-conduct or transaction of His creatures upon Him, is similar to what it
-would be upon us, when under the influence of our natural passions; that
-He rewardeth good, as we do, when we love or are pleased; and punisheth
-evil, as we do, when we hate or are angry. The text merely intimates the
-measure, which the Almighty was determined to adopt, in consequence of
-the great and universal wickedness of mankind; of their having so far
-fallen from the noble end of their creation.
-
-Having tried many gracious methods of indulgence with them, and sought to
-reclaim them by every probable and possible means, and having found that
-His goodness and forbearance, instead of “leading them to repentance,”
-only hardened them in guilt, He now saw fit to change His overtures of
-mercy into the sentence of condemnation; and to send a deluge for the
-destruction of that people, who would not “turn and live:” and this is
-all that can be intended by God’s repentance and grief.
-
-But it happened in those days, as it has too frequently happened with the
-sinful and rebellious ever since, that the people believed not the
-threatenings denounced against them; whether they doubted the power of
-God to inflict so extraordinary a punishment; or whether they built their
-hopes upon the vain expectation of His mercy; or whether the wickedness
-of their hearts and lives led them entirely to cast off the belief of God
-and His word, and to plunge unheeding into the gratifications and
-pollutions of vice; whatever were the operating motive, “they would not
-turn and seek after God.” Yet these infatuated people were not lost for
-want of further instruction and admonition. God mercifully thinks of His
-creatures, though they are forgetful of Him. He had raised unto them
-preachers of righteousness; and sent His Holy Spirit to work upon their
-consciences, to convert them from the delusions of evil, to teach them
-the knowledge of His ways, and persuade them to desist from their work of
-self-destruction. But there is a day, to nations as well as to
-individuals, beyond which the goodness and patience of God will no longer
-forbear: “My spirit,” says He, in the chapter before us, “shall not
-always strive with man.” It had been working in the human heart, ever
-since the fall; inspiring His servants to point out the way of salvation;
-and struggling with the wayward inclinations, the perverse opposition of
-His creatures; to mortify the power of sin, and lead them to recover the
-favour and happiness, which their first parents by transgression had
-lost. But it shall not _always_ strive; and the approaching termination
-of their trial was thus graciously declared to this “disobedient and
-gainsaying people.” God spake thus by the mouth of Noah: “The days of
-man (the time which I will allow, to see if ‘haply he will repent and
-seek after Me,’) shall be a hundred and twenty years.” {43a} All this
-period was to elapse between the denunciation of the divine vengeance and
-its execution; and to this St. Peter alludes, when speaking of “the
-long-suffering of God, that waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was
-preparing;” {43b} while Noah himself, the great “preacher of
-righteousness,” warned all around him of the certainty and the terror of
-this impending calamity. All entreaties, however, and warnings, and
-threatenings; all present mercies and past experiences, were vain. They
-despised the faith and rejected the preaching of the patriarch, and
-ridiculed his preparation of the ark; but they could not “make the word
-of God of none effect;” His judgment overtook them in the midst of their
-rebellious career; the flood came at the appointed time; desolation was
-spread over the face of the earth; and all its inhabitants, with the
-exception of one family, were indiscriminately involved in the
-wide-wasting ruin.
-
-Let us pause for a moment, to apply the consideration of this part of the
-history to ourselves. To all who are wilfully walking in the ways of
-sin, the good and gracious God is continually addressing His warning and
-expostulating voice; by His holy word, abounding with the most awakening
-admonitions and awful examples; by His appointed ministers, superadding
-their feeble endeavours to inculcate the doctrines and set forth the
-terrors of that word “by line upon line and precept upon precept;” by
-various occurrences in life, by reverses and privations and afflictions
-and sickness and death; by the strivings of the Holy Spirit, and the
-alarms of conscience; by flashing at intervals, in vivid colours, the
-conviction of an hereafter upon the mind and heart; and compelling the
-sinner to see, whether he will heed it or not, the peril and the
-dreadfulness of his situation. Of all who hear me there cannot be one,
-but has experienced, more or less, these manifestations of mercy and of
-terror: Are there not some by whom they have been disregarded? We have
-all of us been instructed and reminded and admonished, in a great variety
-of ways; have we “profited withal?” Have we been awakened from the
-dreams of sensual pleasures, from the stupor and infatuation of sin? Can
-we now lift up our hearts in sincerity to God, and thank Him that we have
-been brought, by this or that warning, into nearer and holier communion
-with Him; to serve Him in righteousness and truth, and to seek, in right
-earnest, the salvation of our souls? If it be otherwise with us, if we
-have neglected the seasons of grace, or if we have returned, after a
-temporary humiliation and conviction to the vanity of our former habits
-and pursuits, let us, if we believe the word of God, lay seriously to
-heart the solemn declarations on this head, with which that word
-abounds—that there is a limit prescribed even for the divine compassion
-and forbearance; a period marked out, beyond which God will not manifest
-His favour, “though it be sought with tears;” beyond which, “His spirit
-will not strive with man;” and whenever that spirit shall be withdrawn,
-the conscience will become hardened, the understanding benighted, and the
-sinner “given over to a reprobate mind.” God allows, indeed He has
-already allowed, to every one of us, abundant space and opportunity for
-repentance, as He did of old to the ante-diluvian race; and if we, like
-them, are negligent of His merciful admonitions, we must expect, like
-them, to go on from one degree of wickedness to another, till the
-“measure of our iniquity be filled;” till we are hurried into everlasting
-perdition.
-
-No doubt, when the threatenings of the Almighty began to be executed;
-when the mighty waters were descending from above, and rising in billows
-from the deep below; when these people saw the ark, whose building and
-preparation they had despised, floating in security upon the surface of
-the waters, gladly would they have been admitted: no longer did they
-question the power of God, or the truth of His word; or hold in contempt
-the preaching of His prophets; earnest then, no doubt, was their
-supplication for mercy; and they must have wished, in the bitterness of
-their hearts, that they had listened to the declarations and instructions
-of that holy minister of God, who was provided with a refuge; who was
-escaping unhurt amidst the rolling of the waves, which threatened _them_
-with immediate and inevitable destruction. But their conviction came too
-late; the days of reconciliation were ended; the door of the ark was
-shut; never to be opened again, till the flood had wrought its vengeance,
-and exterminated the sinners from the earth.
-
-Has not the like, the parallel of this dreadful case, been frequently
-discovered by ourselves? Have we not seen, or at least heard of persons,
-who have held out impenitently all their lives long against every means
-of grace and reclaim, by which they have been visited, and then at last,
-when suddenly overtaken by a sickness unto death, have distressfully
-desired that comfort and refuge, which they have never appeared to find?
-Their attention has been called, their eye directed to the ark of
-salvation, the gospel of the blessed Jesus; but having taken no interest
-in it before, having discarded and rejected it, they have seemed to
-behold it only in dismay and despair. Man, it is true, is not an
-adequate judge in such a case; he could not possibly decide, whether they
-were saved or not; but there was fear all around; their friends were
-denied the consolation of persuading themselves, that the door of mercy
-was opened; the sinner cried in agony, but there was no visible sign,
-that the cry was heard; no respite to the afflicted conscience; and no
-repose upon the countenance, that betokened the blessedness of peace.
-
-Suppose not, that this is a scene pourtrayed for the mere purpose of a
-momentary excitement or present effect; it is a true description of what
-has too frequently occurred; and it falls indeed, as every representation
-must fall, infinitely short of the terrible reality. Readily can we
-imagine the sufferings and sorrow and distress of the people, who were
-drowning, with the ark before their eyes; and must we not conclude, that
-the impenitent sinner under the gospel, when he comes to die, will
-behold, with even deeper feelings of anguish, the ark of righteousness
-into which he has never sought to enter; when he finds or fears, that the
-overflowings of ungodliness are sinking his soul to ruin, can any
-description exaggerate, can any description equal, the wretchedness of
-his condition?
-
-The very idea and contemplation of these things may well lead us, with
-all sincerity and fervour, to implore the grace of God, while it is so
-freely offered, and to “seek Him while He may be found;” and O that it
-may lead us gladly and unfeignedly to embrace the covenant of safety,
-which is graciously propounded to us in the gospel; and to “give all
-diligence” to fulfil every condition which that covenant contains. We
-shall not, if we value our eternal welfare, think it sufficient not to
-“deny the Lord that bought us,” not to despise the means which He has
-provided for our preservation and deliverance; we shall turn to Him with
-all our heart, grateful for the means of salvation, and anxious to employ
-them all. “Lord what wilt Thou have me to do?” {50a} “Speak, Lord, for
-thy servant heareth;” {50b} this is the language that befits a sinner,
-who has no hope but in God’s covenanted mercy.
-
-“Our time is in the Lord’s hands;” we know not, if little or much remain:
-Arise, defer not a day. His spirit is now striving within us; to purify
-our affections, to change our corrupt nature, to form the christian
-principle and temper in our souls; let us then, without doubt or delay,
-humbly and thankfully concur with His holy operations, and strive with
-Him, while we may: not lingering and loitering about the ark with
-thoughtless indifference, as if our minds were not made up, whether it be
-worth while to enter; but, in the full and perfect and abiding
-persuasion, that it is the only refuge for man, let us secure, as far as
-it is possible, our rest and habitation there; and then we need not fear
-the overwhelming of the waters, come they ever so suddenly or ever so
-soon; we shall be raised above them all, unhurt and undismayed; we shall
-ride safely and triumphantly over the foaming billows; and settle at last
-upon the heavenly Ararat, the “mountain of the Lord of Hosts,” the
-everlasting abode of tranquillity and bliss.
-
-But of this happy termination we shall have occasion to speak more at
-large, in another discourse; when we come to treat of the character of
-Noah, and the circumstances of his wonderful preservation. In the mean
-time, let us observe, that the deluge is a subject of most awful
-consideration; not merely in itself, as sweeping away into perdition
-almost all the human race, and changing the very form and structure of
-the globe; but also as being a resemblance and emblem of other
-visitations of an offended and avenging God:—in the first place, of the
-overthrow of Jerusalem, and the miserable and general destruction of its
-rebellious people. “As the days of Noe were, so shall also the coming of
-the Son of man be. For as in the days that were before the flood they
-were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day
-that Noe entered into the ark, and knew not until the flood came and took
-them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be;” {53a} so
-unlooked for, so amazing, so disastrous to His enemies.
-
-This stupendous event may also be regarded as typical of another period,
-infinitely surpassing all the rest in terror and in awe;—the coming of
-Christ to judge the world, to execute His final vengeance upon those who
-would not be reclaimed by His mercy. The face of nature will then be
-destroyed by another process; by a direful and universal conflagration.
-“By the word of God the heavens were of old, and the earth standing out
-of the water and in the water: whereby the world that then was, being
-overflowed with water, perished: but the heavens and the earth, which are
-now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved unto fire against the
-day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men.” {53b} “Nevertheless we,
-according to His promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, (a new
-state) wherein dwelleth righteousness. Wherefore, beloved, seeing that
-ye look for such things, be diligent that ye may be found of Him in
-peace, without spot, and blameless.” {54a} All that have ever lived
-shall be summoned again into existence; the righteous to be separated,
-and “caught up to meet the Lord in the air,” {54b} and to be conveyed
-into the regions of eternal blessedness; the wicked, to perish, to die,
-not a bodily but a spiritual death; to be consigned together to a place
-of banishment and wretchedness and horror and despair. The miserable
-unbelievers and the obstinate transgressors, in the days of Noah, shall
-then return to the earth from which they were swept away; not to enjoy
-again their revelry and licentiousness; not to be favoured with another
-day of grace; but to receive, with all their companions in evil, with all
-that have ever “followed their pernicious ways,” the full and eternal
-recompence of their deeds. This will indeed be a day of desolation, “of
-lamentation and mourning and woe,” of “weeping and wailing and gnashing
-of teeth;” of which awful day no words, no example, no past event, nor
-even imagination itself, can afford an adequate representation.
-
-God Almighty grant, that we may never know its terrors; that we may
-profit from the warnings and experience, which are mercifully vouchsafed
-unto us; may embrace, with all our hearts, the covenant of salvation into
-which we have professedly entered; and, amidst the wreck and ruin of the
-world, may be delivered with an everlasting deliverance, for the sake,
-and through the merits, of that omnipotent Saviour, who was with Noah in
-the ark; who has guarded, and will continue to guard, the ark of His
-Church in all ages; whose mercy and truth are pledged for the final
-preservation of His faithful people: God Almighty grant this blessing
-unto us all, through the aid and operation of that “Holy Spirit, whereby
-we are sealed unto the day of redemption.” {55}
-
-
-
-
-SERMON IV.
-THE PRESERVATION FROM THE FLOOD.
-
-
- GENESIS vi. 8.
- _Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord_.
-
-IN a former discourse, your attention was called to the execution of
-divine vengeance upon the sinful race of man, by the tremendous
-visitation of a universal deluge; I would now direct your contemplation
-to another point of view; to a fulfilment of the gracious promises of God
-made to a distinguished believer and a faithful servant; to his
-preservation from the general ruin; to the covenants of mercy established
-with him; to the blessings and deliverances thus proclaimed and typified
-to the Church of God in all ages.
-
-Noah, be it first observed, was possessed of that principle, which is the
-sure and only foundation of true righteousness; and to which the Almighty
-has, in every age, manifested His especial favour—the principle of
-_faith_; of a settled, vital, influential belief in the sovereignty, the
-providence, and the word of God: he doubted not the truth either of a
-threatening or a promise, and withheld not the obedience, which his
-belief implied or required. Of this St. Paul assures us; “By faith Noah,
-being warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared
-an ark to the saving of his house; by the which he condemned the world,
-and became heir of the righteousness which is by faith;” {57} he
-condemned the world, inasmuch as his example, his preaching, and his
-deliverance furnished matter of accusation against them; he pointed out
-and led the way to a place of safety; he escaped destruction, and the
-rest of the people might have escaped also; and thus he proved, that they
-justly perished in the unbelief and obstinacy of their hearts. Hence he
-became the heir of those promises and that happiness, to which the
-righteous believer, by God’s mercy, is entitled; he was blessed, not
-merely with that temporal preservation, which the ark afforded him in the
-flood; but also with that spiritual and heavenly salvation, of which the
-ark was an emblem and a sign.
-
-And further; Noah is described, in the verse following the text, as “a
-just man and perfect in his generations.” His faith, as we have already
-intimated, was not, like that of many professors of religion, a mere
-outward and formal assent; it resided in his heart, as well as in his
-understanding; and shewed itself in his disposition, his character, and
-his life. Believing in the goodness of God, he loved Him; in the power
-and justice of God, he feared; in the infallible truth and authority of
-God, he obeyed. With an enlightened reason and conscience, he studied
-the duty of ordinary life; his duty to God and man; and he performed it
-faithfully. “He was perfect in his generations;” not that he had
-attained unto absolute, positive perfection; for that is impossible to
-any mere man, in his fallen condition; it was only “the man Christ
-Jesus,” the incarnate God, that was “holy, harmless, undefiled, separate
-from sinners;” {59} but Noah, in the midst of a “disobedient and
-gainsaying people,” was sincere and upright; he lived in no wilful or
-habitual opposition to his God; he had that degree of perfection, which
-is the mark and fruit of genuine faith; and shews, that the frail
-creature is brought into a state of acceptance with his Creator. He
-engaged heartily in the cause of religion; there was nothing in the
-world, which he was not ready to renounce for it; there was no ordinance,
-nor command of God, which it was not his unbending purpose to obey;
-desirous was he “to serve Him, in holiness and righteousness all the days
-of his life.” And therefore it is yet further said, that “he walked with
-God;” {60a} “setting the Lord (as David speaks) always before him;” {60b}
-living in a perpetual sense of the divine presence; acting as under the
-continual observation of that Almighty Being, who was acquainted with all
-his ways; and whose word was “a lamp unto his feet and a light unto his
-path.” {60c} He walked in communion with God, by his life and
-conversation, as well as by faith, and meditation, and prayer; and he
-preached to a “backsliding and stubborn generation,” by his example as
-well as by his word.
-
-We cannot wonder, that such eminent holiness and obedience, shining forth
-in the midst of so much profligacy and corruption, were honoured with the
-signal favour of Almighty God. A righteous character, which is always
-“of great price in the sight of God,” is peculiarly honourable in an age
-overspread with impiety and guilt. The man, who stands forth to maintain
-the cause of God against a universal host of enemies; who is untainted by
-the moral contagion which is every where diffused around him; who
-perseveringly opposes the mighty stream of iniquity, which is ready to
-overwhelm his soul; that man is a spectacle for angels to behold with
-joy; and one in whom the holy God Himself is well-pleased; he is as “a
-light shining in a dark place,” made more conspicuous and attractive by
-the surrounding gloom. Such was Noah; and God distinguished him
-accordingly by especial tokens of favour and blessing: for He said,
-“Behold I, even I, do bring a flood of waters upon the earth, to destroy
-all flesh, wherein is the breath of life, from under heaven; and every
-thing that is in the earth shall die. But with thee will I establish my
-covenant; and thou shalt come into the ark, thou, and thy sons, and thy
-wife, and thy sons’ wives with thee.” {62a}
-
-A question has been raised respecting the nature of the covenant here
-intended; but the words themselves, taken in connexion with the subject,
-would lead us to conclude, that the covenant to be established, in the
-first instance, was a covenant of safety in the ark, during the flood;
-and this sense is abundantly confirmed by the same word being afterwards
-used in the 9th chapter, when God made His promise to the patriarch, that
-the world should never again be so destroyed: “Behold, I establish my
-covenant with you, and with your seed after you, and with every living
-creature that is with you—neither shall all flesh be cut off any more by
-the waters of a flood; neither shall there any more be a flood to destroy
-the earth.” {62b} Yet, though this was the immediate import of the
-covenant, it probably had, like the ark itself, a further and a typical
-signification, which is thus very admirably expressed by one of the best
-commentators; “I will most certainly make good the promise I have
-formerly made to thee, of preserving thee and thy family from the said
-destruction; and further I will make good, in due time, to thee or thy
-seed after thee, _all_ those covenants or promises, which I have made to
-mankind from the beginning of the world, and which remain to be made
-good; especially the grand covenant concerning the promised seed, of
-Messiah: to which end, I will certainly preserve thee and thy family from
-the destruction I am now bringing on the rest of mankind.” {63}
-
-The first covenant made by God with Adam, was a covenant of works, of
-unsinning obedience; this was broken, and thence came death. The second
-covenant made with Adam, was that of grace and salvation by Jesus Christ,
-who should “come in the fulness of time;” this latter covenant was
-confirmed with Noah, the representative of mankind in the new world after
-the flood; and the covenant, thus renewed with him, was to extend to all
-his posterity; to generations unborn, to all that would become, as he
-was, “heirs of the righteousness which is by faith.” Through him,
-deliverance was preached to the people before the flood; through him,
-everlasting deliverance from sin and death was promised to believers in
-every future age. In the covenant, therefore, made with Noah, all
-mankind have an interest, an especial interest at this day; the promised
-deliverer, whom Noah represented, is come; we “have seen the salvation of
-our God;” the gospel of peace is proclaimed; and nothing is wanting but
-our faithful acceptance of it.
-
-Proceed we now with the history of Noah’s preservation: “The waters
-prevailed exceedingly upon the earth (a hundred and fifty days), and all
-the high hills, that were under the whole heaven, were covered—and all
-flesh died that moved upon the earth, Noah only remained alive, and they
-that were with him in the ark. And the ark rested in the seventh month,
-upon the mountains of Ararat.” {65} Thus was the divine promise
-literally fulfilled, and the fidelity of the patriarch signally
-acknowledged and rewarded. What must have been the emotions of this holy
-man, as he was floating, through the long eventful period, upon the
-surface of the raging waters! How deep and lively his conviction of the
-adorable goodness and the perfect truth of God! How fervent his
-gratitude, how sublime his joy, at escaping unhurt amid the desolation of
-the world! How indescribable his feelings of horror and of awe, at the
-sufferings of those countless multitudes, who were perishing around him;
-over whose lifeless bodies he was riding in peaceful security, reserved
-to be the father of a new-born world! Similar to these are the
-impressions of every sincere believer, on beholding both the providential
-and spiritual dispensations of the Lord. Deeply is he convinced of the
-“goodness and severity of God;” of His goodness to the righteous, His
-severity to the disobedient and evil: Every divine promise and every
-denunciation of divine judgment have been fully accomplished in due
-season; “not one jot or one tittle of the word of God has failed.” The
-Christian, moreover, by his own experience, can testify the truth and
-loving kindness of God: he has sought and found a refuge in the ark of
-salvation, in the gospel of peace; he has been taken out of a corrupt and
-troubled world, and raised above it; so that, while the billows of
-adversity have been rolling all around, and the overbearings of iniquity
-have every where prevailed, he has felt himself in a state of security;
-inclosed by divine mercy “on the right hand and on the left;” protected
-by the power of Jehovah; all things, even the most unruly elements,
-“working together for his good:” when “the rain descends, and the floods
-come, and the winds blow,” he hears and sees it all without dismay; nay,
-with gratitude to his heavenly Preserver; hoping and believing, that the
-waves of trouble are bearing him to the celestial Ararat, upon which he
-shall alight, in God’s appointed time, and “find rest unto his soul.”
-
-But, in the midst of his satisfaction and joy, there is a consideration,
-which strikes a damp upon his soul, and fills him with grief and terror;
-it is, the miserable condition of those his fellow-creatures, who have
-been regardless of their salvation and have perished: the Saviour
-“called, but they would not answer;” He assured them of the coming
-desolation, but they would not take heed; He offered them mercy, but they
-turned away: and the flood came upon them unawares; and it is painful to
-think of them, where they now are, and how many they have been. And not
-only for those who are gone, but for numbers still living, does the
-charitable Christian also feel: it is not for him to be forward in
-judging, not for him to condemn; “he hopeth all things, and believeth all
-things;” but when he sees multitudes around him manifestly walking in the
-“broad way of destruction,” he cannot help feeling both pity and pain;
-especially if any of his neighbours or friends be found in this awful
-state of heedlessness and sin; especially if any who are near and dear
-unto him. He cannot help grieving for them; they will have, at least,
-his tears and his prayers. Would that such sinners might feel for
-themselves, what others feel for them; would that they might turn and
-live! Their case is not like the case of those who were perishing in the
-flood; they are not yet consigned to destruction; would to God that they
-might turn and live!
-
-At length, “the waters were dried up from off the earth, and the face of
-the ground was dry.” “And Noah went forth” out of the ark, and “builded
-an altar unto the Lord, and offered burnt offerings upon the altar,” in
-thanksgiving for his miraculous preservation; “and the Lord smelled a
-sweet savour;” {69} He accepted the incense of the sacrifice, approved
-and honoured the piety and gratitude of Noah.
-
-In all our deliverances and escapes, in all the benefits and blessings we
-receive at the merciful hands of God, let us never fail to imitate this
-bright example of righteousness: be it our first, our immediate act, to
-waft unto the skies the incense of adoration and praise. The faithful
-and observant Christian does indeed perpetually notice the interposition
-of divine Providence in his behalf; and he never fails to render the
-tribute of his heart at least, if not of his lips, to the great
-Deliverer: but besides this, there are few of us, who have not, in some
-striking instances, been wonderfully rescued from imminent danger and
-destruction; preserved in frightful accident, or raised from a sickness
-which was seemingly unto death. Has the favour been duty remembered with
-gratitude? Did it bring us on our knees before the throne of mercy? Did
-we present our offering with that humble sense of our own unworthiness,
-and that devout acknowledgment of God’s love, which gave us just reason
-to believe that the offering was accepted, through Jesus Christ our Lord?
-And ever since, has an altar been raised in our hearts; have our
-affections been dedicated to God, as a memorial of the past deliverance,
-and a fulfilment of the purpose for which we were mercifully spared?
-
-And there is a deliverance greater and mightier than all, of which every
-faithful servant in the gospel is enjoying, at once, both the hope and
-the benefit; a deliverance, of which Noah’s was a type, from the bondage
-and penalty of sin; from eternal misery, and ruin. Are we penetrated
-with a sense of this marvellous mercy? Do we worship our great Redeemer
-in spirit and in truth? Do we love Him with all our heart and soul? Do
-we proclaim abroad our gratitude and love, in the presence of a
-contemptuous world? Noah was immediately and powerfully reminded of the
-divine goodness accorded to himself, by beholding the face of nature all
-desolate and void: and thus, when we behold around us the dismal ravages
-of sin, and contemplate, with the eye of faith, the ruin which they will
-finally bring, are there not afforded to _us_, exulting as we are in the
-hope of our own redemption, abundant memorials of the favour of God to
-ourselves? “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless
-His holy name. Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His
-benefits: who redeemeth thy life from destruction, and crowneth thee with
-loving kindness and tender mercies.” {71}
-
-My brethren, if we would find, as “Noah found, grace in the eyes of the
-Lord,” we must be like him, in faith and obedience, in “faith which
-worketh by love.” We must be ready, at the divine command, to leave the
-“pomps and vanity of a wicked world, and all the sinful lusts of the
-flesh,” and prepare the means of our deliverance, in the way which God
-mercifully points out. We must dare to be singular in the midst of a
-gainsaying and reviling people; and maintain our integrity in the face of
-a backsliding age. If, in the hour of danger and destruction, we would
-have God for our deliverer and friend, we must seek Him and serve Him,
-whilst we are in health and safety: thus will He be our portion in life,
-in death, in judgment, and for ever.
-
-We are hereby led, in the last place, to consider the promise and pledge,
-which God was pleased to afford to the patriarch immediately after the
-flood; that “the waters would no more become a flood to destroy all
-flesh.” “I do set my bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a
-covenant between me and the earth—and I will look upon it, that I may
-remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature
-of all flesh that is upon the earth.” Whether there had ever been a
-rainbow before the flood, is a point that cannot absolutely be
-determined; probably not; but if there had been, it makes no difference;
-the bow was then consecrated to be the token of a covenant of mercy,
-between God and man; and whenever the descending shower and the darkened
-sky recal to mind his former vengeance on the ungodly, we may take
-comfort on beholding this bright display of majesty and beauty, “this
-faithful witness in heaven;” {73} our hearts may then be gladdened by the
-remembrance and assurance of God’s everlasting love: we behold the seal
-of heaven, ratifying the promise of divine favour: and the believer may
-justly regard it, not only as a token of security against a future
-deluge, but also as a hopeful intimation of God’s mercy in all the storms
-of this mortal life, in every threatening flood. We may view it, with
-delighted eyes, as a blessed memorial of the truth and faithfulness of
-that Almighty Protector, whose word is pledged for the preservation of
-His people, at all times and under all possible circumstances. His
-mercies, of providence and grace, can never fail; and an earnest of these
-mercies we may discover, when we look upon the bow in the cloud; it is,
-in a secondary sense at least, emblematical of God’s everlasting covenant
-with His faithful people, that He will “never leave them nor forsake
-them.”
-
-Nor is it without authority, that we are thus extending the import of
-this heavenly sign: St. John in one of his beatific visions, “looked and
-behold a door was opened in heaven, and behold a throne was set in
-heaven, and there was a rainbow round about the throne.” {75} The saints
-in light are thus represented as beholding the abode of their God,
-encircled with the token of His covenanted mercy; an evidence to them,
-that they have finally escaped the devastation of the world; that the
-floods and storms have for ever subsided; that none of the imperfections
-and troubles and dangers, from which they have been rescued, shall ever
-again disturb their mind or mar their happiness.
-
-Hear then, in few words, the conclusion of the whole matter: let the
-destroying deluge awaken in us, by divine grace, a living conviction of
-the infallibility of God’s word, of the certain “perdition of ungodly
-men;” let the deliverance of Noah and his family assure our hearts in the
-expectation of the glorious redemption of every believer and servant of
-God.
-
-Let us enter the ark of salvation, prepared by our great Redeemer; enter
-and abide there; and we shall be carried triumphantly over the stormy
-elements of the world; and be conducted “unto the haven where we would
-be:” the dove will bring unto us the olive branch of peace; and the
-transcendent beauty of the celestial rainbow shall appear without a
-cloud, and bless our souls with the perfect assurance of eternal safety
-and joy.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON V.
-DO THIS GREAT WICKEDNESS AND SIN AGAINST GOD.
-
-
- GENESIS xxxix. 9.
-
- _How then can I do this great wickedness and sin against God_?
-
-THE history of Joseph, by whom these memorable words were uttered, is
-full of interest and instruction. He presents unto us the splendid and
-rare example of a person advanced, from the lowest estate, to distinction
-and wealth and power; and yet preserving his piety and integrity
-unimpaired. Not all the luxury and blandishments of a court of
-unbelievers could tempt him to forget that gracious almighty benefactor,
-by whom he had been rescued from danger, and raised to prosperity and
-greatness. We all know how apt are the understanding and heart of man to
-be captivated and corrupted by the enjoyment of earthly pomp and
-pleasure, under any circumstances; but especially when they are attained
-by a sudden and unexpected elevation. Joseph had been cruelly left by
-his brethren in a state of utter destitution. Taken out of the pit into
-which they had inhumanly cast him, he was sold as a slave to a company of
-people, who were passing by, and carried into Egypt; by accident, as it
-appeared, but really under the guidance and direction of an all-wise
-providence, to accomplish the wonderful purposes of His divine will.
-
-The scriptural account of his rapid rise to favour and eminence, in this
-his new abode, is exceedingly striking; and shews the especial regard
-which the Almighty bears for His righteous and faithful servants; there
-is no situation of life too obscure for the notice of His all-seeing eye;
-none too low for Him to interpose in behalf of His people, and exalt them
-to usefulness and honour. “Joseph was brought down to Egypt; and
-Potiphar an officer of Pharaoh, captain of the guard, an Egyptian, bought
-him of the hands of the Ishmeelites, which had brought him down thither.
-And the Lord was with Joseph, and he was a prosperous man; and he was in
-the house of his master the Egyptian. And his master saw that the Lord
-was with him, and that the Lord made all that he did to prosper in his
-hand. And Joseph found grace in his sight, and he served him; and he
-made him overseer over his house, and all that he had he put into his
-hand.” {78}
-
-Thus favoured and advanced, this holy man never forgot, as too many do,
-that gracious Being, to whose loving kindness he was indebted; instead of
-growing vain of his superiority, as if he had raised himself merely by
-his own talent or industry, he referred all his blessings to God’s
-bountiful providence, and rendered unto Him the return of a grateful and
-faithful service.
-
-It was not long before his fidelity was put to the trial; and the manner
-in which he escaped the snare, that was laid for him, affords a
-remarkable proof not only of his integrity, but of his faith, his piety,
-his religion, his gratitude and love to God: the only principles upon
-which any dependence can be placed in the temptation of an evil hour.
-Joseph, when powerfully solicited to betray the confidence, and despoil
-the honour of his master, might have contented himself with declaring the
-numberless acts of kindness which he had received at Potiphar’s hand; the
-recompence of faithfulness which he owed for them all; or the fear of
-bringing upon himself disgrace and ruin, by so atrocious a crime;
-considerations indeed, which actually had no small influence and weight
-upon his mind. But he goes much further, and appeals to a higher
-authority, to a nobler principle; to one which was calculated to give
-unto every minor consideration a tenfold effect; to secure the
-performance of that duty, which reason and honour and conscience
-suggested; he appealed to his God, from the fountain of whose mercy he
-had derived all his benefits and blessings; and to whom therefore, his
-sincere unswerving obedience was unreservedly due. Like every pious and
-good man, he remembers and regards the human ties by which he is bound;
-and instances, in feeling language, the kindness and estimation of his
-earthly master; “Behold, my master wrotteth not (knoweth not) what is
-with me in the house, and he hath committed all things that he hath to my
-hand; there is none greater in this house than I.” {80} But then this
-man of God, after thus recounting the signal favour which had been shewn
-him by an earthly master, does not rest his duty upon saying, ‘how can I
-abuse the unbounded confidence reposed in me; how can I prove myself so
-unworthy of my lord?’ But immediately, as if it were the habitual
-suggestion of his mind, elevates his thoughts and affections to his
-master in heaven; to Him, who had put it into the heart of Potiphar thus
-to distinguish and bless him; to Him, by whose grace alone he had been
-what he had been, a faithful and dutiful servant; and by whose gracious
-interposition “all things had worked together for his good.” For such
-surpassing mercy poured down upon him from heaven, he could not bear the
-thought of making so base a requital; and exclaimed in the energy of his
-soul, “How can I do this great wickedness and sin against God?” Resting
-upon such a principle, the triumph of his virtue was complete; it enabled
-him to disregard whatever evil consequences might ensue; and to stand
-against the subtlest wiles of the tempter, and under circumstances of
-imminent peril, a noble monument of the power of religion; upright in his
-duty to God and man.
-
-Much edification may the Christian gather from the narrative before us;
-and happy would it be for the Christian world, if the principle, here so
-splendidly illustrated, were in fuller operation. It might indeed be
-thought, that with the superior knowledge we enjoy, of the transcendent
-mercy and goodness of God, of the extent and bounty of His providence, as
-well as the riches of his grace; that, with the clear revelation of the
-divine will, the glorious manifestation of gospel light, to us so
-abundantly vouchsafed; that, taught as we have been to look upon God as
-our reconciled Father in Jesus Christ, as the “author and giver of every
-good gift” in this world, and the spring of all our blissful hopes of an
-inheritance in the brighter world to come; it might have been thought,
-under these superior advantages and means of grace, that in all the
-events of life, in every temptation and trial, our affections would be
-certainly raised, above every earthly consideration, to the high and holy
-God; that, when we are pressed with the solicitations of evil, it would
-immediately occur to our minds and enter into our hearts, how abhorrent
-the offence must be to that perfect and glorious Being, in whose image we
-are professedly recreated; how grievous to that Holy Spirit, in whom we
-ought to live and walk; how disgracefully and basely unworthy of those
-spiritual privileges, to which we have been restored; of the great
-mercies we have already received; and the still greater we are yet
-expecting, from the redemption which hath been wrought for us by the ever
-blessed Jesus; it might be concluded, that Christians, when tempted to
-injury and evil, would immediately refer the matter to the blessed word
-and will of their divine master, and exclaim, with a pious and grateful
-feeling, “how can I do this great wickedness and sin against God?”
-
-Yet, is it not notorious, that a great, an overwhelming portion of the
-inhabitants of this enlightened land, are governed in a very small, if in
-any degree, by this pure sense of spiritual and religious obligation?
-Commonly, when they are solicited to sinful gratifications and pursuits,
-“God is not in all their thoughts:” whether they yield or not, depends
-partly upon the strength of their natural inclination; partly upon the
-light in which the sin may be regarded by the world around them; upon the
-extent to which it may affect their worldly reputation; upon what they
-may calculate to gain or lose by their conduct. The law of custom has
-manifestly a greater influence than the law of God; nay, what are called
-the _rules of honour_, which, in many instances, are flagrantly repugnant
-and opposite to the divine will, (and might rather be called the rules of
-_dishonour_,) are appealed to, in a Christian country, as the arbiters of
-right and wrong; while the “honour that cometh from God only” is totally
-disregarded and forgotten. And even of those, who are unacquainted with
-the precise terms of these fallacious rules, what multitudes are there,
-whose practice and conduct are determined by considerations merely human;
-who will be guided by a feeling of gratitude to an earthly benefactor,
-and yet have no sense or remembrance of the favour of an all-merciful
-God; who will be deterred from evil by the dread of offending an earthly
-superior, that has power only over the body, and yet possess in their
-hearts no fear whatever of Him, “who is able to destroy both body and
-soul in hell.” Where there are no better guides, no higher inducements
-than these, “to refuse the evil and to choose the good,” we cannot be
-surprised at the licentiousness and corruption, which so unhappily
-prevail; nor even at the flagrant and shameless commission of that
-calamitous sin, which Joseph rejected with such holy disdain. Against
-the impetuous desires and cravings of the flesh; the assiduous entreaties
-of wicked companions; and the beguiling charms, which Satan so well knows
-how to spread over all the ways and works of evil; against all these
-combining together, it cannot be expected, that any human motives or
-maxims, any earthly feelings alone, should be able successfully to stand.
-
-Not that such motives or maxims or feelings are to be despised or
-disregarded; not that any just or lawful consideration, however trivial,
-should be overlooked, which may be instrumental, in any degree, to
-preserve us from evil. Far is it from being the design of the gospel, to
-supersede the dictates and rules of reason; the workings of conscience;
-or the influence of natural affection, of hope and joy and gratitude and
-love; the gospel purifies all these motives, and guides them aright, and
-directs the exercise of them into the proper channel. But even the best
-of them, with the sincere Christian, are as nothing when compared with
-his religious principle, with the faith and fear and love of God: when
-tempted to sin, he thinks of that Holy Being, with whom he has entered
-into covenant; of that gracious Redeemer, who hath endured so much for
-his sake, who hath brought him into the way of salvation, by whose favour
-he is enjoying “the life that now is, and the promise of that which is to
-come;” he thinks of the Holy Spirit, “by whom he has been regenerated and
-made a child of grace;” he would not quench that sacred flame and energy,
-by which his corrupt nature has been enlightened and purified; from which
-“all good desires, all good counsels, and all just works do proceed;” by
-which his soul is animated with the inspiring hope of beholding his God
-face to face, in perfect righteousness and everlasting glory. He loves
-to please, he cannot bear the thought of offending, the Lord of majesty
-and mercy; and looks to Him for strength in the hour of trial. The
-constant habit of thus lifting up, in the spirit of prayer, the thoughts
-and affections to God; the full and abiding persuasion of His manifold
-mercies to the faithful, of His terrible judgments to be executed upon
-the disobedient and the impenitent sinner, will always be found the
-surest, the only sure, preservative from sin.
-
-And how can that man, who believes, with all his heart and soul, in the
-glorious revelation of the Gospel; in the miseries which he may thereby
-escape, and the happiness which he may attain; in the means ordained for
-his accomplishment of these momentous purposes; how can he fail or cease
-to maintain a lively remembrance of the goodness and wisdom and power of
-God? Will he not “set the Lord alway before him;” and under the
-countenance and protection of his Saviour, and in the awful presence of
-his Judge, will he not feel himself powerfully actuated to restrain and
-resist every guilty inclination, and to decline from the danger and
-dishonour of every evil way? “How can I do this great wickedness and sin
-against” my Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier—the Almighty God, whose I
-am, and whom I serve?
-
-This reflection is also calculated to excite our attention to the duties
-of this holy season, {89a} prescribed by the Church for our christian
-improvement; the duties of self-examination and repentance. Convinced,
-that every wilful sin renders us unworthy of acceptance with that God,
-“who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity,” let us retire into our
-chamber and take our private hour, and cast a searching eye over our
-character and life, intent upon discovering every stain and blemish; let
-us “see if there be any wicked way in us,” and pray fervently to be “led
-into the way everlasting.” {89b} Let the sinfulness of our condition by
-nature, the sinfulness of our thoughts and words and works, pass in
-review before us; nor let the soul ever rest content, till we have made
-our peace with God;—by an humble abasement under the sense of our
-undeservings; by unfeigned sorrow for the past; by a holy, steady, entire
-resolution, to watch more carefully, and walk more circumspectly; by
-laying aside “every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us.”
-{90a}
-
-When we duly think of the long-suffering and forbearance of our offended
-Father; of His great mercy in “sparing us when we deserved punishment;”
-sparing us to repent of our faults and follies, to advance in holiness
-and righteousness, to further the everlasting interest of the soul;
-surely we shall then be penetrated with a deep sense of the divine
-compassion; and the goodness of God “will answer its blessed purpose and
-lead us to repentance.” {90b} ‘How can I persist in abusing the patience
-which has borne with me so long? How shall I continue to neglect any
-duty, which so merciful a God has commanded, for the edification and
-salvation of my soul? How shall I rebelliously cherish any sinful
-indulgence, which is opposed to His holy law; and thus forfeit my claim
-to that heavenly inheritance, which my Saviour has died to procure for
-the true believer, for the penitent and contrite in heart? How can I do
-less than abhor the sin, which His blood was shed to expiate and cleanse
-away; less, than delight and advance in the way of righteousness which He
-has opened to me;’ even till “I come unto the measure of the stature of
-the fulness of Christ.”
-
-Reflections, deliberations, resolutions such as these, sincerely formed
-and cherished, would very effectually, by divine grace, assist us in
-attaining that disposition of mind and heart, which might lead us
-habitually to raise our thoughts to God, under every circumstance, and at
-every time of temptation. There would thus be cast around us a sacred
-wall of defence; a perpetual barrier against the inroads of Satan and of
-sin; and if at times they should, when we are suddenly thrown off our
-guard, break in upon the heart and lay it waste, they would speedily be
-expelled, and the breach would be healed without delay. Thus we shall
-become more jealous over ourselves, more circumspect and watchful; we
-shall never feel easy, while betraying, into the hands of the enemy, the
-merciful and glorious work of God. With a love for His goodness, a
-reverence for His truth, and a fear of His judgments, abiding in the
-heart, we shall fly from every approach of evil, and dwell in safety
-beneath the shadow of His wing: “we shall be enabled to withstand in the
-evil day, and having done all to stand.” {92}
-
-It is our distinguished privilege to be enlightened by the “wisdom which
-is from above,” to “be strong in the Lord, and in the power of His
-might:” God forbid that we should return to the “beggarly elements of the
-world,” and seek to draw our principles and strength from this polluted
-source. Had we never been blessed with the light of revelation, we must
-have been content with such means of duty, as our dark state afforded: we
-must have been governed and guided like the heathen, whom we now pity.
-But, as we are supremely favoured with the knowledge of the true God, as
-“our fellowship is with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ;” as
-the Holy Spirit is given to “help our infirmities;” let us, in every
-temptation, remember our infinite obligations to the great and merciful
-Jehovah, and trust in the sufficiency of His almighty power.
-
-After thus “walking with God as friends;” having, for the sake of His
-friendship, struggled with our evil propensities; having despised the
-vanity and folly, and renounced the love of the world, we shall
-experience more and more, the value of His favour, and the fulness of His
-grace; serving Him in humble gratitude, we shall be acknowledged as His
-own peculiar people, and He will be our God; in all perplexities we shall
-find Him our guide, in all trouble our comfort and support; amid the
-crooked paths of vice He will “make our way plain before His face;” the
-“snare will be broken and we shall be delivered;” He will honour us among
-men; “such honour have all His saints;” and this will be an earnest of
-our everlasting honour in His heavenly abode, in perfect friendship and
-communion with Him, in that blessed place where sin and temptation will
-be no more, “where nothing that defileth can enter.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON VI.
-ON THE JOURNEY TO EMMAUS.
-
-
- LUKE xxiv. 32. _And they said one to another_, _Did not our heart
- burn within us_, _while He talked with us by the way_, _and while He
- opened to us the Scriptures_?
-
-THIS is a portion of one of those affecting and instructive pieces of
-history, with which the sacred scriptures every where abound.
-
-After the resurrection of Jesus, on the very same day, two of His
-disciples were journeying together to a village called Emmaus, a few
-miles distant from Jerusalem. And as they went, “they talked together of
-those things which had happened.” And certainly never was there
-furnished to disciples an occasion of more interesting conversation.
-They were at no loss for a subject; their feelings were deeply moved,
-their circumstances most peculiar; they had just been bereaved of their
-Lord; and were left, as they thought, helpless and hopeless upon the wide
-world: they had been attending the sad scene of His sufferings; and
-doubtless had been witnessing his awful crucifixion; abundance of matter
-therefore, was afforded them for reflection and discourse. But besides
-this, they had heard the report of their Lord’s resurrection; and as they
-did not at all understand the purport of it, appeared indeed scarcely to
-believe an event so extraordinary, they were probably consulting what to
-expect, or what to do. “And it came to pass, that, while they communed
-together and reasoned, Jesus Himself drew near, and went with them. But
-their eyes were holden, that they should not know Him.” {96} Either He
-assumed a different form, or He supernaturally influenced their sight,
-that they should not at first recognize Him.
-
-Jesus, let us observe, appeared to the disciples, while they were engaged
-in holy meditation and converse; and thus, though no longer visible in
-the world, He may still be expected, at all times, to favour His true
-disciples in a similar manner. While they are conversing upon the things
-belonging to His kingdom, upon the wonders of His love, and the riches of
-His grace, upon their high privileges and expectations, upon the
-doctrines and precepts of His holy word, upon the duties and experiences
-of their earthly pilgrimage, upon their walk with God here, and their
-hope of dwelling together with Him for ever hereafter; while they are
-musing and discoursing of these things, the blessed Jesus will join
-company with them, though unknown and unseen; and will shed over their
-conference a holy and heavenly benediction. A reproach it is to vast
-numbers of His professing disciples, that they are not more anxious to
-embrace such opportunities of enjoying the favour and presence of their
-Lord; that many, even intimate friends and near relations, amid the
-endless variety of their subjects of conversation, are scarcely ever
-found to exchange a sentiment or a word, upon the most interesting and
-important of all topics; the love of their Lord and the edification of
-their souls. Eagerly do they embrace every opportunity of ministering to
-the passing amusement, or the temporal welfare, of each other; the only
-subject, which appears to be forbidden ground, is the subject of an
-eternal life to come, their spiritual well-being here and hereafter.
-
-But let me not be misunderstood on this point; I am not speaking of the
-promiscuous intercourse of society; not of religious discussions or
-allusions amid the ordinary business of life; not of that irreverent and
-dangerous habit, into which same believers have been incautiously
-betrayed, of detailing to one another their continual and familiar
-experiences; I am speaking of the private and sober communing of
-christian friends, who are dwelling together, or journeying together, as
-the disciples to Emmaus: and truly, “with the bible in their hands and
-the Saviour in their hearts,” it is wonderful how they can forbear from
-spiritual intercourse. If the everlasting truths of the gospel have made
-a deep impression upon their minds; if, for the promises therein
-revealed, it is their object to live and to die; if they have one common
-hope of their calling, “one thing needful” which occupies their
-affections; if they have the same exalted view of a glorious kingdom in
-heaven; if they are living together in love, and comforting themselves,
-that the holy bond shall never be broken, that it shall be renewed in a
-happier world and last for ever; then it would be strange if their
-thoughts and their conversation should never turn upon a subject of such
-overwhelming interest; upon a topic so abundantly fruitful in materials
-for mutual edification. The idea of the Lord being present with us in
-our conferences is an animating and ennobling idea: but we cannot expect
-His holy presence in the scenes of vanity and frivolity; nor can we
-expect it at any time, if the thought and desire of Him be altogether
-excluded. From the cold moralist, or the worldly-minded disciple, from
-those who have no practical concern for the gospel or for their souls, we
-need not look for a word of spiritual communication; it is abhorrent to
-their feelings and inconsistent with their notions; but the sincere
-Christian should “think on these things.” “The world will love its own,”
-and follow its own; its own friends and maxims and ways: but “we are not
-of the world,” and better fruit is expected from us.
-
-But to return to the history before us. Having listened for a time to
-the earnest discourse of the disciples, Jesus at length, as if a
-stranger, enquired into the subject, which engrossed their minds and
-rendered them so sorrowful: “And the one of them whose name was Cleopas,
-(the same, it is thought, as Alpheus, who was the father of two Apostles
-and nearly related to our Lord Himself,) answering, said unto Him, art
-thou only a stranger in Jerusalem, and hast not known the things, which
-are come to pass there in these days?” “And he said unto them what
-things?” said it, probably, with a view of giving them an opportunity of
-declaring their opinions, upon what had taken place, as also upon Himself
-and the nature of His kingdom: “and they said unto Him, concerning Jesus
-of Nazareth, which was a prophet mighty in deed and word, before God and
-all the people: and how the chief priests and our rulers delivered Him to
-be condemned to death, and have crucified Him. But we trusted, that it
-had been He who should have redeemed Israel; and beside all this, to-day
-is the third day since these things were done.” {101} They concluded,
-that their bright hopes of redemption were extinguished, were all dead
-and buried with Jesus: even though they had heard of His rising again,
-according to His own promise, which they had just alluded to, still they
-had no expectation of holding any further intercourse with Him, of any
-further display of His power in their behalf.
-
-“Then he said unto them, O fools (O unwise and blinded people) and slow
-of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken; ought not Christ
-(ought not your Messiah prophesied of old) to have suffered these things
-and enter into His glory?” {102} Is it not clearly foretold by your
-prophets, by Isaiah especially in his 53d chapter, that the redeemer of
-Israel should be “despised and rejected of men,” should bear “their
-griefs and carry their sorrows,” “should be led as a lamb to the
-slaughter, should be numbered with the transgressors,” should make “His
-grave with the wicked (should die with malefactors) and with the rich in
-his death,” (should be buried in the sepulchre of the rich,) and after
-that “prolong His days,” and then that “the pleasure of the Lord should
-prosper in His hand?” According to your own prophecies then, and in
-order to their fulfilment, has not Jesus done that, as Messiah, which He
-was required to do? Instead of being offended, and giving up the cause,
-ye ought to be fully convinced, that He is “the Christ, the son of the
-living God.” {103a} Then, “beginning at Moses and all the prophets, He
-expounded to them in all the sacred scriptures the things concerning
-Himself.” {103b} How enlightening and convincing must this discourse
-have been! But it is not preserved to us: with so complete a body of
-information and evidence, it did not please the Almighty to favour the
-world. We are left to gather the instruction by diligent observation and
-study; and thankful may we be, that there still remain most abundant
-sources of satisfactory knowledge on this head; that the prophecies and
-types of the Saviour in the Old Testament, when compared with their
-fulfilment, are sufficiently clear for the conviction of every honest and
-well-disposed mind.
-
-After this, the disciples “drew nigh unto the village whither they went;
-and Jesus made as though He would have gone further. But they
-constrained Him, saying, Abide with us; for it is toward evening, and the
-day is far spent. And He went in to tarry with them.” {104a} And thus
-He still favours His disciples, and will do as long as the world stands;
-when they heartily desire His abiding presence, it will never be denied;
-wherever the place or whatever the occasion, their Lord, if wished for
-and welcome, will be of their company: in the domestic circle, in the
-converse of friends, in the sacred hour of solitude; “when thou sittest
-in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest
-down, and when thou risest up.” {104b} We have only to lift our thoughts
-to Him; “to set Him always before us; and He will be at our right hand,
-that we shall not be moved.” {105a} At all times He will be found “a
-present help;” but especially when we are associated or assembled in
-remembrance of Him. Such is the promise of His word: “where two or three
-are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them:”
-{105b} gathered together for consultation, for worship, for any holy
-purpose.
-
-Jesus, when He had entered into the house with the two disciples, acted
-in a manner which served to bring Him to their knowledge: “As He sat at
-meat with them, He took bread and blessed it, and brake and gave to them;
-(though a supposed stranger, He appeared as the head of the family;
-blessing and distributing, as His custom had been at their ordinary
-meals:) And their eyes were opened, and they knew Him: And He vanished
-out of their sight;” {105c} immediately left them to ponder upon the
-amazing things which they had heard. “And they said one to another, Did
-not our heart burn within us, while He talked with us by the way, and
-while He opened to us the Scriptures?”
-
-Cleopas and his friend were unquestionably favoured beyond the common lot
-of disciples: to hear the sacred oracles explained by Him, who was at
-once the subject and fulfilment of them; by Him, through whose spirit the
-prophets and holy men of old all spake; to hear them perfectly explained
-and illustrated by the voice of the Son of God, might well make a vivid
-impression upon their minds, and fill their bosom with fervent and
-rapturous delight: Yet, though we cannot be so singularly blessed, there
-may be communicated to us a measure of that knowledge, which these
-disciples enjoyed; there may be imparted to us no inconsiderable portion
-of the same holy animation.
-
-Our merciful Lord, on withdrawing His visible presence from this world,
-sent, according to His promise, another Comforter; a Comforter, who
-should “guide His people into all truth;” should “give them a right
-judgment in all things,” and spread a holy influence over their
-affections and desires. And now, when we are reading His word, when
-musing upon it with devout meditation, and conversing with one another
-upon its exalted truths, its heavenly purposes, its abundant promises and
-blessings; and now, when we hear the word from the lips of those
-ministers, who, however unworthy in themselves, are commissioned to speak
-in His great name, our hearts may burn within us, and “our eyes may be
-opened to behold wondrous things out of His law;” {107} we may still be
-powerfully impressed, if we have, what we are taught by our church to
-pray for, “grace to hear meekly the word, and to receive it with pure
-affection, and to bring forth the fruits of the Spirit.”
-
-May I not appeal, in justification of these remarks, to some of you here
-present? Have not your minds, when intent upon the doctrines of the
-gospel, and taking a view of heavenly things, been sometimes visited with
-a holy illumination, which has seemed to raise you above the world, and
-to make you feel more sensibly, that “you have your conversation in
-heaven?” {108} Have not the ties of earth been loosened, while your soul
-was expatiating on the deep things of God, on His wisdom and power and
-love, on the dealings of His providence and grace, on the glories of His
-eternal presence? Have you not, in some such moments, been so impressed,
-as to return to the world with a degree of reluctance; and, like the
-disciples at the transfiguration, almost tempted to say, of your
-spiritual and heavenly visions, “it is good for me to be here?” These
-are no enthusiastic imaginations; they are the sober and solid effects of
-the realized presence of our Redeemer; they are the burnings of heart, of
-which the disciples spake; they are the foretaste of our knowledge and
-joy and light and life above. Doubtless they are to be encouraged with
-humility and sobriety; doubtless they may degenerate into enthusiasm; for
-there is no spiritual good, which may not be abused: but the fear of
-enthusiasm is not to hinder us in gathering comfort and delight from the
-study of scriptural truth, from holy and exalted meditation. The world
-may call it weakness and folly; for it cannot be understood by the world;
-but the Christian knows for it a better name; and few eminent Christians
-have there been, who would not readily bear witness to the truth of these
-things, who have not felt the inspiriting, uplifting power of divine
-contemplation.
-
-And this, like all other exercises of true faith and piety, is of great
-practical importance; it is fruitful in righteousness to all who “think
-soberly;” it serves them, when they return to the busy scenes of earth,
-as an animation to duty; it purifies their affections and renders the
-world little in their eyes; it arms them for conflict, and reconciles
-them to trouble: in the midst of trials, of disappointments and
-bereavements, of struggles and difficulties, of frowns and oppositions,
-they remember, with thankfulness and comfort, the spiritual joys they
-have experienced, and expect to be blessed with them again: yes, in their
-darker hours, they remember, that the Sun of righteousness, has shone
-brightly upon them, and the beams are still reflected; though they cannot
-at present perceive Him so clearly, though He seems, like Jesus with the
-disciples, to have “vanished out of their sight,” He has left a glory
-behind, and will again visit them with the fulness of His favour; and
-they go on their way “not faithless, but believing.”
-
-To those who have been thus in the habit of pious and scriptural
-meditation; of intently dwelling upon the sublime mysteries, and the
-gracious promises, and the noble examples, and the striking histories of
-the word of God; to them it is needless to recommend a continuance of the
-good work; it is a christian obligation, which they can never think of
-declining; and besides this, the delight and improvement, which it
-affords, are its own sufficient recommendation. But upon all, who have
-unhappily neglected this their great privilege and duty, I would most
-earnestly press the importance of attending to this point, as a matter of
-bounden necessity. It is not enough to form an acquaintance with the
-leading truths of the gospel, as a matter of faith and profession; there
-is much to be learnt upon a nearer inspection, much indeed that can never
-be learned without it; much to enlarge and exalt the understanding; to
-renew the heart and regulate the life. The necessary intercourse, which
-most of us have with the world, is of a lowering and defiling nature;
-estranging the heart from a love of holiness and of God: and in order to
-correct this evil, scriptural study and spiritual consideration, as well
-as fervent prayer, are indispensable.
-
-Let not any day pass over your heads without some portion of the Bible,
-some subject of divine revelation, being brought distinctly to your view.
-The exercise will interfere with none of your earthly duties, but will
-help you in the performance of them all; will smooth whatever there be of
-ruggedness in your way; will strengthen you in the hour of temptation,
-and comfort you in perplexity and trouble. Many an encouraging promise
-and many an enlivening assurance will recur to your memory; and “a word
-in season how good is it:” examples of suffering and patience, of
-striving and perseverance, of warfare and triumph, will kindle in your
-breast an emulous ardour, and you will say, ‘By the help of the Lord, I
-will “go and do likewise.”’ Thus will the Bible be a never-failing
-source of strength and consolation all the day long; as the waters, which
-flowed from the flinty rock, accompanied and refreshed the Israelites,
-ever and anon, in their journey through the wilderness, so will your
-spiritual musings, suggested by the very hardships or troubles of life,
-be a perpetual stream of refreshment to your souls, even “in a dry land
-thirsty land, where no water is.” {113a}
-
-And by this means you will be preparing and training your souls for a
-happier communion with the Saviour in another world; where all the
-dealings of His providence, and all the wonders of His grace, will be
-more fully and gloriously manifested. And if the heart of the Christian
-now burn within him, at the contemplation of heavenly truth and redeeming
-love; now, in his frail tenement of clay; how unspeakable will be his
-delight, when these things are revealed to his pure spirit, in the realms
-of perfection and bliss. Then will he know more of “the love of Christ
-which passeth knowledge;” then will he see more of “the length and
-breadth and depth and height” {113b} of the mystery of mercy; he will see
-God “face to face” and “know even as he is known.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON VII.
-IF THEY HEAR NOT MOSES AND THE PROPHETS.
-
-
- LUKE xvi. 31.
-
- _If they hear not Moses and the Prophets_, _neither will they be
- persuaded_, _though one rose from the dead_.
-
-LET us advert to the occasion on which these words were delivered, to the
-parable of which they form a part. The case there presented to us by the
-description of the rich man is unhappily of frequent occurrence in every
-age. Surrounded by all the luxuries that wealth could furnish, he looked
-for nothing beyond them: how many fellow mortals there were near his
-dwelling, deprived of the necessities, while he was revelling in the
-superfluities of life, was no care, no consideration of his; the selfish
-enjoyment of this world entirely absorbed his affections, and threw a
-veil over all expectation of a world to come: satisfied, that he had
-“goods laid by for many years,” he imagined that he had nothing to do,
-but to “eat, drink, and be merry.”
-
-But such ignorance and insensibility did not prevent him from being
-called to account; such forgetfulness of his latter end did not retard
-the evil day. He died—and was buried, we may conclude, with costly
-preparation answerable to the splendour in which he had lived. This
-however, was the last service which his riches were able to render him;
-and melancholy it was, when contrasted with the state, in which his soul
-was existing, while his treasures were employed in doing honour to the
-lifeless body. He found in that state, what he might have discovered
-before, that riches, if selfishly employed in purposes of vanity and
-pleasure, are a deadly snare; that earthly indulgences, if pursued with
-excess, to the neglect of duty towards God and man, instead of being a
-blessing, are paving the way to misery; he found, “what an evil and
-bitter thing it is,” to squander the favours of heaven without
-remembering “the author and giver of every good gift.”
-
-Perceiving therefore, by sad experience, his own deplorable condition, he
-is represented as being moved with a feeling of pity for his brethren:
-his first anxiety, indeed, was naturally for himself—for some
-alleviation, at least, of the wretchedness of his fate; but when he was
-informed that such desire was fruitless, that even the assuagement of his
-pain was impossible, that there was no means of conveying even a drop of
-water to cool the thirst upon his tongue, that the great gulf was finally
-and irremoveably fixed, he then hoped that something might be done for
-his brethren who were still surviving; they had not yet passed the
-boundary of life and grace; and therefore he entreats that, while the
-far-spent day was shining upon them, Lazarus might be despatched from his
-abode of bliss, to warn them of the untimely end to which they were
-hastening; and induce them effectually to repent before “the night should
-come, in which no man can work.” {117a}
-
-Abraham’s answer is, “they have Moses and the prophets, let them hear
-_them_.” A messenger from the court of heaven could tell them nothing
-new; they are already acquainted with their duty and the consequences of
-neglecting it: Jehovah has revealed unto them His blessed will, and
-clearly made known what is required of them, “to do justly, and to love
-mercy, and to walk humbly with their God.” {117b} His covenant with
-their fathers, and the promulgation of His law, have been attested by a
-series of signal miracles, which they do not pretend to dispute; and in
-every page of their history are recorded God’s promised blessings to the
-good, and the execution of His vengeance upon the evil; and, therefore,
-in as far as knowledge is concerned, they have all the intelligence that
-can be desired.
-
-But the wretched man, in the agony of his own feelings, and the earnest
-desire to preserve his family from such woe, still pursues his request.
-“Nay, father Abraham;” but, though they have neglected the ordinary calls
-of heaven, assuredly, if so astonishing an admonition were granted to
-them, as that of one risen from the dead, they would be thereby persuaded
-to repent. Then follows the answer of the text, “If they hear not Moses
-and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from
-the dead.” And thus the conference ended.
-
-From this conclusion of the parables two important observations may be
-drawn _first_, that if men fail to be convinced and converted, to be led
-to their God and their duty, by those sufficient means of grace which are
-already vouchsafed to them, they would not be likely to yield to any
-extraordinary means; and, _secondly_, that no such additional means are
-to be expected.
-
-1. In all cases of spiritual and practical unbelief, in all cases where
-the declarations of the Almighty are disregarded, the fault lies not so
-much in the understanding as in the heart. The revelations of heaven are
-at variance with those interests and pursuits, which the heart is
-inclined and resolved to retain; and on this account, and by this means,
-the mind is prejudiced and set against such revelations, and they are not
-fully and implicitly believed. They call men to the love and practice of
-holiness, to which our degenerate nature is averse; the pleasures of sin
-are preferred, and the voice of God is unheeded: they teach us, that all
-earthly objects and possessions, in themselves, are vain, and call us to
-prepare for an everlasting inheritance above; the sensual and
-worldly-minded think and feel, that “it is good for them to be here,” and
-are not disposed to place their affections upon the promise of an
-hereafter. We none of us professedly disbelieve the revelation of
-heaven, any more than the brethren of the rich man did; and therefore I
-need not stay to argue the point on that ground. The doctrine before us
-is this, that men, professing to believe, to have received abundant
-evidence of the truth, and yet refusing to act upon that belief, would
-not be induced so to act, by any violent appeal to their senses or
-natural powers, even though it were the work of a divine interposition in
-their behalf.
-
-What do we believe? That, after this life, which experience tells us
-must soon terminate, and which may, at any moment, be unexpectedly and
-suddenly brought to a close, we shall immediately enter upon another and
-an eternal state of being; and that our condition, in the endless life to
-come, will be happy or miserable, according to the manner in which we
-have passed our short pilgrimage upon earth, whether in a belief of the
-gospel or in unbelief; in obedience or disobedience; in holiness or sin.
-Now, if we really and vitally believe these truths, their importance is
-so striking, that nothing could possibly suggest to the mind a weightier
-consideration. And if these truths be only superficially credited, it
-must be owing to some corrupt and perverted affections, which throw a
-veil over the understanding, and render it proof against all moral means
-of conviction. Perhaps some strange and startling occurrence, such as
-the re-appearance of a friend from the dead, might forcibly affect the
-imagination for a time; and, filling us with alarm and apprehension,
-might fill us also with vehement resolutions of amendment: but the
-imagination is a weak principle to build upon; the impressions it
-receives are commonly very transient; they gradually wear away on the
-presentation of fresh images, in our commerce with the world: and if
-there be not a solid spiritual conviction, in the mind and heart, of the
-awful realities of an hereafter, if the conviction does not rest upon the
-divine evidence accorded by the Spirit and the word of God, the effects
-of sudden surprise or consternation will soon vanish away; the latent
-dispositions of the soul will break forth again; the old habits, of
-recklessness and evil, be reassumed; the world again victorious.
-
-For the truth of these things, I appeal, if not to yourselves, (as in
-many instances, I reasonably may) but if not, to those around you. How
-many examples have occurred, within the compass of your own experience,
-of extraordinary visitations having produced but a very short-lived
-influence upon the heart and character? How often have we seen the
-careless awakened by an alarming sickness, by an approach of the king of
-terrors, (which can hardly be supposed less convincing than an angel from
-heaven, or a spirit from the blest), and yet awakened only to return, on
-the removal of danger, to the slumbers of insensibility and sin. The
-solemn promises, which the terrified sinner made to his friends, his
-minister, and his God, were but the offspring of fear; the creatures of
-imagination; born only for the moment; soon disappearing, when the crisis
-was past.
-
-And when the stroke of death has actually fallen upon a relative or
-friend, we have sometimes seen it overwhelm the soul of a heedless
-survivor, and bring him to himself, to serious thought and repentance; he
-began to sit loose to the remaining interests of life; he looked with
-anxiety to the world unknown, and formed resolutions of devoting his
-years to a constant provision for futurity; but all to no ultimate
-purpose; the subject had sued for his attention before, and been
-rejected. When his affections have had time to cool, he finds that no
-new importance has really been given to the truth; the evidences of it
-rest as they did; others have lost friends as well as he; it is the
-common lot of mortality; and he cannot keep alive the impression for
-ever; the world must be attended to; and one object after another
-continues to gain an ascendancy, till his new-born hopes and fears are
-extinct; till his principles and conduct and views return to their old
-level, from which they will in future become the more difficult to be
-raised.
-
-It is unnecessary for me to insist, that this is no ideal picture, drawn
-for the mere occasion of placing the subject in a strong light; your own
-acquaintance with the world may furnish you with living resemblances of
-it; and it is unhappily the lot of Christian Ministers, who have more
-frequent opportunity of witnessing such impressions, to observe, in the
-end, their repeated and lamentable failure; to perceive how far they fall
-short of lasting conviction and salvation.
-
-Well, therefore, in the affectionate and faithful discharge of our duty,
-may we call upon our hearers to weigh, in the dispassioned hours of
-health and tranquillity, the nature and the moment of those divine
-truths, which the gospel clearly reveals unto man; to judge rightly and
-truly of their everlasting import; and to embrace them, from the
-undeniable evidence already presented, with all the heart and all the
-soul. We call, however, upon our hearers, not as if the vital impression
-depended upon themselves alone, upon the exercise of their own judgment
-or the workings of their own conscience. We call upon them to pray for,
-and be guided by, the mighty operation of the Spirit of God: He is ever
-ready to enlighten and instruct and quicken and determine them; giving us
-His grace, “that we may have a good will, and working with us, when we
-have that good will.” {125} Listen to His teaching; obey His godly
-motions; follow up the convictions which He brings to the mind and heart.
-Light enough is perpetually given, to guide you into all truth; live in
-the light; walk in the light.
-
-Thus, indeed, every additional admonition, which a gracious God may be
-pleased to vouchsafe unto us, will be turned to good account; our faith
-will be confirmed, our affections purified, our knowledge increased, our
-resolutions strengthened and settled; “unto him that hath, shall more be
-given;” the sincere and pious believer will advance, at every call, a
-step nearer to his Saviour and his God; the still small voice of heavenly
-warning will be heard, even amidst the ordinary occurrences of life; the
-wonderful dealings of providence and the manifold means of grace will be
-turned to godly account; the instructions and examples of the living, and
-the contemplation of the saints at rest, will alike afford materials for
-spiritual edification. But if the great call to liberty and life be
-habitually neglected, to liberty from sin and shame, and life to holiness
-and glory, then the mind and heart are not in a condition to take
-advantage of occasional excitement; it strikes, but it does not overcome;
-it rouses, but the stupor returns.
-
-2. Proceed we now to the second observation which may be drawn from the
-text, that when men reject the abundant evidence of truth, and the
-gracious invitations of heaven already given, when they have resisted the
-strivings of the Spirit of God, they are not to expect Him to deviate
-from the ordinary rules of His providence and grace, for the sake of
-removing their wilful blindness, and overcoming their perverseness and
-obstinacy.
-
-It is a part of the divine economy, in the salvation of man, that he
-should of his own free will, by the grace of God preventing and
-assisting, “refuse the evil and choose the good:” and therefore man is
-not to expect from the Almighty any such interference in his favour, as
-might absolutely overrule his will, and compel him to hearken and obey.
-God’s infinite mercy is sufficiently manifested in His offer and promise
-to save those rebellious sinners, who listen to the teaching of His
-Spirit, who are willing to be saved in His own appointed way. To save
-those who quench the light afforded them, who discover no such
-willingness, who unthankfully turn away and refuse the inestimable gift
-presented to them, would be in direct opposition to the whole tenour of
-the word of God. And experience concurs with Scripture to inform us,
-that no such extraordinary interposition is generally vouchsafed. The
-Jews, in our Saviour’s time, had read of the miracles of Moses and the
-prophets, professed to credit their inspiration, and their mission from
-on High; they had seen the astonishing miracles of Christ Himself; and
-might, if they would, have perceived the fulfilment of their prophecies
-in Him; many of them were eyewitnesses to the signs and wonders attendant
-upon His crucifixion; to the earthquake, and the supernatural darkness,
-and the rending of the veil of their temple; nor could they deny His
-resurrection from the dead. Against all this body of evidence, against
-all the means of conviction, they persevered in their rejection of Him.
-And the time came, when no further testimonial was to be granted; they
-were left “to fill up the measure of their fathers;” they died in their
-sins.
-
-In addition to all these opportunities and advantages afforded to the
-Jew, we enjoy, at this day, the fulness of the manifestation of the
-gospel; the real nature of the Messiah’s kingdom is clearly and
-completely revealed unto us; the blessings of the gospel are set before
-us, in the most conspicuous and glorious light; we have all the
-certainty, which mortals can have, of a world to come; all the knowledge
-which our imperfect faculties could receive, of the nature of that world;
-and all the means of grace and hopes of glory. And if by all these
-mercies we are not convinced and persuaded, we can have no right or
-reason to look for any preternatural or overpowering interposition, even
-from the goodness and long-suffering of God. Rather may we fear that
-judicial infatuation, so frequently alluded to in Scripture, of the
-closed eye, the dull ear, and the gross obdurate heart. O let the
-sinner, instead of flattering himself with the delusion, that some
-extraordinary thing will one day be happening to him, which shall
-disengage him from earth, and fix his thoughts on heaven and eternity, O
-let him rather apprehend that the time is approaching, when the measure
-of his iniquity shall be filled up, and God will be no longer found.
-
-I am not asserting, that such signal interferences have never been
-vouchsafed; that such loud awakenings have never been successful: I mean,
-that they are not in the ordinary course of divine providence, and are
-not to be expected. I mean to say, that where the grace of the gospel is
-continually resisted in the heart and life, the careless recusant is
-seldom reclaimed through the medium of any extraordinary visitation;
-whether of sickness, of accident, or any terrible calamity. The man, who
-entrusts his soul to the hope and operation of such occurrences, is
-placing it in imminent jeopardy. Whoever will save his soul alive, let
-him, without delay, “seek the Lord, while He may be found, and call upon
-Him while He is near;” {130a} peradventure God may “laugh at his
-calamity, and mock when his fear cometh.” {130b}
-
-And in other ways also does the same evil principle work, the same evil
-habit of “resisting the grace of God:” many persons, who express
-themselves thoroughly convinced of the truth of the christian revelation,
-and the absolute necessity of a spiritual obedience and a holy walking
-with God, put off their work of righteousness, from year to year, in the
-hope, not of any great or appalling event, but that some new
-circumstances may arise, which shall make it more convenient for them to
-renounce the world, and attend, without let or hindrance, to the
-salvation of their souls; they will have gained a sufficiency of earthly
-comforts, or they will be tired of the world; they will be growing old
-and feeble, and naturally more inclined to think of heavenly things. But
-this is only the same temptation as the former, presented in another
-shape; the “convenient season” is hoped for in vain; Satan never suffers
-us to be without a hindrance, real or imaginary; our attachment to the
-world does not wear off; we grow older without growing more religious,
-without drawing nearer to God; and we never are, it is impossible we
-should be, _naturally_ disposed to “turn and seek after Him:” thus the
-delusion goes on; and we “will not be persuaded;” and thus, too
-frequently, the “expectation cometh utterly to an end for evermore.”
-There is no trusting to anything, but the _present_ conviction and
-determination, but the instant and unreserved “obedience of the heart
-unto righteousness;” “to-day, if ye will hear His voice, harden not your
-hearts.” {132}
-
-In conclusion, I call upon you to think on the condition of the rich man
-in torment. His anxiety for a special interference in behalf of his
-brethren is represented as useless to _them_, but it may be salutary to
-_us_: It may assure us of the wretchedness of that place, to which he was
-condemned; may incline us, by the inspiration of God’s Holy Spirit, to
-value and improve His gracious gifts, while they are mercifully bestowed;
-may determine us, while we have the all-sufficient light of the gospel,
-to be guided thereby into the way of peace; we may learn from this awful
-lesson, that if (God forbid that it should be so) but _if_ any of us
-should be similarly doomed, we shall mourn for ourselves, and be anxious,
-that the companions we have left may be our companions no more; let us
-take heed for ourselves, and be anxious for one another in time, while
-the heed and anxiety may be crowned with success; may lead us to seek and
-find God’s favour and mercy, and so “escape from the wrath to come.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON VIII.
-PERFECT LOVE CASTETH OUT FEAR.
-
-
- 1 JOHN iv. 18.
-
- _There is no fear in love_, _but perfect love casteth out fear_:
- _because fear hath torment_; _he that feareth is not made perfect in
- love_.
-
-OF all the sources of happiness, which the merciful God has opened to us,
-the most pure and abundant are the feelings of affection and love. I
-appeal, for the truth of this, not to the understandings, but to the
-hearts of those that hear me; and they will at once testify, unless
-corrupted and perverted by selfish or vicious habits, that such, even
-with regard to earthly happiness, is undoubtedly the fact. Persons
-indeed of inferior principle, of irregular and irreligious lives,
-frequently draw from this source the most considerable portion of their
-pleasure, whatever abatements it may receive from their sin and folly:
-and when the passions are attempered, and the affections purified and
-exalted, by the influence of our holy religion, by the refining energy of
-the spirit of God, the delight naturally and necessarily becomes
-proportionably greater. “To love one another” is not only our first
-earthly duty, as injoined by the Saviour, but also our highest interest
-and advantage, as contributing to the happiness of all.
-
-If then so much enjoyment is derived by mankind from the exercise of
-mutual love, how much more from the love of God—the pure, the gracious,
-the ever blessed God; “who loadeth us with His benefits;” who made us
-what we are, and gave us what we have; who created us for His glory, who
-redeemed us from sin and death, who sanctifieth all that trust in Him,
-that they may be happy for ever: in a word, whose goodness to us knows no
-bounds, but those which are set by our own perverseness and ingratitude.
-Almighty and most merciful Father, “whom have I in heaven but Thee? and
-there is none upon earth that I desire beside Thee.” {136} “Graft in our
-hearts the love of Thy name;” we cannot love Thee as Thou hast loved us;
-but give us the grace to love Thee with holy sincerity; with that devout
-and reverent affection, which shall render all other objects of desire
-comparatively indifferent to us, and make us satisfied with Thy favour,
-whatever else we want; which shall calm our apprehensions, when we think
-of an hereafter; and allay the uneasiness which arises in our breasts,
-when we reflect upon Thine infinite holiness, and our own degenerate
-condition.
-
-Perhaps it may be imagined, that this is a state of blessedness
-attainable by few, if any, upon earth: some may urge the text against us,
-and say that this blessedness is promised only to perfect love, which
-mortals can never hope to attain; and that it is inconsistent with those
-numerous passages of Scripture, which admonish us of the necessity of
-fear; that in the admirable collect of our Church for this day, {137} we
-are instructed to pray for “a perpetual fear and love of God’s holy
-name.” How then can we possess the love which casteth out fear? I will
-endeavour to reply to these observations; and pray God that we may all
-derive, from the consideration of this subject, a more true and lively
-and abiding sense of the nature and necessity of that love towards Him,
-which, as His adopted children and the inheritors of His kingdom, we are
-absolutely bound to entertain.
-
-Unquestionably true it is, that the fear of God is, and ever has been,
-indispensable to all His faithful servants; as well under the mild
-dispensation of the gospel, as under the severer discipline of the law.
-“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” {138a} “Surely his
-salvation is nigh them that fear Him.” {138b} “Unto you that fear my
-name shall the Sun of Righteousness arise, with healing in His wings.”
-{138c} And accordingly the Apostle observes, “In every nation, he that
-feareth Him, and worketh righteousness, is accepted with Him.” {138d}
-“His mercy is on them that fear Him, from generation to generation.”
-{138e} But what is the nature of this fear? It is not a slavish
-principle, not a disturbing and distressful feeling. It consists in an
-awful sense of God’s glorious perfections; of His divine Majesty,
-unspotted purity, infinite knowledge and power; of His presence pervading
-every part of the creation, even the very mind of every intellectual
-being; such a sense, as to fill us with the deepest humility, perceiving
-ourselves unworthy even to stand in the sight of Him, “who is of purer
-eyes than to behold iniquity;” such a sense, habitually impressed upon
-the heart, as inclines and constrains us to “follow the good” which He
-loves, and “depart from the evil” which He abhors.
-
-And this principle is plainly and entirely consistent with the sincerest
-love: our love indeed is powerfully increased by the reflection, that our
-heavenly Father, of whose attributes we form conceptions so awful and
-sublime, should condescend to bestow such regard upon His frail and
-fallen, His disobedient and rebellious children; it may teach us to
-exclaim with the liveliest emotions of gratitude, as well as with humble
-adoration and astonishment, “Lord, what is man that Thou art mindful of
-him, and the son of man that Thou visitest him?” {139} Good reason,
-therefore, had the framers of our Liturgy, for directing us to implore
-the united influence of a perpetual fear and love of God’s holy name.
-
-But the fear spoken of in the text is of another kind; it relates to
-uneasy and distressful apprehensions respecting our acceptance with God;
-to a feeling of doubt and distrust, whether we are, in deed and in truth,
-partakers of the gracious promises of the gospel; whether we are living
-in a state of reconciliation with God; whether we have within us that
-earnest of the Holy Spirit, which is the pledge and seal of our
-redemption; whether, in a word, we are objects of God’s favour here, and
-have a well-grounded hope of his mercy hereafter.
-
-That this is the state of mind represented to us by the beloved Apostle,
-is clear from his own reasoning; “for fear,” says he, “hath torment:” now
-the fear of God, as above described, has no torment at all; it makes us
-humble, and fills as with reverential awe, but it tends to comfort and
-peace. We could not entirely love a Being, whose manifestation inspired
-us with terror and dismay; and this is the very reason why many, when
-they come seriously to consider their condition, are filled with
-confusion and alarm; because they do not love God in sincerity and truth:
-their affections have been set on the world; and therefore their title to
-salvation, upon the terms proposed to them in the gospel, is clearly
-insufficient; they have served other masters, and have reason to tremble
-for their reward from the great Lord and Master in heaven; they have
-employed their talents for other purposes, than those for which they were
-committed, and therefore, when they think of making up their accounts,
-their lord presents himself as “an austere man,” exacting more than they
-will be able to render: no man can heartily love God, without an entire
-obedience of the heart; this they have never shewn, and therefore have
-never loved Him: how then can they expect His favour; how can they
-reflect upon their condition with composure and comfort?
-
-Truly is it said, that such fear hath torment; for of all the uneasiness
-which the mind can suffer here, the most painful is that, which is
-produced from an apprehension of “the terrors of the Lord;” better not to
-have known the greatness of the salvation promised, than to neglect the
-means of securing it; better not to have heard of an hereafter, than to
-have a reasonable dread upon the spirits, what that hereafter shall be.
-They who have greater cause for fear than for hope, must, if they are
-given to meditate and look forward, find it cast a dismal shade over
-every scene and prospect of life; they may contrive to drown their
-serious thoughts, in the midst of worldly pursuits and intemperate
-pleasures; but this is only for the passing hour; they cannot possibly
-think, that their condition is thus really improved. But why take so
-much pains to mitigate or conceal a misery, which it is in our power, by
-God’s gracious mercy, effectually to prevent? Escape from these torments
-of the conscience by a sincere devotedness to the service of your
-Almighty Father, in the gospel of His beloved Son; by cherishing in the
-heart that “perfect love for Him, which casteth out fear.”
-
-Yet is this possible, it may be said, for weak and imperfect man? Is it
-not rather a state at which we should aim, than one at which we can ever
-hope to arrive? Certainly the imperfect creature can never attain to
-actual perfection in any moral or spiritual duty; but his will and desire
-may be perfect, though his service is not; and in this sense, the duty of
-perfect love is equally binding upon all believers. It is a very common
-persuasion, and dangerous as it is common, that the standard of christian
-duty is raised much higher in the gospel, than it is necessary for the
-generality of Christians even to think of reaching; that some of the
-commands, there given, are intended only for the chosen few, more eminent
-than the rest of mankind in spiritual attainments; and thus too many
-professing disciples of our Lord, imagining themselves not bound by such
-extensive obligations, are content with measures of obedience, infinitely
-less than those, which are positively required; content with a state of
-heart and life, far short of that, which the gospel recognises and
-injoins. But this is a mere delusion, to suit the wayward fancy and the
-corrupt inclination of man: where do we read in the Bible of such
-limitations and exceptions? Where do we find one set of rules for
-eminent Christians, and another for Christians in general? Are not all
-its precepts, and all its principles, and all its instructions, of
-universal obligation? When the Saviour promised His divine blessings to
-“the poor in spirit,” to them that “hunger and thirst after
-righteousness,” to “the pure in heart;” were the conditions intended only
-for the disciples around Him on the mount? Were they not also designed
-for His followers in every age? And when the Lord commanded Moses to
-“speak unto all the congregation of the children of Israel, and say unto
-them, Be ye holy, for I the Lord your God, am holy,” {144} does the
-precept concern only the people of old? Is it not equally applicable to
-Christians? Yea, it is urged upon us all by the mouth of an Apostle.
-{145} The same is true of every spiritual doctrine, every moral command
-recorded in the Book of Life: there is no means of grace, no measure of
-obedience ordained, which a Christian can safely neglect.
-
-Whatever, therefore, be meant in the text by _perfect_ love, that love it
-is the bounden and necessary duty of us all to attain and to cherish.
-And what is really meant by this expression, may be most readily and
-fully understood from a precept of the divine law, as confirmed and
-enforced by our blessed Redeemer; “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God, with
-all thine heart and with all thy soul and with all thy strength.” This
-is the love described in the text; perfect in _kind_, as admitting of no
-rival principle, of no competition with “the world or the things that are
-in the world,” with any or all of them together; imperfect in _degree_,
-on account of the infirmity of our faith, of the weakness and corruption
-of human nature.
-
-We cannot be at a loss to understand this distinction; yet it may be
-further illustrated by an example from ordinary life. The most
-affectionate and dutiful child will fail occasionally to please and obey
-its parent; but there will be a constant desire and endeavour to please:
-to have excited the parent’s displeasure, will bring uneasiness and
-sorrow; and therefore the violations of duty will be neither wilful nor
-habitual. And this sincere affection, for a kind and good parent, never
-ceases to produce delight; the child indeed, feeling so much respect and
-reverence, will be afraid of offending, afraid of the unworthiness,
-afraid of the dishonour; yet the service of obedience is rendered from
-choice, and not from constraint; with emotions of joy, with a grateful
-endearment of soul: slavish terror there is none; it is banished by the
-overpowering principle of love.
-
-The case is similar, with respect to the love of God: whoever, from a
-sense of the relationship which he is privileged to bear to the almighty
-and gracious Creator; whoever, from a contemplation of the high and holy
-perfections of the Godhead; whoever, from a perception of the divine
-goodness and mercy, does truly love the great and glorious Lord of all,
-will constantly delight to serve Him; sensible indeed of his manifold
-weaknesses and deficiencies, and thereby brought to grieve, and rendered
-the more fearful to offend; but still entertaining no doubt, that his
-services, imperfect and unworthy as they are, are accepted at the throne
-of grace, through the merits of his Redeemer, and as the fruit of faith
-in His prevailing name. For no earthly consideration would he exchange
-this heavenly joy and satisfaction; and no earthly event or dispensation,
-however afflicting, can drive him even to distrust, much less to despair.
-Though nature feels her bereavements and her troubles, his faith is
-strong; and it assures him, that the very chastisements of the Lord are
-inflicted in mercy. “Who,” says the Apostle, “shall separate us from the
-love of Christ? shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or
-famine, or nakedness, or peril or sword? Nay, in all these things we are
-more than conquerors through Him that loved us. For I am persuaded, that
-neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor
-things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other
-creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in
-Christ Jesus our Lord.” {148}
-
-In speaking, however, of the holy confidence, with which we are inspired
-by the sincere love of God, far would I be, as far as possible, from
-confounding it with that self-sufficient and presumptuous tone into which
-some persons have been unbecomingly betrayed, when describing their
-spiritual condition. Humility is the foundation of the Christian’s
-confidence: he trusts, only because he is “strong in the lord, and in the
-power of His might;” he is sufficient, only because “all his sufficiency
-is of God.” And the purer his love, and the higher his attainments, the
-more humbly and modestly does he speak of them: he talks not of
-certainty, “as if he had already attained,” but delights himself with
-“full assurance of faith,” {149a} with “full assurance of hope;” {149b}
-his is not an extravagant joy, proceeding from the arrogant assertion of
-an elective claim, but a holy tranquillity of soul, arising from faith in
-the Redeemer’s undeserved mercy; from unfeigned love to the most
-benevolent and perfect Being; and reposing itself upon the unchangeable
-promises of Jehovah.
-
-We do not question, my brethren, the claims of Almighty God to our
-perfect love. Is He not our Creator? and could He have formed us with
-any other design, than to make us happy? If reason could have doubted
-this truth, revelation makes it clear. And are we not preserved, every
-moment of our lives, by His infinite wisdom and mercy and power? And
-though we are forgetful of His sustaining hand, still He feeds us with
-the bounties of nature; and invites us to partake of the riches of His
-grace. What are the greatest blessings, which a human being, which any
-creature could possibly desire? To be delivered from evil, and to enjoy
-everlasting good. And did not the adorable Son of God take upon him the
-infirmities and sufferings of our mortal state, to redeem us from misery,
-and exalt us even to glory? And does not the Holy Spirit condescend to
-dwell in our tabernacles of flesh, that He may cleanse us from every
-sinful defilement, “purify unto Himself a peculiar people zealous of good
-works,” {150a} and make us “meet to be partakers of the inheritance of
-the saints in light?” {150b} Could we, even if we had been worthy, have
-desired, have imagined for ourselves, blessings so great and favours so
-exalted, as those which the good and gracious God is showering down upon
-us? Shall we not then be inclined, from every consideration, shall we
-not be determined, by God’s grace, to love this heavenly benefactor with
-all our heart—from a principle of gratitude; from an admiration of divine
-perfection; from the inspiring hope and prospect of our eternal
-salvation? Yes, let us give unto Him, not that divided affection, which
-is the vain offering of a degenerate and degraded world; but the full and
-unreserved energies of the soul. If a portion of our heart be engrossed
-by any other object, we are not the true people of the Lord; we render
-Him not a reasonable or acceptable service; our love is embittered with
-fear; with a fear that has, and will have, torment. Lord, let our
-affections be altogether devoted unto Thee; pour Thy spirit of love into
-our hearts, for the sake of Him “who loved us and gave Himself for us;”
-we cannot love Thee here upon earth as we would do, but be pleased to
-accept what Thou enablest us to give, the tribute of a sincere heart; and
-let it be to us a never-failing source of humble confidence and holy
-comfort; so that we may anticipate the joyful hour, when we shall be
-removed, from this imperfect state of being, to a purer and happier
-world; where, with affections exalted and understandings enlarged, we
-shall render Thee a more delightful and laudable service; with angels and
-archangels, and all the company of heaven.
-
-“God is love;” and when the veil of the flesh is laid aside, and we are
-admitted into His glorious presence, “we shall be like Him, for we shall
-see Him as He is;” {152} then will our felicity be complete, complete for
-ever; then, in the fullest sense of the words, we shall be “made perfect
-in love.” Here then, without a question, our true happiness lies; here
-is our all: let us pray that we may never lose sight of it; that the
-desire, now kindled, may never be extinguished; that every “heart may
-there be fixed, where true joys are to be found, through Jesus Christ our
-Lord.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON IX.
-HUMBLE YOURSELVES UNDER THE MIGHTY HAND OF GOD.
-
-
- 1 PETER v. 6.
-
- _Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God_, _that He may exalt
- you in due time_.
-
-THERE is nothing, which more peculiarly marks the character of the
-faithful Christian, than the manner in which he submits himself to the
-appointments and dispensations of his God. The worldly and carnal spirit
-either frets and repines under the visitations of misfortune, or is
-disconsolate and cast down; or, at the best, bears up with a mere animal
-fortitude against them: it finds no comfort to flee unto, but such as is
-afforded by the vain world, in which it has already met with vexation und
-disappointment; and if the world is unable to secure a continuance in
-prosperity, still less is it able to provide a refuge in the dismal days
-of sorrow.
-
-So lamentably indeed has this truth been experienced by many, that they
-have been driven to the fallacious and fatal expedient of attempting at
-once to drown their cares in intemperance; they have found nothing in the
-world sufficient to satisfy their reason, or to soothe their irritated
-feelings; and therefore have destroyed their faculties, that they might
-not reflect; and cut short the thread of that life, which they imagined
-themselves unequal to support: and some indeed have had recourse to a
-more speedy and awful means of delivering themselves from the burden of
-mortification and grief; ill prepared as they were, their own hand of
-violence has hurried them into the presence of their Judge. And even
-they, who have been preserved from these most miserable extremities, have
-sufficiently testified by their conduct, that the world has nothing
-satisfactory to offer, for the healing of a wounded spirit, or the
-removal of a load of sorrow.
-
-Religion, the religion of the gospel, is the only source from which true
-comfort or support can possibly be drawn; and we see her triumphs
-manifested in the most blessed and remarkable manner when the faithful
-servant of God is overwhelmed with trouble; we perceive his mind in a
-state of tranquillity, under a conviction, that the Lord “doeth all
-things well;” and remembereth mercy, no less in chastisement, than in the
-time of prosperity; his unquiet emotions are subdued into holy subjection
-to the divine will; his affections are set the more earnestly on things
-above; the vanities of earth have lost their hold; and there ariseth in
-the heart that “peace of God, which passeth all understanding.”
-
-They who have been much conversant with scenes of sickness or of sorrow,
-cannot fail to have observed the truth of these remarks, to have been
-struck with the vast difference in the behaviour of men, in proportion as
-they have imbibed the true spirit and principle of the gospel. Some we
-have seen dismayed, disturbed, and restless; with nothing in their
-countenance, but vexation or anguish; others, cheerfully bearing up under
-the evils which have befallen them; and, by their expressions of joyful
-resignation, delighting and comforting the friends, who were shedding
-over them the tears of sympathy; the power of the word of God, the “joy
-of the Holy Ghost” has been visible in their very features. Those
-persons, who have beheld such an example, have been favoured with an
-instructive lesson, which they should “grave on the tablet of their
-heart;” a lesson teaching them, faithfully and forcibly, where to look
-for aid in the reverses and afflictions of life.
-
-Yet, in order to lead us more effectually to cultivate, and to reap the
-benefit of, this heavenly frame of mind, let us now consider the bearing
-of the apostolic charge in the text, “Humble yourselves under the mighty
-hand of God.” Here we may discover powerful reasons intimated, why we
-should bring ourselves into a state of entire submission to the divine
-will, and rest satisfied and resigned under every dispensation. The hand
-of God is mighty: He is the sovereign Lord of all; has an absolute right
-to dispose of His creatures, according to His good pleasure; and is alone
-able both to know and to do, what their several necessities require.
-They, therefore, who profess themselves His people, are bound, by that
-very profession, unreservedly to submit to His sovereign disposal: “Shall
-the clay say to him that fashioneth it, what makest thou? O Lord, Thou
-art our Father, we are the clay, and Thou our potter; and we all are the
-work of Thy hand.” {158} He who created, He who redeemed us, He to whom
-alone we can look for sanctification and life, should and will maintain
-the dominion over us: He that gave us our being, must be able, and cannot
-be unwilling, to “give us all things needful both for our souls and
-bodies.” We understand not how He formed us from the dust of the earth;
-so neither can we understand the methods of His providence; but, as “the
-life is more than meat,” so may we trust His goodness and His power, to
-preserve, in the best and wisest manner, the being of those, who seek His
-protection and submit to His government. A wise son yields to an
-affectionate father, even in points where he cannot comprehend the entire
-wisdom of his discipline and correction; yields, not only because
-experience has taught him the benefit of subjection, but also for the
-sake of obedience to a father, who is entrusted with the guidance of him,
-and has a right to be obeyed; much more should we, the adopted children
-of the Most High, bow with meekness and reverence before an Almighty and
-heavenly Father, though we altogether comprehend not the purpose of the
-trials, which He bringeth upon us: they are chastisements of mercy, of
-whatever kind they be, and moreover are ordained by Him, who has the
-entire undisputed right of dominion over us.
-
-Another consideration here suggested is, that all resistance is vain;
-“the mighty hand of God” is uncontrollable. Utterly weak and fruitless
-were all the assembled powers of the universe, combined against His wall:
-what can a frail creature do, child of the dust, akin to the worm? If
-God strikes, who shall stay or avoid the blow? Whatever visitation He is
-pleased to send, to a family or to an individual—of sickness, of
-calamity, of death—there is no keeping it out of the dwelling; it may be
-softened by resignation, it may be removed, and even blessed, by prayer;
-but we cannot hinder the accomplishment of God’s will. In the language
-of the pious Hannah, “The Lord killeth and maketh alive; He bringeth down
-to the grave and bringeth up—He raiseth up the poor out of the dust, and
-lifteth up the beggar from the dunghill, to set them among princes, and
-to make them inherit the throne of glory: for the pillars of the earth
-are the Lord’s, and He hath set the world upon them. He will keep the
-feet of His saints, and the wicked shall be silent in darkness; for by
-strength shall no man prevail.” {161a}
-
-Yes truly; the afflicting hand of God is mighty in operation, both to the
-wicked and the good; the former are constrained to feel, though they will
-not heartily or practically acknowledge, that there is no dependence to
-be placed on the schemes or exertions of man; no trusting, that
-“to-morrow will be as this day and much more abundant.” {161b} When
-“riches shall have made themselves wings and have flown away;” {161c}
-when the favourite or the friend have been cut off; when the bodily frame
-is under the influence of alarming disease; then the sinner, if he be not
-spiritually humbled, will, at least be made sensible, that there is a
-power which can lay him low; the conviction is forced on his mind, though
-he may refuse to act upon it; his conscience is smitten, though he will
-not obey its emotions; it assures him of the vanity of human devices, of
-human dependencies and strength, though it fail to incline him to his
-God.
-
-How blessedly different the effect of the mighty hand of God upon the
-sincere Christian! Even the heaviest affliction, the most untoward or
-adverse occurrence, produces, when he comes to reflect, a salutary
-influence on his mind and heart. Perceiving that it is the natural
-tendency of a smooth uninterrupted course, to make him rest satisfied
-with earthly enjoyments, and draw aside his attention from the sublimer
-delights and the more substantial interest of heavenly things, he
-acknowledges, not only with acquiescence, but with gratitude, the severer
-dispensations of providence; he knows, that his faith must be tried and
-his patience made perfect; it is the very object for which he is placed
-in this transitory state of existence; he therefore implores his gracious
-Father, to sanctify to him the crosses and disappointments below, and
-make them minister to the completion of his happiness above; whatever
-they are, they are less than his transgressions deserve; whatever they
-are, they are “of God’s sending,” to lead him to reflection and
-repentance; and very efficacious are they for the fulfilment of this
-merciful purpose; perhaps the only means by which he could have been
-preserved from falling, amidst the snares and temptations that surround
-him. The Christian is ready to confess, and many we have heard with
-thankfulness confessing, that of all the mercies received from the hands
-of God, the most distinguished, because the most effectual for his
-salvation, are the vicissitudes and troubles of life: how many a sincere
-believer, by the discomfiture of his earthly prospects, has been led to
-fix his heart more intently and stedfastly, upon the unchangeable
-felicity of heaven; how many, at the death of a friend, have sought more
-earnestly and experienced more abundantly, “the power of the spirit of
-consolation;” and have thereby been led to transfer their affections to
-that blessed world, where christian friends shall meet, and never
-separate again. How many, by the infirmities of the body, have been
-admonished and persuaded to make a better provision for the health and
-well-being of the soul! The hand of God has been mightily laid upon
-them, to rescue them from the tyranny of sin and Satan, to place them in
-the enjoyment of “the perfect law of liberty,” manifested in the gospel;
-to save their souls alive.
-
-Let us not regard the various calamities that befal us, of whatever
-nature they may be, as the mere result of human design or contingency;
-for whether they be occasioned by our own imprudence and neglect, or by
-the instrumentality of an evil world, they are permitted and ordained by
-a wise and merciful God, to draw us nearer to Himself; to teach us the
-utter insufficiency of all earthly interests and possessions; and to
-raise our thoughts to the glory of an eternal kingdom. And if we receive
-them in a christian spirit, they will never fail to answer their high and
-holy purpose. Let us therefore watch and pray, that we may duly consider
-every calamitous day as a sacred opportunity, as a season of grace, as
-the rod of our Almighty Father to chastise us from sin: let it call us to
-deep meditation and contrition, to serious examination of heart; for it
-is only by the religious and spiritual observance of such seasons, that
-we can ever hope to derive from them improvement and comfort.
-
-Remark and remember the language of the text, “Humble _yourselves_ under
-the mighty hand of God;” it is not enough that we be humbled, in a
-worldly sense, by the stroke of misfortune; that is a consequence, which
-may of necessity ensue: the loss of possession may drive us into needy
-solitude; the loss of health destroy our energy and activity; the loss of
-reputation bring us to shame; the loss of friends oblige us to mourn,
-from the very feelings of nature; but all this while, there may be no
-humility of heart, no self-abasement, no voluntary humiliation under “any
-of the dispensations of heaven:” the “hand of God hath touched us;” but
-we may not, nevertheless, be vitally touched ourselves, with a proper
-sense of the trials, which He has called us to endure: we must fall low
-before His footstool; we must bend our knees in humble fervent prayer; we
-must implore the aid of His Holy Spirit, to open our understandings, that
-we may perceive the graciousness of His dealings with us; and to enlarge
-our hearts, that we may take the full benefit of His “loving correction;”
-we must unfeignedly and fully confess, on our own part, that unworthiness
-and iniquity, which excited God’s displeasure, and required His
-afflicting visitation; and that mercy, on God’s part, which seeketh to
-reclaim us from error; to “purge our conscience from dead works;” to make
-us more alive to the “things which belong unto our peace;” to lead us
-from the vanities of time to the momentous realities of eternity.
-
-If we thus improve the sorrowful events that await us, we shall find a
-happy deliverance from them all; and it is the only possible means, by
-which we can be happily delivered: this the text implies; “Humble
-yourselves under the mighty hand of God, _that He may exalt you_;” that
-you may thus be rendered meet to partake of His mercy; that He may visit
-and comfort you in your low estate; and make it instrumental to your
-spiritual exaltation. If you murmur or complain, or do but naturally
-mourn; if you manifest only the frettings of a worldly disposition and
-temper, your case thereby becomes still more grievous and intolerable;
-the heart is vexed by its vain and rebellious strivings; “the sorrow of
-the world worketh misery and death.” You are thus preventing the
-benediction of heaven from descending upon you; you are closing up the
-avenues, through which the grace of God may find its way into the heart;
-you are neglecting that remedy, by which alone the stricken soul can be
-healed, by which your trouble may be converted into a blessing. Embrace
-the proffered means; humble yourself beneath the burden, with “a godly
-sorrow,” for the sin that has brought it; bend yourself beneath the storm
-of heaven, and the Sun of righteousness will soon shine forth, and cheer
-you with His brightest beam; “the God of consolation,” your Redeemer,
-your unchangeable friend, “the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever,”
-will turn your darkness into light; your “weeping will endure but for a
-night, and joy will come in the morning.” {168}
-
-Or, if it be not literally so; if deliverance come not so speedily as you
-desire or expect, it will assuredly come in God’s “due time;” He may
-wait, to try the strength of your patience and your faith; may seem for a
-season, as though He heareth not your prayer; but rest assured, He does
-hear, and the answer is preparing: the wise and benevolent author of four
-blessings knows best when to bestow them; depend upon His mercy, and
-trust Him for the time: the delay will be nothing, as compared with the
-comfort when it arrives: the very delay will minister to the fulness of
-your joy: you will perceive the truth of the divine character, as drawn
-by the pencil of the prophet; you may apply the prophetic description to
-yourself; “For a small moment have I forsaken thee; but with great
-mercies will I gather thee. In a little wrath I hid my face from thee
-for a moment; but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee,
-saith the Lord thy Redeemer.” {169}
-
-God will exalt every humble and faithful servant, in due time, even in
-this world; not perhaps to earthly greatness and honour; but, what is
-infinitely more important, to the height of His own blessed favour; to
-the delight of a peaceful reconciliation with Himself; to the happiness
-of an approving conscience; to a “hope full of immortality:” and, after
-death, He will crown that hope with a glorious consummation; will exalt
-that servant to the skies; far beyond the reach of change, of trouble, or
-of fear. The Christian, like the Captain of his Salvation, “will be made
-perfect through sufferings;” like Him, when the combat is over, will
-receive the crown of glory, and sit down for ever at the right hand of
-his Father and his God.
-
-He will then more fully see and admire the gracious dealings of his
-merciful God and Saviour; will see, what reason he had to be thankful for
-the chastisements of heaven; how they have trained and prepared his soul
-for the happiness of the blest; how wonderfully they have ministered to
-the fulness of his joy. Bear then patiently; bear, I ought to say,
-thankfully, what the Lord layeth upon thee; it is His hand that “worketh
-all in all,” His hand of might and mercy. Thou canst not always trace
-His designs and operations; if thou couldst, where would be the exercise
-of thy faith? But if thou wilt believe and trust Him, if thou wilt bow
-and submit, He will thus exalt thee in due time, when thou art ready,
-when thy trial is completed, when thy appointed work is done. This is
-the seed-time; sow, and thou shalt see it spring up; labour, and wait for
-the harvest; “they that sow in tears shall reap in joy.” {171}
-
-
-
-
-SERMON X.
-THOU ART THE MAN.
-
-
- 2 SAM. xii. 7.
-
- _And Nathan said to David_, _Thou art the man_.
-
-THE parable, of which these words are a part, is admired, even for its
-elegance and simplicity, by every one who is capable of appreciating its
-merit. It serves also to illustrate, in the clearest manner, the
-advantage of this mode of instruction; which is intended, in the first
-place, by a lively representation of the productions of nature, or the
-incidents of common life, to convey an adequate notion of a truth or
-doctrine in easy and familiar terms; and to leave a more striking
-impression of it upon the memory and the heart. The parable has a
-further advantage: the instruction it affords is not at once unfolded to
-the mind; the attention and the feelings are first awakened, by the
-relation of some interesting occurrence, apparently unconnected with the
-object in view; by which means, an assent is gained over to the side of
-truth, before the understanding has had time to be prejudiced, by the
-workings of self-love, or the disinclination to religious admonition.
-
-Such was precisely the case with the parable before us. Had Nathan
-addressed to David a direct and formal expostulation, it is probable that
-the king would have considered his interference as intrusive and
-impertinent; would have either driven him from his presence, or have been
-prepared, by some plausible excuse, to cast a veil over the hideousness
-of his crimes. But the royal offender, though he could readily palliate
-his own atrocity, could not bear to hear of cruelty in another. When it
-was reported to him, that there were two men in a city, the one rich and
-the other poor; that the rich man, when there came a traveller unto him,
-spared to take of the abundance of his own flock, and of his own herd,
-and took from the poor man a little ewe lamb, which was all he had in the
-world; took it from him under the most affecting circumstances; “for he
-had bought and nourished it up, and it grew up together with him and with
-his children; it did eat of his own meat, and drank of his own cup, and
-lay in his bosom, and was unto him as a daughter.” When the king heard
-all this, his feelings were violently excited, “his anger was greatly
-kindled against the man; and he said to Nathan, as the Lord liveth, the
-man that hath done this thing shall surely die.” {174} This was the
-moment for making the application: and judge of David’s shame and
-confusion of face, on finding that all his pity, and all his anger, and
-all his condemnation, had in truth been directed against himself: “Thou
-art the man.” He could not help perceiving, that great as was the
-cruelty, which he had been reprobating in the case laid before him, he
-had been guilty of still greater himself: though he had the whole kingdom
-for the exercise of his legitimate choice, he would rather deprive an
-humble servant of the only object of his conjugal affection, deprive him,
-by becoming, in the first instance, accessary to his murder.
-
-We may here observe, how terrible is the infatuation of sin. It might
-have been thought that David, if he had not immediately perceived the
-full intention of the prophet in laying this parable before him, would at
-least, from an instantaneous recollection of his own notorious guilt,
-have treated, with some degree of lenity or forbearance, the barbarity of
-which Nathan appeared to be complaining; that he would not so soon have
-denounced against a delinquent, so much less heinous than himself, the
-utmost severity of punishment. But, as if his own conscience were clear,
-he immediately exclaimed against the imagined offender, as a wretch unfit
-to live; he does not appear to have been awakened to a sense of his own
-crimes, till he heard the overwhelming application, “Thou art the man.”
-
-Such is generally the fascination of sin; it darkens the understanding,
-and deadens the conscience, and renders men insensible to their real
-condition. It is the great object of the enemy of our souls, an object
-in which he too often fatally succeeds, to make us blind, not only to the
-heinousness and danger, but also to the very existence of guilt: so that,
-however acute we may be in perceiving the transgressions of others, and
-however severe in reprobating and condemning them, we are, in very
-frequent instances, utterly regardless of our own. Many, it is to be
-feared, there are, who persist in a course of sin day after day, and year
-after year, without once feeling any lively or serious compunction; while
-they have frequently, in that time, been reproachfully animadverting upon
-the mote which they have detected in their brother’s eye.
-
-Perhaps of all the temporal consequences of sin, the operation of this
-evil habit is one of the most calamitous; for it not only prevents us
-from a repentance of the past, but serves as an encouragement to our
-reckless perseverance in sin; it destroys the very principle of vital
-religion; removing entirely from our hearts the love and fear of God; and
-filling us with “envy, hatred, and malice and all uncharitableness.” Let
-David’s infatuation be a warning to us, let it induce us to take diligent
-heed, lest we be irreclaimably “hardened by the deceitfulness of sin;”
-lest the conscience be at length so entirely seared, as to become callous
-to the very perception of iniquity; as to make us “call evil good, and
-good evil; to put darkness for light, and light for darkness; to put
-bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter.” {177}
-
-Before, however, we further proceed to the practical inferences which may
-be drawn from this subject, it may be proper to notice some irreverent
-and reproachful remarks, which have been made on the flagrant crimes of a
-person so distinguished as David. Is it possible, some have urged, that
-such guilt, and such hardihood in guilt, could have been found in the
-“man after God’s own heart?” {178} But this honourable appellation, be
-it observed, was given to David, not on account of his moral or spiritual
-purity, but on account of the excellence of his character as a king; he
-was so named in opposition to Saul, who had acted in wilful disobedience
-to the divine commands, and therefore, in the administration of his
-government, was not a man after God’s own heart; that is, he did not (as
-David did, in this particular,) perform God’s will.
-
-Again, it has been said, could an inspired person possibly fall into such
-a complication of evil? Miraculous inspiration, we answer, was not given
-to the sacred pen-men, as a certain preservative from the corruption of
-sin, but to enable them to reveal the will of God; to guard them, in this
-respect, from error; and to “guide them into all truth:” their carnal
-appetites and passions were not supernaturally overruled; they still had
-their choice between good and evil; though revealing to mankind the holy
-law of God, they might themselves neglect the duties which it injoined:
-many instances are recorded of the abuse of spiritual gifts, many
-examples of their consisting with unholiness and transgression. The very
-chief of the apostles intimates to us the personal care and watchfulness
-and labour which were necessary, “lest, having preached to others, he
-himself should be a castaway.” {179}
-
-Not but that David’s guilt was most deplorably inconsistent with his high
-character and office, and was a dishonour to religion itself; I am only
-shewing, that it was not incompatible with the appellation which he had
-received, and the high and holy functions which he was called to
-discharge. And be it remembered, to David’s honour, that though his sin
-was aggravated, his confession of it was full and unreserved; that he
-most humbly and religiously submitted to the penal retribution of his
-offended God; that his repentance was bitter and sincere: it was “a
-repentance indeed never afterwards repented of:” continually was his harp
-attuned to the bewailing of his own depravity; continually was he
-descending from the lofty strains of thanksgiving and joy, and pouring
-forth in the abasement of his soul, the doleful notes of mourning and
-lamentation.
-
-And, in truth, there was abundant cause; for the crimes of David afford
-one of the most melancholy instances of the violation of conscience, of a
-departure from the service of the Most High. Let it fill us with
-humility and fear. If so eminent a servant of God could fall into such
-abominations, how deeply concerned, how “instant in prayer,” how vigilant
-and careful should we be, lest our feet be betrayed into evil! We see to
-what criminal and dangerous excess human nature may be led, if we fail to
-cherish the grace of God; and are abandoned to the government of our own
-corrupt desires, and the tyranny of our spiritual adversary. To the
-lukewarm and the wavering I need scarcely say, that without greater
-seriousness and circumspection, they will assuredly be overthrown: but
-let me also admonish the faithful Christian; him, who appears to be
-safely pursuing the even tenour of his way; who may be led, by the
-regular and habitual discharge of religious duties, into a state of
-presumptuous confidence and slumbering security; him I would admonish,
-from the instance of David, “that the heart is deceitful above all
-things, and desperately wicked;” {181a} that it may, when most implicitly
-trusted, most dangerously betray; let David teach “him that thinketh he
-standeth to take heed lest he fall.” {181b}
-
-Some perverse and worldly-minded persons have made a very different use
-of the lamentable case before us; it has encouraged them in wilful
-transgression; it has served them as a “cloak for their sin.” Surely,
-say they, if David could so flagrantly transgress, how can we be expected
-to preserve our integrity? If he was accepted of God, indulgence would
-readily be extended to the comparatively trifling offences of inferior
-servants. True; we cannot be perfect; we may hope for pardon; but we are
-not, on that account, to sin presumptuously; not to offend, because God
-is merciful: this did not David. Whoever deliberately sins from the hope
-of God’s mercy, is taking the surest was to deprive himself of that
-mercy. There is frequently great error in the notion of trifling
-offences: no offence is trifling in the sight of an infinitely holy God:
-much less any wilful offence. The magnitude of a fault chiefly depends
-upon the circumstances under which it is committed; much more readily
-could we urge an excuse for him, who is heedlessly or suddenly borne away
-by impetuous passion and carnal desire, than for him, who presumes
-deliberately to trample upon the law of God, because another has been
-forgiven. Shall we thus abuse the mercies of redeeming love? “Shall we
-continue in sin that grace may abound? God forbid. How shall we that
-are dead to sin, live any longer therein?” {183} Would we find the
-favour that David did, we must seek it, like him, in the true spirit of
-penitence and devotion; we must “confess our wickedness, and be sorry for
-our sin:” we must hate the works and workers of iniquity: we must imitate
-David, not in his crimes, but in his repentance and reformation.
-
-Let us learn another lesson from the history before us; let it teach us
-the importance of being always disposed and ready to receive spiritual
-counsel; of being in the habit of applying to ourselves every opportunity
-of improvement, with which we may be blessed. Too many, like David, are
-extremely backward to receive an intimation of their own errors, and to
-avail themselves of the benefit of reproof. They are sufficiently
-quick-sighted in discovering the applicability of reproach, to their
-neighbour; without even suspecting that it may suit their own case and
-condition. How many have acknowledged the propriety and force of
-admonitions and rebuke, which they have heard in the house of God,
-without ever taking them home to their own breasts; and this undoubtedly
-is one cause, why the voice of public instruction produces, in general,
-so little effect upon the characters and conduct of men. While they are
-pleased to imagine, that the representations and censures of the preacher
-are suited to others rather than to themselves, no wonder that they
-retain their neglectful, sinful, unprincipled habits, in defiance of
-every remonstrance, and every warning. Instead of torturing their
-ingenuity, to discover to what particular persons in the congregation a
-discourse may be most fitly and beneficially applied, let them rather be
-anxious to inquire, how far it may be accommodated to their own case; and
-to all those, who presume to make a further inquiry, who are looking
-around for the delinquencies of their neighbour, we would say, restrain
-thy wandering eye, and look within, “Thou art the man.”
-
-A readiness to take advantage of religious instruction, is one of the
-surest evidences of a christian spirit, and one of the greatest blessings
-that a Christian can enjoy. It manifests a christian spirit, inasmuch as
-it shews an humble sense of our own failings and imperfections, and an
-anxious desire to recover from them all; to “grow in grace and in the
-knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.” {185} It is one of the
-greatest blessings to the Christian, because there is seldom a day,
-seldom an hour that passes, from which he may not derive some spiritual
-benefit. While the reckless and self-conceited, who dwell with
-complacency upon their state and character, perceive not any counsel
-adapted to their wants, the humble-minded are gathering edification from
-every thing around them; from all they hear and all they see: doubtless,
-it must be so; for how can they, who think themselves whole, discover the
-need of a physician, how can they apply a remedy?
-
-Suffer me to entreat you, in conclusion, that whenever you are seriously
-impressed with a conviction of evil, or the neglect of any christian
-duty, you will carry home the impression, to have its full effect upon
-the heart. For want of this care and this habit, many a salutary lesson,
-that strikes for the moment, is afterwards thrown away, unheeded and
-forgotten: and thus the very means of grace, which are ordained to
-recover us from sin, and enable us to “work out our salvation,” become
-the instruments of confirming us in error and guilt. The mind, which is
-continually accustomed to receive and to neglect religious instruction,
-may be thereby brought into a heedless and torpid state, from which it is
-well nigh impossible to be roused. Not that any thing “is impossible
-with God:” but I appeal to experience, and ask, whether it is not a
-notorious matter of fact, that many amongst us have for years uniformly
-persevered, in the same neglect of christian duties, the same worldly
-principles, the same evil courses, the same habits of intemperance and
-licentiousness and profaneness; and it will not be denied, that they
-have, in these years, frequently heard the voice of expostulation, and
-perceived the justice, the force, and the importance of it. Then why are
-they still unreclaimed?—because they have never followed up the
-conviction of “Thou art the man.”
-
-God grant, that this admonition may have its full effect upon us; that we
-may go and meditate, and pray; pray daily for the blessing of an humble
-and a teachable heart; pray for God’s grace, to correct all our sinful
-follies, and supply all our deficiencies. Probably, my brethren, we have
-been “leaning too little upon the hope of this heavenly grace;” we have
-been relying upon our own perception of right and wrong, our own choice
-and decision, our own feeble resolutions; if so, no wonder that we have
-failed, in our work of repentance and spiritual change. “Turn Thou us
-unto Thee, O Lord, and we shall be turned:” {188} here lies our hope and
-our strength, in the renewing influence of the Spirit of God. As we do
-desire, so let us fervently pray, that we may, in our course of
-penitence, imitate the example of the royal psalmist, and let contrition
-“have its perfect work;” that we may, here below, with heart and soul,
-join in the pious and repentant strains of David’s harp, and thus may be
-admitted to sing to other harps hereafter, in the chorus of the Redeemed
-above.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XI.
-THE WAY OF THE LORD EQUAL.
-
-
- EZEK. xviii. 25.
-
- _Ye say_, _the way of the Lord is not equal_. _Hear now_, _O house
- of Israel_; _is not my way equal_? _are not your ways unequal_?
-
-THE main purport of this chapter was, to obviate some objections which
-had been groundlessly entertained against the dealings of God with His
-people. They were at that time suffering in a state of captivity; and
-the calamities attendant upon it had been threatened long before, as a
-punishment for the sins of their ancestors. The Jews, therefore,
-assuming that this was the only cause of divine vengeance; imagining, in
-the blindness and pride of their hearts, that there were no delinquencies
-of their own to deserve such retribution, presumed to charge the Almighty
-with injustice, for this visitation of His wrath.
-
-The prophet, in the opening of the chapter, thus remonstrates with them:
-“What mean ye, that ye use this proverb concerning the land of Israel?”
-(concerning the evils with which it is afflicted,) that ye say, in the
-language of accusation and reproach, “the fathers have eaten sour grapes
-and the children’s teeth are set on edge?”—thereby meaning, that the
-present generation are unjustly punished for the transgressions of their
-forefathers. “As I live, saith the Lord, ye shall not have occasion to
-use this proverb any more in Israel.” I will make so visible a
-discrimination between the righteous and the wicked, between those who
-tread in the steps of their wicked progenitors, and those who take
-warning by their examples, that you shall not have any further occasion
-to use this proverb amongst you.
-
-The Jews, in this as in many other instances, misunderstood and perverted
-the dispensations of the Most High. God had declared, that He would
-“visit the sins of the fathers upon the children,” and that He “would
-shew mercy unto thousands of those that loved Him;” from which they
-inferred, that worldly calamities, in the one case, and prosperity in the
-other, constituted the sole recompence, which they were severally to
-expect: they supposed, that when a nation was punished, on account of the
-general depravity, no respect was had to the different merits of
-individuals, of which that nation consisted; and that, when a people were
-prospered and exalted, as the reward of righteousness, they were all, of
-necessity, the objects of divine favour. Whereas, these temporal rewards
-and punishments formed but a part of the dispensation, under which they
-were placed. God had far other means in store, to bless the faithful and
-to afflict the transgressor. Under every visitation, His unerring eye
-could discern between the evil and the good; the one, however prosperous
-in a worldly point of view, He could mortify and humble; and the other,
-in whatever evil they might be involved, He could favour and bless.
-
-But there was still another consideration, to which the Jews, though they
-practically disregarded it, were specially directed; a consideration,
-which might have taught them, how the seeming irregularities, of which
-they complained, would be completely rectified; it was that of a final
-judgment, of a world to come. Their prophet Isaiah expressly says of the
-transgressors, that “their worm shall not die, neither shall their fire
-be quenched.” {192a} And Daniel more particularly intimates the awful
-difference between the conditions of the righteous and the wicked in a
-future state; “many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall
-awake: some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting
-contempt.” {192b} But the Israelites “had eyes and saw not, ears and
-heard not;” {193a} they listened only the temporal promises of God, and
-excluded from their minds the prospect of a final retribution, of a
-kingdom to come. The prophet awakens them to this consideration in the
-4th verse, “Behold, saith the Lord, all souls are Mine:” as they are all
-equally My creatures, so My dealings with them shall be without prejudice
-or partiality; “The soul that sinneth, it shall die:” this denunciation
-could not possibly be understood of temporal death; for that, they knew,
-must pass equally upon all: it must relate to a final execution of
-judgment, to future misery and destruction. The Jews were familiar with
-this form of speech and this application of it: of wisdom it is said,
-“They that hate me, love _death_.” {193b} “There is a way that seemeth
-right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of _death_.” {193c} A
-similar mode of speech, we may observe, frequently occurs in the New
-Testament also; in which we continually find expressions and figures
-borrowed from the Old: “If ye live after the flesh, ye shall die; but if
-ye, through the spirit, do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live.”
-{194a} And, in the book of Revelation, mention is made of the _second
-death_; {194b} a term which was in use among the Jews themselves, though
-not found in their inspired writings. And in the same sense, we shall
-perceive, the figure is repeatedly employed in the chapter before us.
-
-The prophet therefore vindicates the justice and equity of God on two
-substantial grounds: he directs his murmuring and rebellious people to
-consider, that they were visited with calamity for their own
-transgressions, as well as for those of their forefathers; and he refers
-them to the future and final judgment of the Almighty, in which the
-prosperity of the wicked and the sufferings of the righteous alike
-terminate; in which both shall receive their just and everlasting
-recompence. “The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither
-shall the father bear the iniquity of the son; the righteousness of the
-righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be
-upon him.” “Have I any pleasure at all that the wicked should die, saith
-the Lord God, and not that he should return from his ways and live?”
-{195}
-
-The passages last mentioned may introduce to our notice two
-considerations, most distinctly and forcibly stated in the latter part of
-this chapter, in both of which we are very deeply and peculiarly
-interested; they are these; that if the wicked repent of their evil ways
-and turn heartily to God, they shall be forgiven and received into His
-favour; but that if the righteous fall away, they shall be condemned and
-perish: on the one hand, there is ample encouragement to the sinner to
-return; on the other, an awful admonition, to the righteous, of the
-necessity of perseverance unto the end. How gracious the instruction in
-either point of view! If it were not for the heavenly assurance of the
-offer of pardon to all, without partiality or exception, many a flagrant
-transgressor, when brought to a sense of his sin and shame—his conscience
-pierced with the remembrance of so manifold offences against a just and
-holy God, his soul over-burdened with the load of guilt—might sit down
-disconsolate and despairing in the shadow of death: and if it were not
-for a warning voice, bidding them, as they hope for salvation, to
-persevere, the righteous, when assailed by temptation, might at length be
-induced to yield, under a presumption, that their former obedience, that
-the good deeds they had already performed, would turn the balance in
-their favour, and procure for them acceptance at the tribunal of God,
-though they were ultimately found in the way of evil. Into this error
-the Jews had actually fallen; and do, as it is affirmed, continue unto
-this day; and others might “follow their pernicious ways.”
-
-Each of the important doctrines, which we are now considering, is
-declared by the prophet in the most explicit and unequivocal terms. “If
-the wicked will turn from all his sins that he hath committed, and keep
-all My statutes, and do that which is lawful and right, he shall surely
-live, he shall not die. All his transgressions that he hath committed,
-they shall not be mentioned unto him: in his righteousness that he hath
-done, he shall live.” {197} None of his former transgressions shall
-exclude him from the privileges and blessings of God’s people; he shall
-be freely and fully received, without reproach, into a gracious covenant
-with his God. This condition of acceptance manifestly implies a vital
-belief in the sovereignty and mercy of God; for without this, none would
-be encouraged to turn unto Him with the hope of forgiveness and favour:
-“He that cometh to God must believe that He is, and that He is the
-rewarder of them that diligently seek Him.” {198a} “The just shall live
-by his faith;” {198b} and the duties which the prophet prescribed to his
-people, as the means of saving their souls alive, were evidently regarded
-by him as the fruit of that faith. Thus, therefore, they were left
-without excuse; no longer able to say, “that the way of the Lord was not
-equal;” for so far from having decreed to involve them all in the same
-indiscriminate punishment, He was willing, nay desirous, of admitting
-into His favour even the most disobedient and abandoned amongst them.
-Although in a state of miserable bondage, He would either “break their
-bonds asunder,” and provide them with a place of refuge; or He would make
-their bodily afflictions minister to the well-being of their souls. If
-the light of His countenance shone upon them, happy was their lot in the
-darkest hour of suffering and privation: and if they did not live to
-enjoy a restoration to the privileges of their own land, still might they
-rejoice, in the prospect of being restored to their forfeited inheritance
-in the mansions of eternal peace. Would they but forsake the idols,
-after which they were gone astray, and turn to “love the Lord their God
-with all their heart and soul and strength,” “ceasing to do evil, and
-learning to do well,” though “their sins were as scarlet, they should be
-as white as snow; though they were red like crimson, they should be as
-wool.” {199} Surely none but the obstinate and rebellious, none but the
-hardest and most ungrateful heart, could complain of the dealings of God.
-Wonderful indeed was the patience which had borne with them so long;
-adorable the mercy which was still held out for the encouragement and
-return of a backsliding people.
-
-Under the gospel dispensation, the same gracious doctrine is yet more
-fully revealed. “If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father,
-Jesus Christ the righteous.” {200a} “If we confess our sins, He is
-faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from _all_
-unrighteousness.” {200b} “The Lord is long-suffering to us-ward, not
-willing that any should perish, but that _all_ should come to
-repentance.” {200c} Texts indeed there are without number of the same
-merciful import; and numerous also are the examples, recorded in Holy
-writ, in which the Saviour vouchsafed His loving kindness and favour to
-the weary and heavy-laden sinner; “seeking and saving those that were
-lost;” and thus affording us the most ample assurance of the truth of His
-own gracious promise, “Him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out.”
-{200d} Are there any amongst us, my brethren, who have not yet made
-their peace with God; any, whom Satan hath hitherto held fast in “the
-gall of bitterness, and the bond of iniquity;” who feel the wretchedness
-of their condition here, and are alarmed at the expectation of what may
-come hereafter? May “the goodness of God lead them to repentance!”
-However deep and dangerous the wounds which sin has made in their hearts,
-there is “balm in Gilead,” if they will earnestly seek it, and apply it
-to their souls: their offended Lord is still “waiting to be gracious;”
-and though they have been prodigally wasting his bounty in riotous
-living, yet if they be at length pierced to the heart by the misery to
-which it has brought them, and be truly desirous of returning to their
-peaceful home, and be ready, with all humility and contrition, to
-acknowledge their unworthiness, and to seek again the divine favour, from
-which they have been so unhappily estranged, then they will be received
-even with welcome; if but one sinner return, there “will be joy in
-heaven;” and the family of the blest will hail his reception; and his
-wanderings shall be mentioned no more. “Awake thou that sleepest and
-rise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light.” {202}
-
-But let not this gracious offer of mercy be abused; let it not act as an
-encouragement to a continuance in sin, under a notion that
-transgressions, however multiplied and aggravated, may be, at any future
-day, repented and forgiven. The grace of repentance, like every other
-good gift, cometh from God; and the proffered mercy, which is long and
-obstinately rejected, may be, and often is, withdrawn. If we will not
-hear, while the Almighty now speaks; if we will not answer, while He is
-now calling, “the ear may become heavy that it cannot hear,” and we may
-be left to perish in our sins. One word more; think of the many sudden
-departures; you are not without awakening and awful examples; your eye
-may be closed in death, while it is turned away from your God; or if you
-should be permitted to experience a few days’ alarm, God alone knows what
-effect it may produce upon the heart. Seek Him “in health and wealth;”
-the work is of amazing magnitude and everlasting importance; it demands
-all your vigour, all the unclouded faculties of your soul.
-
-And let those who have embraced the blessed gospel, in sincerity and
-truth, who are believing in the name of Jesus for salvation, and “are
-fruitful in every good word and work,” ever bear in mind the absolute
-necessity of persevering in the good and holy cause. For of what service
-can it be, to begin the race with animation, and to pursue it, for a
-season, with ever so great activity, if they loiter before the end, and
-relinquish their exertions “for the prize of their high calling?” “When
-the righteous turneth away from his righteousness and committeth
-iniquity, and doeth according to all the abominations that the wicked man
-doeth, shall he live? All his righteousness that he hath done shall not
-be mentioned; in his trespass that he hath trespassed, and in his sin
-that he hath sinned, in them shall he die.” Here also we must allow,
-that “the way of God is equal.” {204} For surely it argues the most
-depraved and abandoned state of mind and heart, to depart from our God
-and our Redeemer, after having been once convinced of the truth and the
-blessedness of His holy religion; having “tasted how gracious the Lord
-is,” having experienced the guidance and comfort and support of his
-all-powerful spirit, having had our “hopes full of immortality,” having
-enjoyed a foretaste of the happiness of heaven, after all to fall away,
-and prefer to these exalted objects, the miserable pleasures, the base
-indulgencies, the perishable possessions of earth! A change so
-disastrous must reduce the understanding and heart into the worst
-condition of which they are capable. It is the evil spirit, which had
-been once cast out, returning to his abode, with seven other spirits more
-wicked than himself, and dwelling there, as in a settled home, and the
-last state of that man is worse than the first. {205a} The Apostle
-represents the matter to us in this light: for so difficult is it for a
-person, in such a state, to be worked upon by any consideration, that he
-describes it, in his strong language, as an actual impossibility: “it is
-impossible, (he says) for those who were once enlightened, and have
-tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost,
-and have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to
-come, if they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance;”
-{205b} and then he adds the reason, “seeing they crucify to themselves
-the Son of God afresh, and put Him to an open shame;” they maintain the
-horrid principles and character of those who “crucified the Lord of
-glory;” they deliberately renounce his friendship, and become “enemies to
-the cross of Christ;” they cast a shameful reproach upon Him, infinitely
-greater than it is possible for those enemies to do, who were never
-admitted into the privilege and happiness of His favour. Fain would we
-hope, that this is a case of rare occurrence; but it is possible, or why
-should the prophet and Apostle have represented it? “Therefore, let him
-that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall;” {206a} “let him give
-all diligence to make his calling and election sure.” {206b} “The just
-shall live by his faith: but if _that man_, (however faithful and just he
-has been) draw back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him;” {206c} this
-is the proper translation of the passage. God Almighty of His infinite
-mercy grant, that the words which follow this text, addressed by the
-Apostle to the faithful disciples of old, may be realized by all of us
-here; “we, (says he,) are not of them who draw back unto perdition; but
-of them that believe to the saving of the soul.” Pray to God without
-ceasing for grace to persevere: His Holy Spirit, if sought and cherished
-and used, will enable us to be faithful and to overcome, will “make us
-more than conquerors, through Him that loved us.” {207a}
-
-In conclusion then, I ask, “is not the way of the Lord equal?” And of
-those, who presume to arraign it, are not the ways unequal? Equal and
-merciful do all the ways of God appear, whenever they can be traced;
-equal and merciful they are, whether they can be traced or not. “O man,
-who art thou that repliest against God?” {207b} “Shall not the judge of
-all the earth do right?” {207c} Humble thyself, and accept His proffered
-mercy: Hear His words; “Look unto Me, and be ye saved, all the ends of
-the earth: for I am God, and there is none else.” {207d} Salvation is
-all that the sinner can desire; and surely he can repose, without doubt
-or distrust upon the all-wise, all-merciful, omnipotent God.
-Understanding and experiencing, in so many instances, the divine wisdom
-and mercy, we can have no difficulty in believing, that God “doeth all
-things well.” “He that spared not his own Son, but delivered Him up for
-us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?” {208a}
-Most unreasonable, most ungrateful would it be to question or complain.
-No true believer does so: he is thoroughly convinced of the truth of
-God’s word, and the equity of God’s dealings and dispensations. This is
-his concern, this the great purpose resting in his soul, to be reconciled
-to God in His own appointed way; to be made an inheritor of His eternal
-kingdom. He knows, and it is enough for him to know, that “the grace of
-God, which bringeth salvation, hath appeared to all men;” {208b} he
-believes, and he acts upon the belief, that “the blood of Jesus Christ
-cleanseth us from all sin;” {208c} he seeks to “wash and be clean,” and
-faithfully waits for the promised blessing: “Verily there is a reward for
-the righteous; verily He is a God that judgeth the earth.”{208d}
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XII.
-THE NEW MAN.
-
-
- EPH. iv. 24.
-
- _That ye put on the new man_, _which after God is created in
- righteousness and true holiness_.
-
-IN treating of these words, it shall be my first object to explain their
-real nature and import. St. Paul has been describing, in this chapter,
-the character of the unregenerate Gentiles, who “walked in the vanity of
-their mind, having the understanding darkened, being alienated from the
-life of God through the ignorance that is in them, because of the
-blindness of their heart.” And this description applies, with almost
-equal force and truth, to a considerable portion of those who have “named
-the name of Christ:” though they acknowledge with their lips the truth
-and obligation of the christian religion, they still “walk in the vanity
-of their minds.” As to any saving view of the truth, “the understanding
-is _yet_ darkened:” and though their ignorance be removed, with respect
-to a revelation of the divine will, they are as far as ever from “the
-life of God;” though the mind is enlightened with the knowledge of the
-fact, the blindness of the heart remains.
-
-The Apostle proceeds to say of his Ephesian converts, “but _ye_ have not
-so learned Christ”—“if so be, that ye have heard Him” (or rather, as the
-phrase may properly imply, _forasmuch_ as ye have heard Him) “and have
-been taught by Him as the truth is in Jesus.” And what had they heard,
-as necessary to their salvation by His name, and what is the truth they
-had been taught?—“that ye put off, concerning the former conversation
-(the former life and conduct), the old man, which is corrupt, according
-to the deceitful lusts” (the worldly principles and the sinful habits
-above described, to which you were addicted before your conversion); and
-“be renewed (or made new) in the spirit of your mind; and that ye put on
-the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true
-holiness;” the change thus produced being so great and important as to be
-compared to a new creation; the inner man being totally different from
-what he was before. It is said, moreover, that the new man “is created
-_after God_ in righteousness;” this is fully explained by the same
-Apostle, in his Epistle to the Colossians, where he is treating on the
-same subject; he there speaks of the converts being renewed “after the
-image of Him who created them.” {211} At the creation of Adam, God is
-represented as saying, “Let us make man in our image, after our
-likeness,” that is, in perfect innocence and purity. Thus was Adam
-formed, perfectly upright and holy: by disobedience his nature was
-changed; he became sinful and unholy; and this change was entailed upon
-all his posterity. The object, therefore, of the new creation is to
-restore in us, as far as we are now capable of it, that image of divine
-righteousness, which man lost by the fall. On considering, then, the
-holy nature of God, we are at once made acquainted with that change, in
-the natural man, which the gospel teaches and requires; we are brought to
-perceive and acknowledge that “true holiness,” which as Christians we are
-bound to desire and attain.
-
-The same truth may be said to have been substantially revealed to the
-servants of God under the old dispensation: there is no express mention
-indeed of a new creation of the individual; but the prophets every where
-assert, what is similar in effect, that no wicked person, without hearty
-repentance and an entire change of character, must expect the divine
-favour. To this purpose is the language of Isaiah: “Wash you, make you
-clean; put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes; cease to
-do evil, learn to do well.” {213a} The unclean and unrighteous cannot
-stand before God. “As I live, saith the Lord God, (by the mouth of
-Ezekiel) I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the
-wicked turn from his way and live; turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways;
-for why will ye die, house of Israel?” {213b} The prophet thereto
-plainly intimating, that notwithstanding all that goodness and
-long-suffering of the divine nature, which is expressed in a most
-compassionate invitation, and is confirmed even by the solemnity of an
-oath, yet if sinners did not “turn from their evil ways,” there was no
-remedy, but they must die. And the same prophet on another occasion,
-uses language very similar to that of the text; “I will put a _new_
-spirit within you, and I will take the stony heart out of their
-flesh—that they may walk in my statutes and keep mine ordinances, and do
-them, and they shall be my people, and I will be their God.” {214a}
-Agreeably to this, the same people are subsequently exhorted, to “cast
-away from them all the transgressions whereby they had transgressed, and
-to make them a new heart and a new spirit.” {214b} However therefore,
-the New Covenant doth exceed the Old, with regard to the clearness of its
-manifestations, and its fuller dispensations of grace, yet are there in
-both of them the same consistent terms of reconciliation and salvation
-for rebellious man; in both are injoined the same purity of spirit, and
-integrity of character; this is the plain, uniform, infallible intimation
-of both, that “without holiness no man shall see the Lord.” {214c}
-
-That the people of old were but partially awake and alive to the great
-change required to be wrought in them, from sin to righteousness, from
-the love of evil to the love of good, from a “bondage unto the elements
-of the world” to the glorious liberty of the children of God, is too
-fully proved from the complaints of patriarchs and prophets and holy men
-of every determination. The sound of the gospel, thank God, has now gone
-forth into all lands, and brought “life and immortality to light;” it has
-awakened many nations, who lay fast bound in the slumbers of spiritual
-death; but whether it has vitally and savingly awakened a greater
-proportion of those, to whom the glad tidings have been revealed, is a
-matter of reasonable doubt. At least, if we compare what man is by
-nature, with what he may be and ought to be by divine grace, it must
-appear, from the life and conduct of the great majority in the christian
-world, that they have by no means attained that renovation of spirit and
-principle and character, which can entitle them to the appellation of new
-creatures.
-
-Of how many may it be said, (and their own consciences will bear witness
-to the truth of the accusation,) that their thoughts are ordinarily
-flowing in much the same channel, their passions yielding to the same
-excitements, and their pursuits directed to the same end, as they would
-have been, had the pure doctrines and precepts of Christ never been
-promulgated. Vast numbers, in the visible Church of Christ, who profess
-some regard for religion, instead of raising their affections to the
-standard of the gospel, are seeking to _bring down_ the immoveable
-standard of the gospel to _them_: and greater numbers still, of reckless
-men, bestow not so much as a thought upon that spiritual change, which is
-absolutely essential to the christian character. For what is the
-religion of thousands amongst us?—merely, if I may so call it, that
-traditionary acquaintance with divine things, which is acquired in
-infancy; that outward assent to evangelical truths, which was handed down
-to them by their forefathers; a cold respect for the shadow, without any
-concern for the substance: they are content to observe the forms of
-religion, because they have been accustomed so to do, and their
-neighbours do the same; and to attend to what are called the decencies of
-life, because they would otherwise be disreputable; to crimes and to
-holiness strangers perhaps alike; satisfied to do no worse, than they see
-the multitudes around them doing; and resting their claim to God’s favour
-on a few moral pretensions, or even on the absence of scandalous
-immorality; probably looking for exemption from the penalties of the
-divine law, because their transgressions have never been such, as to
-expose them to the scourge of the law of man.
-
-This, however deplorable, is a true description of no inconsiderable
-portion of our christian land; to none of _us_, we may hope, is the
-description strictly applicable; but it is too probable, that there are
-many amongst us, who partake more or less of the character here
-delineated; who practically regard the christian religion as a system to
-be accommodated to their dispositions and habits and pursuits of life,
-and not as demanding a total alteration in their views and tempers and
-motives of action. Though their thoughts are directed to objects, far
-above those of “the heathen who know not God” and though their morality,
-upon the whole, be of a higher order and a purer cast, yet are their
-affections willingly led captive by the ensnaring vanities and engrossing
-interests of this lower world: heaven is the object of their settled
-creed, but it is not the main purpose to which their endeavours are
-anxiously and daily directed; in balancing between this or that pursuit,
-their thoughts are intent only upon providing for “the meat that
-perisheth,” without any enquiry or concern, how they may best provide for
-“that which endureth unto eternal life.” {218} And the morality, on
-which they so complacently rest, has frequently no connexion whatever
-with the christian faith; referable rather to philosophy than the gospel,
-to “the praise of men than the praise of God.” Hence it follows, that
-their moral obedience is lamentably defective; extending only to the
-performance of those duties, which least oppose their inclination or
-their temporal advantage; while even such duties are but imperfectly
-discharged. Their self-government is wretchedly defective; the controul
-of their thoughts, the mastery over their passions, the command over
-their tongue, are attainments which they seldom bind it upon their
-conscience to acquire. And though they be turned from idols to worship
-the living and the true God, the fruit of their service, as well as the
-irregularity of it, affords but too clear a proof, that they “worship him
-not in spirit and in truth.” However improved, in their moral character,
-by their acquaintance with the christian religion, they cannot possibly
-have imbibed its spirit; nor have arrived at that happy change of the
-natural man, which can be denominated by a new creation. They are
-working out, or rather seeking to work out, their salvation on maxims of
-human expediency, and in accommodation to human interests; not with “fear
-and trembling,” lest they should lose the inestimable prize; they are not
-evincing, that it is “God that worketh in them both to will and to do.”
-{220}
-
-I have thus enlarged, on the presents occasion, upon the enormous
-deficiencies of christian character, because it is of great importance
-for us to understand, what is not accordant with the principles of the
-gospel, as well as what is: it is of vital consequence, that we should be
-thoroughly aware of the insufficiency of that spirit and view, of those
-maxims and motives of those habits and observances, which pass current
-for religion in the world.
-
-We cannot put on the new man, unless we put off the old; and we cannot
-put off the old, unless we thoroughly understand in what it consists.
-The work is too commonly supposed much easier and much less
-comprehensive, than it really is: many vicious habits may be corrected,
-without any essential or fundamental alteration of character. A man may
-become weary of the pursuits, disgusted with the follies, worn and sated
-with the profligacies of life; he may find his circumstances
-impoverished, his reputation impaired, his worldly interest obstructed:
-and such considerations as these may generate a purpose of moral reform.
-Or the sinner may feel himself oppressed with the increasing weight of
-years; infirmities are coming fast upon him; and his conscience, in many
-a whisper of fear, tells him that something should be done, some
-preparation made, for the world to which he is hastening, for the account
-which he will speedily be called to render. The idea of dying with those
-depravities, to which he has clinged through life, is awful and
-insupportable. The more flagrant of them are accordingly corrected; and
-the rest, which are less startling and disquieting, are undisturbedly
-retained. In all this there is no change of principle, no vital
-alteration: the old man continues; less hideous in features and outward
-appearance, but the very same in reality. With this partial renovation
-the mind is satisfied; the conscience is becalmed; the sinner dies.
-
-Through the “deceivableness of unrighteousness,” through the wiles of
-Satan and the evil propensity of our own hearts, we are always in danger
-of being too easily content with our spiritual condition; we look too
-much to the outward and visible form, and too little within; to little to
-the habitual principle, the constraining motive, the cast of character:
-and it is in this, that the difference between the old and the new man,
-in the christian world essentially consists. Suffer me to point out
-again a few of the broad lines of distinction. The old man, whatever of
-religion he may profess, lives principally for himself and the world; he
-may think of religion, and speak of it, and pray for it with the lips,
-but it has no dwelling place in his heart, is not the business of his
-life. However observable, in many respects, his moral deportment may be,
-his character is seldom consistent. From some evil pursuits he abstains,
-in others he wilfully and constantly indulges; some evil passions are
-kept in creditable order, others are let loose; some duties he
-professedly performs, and others he professedly omits. And nothing is
-done with a true christian motive, or christian view; nothing from a
-sense of absolute and uncompromising obedience to the will of God. Nor
-is it surprising, that there should be such deficiencies and
-inconsistencies in his character; he has no principle or means, by which
-he can possibly walk uprightly with his God. He does not “believe with
-the heart unto righteousness;” he does not seek, nor desire, to “live in
-the spirit and walk in the spirit;” there is no life in his devotion, no
-sincerity in his prayer: he “asks not faithfully” for repentance and
-holiness, and they cannot be “effectually received.” He is not disposed
-to bring his understanding and heart into subjection to the divine will.
-He studies not that holy word, which ministers the principle of a divine
-life, and the spirit of obedience to the soul. He lives for earth and
-not for heaven. He is too proud to be taught the humiliating doctrines
-of revelation; too full of himself, to bow implicitly to his Redeemer.
-In a word, nature is his book and not the Bible; the world is his teacher
-and not the Spirit of God; earthly and not spiritual subjects are the
-delight of his heart; he walks not “by faith, but by sight.”
-
-The new man is the reverse of all this; he humbles himself, as a sinner,
-at the foot of the cross, under a deep sense of his own guilt and the
-divine mercy; desirous only to be reconciled and saved; he constantly
-studies the mysteries God’s word, with a submissive understanding and an
-obedient heart; he rests his only hope on the merit of a Redeemer, whose
-promises and whose law he receives with all his mind and soul and
-strength; he prays “without ceasing” for the Holy Spirit, is directed by
-His teaching, supported by His power, and comforted by His heavenly
-illumination. Doubtless he must live _in_ the world, and _by_ the world,
-as well as other people; but he does not live _for_ the world; his heart
-is not there, his delight is not there; he is a redeemed pilgrim,
-journeying in a far country, returning to his Father’s house; and his
-heart is musing on the “many mansions” there, and full of the inspiring
-influential hope, that one of them is prepared for him.
-
-Such holy principles are continually manifested by a determination of
-purpose, a decisiveness of character, a devoted spirit of uniform
-obedience to the revealed will of God. As the conscience bears witness,
-so does the life: “the tree is known by its fruit;” all evil affections
-are resolutely mortified, all sinful pleasures and pursuits utterly
-abandoned. The sincere Christian, the new man, has an earnest desire and
-care upon his soul, to be “righteous before God, walking in all the
-commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless.” {226a} For this
-blessing he daily prays; in this work he daily advances: “loving the Lord
-God with all his heart,” and “loving his neighbour as himself,” he is of
-all men the most inclined, as he is assuredly the most bound, to “live
-soberly, righteously and godly in this present world.” {226b}
-
-These remarks suggest the necessity of further admonition on this head.
-Many persons have been led to entertain enthusiastic notions on the
-subject of the new man, the new creation, the new birth. They have
-supposed it principally to consist in certain inward experiences or
-feelings, which they have been enabled to trace to some particular event
-or period: the Holy Spirit, as they believe, then beginning, for the
-first time, to work upon their understandings and hearts; and thus
-leaving an indelible impression, the seal of their redemption, the
-earnest of their certain acceptance with God. Far are we from denying,
-that such sudden conversions may and do take place: still farther from
-denying that, whether sudden or gradual, a change from the old to the new
-man is attributable to the aid of a divine energy and power. It is,
-properly speaking, a new creation; the imparting of a new nature: and
-cannot be effected without the hand of the original Creator: without the
-operation of that Spirit, which “moved upon the face of the waters,”
-which “breathed into the nostrils the breath of life, so that man became
-a living soul.” {227a} Our Liturgy has correctly and fully embodied the
-testimony of scripture, on this as on other points: we are taught to
-pray, that God will “_create_ in us new and contrite hearts.” This
-blessing must proceed from that Holy Spirit, who still in His ordinary
-dispensations, as formerly in His miraculous gifts, “divides unto every
-man severally as He will;” {227b} not as it were capriciously, but
-according to His own infinite wisdom and goodness, as He judges expedient
-to the case of each individual. But this divine grace is not
-communicated for the mere purpose of producing a glowing affection, a
-familiar experience, an enraptured view of spiritual things: nor can any
-inward feelings alone prove that such grace has been administered at all:
-the proof must be manifested, in the way pointed out by the text: the new
-man “is created, after God, in _righteousness and true holiness_.” A
-holy character and a righteous life are the proper and indispensable
-evidences of such a change; a faithful walking with God, a sober
-self-government, an upright dealing with all mankind.
-
-I counsel you, my brethren, in the language of truth and the spirit of
-affection, to be content with no other evidence: equally far be you
-removed from that carnal profession of the gospel, which despises or
-neglects the mighty change required of every sincere believer; and from
-those fanciful notions of spiritual experience, which leave the heart and
-the character arrayed in the spotted garment of sin: both in the one case
-and the other, you will be “grieving the spirit,” and “quenching the
-spirit.” In your principles and life, as well as in your views and
-affections and desires, “let old things pass away, and all things become
-new;” {229a} “put off the old man with the deceitful lusts,” and thus let
-the new man be put on. “Abhor that which is evil: cleave to that which
-is good.” {229b} This is the method ordained of God, by which we are to
-“work out our salvation;” this our plain, this our necessary duty. Pray
-we fervently, strive we diligently, that we may be thus effectually
-turned from sin to holiness, “from darkness to light, from the power of
-Satan unto God.” {229c}
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XIII.
-THE WEDDING GARMENT.
-
-
- MATT. xxii. 2.
-
- _The kingdom of heaven is like unto certain king which made a
- marriage for his son_.
-
-IT is my intention, in this discourse, to explain the several particulars
-of the parable before us; which may be regarded, in the _first_ place, as
-descriptive of the dispensation of the gospel to the people of Israel and
-the world at large; and, in the _second_ place, as instructing us in that
-peculiar fitness necessary to all, who shall be admitted to enjoy the
-privileges and happiness of the kingdom of God.
-
-The state of the gospel, our Saviour informs us, may be compared to the
-conduct of a king at the marriage of his son; or rather, as the meaning
-is, at the marriage _feast_ which he gave on that occasion: the
-circumstances which might, in that case, be supposed to occur, aptly
-represent a variety of particulars belonging to the gospel dispensation.
-
-Before, however, we enter upon the parable, it may be remarked, that
-spiritual blessings are frequently set forth in the holy scriptures,
-under allusions to feasting and refreshment. Thus Solomon of old:
-“Wisdom hath builded her house, she hath hewn out her seven pillars: she
-hath killed her beasts; she hath mingled her wine; she hath also
-furnished her table. Come, eat of my bread, and drink of the wine which
-I have mingled. Forsake the foolish, and live; and go in the way of
-understanding.” {231} And thus the prophet Isaiah, in describing the
-state of the gospel: “In this mountain shall the Lord of hosts make unto
-all people a feast of fat things, a feast of wines on the lees, of fat
-things full of marrow, of wines on the lees well refined.” {232a} And
-thus our blessed Lord Himself: “I appoint unto you a kingdom, as My
-Father hath appointed unto Me, that ye may eat and drink at My table in
-My kingdom.” {232b}
-
-1. Let us now proceed with the parable: “He sent forth his servants to
-call them that were bidden to the wedding (feast); and they would not
-come.” This probably alludes to the first period of the promulgation of
-the gospel; under the preaching of John the Baptist and of the earliest
-disciples; the former endeavouring to prepare the hearts of men for the
-kingdom and coming of Christ; and the latter proclaiming His glorious
-arrival, preaching the truth of His gospel, and confirming the word by a
-display of miraculous power. But the Jews had been a carnal people,
-“holding the truth in unrighteousness;” and they refused to give ear to
-those holy instructions, which called upon them to “lay the axe to the
-root of all sin,” and to “bring forth fruits meet for repentance.” {233a}
-This it was that prevented them, not only from a cordial acceptance of
-the gospel, but even from a fair examination and inquiry; they would not
-listen to such doctrine; their heart was decided against it: to this it
-was owing, these carnal habits and views, that when their Messiah came,
-they were not ready to receive Him in the way which He required. Ready
-enough were they to admit Him in their own way; agreeably to their own
-notions and desires, as an earthly conqueror, as the dispenser of
-temporal blessings and rewards; but not as the abolisher of sin; not as a
-preacher of righteousness; not as a herald, announcing to them the
-necessity of holiness in this world, and the inheritance of glory in the
-world to come. Not all His amazing miracles, not all His fulfilment of
-their own prophecies, not all the power of His word, could convince their
-understandings; because they had “an evil heart of unbelief:” {233b} and
-therefore, notwithstanding His awful warnings, His earnest and
-affectionate invitations, “they would not come” unto Him, that they might
-find rest unto their souls.
-
-Here we behold, as in a glass, the real ground of every rejection of the
-Saviour in every age; it is not because men deny His excellency, or His
-power, or His mercy, or the greatness of His kingdom: it is because they
-“love this present evil world,” and the “god of this world hath blinded
-their minds,” {234a} through the deceitfulness of sin. Even though
-eternal salvation is offered them, and they do not disbelieve it; still,
-awful to think! the Saviour is rejected for perishable interests and
-sensual indulgences. “He feedeth on ashes; a deceived heart hath turned
-him aside, that he cannot deliver his soul, nor say, is there not a lie
-in my right hand?” {234b} Men walk on in darkness because they love it;
-and they “love darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil.”
-{234c}
-
-2. But the Jews were not yet cast off, without further admonition and
-entreaty. “Again He sent forth other servants, saying, tell them who are
-bidden, behold I have prepared my dinner; my oxen and my fatlings are
-killed, and all things are ready; come unto the marriage” feast. But
-“they made light of it,” and offered a variety of groundless excuses.
-This may chiefly refer to the fuller manifestation of the gospel, after
-the resurrection and ascension of our blessed Lord; for the parable, as
-we shall more clearly perceive in the sequel, is partly of a prophetic
-nature; and intended to represent to the Jews their persevering spirit of
-obstinacy, and the punishment which would ensue; that some of them at
-least, when the fulness of the time should come, might be struck with the
-force of this predictive representation, and be converted to the “truth
-as it is in Jesus.”
-
-Every thing requisite for the sumptuous feast was liberally provided: in
-the days of the apostles, abundant indeed was the confirmation of the
-truth and doctrines of the gospel; bright the manifestation of heavenly
-glory, that was shed abroad upon it. Then were strikingly fulfilled the
-words of their prophet Joel; “I will pour out My Spirit upon all
-flesh—also upon the servants and the handmaids in those days will I pour
-out My Spirit.” {236} Accordingly the gifts of the Holy Ghost—were
-openly poured forth, and mighty were the deeds done and the words spoken
-by His servants, under the operation of His marvellous power: the old
-dispensation was fully brought to bear upon the new: it was shewn how the
-character of Jesus corresponded, in His birth and life and death and
-resurrection and ascension, as well as in His offices of Priest and
-Mediator and King, with various prophecies and types exhibited in the
-ancient scriptures. The benefits and blessings of the christian
-dispensation were more particularly and largely set forth: the feast was
-fully displayed before them, in all its rich and magnificent abundance.
-Many were then induced to enter into the guest chamber, and partake of
-the heavenly repast; but many more, the Jewish nation at large, made
-light of it, and went their way. And not only so: not only was the
-invitation unheeded and despised; but the remnant, that is, some who were
-not content with disobeying the call, “took his servants, and entreated
-them spitefully and slew them;” persecuted the disciples even unto death.
-
-3. We now come to a part of the parable, which must of necessity receive
-a prophetic interpretation: “When the King heard thereof, he was wroth,
-and he sent forth his armies and destroyed those murderers, and burnt up
-their city.” This plainly points out the Roman armies ravaging Judea,
-destroying Jerusalem, and putting the inhabitants to the sword; an event,
-which did not take place till many years after. Neither, in truth, is
-there mention made, in the gospel history, of the Jews having slain any
-of the disciples, whilst their Lord was with them. They were murderers
-of the Son of God, and of many of His apostles and disciples after Him;
-thus “filling up the measure of their iniquity,” and drawing down upon
-themselves, and their nation at large, the most tremendous visitation of
-divine wrath, ever inflicted in this world upon a rebellious people.
-
-4. We are next carried forward to another period in the gospel
-dispensation; a period in which we ourselves are deeply and peculiarly
-interested; from which we date all the spiritual mercies and advantages,
-all “the means of grace and hopes of glory,” which have been vouchsafed
-to our souls. “Then saith the king to his servants, the wedding (the
-wedding feast) is ready, but they which were bidden were not worthy.”
-The Israelites who were honoured, as the people of God, with the first
-invitation and call to the gospel, shewed themselves unworthy of it, by
-their ungrateful and obstinate rejection. “Go ye therefore into the
-highways, and as many as ye shall find, bid to the marriage” feast: go
-ye, as we may interpret the words of our Lord, go ye, My ministers and
-messengers, into the world at large, and carry My invitation to the
-Gentiles; to as many as ye shall find; and proclaim to them that My table
-is spread for all: since the people, who were first bidden, have “not
-heard when I spake, nor answered, when I called,” the “kingdom of heaven
-is now thrown open to all believers,” so that “whosoever shall call upon
-the name of the Lord shall be saved:” My kingdom shall no longer be
-confined to one peculiar race; the time is come, when the blessedness of
-it shall be diffused abroad as “the waters cover the sea:” I am ready to
-“make a covenant with all flesh”—a covenant of peace—of benefits and
-mercies, such as their “eyes have never seen, nor ears heard;” the
-universal banquet is spread; bid them all to come. “So those servants
-went out into the highways, and gathered together all as many as they
-found, both bad and good: and the wedding (table) was furnished with
-guests:” for it was not unusual, we must observe, in those countries, for
-men of the highest rank and distinction to admit to their tables, on
-remarkable occasions, persons of the lowest condition.
-
-And this part of the parable also was representative of a future period;
-for though Christ had received homage from some in the Gentile world, and
-had signified His favour to others as well as the Jews, it could not be
-said, that the blessings of His gospel were at that time distinctly
-offered to the world at large. By St. Peter, in the first instance, in
-the case of Cornelius, and afterwards more fully by St. Paul, the Apostle
-of the Gentiles, were the good tidings universally announced and spread.
-This accords with the invitation in the parable, where we find that no
-exceptions were to be made: the “servants gathered together all, both bad
-and good;” thus, to men of all characters and descriptions the gospel was
-indiscriminately preached: the best greatly needed it; and even to the
-worst the door of grace and repentance was opened.
-
-Doubtless, there are vast differences in the characters of unregenerate
-men, of the very heathen “who know not God.” Some will use, more
-faithfully than others, the feebler light of natural religion; and thus
-arrive at a higher state of moral rectitude and respectability. But
-whatever comparative excellence any one may attain, in such a state, he
-is at best a polluted sinner: fallen from the favour and family of God;
-without the power to rise and return; the inheritor of sin and death,
-without the means of salvation. God must be reconciled, and the gate of
-mercy thrown open; or the sinner must perish. And it is for the offended
-God alone, to appoint the means of reconciliation; and proclaim the
-conditions of pardon and mercy. Jesus Christ, the eternal Son of God, is
-the only means of deliverance; by His incarnation and sacrifice has
-atonement been made for man; “there is no other name under heaven given
-among men, whereby we must be saved;” {242a} “other foundation can no man
-lay.” {242b} The moralist must lay aside his vain pretensions, and
-humble himself at the foot of the cross; must come to the Saviour and
-learn of Him; come and be “baptised for the remission of sins;” come,
-that his character may be essentially changed by the Spirit and the word
-of God; that he may have new desires, new affections, new principles, new
-prospects: and many of “the children of this world,” amiable in their
-disposition and reputable in their conduct, deceive themselves in this
-matter; perceive not their need of a Saviour, “trusting in themselves
-that they are righteous;” good in their own eyes, good in the estimation
-of their neighbours, they undervalue and neglect the gospel; and
-therefore still continue “dead in trespasses and sins.”
-
-But the bad as well as the good were gathered together; not only to
-those, whose conduct had been honourable among men, and whose characters
-were fair; but to notorious delinquent, yea, even to the worst of
-sinners, the door of the guest-chamber is open; all are invited; all, if
-they will comply with the conditions and rules of the feast, shall be
-fed; publicans and sinners, extortioners and unjust, disobedient and
-reprobate, all are the objects of the Saviour’s mercy; “Come unto me, all
-ye that are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” The
-invitation is free and universal; none who rightly seek admission, shall
-be excluded. This exactly agrees with the language of the evangelical
-prophet: “Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he
-that hath no money; come ye, buy and eat.” “Let the wicked forsake his
-way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts: and let him return unto the
-Lord, and He will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for He will
-abundantly pardon.” {243a} “The fountain is opened for sin and for
-cleanness;” {243b} “wash you, make you clean;” laden as ye are with
-iniquity come but to your Saviour, in sincerity and truth, with a
-contrite and repentant heart; come, as He has invited you; look to the
-all-sufficiency of His sacrifice; believe in Him for justification and
-life; be ready to learn of His example and to receive His spirit and His
-law into your heart, and you shall be admitted to His holy banquet, and
-be made welcome at His table; you shall find comfort in the presence of
-your Lord, and in them “that sit at meat with you.”
-
-5. We are now led to the last and most striking part of this parable:
-the king came in to see the guests; to see whether they conducted
-themselves worthily of his entertainment, and appeared in the dress which
-he had provided, for such as were unable to furnish themselves. And
-thus, with regard to the heavenly feast, the guests are strictly and
-constantly accountable for their behaviour. Our blessed Lord watches the
-demeanour of all who profess to accept His invitation in the gospel;
-observes, how every one, who is “admitted into the fellowship of His
-religion,” fulfils the conditions required of him. Nor is it the
-external demeanour alone, which engages His notice and inspection; He
-sees through the innermost windings of every heart, and will infallibly
-“judge righteous judgment.” No violation of His will, in thought, or
-word, or deed; no insincerity or deceitful appearance can possibly remain
-undetected.
-
-“When the king came in—he saw there a man who had not on a wedding
-garment. And he said unto him, friend, how earnest thou in hither, not
-having a wedding garment?” The man could not pretend to offer an excuse:
-he knew the rules of the feast, and had wantonly neglected them; he was,
-like many other ungrateful people, regaling himself upon a benefactor’s
-bounty, but shewed him no respect or regard: being therefore
-self-condemned, “he was speechless.” Thus will it be with every
-negligent and disobedient Christian, when the Lord comes to make enquiry
-into his character: to justify himself, he will feel to be impossible;
-thoroughly has he known his Lord’s will, and full often has his
-conscience reproved him for not performing it: there will be nothing left
-for him, but unavailing sorrow and speechless remorse.
-
-“Then said the king to the servants, bind him hand and foot; and take him
-away, and cast him into outer darkness, there shall be weeping and
-gnashing of teeth.” Cast him, from the lighted chamber, to the darkness
-of the night without, where he shall bitterly regret the pleasures he has
-so foolishly lost. Sad emblem of that state, whose sadness can be known,
-here upon earth, only by emblematical representation, only by such
-figures as “outer darkness,” as the “worm that never dies,” and “the fire
-that never shall be quenched;” a darkness of mind, in the utter regions
-of despair, without a ray from heaven to cheer it; the worm of anguish
-preying upon the soul; and a fire burning, whether without or within, or
-both; raging yet not consuming. God grant, that we may hear only of this
-wretched state “by, the hearing of the ear;” that our eyes may never
-behold it; that none of us may be consigned to this abode of unredeemed
-and unredeemable misery: and, that we never may, let us “walk worthy of
-our vocation;” of the Lord of that heavenly feast, of which we are
-professing to partake. Put on, my brethren, the wedding garment of the
-gospel; put it on, or intrude not into the presence-chamber of your Lord;
-dread the doom of the hypocrite and the despiser; pretend not to partake
-of the heavenly feast, to expect any of the blessings of the gospel,
-unless ye consent and seek to be clothed with the raiment provided by
-your King; with all those christian graces and virtues, which He will
-enable you to obtain.
-
-If indeed it depended upon ourselves, “miserable and poor and naked” as
-we are, to provide a suitable covering; if the sinner were required to
-produce, from his own store, the raiment of holiness and righteousness,
-and thus make himself acceptable to his Saviour and his God; then would
-he have much reason to urge for his unworthiness and deficiency: for he
-has no means of making any such provision; he has not “wherewith he shall
-come before the Lord:” his heart is corrupt; his character is unholy; and
-he has no power to change them. But the provision does not depend upon
-ourselves; what the Lord commands us to be clothed with, He has
-mercifully prepared: He gives His Holy Spirit, to change the heart and
-reform the character; to enable us to “put off the old man with the
-deceitful lusts, and to put on the new man, which after God is created in
-righteousness and true holiness.” This spiritual clothing the Lord
-offers to all His followers; and woe be to those, who refuse or slight
-it: for this is a contempt of His divine mercy; a defiance of His
-authority and command: the expectation of His favour, on such terms, is
-adding insult to presumption. If we do make a profession of belonging to
-Him, let us not thus foolishly cast away our hope; let us not deceive
-ourselves by imagining, that we can possibly maintain a title to the
-privileges and blessings of the gospel, whilst we are living in the
-neglect of those ordinances and laws, which the Lord has graciously
-appointed as the means of our acceptance with Him. They who neglect the
-means, will assuredly lose the end; will be numbered among the despisers
-of their Saviour’s mercy.
-
-And in order to keep alive in our minds that deep concern, which so
-momentous a subject demands, frequently let us be meditating upon that
-awful hour, when the King shall come in to visit and inspect His guests:
-His eye shall be upon every one, and every one’s eye upon Him; imagine
-yourself then in the guest-chamber without a wedding garment; ready and
-desirous to sink into the earth; but there will be nothing to cover your
-guilt and shame: though you have entered in with the other guests, and
-taken your station at the feast, you will be called out from among them,
-and everlastingly separated from the goodly company. A garment you would
-then, no doubt, most willingly accept; but it will be too late; it should
-have been accepted when offered; the season of grace will be past; the
-time for judgment will be come.
-
-My brethren, you have professedly accepted the invitation of your Lord;
-you have entered into the guest-chamber; and if you be not already
-clothed with the spiritual apparel, provided by His grace and mercy,
-delay not an instant to apply for it: the King may come sooner than you
-expect; I pray that He come not, before you are ready to meet Him. And
-where is this garment to be found? Seek His Holy Spirit; search His Holy
-word: you will then not fail to find it, and He will dispose you to put
-it on. Repent and believe; love and obey: “cease to do evil, learn to do
-well;” thus “adorn the doctrine of God your Saviour in all things.” And
-then you will finally be admitted to the heavenly feast; to the marriage
-supper of the Lamb; to the company of angels; in the courts of uncreated
-light—“for the glory of God doth lighten them, and the Lamb is the light
-thereof;” {251a} “In whose presence is fulness of joy, and at whose
-right hand there are pleasures for evermore.” {251b}
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XIV.
-WALK WORTHY OF THE LORD, BE FRUITFUL, AND INCREASING.
-
-
- COL. i. 10.
-
- _That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing_, _being
- fruitful in every good work_, _and increasing in the know ledge of
- God_.
-
-ONE of the great objects of St. Paul, in writing his epistles, appears to
-be considerably overlooked by the christian world at large: it was, to
-lead those churches and communities, in which the true foundation of
-Christianity had been laid, to build upon it a corresponding character
-and life. Certainly, a great portion of the epistles is occupied in the
-assertion and explanation of christian doctrine; and this, principally,
-with a view to remove certain errors and prejudices, which the members of
-some churches had entertained; and upon which they had requested the
-apostle’s decision. But well knowing how apt the human mind is to rest
-satisfied with speculative views and persuasions, he never omits to
-remind his converts, that much more was necessary than the profession of
-a true faith; that in vain would their opinions be rectified, unless
-their heart was also changed; that though they had “all faith and all
-knowledge,” it would “profit them nothing,” unless the graces and virtues
-of their holy religion were signally manifest in their lives.
-
-There is scarcely an epistle, in which the apostle does not labour, with
-the most intense desire, with the most full and repeated and peremptory
-injunctions, to press upon them this momentous consideration: there is
-not, in the word of God, a more complete digest and code of christian
-duty, than in the writings of St. Paul; and yet they are, by many, almost
-exclusively regarded as an exposition of deep and mysterious doctrines;
-as if this were the sole end and purpose for which they were composed.
-Well would it have been for the christian world, if as much attention had
-been paid to the practical, as to the theoretical subjects in these
-divine oracles: we should not then have witnessed so many disputations,
-in which charity has been lost sight of, nor so much of the “form of
-godliness without the power;” so many religious terms and denominations,
-of which the ignorant have understood little but the name: we should have
-had less of sect, of party, of invidious distinctions of any kind; and
-more of vital religion amongst us. But it is now, as it ever was, with
-fallen and degenerate man; he is fonder of exhibiting the powers of his
-understanding, of exciting his feelings, and of displaying the pride of
-spiritual knowledge, than of reforming his principles and regulating his
-conduct: he has therefore directed his view to the mystery of the
-foundation, and overlooked the directions for raising and completing the
-superstructure.
-
-Not that the various revelations of doctrine, in the writings of St.
-Paul, are by any means to be lightly regarded; nor that they do not
-demand the most reverential attention and profound enquiry: it is of high
-importance for us to attain a “right judgment in all things:” yet
-doubtless it would tend more to the edification of Christians in general,
-if they took greater heed to the rules and precepts of the divine law, to
-the evidence and fruit of their faith; and to all that neglect them, we
-would say, “these things ought ye to have done, and not to leave the
-others undone.”
-
-The passage of scripture, from which we are now discoursing, will
-exemplify these remarks. St. Paul, in the very opening of his epistle,
-assures the Colossians, that since the day he heard of their conversion,
-he did “not cease to pray for them and to desire that they might be
-filled with the knowledge of the will of God, in all wisdom and spiritual
-understanding; that they might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing,
-being fruitful in every good work, and increasing in the knowledge of
-God.”
-
-1. “That ye might walk worthy of the Lord.” It is scarcely possible for
-the most cursory observer not to perceive, that the faith of the gospel
-cannot be truly embraced with indifference; that the christian name is
-not a mere honorary or professional title, independent of obligations and
-of consequences. As the Bible is rich in promises, so is it also clear
-and necessitating, in the conditions upon which those promises are made:
-as the Redeemer has freely offered unto us the benefits of His cross, so
-has He as plainly injoined upon us the indispensable duty of “taking up
-our own cross daily,” and “following the blessed steps of His most holy
-life;” as He has reconciled us unto the Father, and again adopted us into
-the blessed family above, so are we required, if we have any part or lot
-in this matter, to be-have as children, who have recovered the forfeited
-privileges of their glorious inheritance, and “have their conversation in
-heaven.” As we have been “bought at so great a price,” we must continue
-the subjects and the property of the “Lord that bought us.”
-
-No man, whose nature, whose principles, whose affections, whose life,
-remain unchanged; no man, enthralled by the pleasures and devoted to the
-pursuits of a thoughtless and corrupt world, can justly consider himself
-as an actual partaker of the covenanted mercies of God. He may have been
-admitted by baptism into Christ’s visible church; he may hope to render,
-at some future day, his baptismal privilege available to salvation; but
-every page of God’s revealed word would forbid him to regard himself as
-an accepted “inheritor of the kingdom of heaven,” while his life is
-palpably at variance with the conditions upon which that inheritance is
-vouchsafed; while it is contradictory to the laws, and totally
-inconsistent with the blessings, which the Saviour has proclaimed to
-mankind. Every man must not only perceive from the gospel, but be
-assured by his own reason and conscience, that such divine mercies
-absolutely require and imply some degree of worthiness; some
-correspondence in his views, his temper, and his conduct.
-
-Worthy indeed, in the fullest sense of the word, of such transcendent
-love and favour, of life and immortality, of everlasting honour in the
-presence of the pure and perfect Creator, the degenerate creature can
-never be; he has sinned; and “the wages of sin is death.” But there is a
-fitness, which the Christian, by divine help, must attain; a humility and
-contrition of heart; a sincere belief in God’s mercy through Christ; a
-grateful sense of God’s undeserved goodness; a desire of recovery from
-the ruin of his fallen nature; and withal, a true spirit of acquiescence
-in those means of grace, and that revealed law, ordained to bring the
-sinner to his Maker; and this conformity, in the character of man, is
-frequently represented in scripture by the name of _worthiness_: he
-becomes worthy in this respect, inasmuch as he fulfils the conditions of
-the gospel covenant, and is thereby rendered a fit object of God’s free
-mercy: without this character he would be unworthy, inasmuch as he would
-shew himself unmoved by the marvellous loving-kindness of his Saviour;
-would shew, that he had no real value for the blessings, which the gospel
-places within his reach; no regard for the revelation and ordinances of
-God. It is an observation as true as it is common, that the holy gospel
-designs not to save us _in_ our sins, but _from_ them; we must therefore
-be made willing and desirous and careful, to subdue the prevalence of
-sin, or we cannot attain unto salvation; and if the dominion of evil be
-subdued, there will grow up, in our hearts and lives, the manifold fruits
-of righteousness.
-
-Such was the worthiness, which the apostle prayed and laboured to produce
-in the early disciples; and if, without this, we are hoping to be
-accepted of the Lord, “we are deceiving ourselves, and the truth is not
-in us.” The meetness indeed, of which we are speaking, is not
-exclusively our own; it must “be wrought in us of God;” still it is to be
-sought by prayer, and improved with diligence: “We are not sufficient of
-ourselves to think any thing, as of ourselves; but our sufficiency is of
-God;” {260} yet God will not fail to supply us with the means, if we pray
-for them and use them faithfully.
-
-To this statement I request your especial attention; because there are
-professing Christians, who take an improper view of this important
-matter. Conscious of their own unworthiness in point of _merit_, they
-are apt to overlook that worthy _fitness_, of heart and character and
-life, which is necessary for every sincere follower, of Christ. The
-proclamations of their own undeservings, and their Saviour’s free love,
-are sometimes so loud and frequent, as to lower in their minds the sense
-of moral and spiritual obligation, as to make them relax in their duly to
-God and man; as if they were privileged to offend, because they extolled
-the Saviour, and debased themselves. This is a vain and a fanatical
-spirit: Christ alone is worthy to save; but we must endeavour, by His
-sanctifying aid, in all things to be made more and more worthy of the
-exceeding “riches of His grace.”
-
-2. And, in order to encourage us in the goodly work, the Almighty, whose
-happiness is infinite and incapable of increase, graciously represents
-Himself as _pleased_, even with our imperfect services: “That ye might
-walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing.” “Though the heavens are not
-pure in His sight,” yet does He condescend to “visit man” with His
-favour, and “to regard the son of man,” who serveth Him, with an
-approving eye: He is pleased, because it is the fruit of the sinner’s
-reconciliation, by the death and sufferings of His beloved Son: for His
-sake, even the feeble struggles of the Christian, in the way of duty, if
-they be resolute and determined, are an acceptable service; even the
-spark of goodness, if it glow with sincerity in the bosom, is honoured
-and rewarded.
-
-This is an animating consideration: we observe the effect naturally
-produced in the mind of man, even by the approbation of a
-fellow-creature, whom he regards as his superior; what holy satisfaction
-then, and complacency and delight, may we not derive from the persuasion,
-that our humble services are favourably viewed by the all-wise and
-almighty God, who recompenses every one according to his work: if God be
-pleased, whose displeasure shall we fear? If “God be for us, who shall
-be against us?” And O, that we may never forget, that it is one of the
-great purposes of the gospel, to render us, infirm and imperfect as we
-are, pleasing unto Him, through the merits and intercession of our
-Redeemer; by “walking worthy of the vocation wherewith we are called.”
-{262}
-
-3. The apostle proceeds, in the text, to open and extend his view of
-evangelical righteousness. It consists not in that partial cultivation
-of spiritual affections, in that modified selection of particular duties,
-with which the christian world is so prone to be content: it obliges the
-believer to “be fruitful unto every good work.” This is a point, in
-which vast multitudes, in the christian church, lamentably and
-notoriously fail; in which many fail, who make a considerable profession
-of their zeal for religion; and comply, to a certain degree, with most of
-its obligations. There are some pleasures or pursuits, which, though
-they do not pretend to reconcile them with the law of God, they still
-perseveringly retain. Upon the whole, they professedly adopt the
-ordinances and requisitions of the gospel: but there are some more
-unpalatable than others; some to which they feel an unconquered
-repugnance: and these they leave out of their religious system
-altogether; to these they never so much as resolve to conform. And thus,
-they fail to manifest, (what is confessedly the most difficult, yet the
-most important of all christian attainments,) a surrender of the heart to
-God. Their own inclination, their own judgment, and not the divine will,
-is the rule and standard of their conduct; and no doubt, if they felt
-this strong reluctance to the duties which they do perform, these also
-would be equally neglected: in other words, no part of their obedience
-rests upon a true foundation: it proceeds not from a sincere belief in
-the truth and authority of God’s word. All the injunctions, all the
-precepts of the gospel are obligatory alike; all equally declarative of
-the divine will, and equally necessary to the spiritual renovation of
-man. And those injunctions and precepts, with which we are the least
-disposed to comply, do in fact require our peculiar attention and
-observance; because they point out to us the natural blemishes, which
-stand most in need of repair; because they shew where the greatest danger
-lies, of our being deficient in that complete change, of principle and
-affection and character, which the infallible word of truth has declared
-to be indispensable.
-
-St. James assures us, that “whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet
-offend in one point, he is guilty of all:” {265} he who reserves to
-himself any particular indulgence or pursuit, which is clearly at
-variance with the will and word of God, obeys not, in any thing, from a
-real christian motive; and shews himself ready, if a sufficient
-temptation were offered, to disobey in any and every point. It is true,
-that there is no “good work,” which the Christian performs with uniform
-unvarying obedience; but neither is there any, in which he does not
-sincerely desire and endeavour “to be fruitful;” there is no act of
-righteousness, to which he is a stranger; no “besetting sin,” which he is
-unwilling or unmindful to cast away: though the good fruit, to his
-sorrow, does too frequently fail, after all his unqualified labour; yet
-the unprofitable branch is pruned again, and watered by the tears of
-repentance, and fructified with the dews of heaven, and bears another
-day. He believes, and fears, and “loves the Lord his God with all his
-heart and all his soul and all his strength;” and therefore, though there
-are many imperfections, there is no reserve in his obedience.
-
-4. The latter clause of the text directs us to a very distinguishing
-feature in the christian character: “Increasing in the knowledge of God.”
-Knowledge must evidently here be taken, in a larger sense, to signify a
-lively comprehension of religious doctrines and duties, a practical
-understanding of the will and ways of God. In this knowledge it is
-absolutely essential that the true believer should be continually
-advancing: the objects of his faith are of such deep and overwhelming
-interest, that the longer they are studied and pursued, the more they
-will, of necessity, captivate his thoughts and strike root into his
-heart: the more he seeks for the treasures in God’s word, the more he
-will find: the more he knows of God, the more he will desire and delight
-to know: feeling the comfort and happiness of a reconciliation with his
-Maker, he is ever anxious to obtain a nearer and holier communion with
-Him; sensible of his absolute and entire dependence upon the Redeemer’s
-mercy, he is ever leaning upon Him with new satisfaction, with a growing
-spirit of confidence and complacency; the more he thinks of heaven, the
-more “his affections are set on things above;” the more he thinks of the
-wretchedness of the rejected, the further he flies, in terror, from their
-dreadful abode. The consequence of all this must be, a progressive
-“victory over the world, the flesh, and the devil;” a daily improvement
-“in all virtue and godliness of living.”
-
-And there is yet another consideration; as we value and use the gracious
-gifts of God, they are increased and multiplied unto us; “whosoever hath,
-to him shall be given, and he shall have more abundance;” {267} the lamp
-shines brighter, that is to guide his feet; and his heart is ever
-quickened with fresh energy and zeal, by the influence of the Holy
-Spirit; thus he goeth on from grace to grace, from strength to strength,
-“from glory to glory.”
-
-The apostle, therefore, in praying that the converts might be increasing
-in the knowledge of God, is praying that they might have the invariable
-mark and earnest of a sincere and genuine faith. How little does this
-point seem to be considered! How many content themselves without any
-regular advancement, without any advancement at all; they cannot, after
-all the flattery with which they contrive to deceive themselves, be
-persuaded in their minds, that they grow decidedly better as they grow
-older: a year, perhaps many years ago, they were as religious, as
-fruitful in piety and good works, as they are now: no increase of
-spiritual knowledge, no new grace, no fresh habit of obedience, no
-additional exertions to mark the lapse of time; no passion subdued, no
-unholy pursuit abandoned, no vice mortified and forsaken. Wherever this
-is the case, the gospel has not been sincerely received into the heart;
-it has not been felt as the “power of God unto salvation;” it has not
-been, as it is designed to be, an effectual instrument of righteousness
-to the soul. To those, who remain in so careless and indifferent and
-unimproving a condition, we must say, that “our preaching has been vain,
-and their faith is also vain.”
-
-Possibly there may be some amongst us, who never yet bestowed an adequate
-attention on this important point; if any such there be, I would urgently
-exhort them, as they tender the salvation of their souls, to neglect this
-point no longer; deeply to enquire without delay, whether they “are
-growing in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
-Christ.” {269} Let them enter with earnestness upon this necessary
-consideration; let it be frequently repeated: Is my faith increased and
-strengthened? Is my character more holy, my conduct more upright? Does
-my temper improve? Are my passions better regulated; my thoughts more
-spiritual; my devotions more pure and fervent; my affections more
-detached from the world, more fixed on God and heaven? My life and
-conversation, are they more accordant with the precepts and the example
-of my Saviour?
-
-But the topics of enquiry are too numerous to be mentioned; I will only
-add, that the sincere believer sets the “prize of his high calling”
-continually before him; and advances to it, in holiness and
-righteousness, every day; keeps advancing till his race is run; and thus,
-when his toil is over, receives the crown of victory, and “enters into
-the joy of his Lord.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XV.
-THE WORD OF THE LORD PRECIOUS.
-
-
- 1 SAM. iii. 1.
-
- _The word of the Lord was precious in those days_; _there was no open
- vision_.
-
-FROM Moses to Samuel, a period of several hundred years, there was no
-prophet regularly appointed; particular revelations were made to
-individuals, and occasional messages from heaven were publicly delivered
-to the people; but there was no acknowledged prophet, to whom they might
-at all times resort, to know the mind and will of God; or, as it is
-described in the text, “there was no open vision.” The natural
-consequence was, that such intimations of the divine will, as were then
-given, made a deeper impression; they were more highly valued and more
-eagerly sought for, than when the gift of prophecy, in after ages, became
-more common. When the word of God abounded, it was received with
-indifference; when rarely vouchsafed, it was intently desired.
-
-Such is perpetually, and on all occasions, the perverseness of man:
-blessings of every description are estimated, not according to their
-excellence, but their rarity; not according to the ease, but the
-difficulty, with which they are to be obtained. And further, when in
-possession of a blessing, we are often utterly insensible of its value;
-we abuse it in thoughtless excess, and are ready to squander it away; but
-the moment it is departed, we discover our blindness and folly; and would
-give, perhaps, all we have, to bring the treasure back again. Meat and
-drink and raiment, the air we breathe, the sun and the shower, excite no
-spirit of gratitude, and by many are scarcely received and remembered as
-blessings; but in the days of famine and of pestilence, amidst the
-warfare and desolation of raging elements, these benefits and mercies are
-painfully acknowledged, and ardently desired. Again: the advantages of
-civil and religious liberty make little impression upon the hearts of
-those, by whom they are fully and uninterruptedly enjoyed: it is under
-the iron arm of intolerance and oppression; it is in the dungeon and the
-mine, that the excellency of these privileges is learned. And thus it is
-of domestic happiness and comfort: the value of home is frequently not
-appreciated, until it is forsaken and lost; the worth of a friend, even
-of the nearest relative, is sometimes but lightly considered, till he
-“goes hence and is no more seen.”
-
-These observations are also illustrative of the feelings and conduct of
-men, in regard to their spiritual privileges and blessings. While the
-light of divine revelation is shining upon their dwellings, pointing out
-to them the way of salvation, and opening the prospect of a glorious
-immortality, they shut their eyes, and turn away into the fatal paths of
-sin and misery, to the darkness of eternal death; but when their
-opportunities are lost, when “the evil days are come upon them,” and
-there is no instructor or counsellor or comforter to be found, they
-perceive the preciousness of the time and the talents, which have been
-heedlessly thrown away; and would give the world, if they possessed it,
-for what they were once unwilling to make the smallest sacrifice.
-
-We are apt to express a wonder at the obstinate indifference of the
-people of Israel to their religious advantages and instructions; we are
-astonished, that they could forget their miraculous deliverances by the
-hand of Moses, and the manifold revelations vouchsafed through him for
-their knowledge and guidance; and that almost every divine communication
-to them, in after ages, should have been but the forerunner of guilt and
-apostacy: yet in truth, the history of Israel is but too faithful a
-picture of the people of God in other times and other countries; by no
-means excluding our own. The word of God has not been accounted
-precious, in proportion to the extent to which it has been diffused; the
-Bible has not been, in too many instances, the most highly prized, where
-it has been most widely circulated; nor have the ministers of the gospel
-been always most attentively and devoutly heard, where they have
-increased and multiplied. Before the age of printing, when the copies of
-the sacred word were comparatively few, the Christian, who was so happy
-as to possess one, commonly regarded it as a treasure; or if he could
-obtain a part only, by the labours of the pen, even a gospel or an
-epistle, it was considered as a “pearl of great price.” And afterwards,
-in the days of ignorance and persecution, when the sacred scriptures were
-withheld from the people by a blind and bigotted priesthood, the thirst
-for divine knowledge, for these streams of life and salvation, was
-inconceivably great; men sought them and treasured them at the peril of
-their lives. In these dark days, and long after, the public preachers of
-the word were few; and people flocked from distant quarters to hear the
-good tidings proclaimed. Having no regular supply of spiritual food,
-they sought it out with earnestness where they might; “the word of the
-Lord was precious in those days;” and “beautiful upon the mountains were
-the feet of Him,” who came to “lighten their darkness,” and to deliver
-the message of salvation to their souls.
-
-How widely different from this is the case in our day. Copies of the
-Holy Scriptures are multiplied beyond all calculation: not a village,
-scarcely a dwelling, where they are not, or may not be procured: and,
-instead of any persecuting power, forbidding the use of them, every
-possible encouragement is afforded, and every means devised by which they
-may be adequately understood. And such, under the divine blessing, has
-been the success of those means, that the greater portion, even of the
-poorest in this favoured land, are able to discover for themselves the
-light of life; to apply it for their guidance and comfort and eternal
-salvation.
-
-And with respect to the preaching of the gospel, though it is not yet
-sufficient for the demand of our extended population, still it may be
-truly described as general throughout the land. Although, for “the
-plenteous harvest, the labourers are too few,” still are they every where
-abroad. And if it be objected, that “the word of truth is not always
-rightly divided,” yet are there portions of it uniformly read, in every
-christian assembly, on the Lord’s day; and in our own incomparable
-Liturgy, no inconsiderable part of the divine word, of its saving
-doctrines and duties, is actually embodied.
-
-So much for our holy congratulation, for the honour and glory of our
-land, for the rich abundance of spiritual privileges and blessings,
-which, under the favour of almighty goodness, we have the happiness to
-enjoy. It were well, if the sequel of our subject afforded equal ground
-for rejoicing; that it equally redounded to our honour. But here there
-is a dark cloud resting, which casts over the scene a melancholy gloom.
-The value set upon the word of God, its preciousness in the heart of man,
-is not proportioned to the frequency and the fulness of its
-communication. It is in almost every dwelling, but not in every dwelling
-esteemed and loved; not devoutly treasured, not eagerly and diligently
-read, as it used to be in the days of scarcity. How many who possess it,
-perhaps superbly ornamented, in a variety of forms, and with goodly
-interpretations, seldom open it; seldom in comparison with its high and
-everlasting importance, for their enlightenment and edification: possibly
-it may be read on the Lord’s day as a cold customary exercise, and by
-vast numbers not even on the Lord’s day; they are positively unmindful of
-the sacred treasure, unconscious that it is so much as in their
-possession. No change of heart, no lively faith, no spiritual strength
-is derived from its exalted doctrines; no purification of the affections
-from its means of grace; no regulation of the life and character from its
-perfect law of righteousness. How should there be, when it is laid by,
-idly, carelessly, and contemptuously.
-
-The Bible is grievously neglected both by rich and poor. The rich too
-seldom spare any of their abundant leisure, in storing their minds with
-the riches of heavenly wisdom; other books, of worldly interest or
-amusement, absorb almost their whole attention; an unimproving, nay
-injurious publication, the foolish dream of fiction, will be seized and
-read with avidity, whilst the oracles of eternal truth are treated with
-an indifference, that borders on disdain. The poor, it is true, have but
-little leisure; sufficient however, if that little were diligently used,
-to enable them to acquire a considerable knowledge of their Bible; but
-the great multitude of them seek their refreshment from other sources;
-from the pollutions of earthly pleasure. We might have expected better
-things: having fewer worldly possessions and comforts, it might be
-thought, that the poor would gladly supply such deficiency by the
-attainment of spiritual blessings; by raising their hopes and affections
-to the imperishable treasures of a brighter world to come: but it is too
-often found otherwise: the enjoyments of earth, however unsatisfactory
-and even debasing, are preferred to the abundant consolations and
-happiness of the gospel.
-
-Thank God, there are many bright exceptions to these remarks, both
-amongst the rich and the poor; the number is great, and we hope
-increasing, of those to whom “the word of the Lord has been precious;”
-who have “received it with gladness;” who have “believed with the heart
-unto righteousness;” who “have seen the salvation of their God.” But
-still, when we cast our eyes upon the vast and reckless multitude, we are
-ready to weep over it and to say, O that ye would know, even ye in this
-your day, the things that belong unto your peace; before they be hid for
-ever from your eyes.
-
-From this lamentable neglect of the word of God, we may readily account
-for the want of religious principle, for the decay of religious
-character, for the overspreading of corruption and vice, so notorious in
-the christian world. The astonishing circulation of the Bible through
-this country, of late years, might have reasonably led us to hope for a
-signal diminution of irreligion and crime. And God forbid, we should be
-of the number of those who maintain, that _no_ such advantage has been
-derived from this dissemination of the word of life. But even the most
-sanguine person will not contend, that this holy exertion, this spiritual
-culture has produced a corresponding fruit: thousands of those, who have
-free access to the Bible, are lying, if not in utter darkness, at least
-in the shadow of death. And what is the cause? The scriptures are not
-valued in proportion to their extended circulation; they are not read
-with humble reverential attention, as the holy word of God; not
-understood or desired, as the fountain of light and life; not sought as a
-means of spiritual reformation and righteousness: and therefore, we may
-expect a greater prevalence of iniquity; as a judgment of the just and
-offended God, for so flagrant an abuse of the knowledge of salvation.
-
-And thus with regard to the preaching of His word: where is that vehement
-desire, that deep interest, that holy concern to profit withal, which was
-observable in the days when preachers were few? We do not say, that it
-is utterly extinguished; but certainly not proportioned to the
-opportunities vouchsafed. How many in this our place and neighbourhood,
-refuse to travel, even the shortest distance, to hear the gospel; and of
-those who professedly go to hear it, not a few are led by mere curiosity
-or custom. How do we stand condemned by many a less favoured people!
-There are indeed lands, at this day, still thirsting for the knowledge of
-their God and Saviour; lands, to which it has but just been carried,
-where it is only beginning to be understood; and _there_ the people will
-instantly repair at the very sound of the good tidings, and wait with
-eagerness upon the footsteps of the missionary, who bears in his hand the
-sacred treasure; but _here_, where the messengers are in every place,
-where the ministers of reconciliation abound, here are awful numbers, who
-never enter the house of God, for the single purpose of hearing His word:
-the gift is continually offered, without trouble or risk, “without money
-or price;” and, therefore, it would seem, perversely despised.
-
-Similar remarks may be made, concerning all those divine ordinances and
-means of grace, with which this privileged land has been so richly
-provided. The public worship of Almighty God, the holy sacraments of our
-Church, the instruction afforded to her children, the means of private
-devotion and godly advancement, all these are pressed upon the notice and
-acceptance of all; it is not enough to say, that we are invited; we are
-_urged_ to the participation of these abundant blessings; yet how often
-are we urged in vain. At this moment, in some of our countries or
-dependencies abroad, where Churches are sparingly scattered, and the
-visits of ministers are few and long between, these divine ordinances are
-coveted with a painful anxiety, and no opportunity is ever lost: here, in
-the mother country, is the fountain of blessings, and the “streams are
-ever flowing withal;” but thousands esteem not these waters of life, and
-many never care to taste them.
-
-It is impossible, that the truth of these observations can be denied; and
-to every sincere and serious Christian the subject must afford a painful
-reflection. And well does it become us all, each in our several
-vocations, to exert our utmost power for the abatement of so crying and
-alarming an evil. Many of us, I trust, are gratefully sensible of the
-goodness and love of God, in having so liberally bestowed upon our land
-the blessings of the word of life; grateful from the experience of its
-inestimable benefit to our own souls: let each then in his station, and
-according to his influence and ability, recommend the word to those
-around him; and assist in waking a slumbering people to a sense of the
-glorious opportunities awaiting them. Many, from their education and
-rank, have it in their power to contribute largely to the success of this
-glorious cause, to become instruments of righteousness and salvation to
-their lost fellow-creatures: and the poorest may do much in this blessed
-work; they may train their families in the study of the Bible, may lead
-them to adore the God of mercy and of truth, and to save their souls
-alive; considerable also is the impression, which, by prudence and
-friendly care, they might make upon their poor neighbours; bringing them
-to join together in happy union, for the perusal of that word, which is
-their common interest and hope; which would elevate them above the
-troubles of a stormy world, would lead them to “lighten one another’s
-burdens,” and to “go on their way together rejoicing.” And, to say the
-least, every one has the power to recommend the holy scriptures by the
-light of his own example; by shewing, on all occasions, his love for the
-Saviour’s marvellous goodness; by duly reverencing and reading the word
-of truth; and manifesting the blessedness thereof, in the decided change
-of his own heart and temper, in his own character and life. And all such
-recommendations, let me add, the Lord is demanding at our hands, in
-return for His unspeakable mercy.
-
-My brethren, let us suppose, that it should please God, for the
-heedlessness of this nation, to deprive us of the privilege and blessing
-of the Bible; and to declare, that the neglected ministry of His word
-should be continued no longer: we should undoubtedly regard this as the
-direst calamity, which could possibly befal us; we should immediately and
-cheerfully consent to any sacrifice, by which so dreadful a token of
-divine wrath might be averted. Then let us be consistent; and whilst we
-do enjoy this invaluable favour of heaven, let it be cherished and
-improved. Let the gospel, instead of being less precious to us, on
-account of its universal publication, and its facility of attainment, be
-therefore prized the more; and while we adore the Lord of mercy for
-diffusing this heavenly benefit through our dear and native land, let the
-treasure be laid up in our own bosom: what is intended for the good of
-all, is intended for the good of each: to bless God for giving the gospel
-to our country, and to undervalue or neglect it ourselves, is folly and
-hypocrisy; but too many individuals, amounting indeed to a large portion
-of our christian community, are guilty of this folly, and thus exposing
-the land to judgment, thus endangering “the ark of God.”
-
-All of _us_, my brethren, do I trust feel thankful to our God and
-Saviour, who hath honoured us, unworthy as we are, with the revelation of
-His word, and hath “brought life and immortality to light:” whatever
-others then may do, let our sense of the gracious gift be undeniably and
-duly shewn: let us daily have recourse to this holy word, as “the lamp of
-our feet and the light of our paths:” be it our constant prayer for the
-spirit of God to open our eyes that we may understand, and our hearts
-that we may reverence, the wonders of His holy law; that it may be the
-object and study of our lives, to walk in all those means of grace, which
-it holds forth for our redemption from sin and death; for our safe
-passage through this transitory world of trial, to an eternal world of
-happiness and glory beyond the grave. If we hear and read and mark and
-learn, in the spirit of devotion and prayer, we shall continually find
-new treasures of mercy opening to our view; new and unlooked-for stores
-of knowledge; new affections and dispositions; new hopes and prospects,
-in the promises of the blessed Jesus: the word will be a blessing to us
-through life and even to our journey’s end; a sure guide amid the dangers
-of prosperity, a powerful support in the day of trouble, an inconceivable
-comfort when we die. But if we prize it not in life, how can we expect
-consolation from it in death? On the contrary, our spirits will be
-weighed down by the grievous remembrance of inexcusable neglect. Be wise
-in time; lay up in store the good foundation: the word, having been all
-along precious, will be increasing in value to the last; even until it
-leads us to the “open vision” of eternal day.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XVI.
-DISTINCTIONS TO BE MADE ON THE DAY OF JUDGMENT.
-
-
- MATT. xxiv. 40.
-
- _The one shall be taken and the other left_.
-
-IN the chapter before us, our blessed Lord is describing to His disciples
-various circumstances, which should attend the destruction of Jerusalem;
-an event, which has been generally regarded by the christian Church, as
-representative of the proceedings of that more awful day, when Christ
-shall appear at last to judge the universal world, “in righteousness and
-truth;” and “render unto every man according unto his works.”
-
-Many false teachers had arisen, even in those early days of the gospel,
-pretending to set forth the signs of Christ’s coming to take vengeance on
-His enemies; and therefore the disciples had requested of their Master
-some certain information on this momentous topic: they “came unto Him
-privately, saying, Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be
-the sign of Thy coming and of the end of the world? And Jesus answered
-and said unto them, Take heed that no man deceive you: For many shall
-come in My name, saying, I am Christ, and shall deceive many. And ye
-shall hear of wars, and rumours of wars: see that ye be not troubled: for
-all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. For nation
-shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall
-be famines and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places. All these
-are the beginning of sorrows.” {291}
-
-Our Lord proceeds to detail a great variety of other circumstances which
-should occur, some of them belonging to the desolations of Judea, some to
-the future judgment alone, and some to both these events; of which latter
-kind is the description connected with the text: “There shall be two in
-the field; the one shall be taken and the other left. Two women shall be
-grinding at the mill; the one shall be taken and the other left:” that
-is, though destruction shall fall upon the Jewish nation at large, for
-their rebellion against God, their resistance to the clear evidence of
-the gospel, their shedding of the blood of His beloved Son, yet shall not
-all be equally involved in the same calamity and perdition. Divine
-providence will then make a distinction between those, who have
-obstinately rejected and maliciously persecuted the Saviour and His holy
-religion, and those, whose hearts have been opened to the reception “of
-the truth as it is in Jesus;” who, being convinced and converted, have
-become His faithful followers.
-
-And though the whole race be so intermingled, one amongst another, by the
-various offices and duties and relations of life, that to the eye of man
-there may be no distinguishable difference amongst them; yet the
-all-seeing God, who “is a discerner of the thoughts of the heart,” will
-not be misguided by any outward appearances; will perceive a very
-manifest difference in characters seemingly alike: will infallibly know
-whom to punish and whom to spare. As in the overthrow of Sodom and
-Gomorrah, He singled out, and selected for preservation, one righteous
-person, (and for his sake, a portion of his family also,) so, in the
-storm of vengeance about to fall upon the devoted city of Jerusalem, He
-would, in many signal instances, make the same merciful distinction. And
-the declaration, thus made, was calculated at once to comfort and
-encourage the faithful, and to alarm the conscience and check the
-presumption of the wicked.
-
-The intimation here afforded of the perfect knowledge and the just
-discrimination of the Almighty, in regard to His judgments upon the
-Jewish people, applies with peculiar force and truth to His perfect
-dealings with all mankind, at the last great day. Although, when
-Jerusalem was destroyed, it is undoubtedly true, that the faithful
-disciples of Jesus were generally delivered, yet it cannot be supposed
-that, in so extensive an overthrow, all the Christians, and all their
-innocent children, without any exception escaped. But when Christ shall
-sit upon His throne of judgment, not one undeserved victim shall there
-be; and not one, who “has sinned against the light,” shall escape with
-impunity. All those inequalities, which are unavoidable in the present
-constitution of things, shall then be made right and recompensed. The
-murdered innocent shall be requited with a robe of glory; and the
-prosperous sinner be abased with scorn and infamy.
-
-How necessary, how indispensable, for the assertion and execution of
-divine justice, is the appointment of such a tribunal! How unequally are
-deserts distributed in this probationary world!—very often in cases, of
-which we ourselves may form an adequate opinion. Not unfrequently do we
-observe the righteous, doomed to extreme poverty and affliction and
-suffering; and though they be most graciously comforted and supported
-under their several burdens, we can hardly imagine, that such alleviation
-is all the requital they are to receive: and in truth, what is the
-principal source of their comfort and support? Is it not the hope of a
-happy termination? Is it not the prospect of entering into an
-everlasting rest, of being for ever delivered from sorrow and pain, in
-the presence of their Saviour and their God? And can we believe, that
-this blessed expectation, vouchsafed as the solace of their woes, will
-end in disappointment and nothingness? Does it not point to a day, in
-which their bright hopes will be more than realized in the merciful
-sentence of their Judge; in their reception, at His hands and through His
-merits, of “an eternal recompense of reward?”
-
-And thus, on the contrary, frequently do we see the unprincipled and the
-profligate enjoying the favour of the world, and rising to no
-inconsiderable eminence of earthly prosperity: their crosses and
-vexations and troubles no doubt they have, as the natural fruit of
-irreligion and vice; as the retributive chastisement of an offended God;
-“sowing in corruption,” they do certainly more or less reap in sorrow;
-but still, if there were no other state, their lot would be,
-comparatively at least, much happier than they deserve; and therefore
-_their_ condition also leads us to expect, and fearfully does it betoken,
-a day of fuller retribution; when the infinite justice and truth of God
-will be finally and perfectly vindicated.
-
-Many cases, like these, of suffering virtue and prosperous vice, we are
-able clearly to discern: so broad are the lines, so prominent the
-features, that we can scarcely be mistaken: but perhaps there are many
-more cases, of which we can form no adequate opinion at all; neither in
-any instance, could we pretend to award or ascertain the exact degree of
-merit due to any individual. When we speak of merit, we do not mean to
-intimate that any action, in itself, is deserving of reward; we regard
-works of righteousness, only as the fruit of faith in a crucified
-Redeemer. But this fruit is much more abundant, and much more excellent,
-in some than others; and sometimes, when it makes the fairest shew, the
-quality is inferior. By merit then, we here mean the faith and behaviour
-of a Christian; or, that behaviour by which the faith is manifested;
-that, to which God has freely promised a reward, for the sake of our
-great Redeemer. According to the faith, will the fruit be, both in
-quality and abundance; and according to the fruit will be the gracious
-reward; which reward He alone can determine and bestow, who discovers the
-secret springs of the character and conduct of every man living.
-
-The value of an action depends upon the spirit and principle, with which
-it is performed; and of these things no one can perfectly judge, but the
-searcher of the heart. Even in the christian community, many words and
-deeds there are, obtaining applause from men, which will be condemned by
-the omniscient God, as having proceeded from unworthy motives, and being
-but the garb of hypocrisy; many persons there are, in whose respective
-demeanour we may be able to trace no very marked lines of difference, who
-yet differ most essentially, when measured by the scale of infinite truth
-and justice: all these secret distinctions will be clearly brought to
-light at the great inquiry on the judgment-day; every one will then
-appear in his true character; the veil of deception will be for ever torn
-aside; and of those, who seem alike to us in the present life, we shall
-find that one will be taken and another left; one taken to glory, and
-another left to shame and wretchedness and ruin.
-
-It may be useful to mention a few instances, in which we may be deceived
-in our comparative estimate of men. Even with regard to the fundamental
-principles of religion, to a real belief in the truths of the Bible, to
-the essentials of a christian character, it is possible that we may form
-very mistaken opinions concerning many around us. It is true, that
-insincerity and deceit are commonly, sooner or later, in some degree
-detected; it is difficult to be always dissimulating, and acting a part;
-some evil fruit, some inconsistency does generally betray the hollowness
-of hypocritical pretensions: still however, it is not always so; and
-doubtless there are some,—out of the number of those persons, whom we are
-in the habit of considering as equally resting their hopes upon the true
-foundation, equally believing in Jesus Christ for pardon and salvation,
-equally zealous in the maintenance of His holy religion and attentive to
-the ordinances,—some there are, who differ materially from others, in the
-unerring judgment of God. They may repair to the same place of worship,
-perhaps with the same degree of regularity, but with very different views
-and impressions: we can judge only of the outward appearance, of the
-posture of the body or the moving of the lips; it is for the Lord to look
-upon the posture of the soul and the offering of the heart. Many, no
-question, come to the House of God from very unworthy motives and for
-very unworthy purposes; and frequently they do not escape the observance
-of _man_; but _man_ cannot penetrate into the case of every individual;
-to the eye of Jehovah alone are “all things naked and open;” He sees and
-judges, _who_ come unto Him in humble faith; who approach His tabernacle
-is a pious frame and temper, with holy affections, with integrity of
-heart; who “worship Him in spirit and in truth.” My brethren, it is an
-awful consideration: but from the same Church, the same christian
-society, the same assembly of worshippers, “one shall be taken and
-another left.”
-
-Again, with respect to a discharge of the ordinary duties of life, there
-may be much real, though little seeming difference, in the characters of
-many, with whom we are daily acquainted. Punctuality and diligence,
-though always commendable and useful for the public good, may be, in as
-far as the person himself is concerned, of little value in the sight of
-God; our acceptableness with God, in this matter, depends upon the
-principle and the view and the spirit, with which the business of life is
-conducted: it may be carried on merely for the sake of self-interest; of
-gain, reputation, and pleasure; without any religious feeling or purpose
-whatever, without a single prayer offered up for heavenly assistance and
-blessing, without a word of thanksgiving or acknowledgment: or, on the
-other hand, we may proceed to our daily employments and pursuits, “strong
-in the Lord and in the power of His might;” imploring and depending upon
-His grace; “doing whatever we do for His glory;” active and diligent and
-faithful, from a sense of love and duty to Him, for the sake of obeying
-the law of our blessed Redeemer, and thus bringing forth the fruit of
-faith unto perfection; “living soberly, righteously and godly in this
-_present_ world,” {302a} with the continual hope and expectation of a
-glorious world to come. Now, whether industry be the work of religious
-principle, or whether it arise merely from selfish and earthly views,
-_we_ are often unable to decide: but God knoweth all the thoughts of man;
-and therefore can assign, to every action and habit and pursuit, its true
-origin and its due reward; and many persons, it will be found at last,
-who have gone forth together unto their labour, who have been engaged in
-the same occupations, have toiled together as companions in life, will be
-separated when the day of full inquiry comes; the one, having “sown unto
-the spirit,” shall be _taken_ to enjoy the fruit of life everlasting; the
-other, having “sown unto the flesh,” shall be _left_ to “reap
-corruption.” {302b}
-
-Similar observations will of course hold good, with regard to the
-practice of particular virtues. They, “who give alms only to be seen of
-men;” who dispense their bounty from any other principle, than that of
-love to their Saviour; for any other purpose, than to serve God and to
-benefit their fellow-creatures; they “_have_ their reward” already—the
-only reward, which they are caring to seek—the applause, the good will,
-or the esteem of mankind: and they must not expect, on the latter day,
-the reward which they seek not; the approval of their sovereign Lord; the
-praises and blessings of christian charity. Again, they who exercise the
-virtues of honesty or sobriety, merely for the sake of worldly expedience
-or reputation, will likewise “have their reward” all the reward they are
-to expect, in this life. Christian faith and christian principle are the
-only foundations, upon which a Christian can surely and successfully
-build; they, who build upon them, will be taken to see the goodly fabric
-perfected in heaven; whilst every work, which is raised upon “other
-foundation,” will be left to desolation and devouring fire.
-
-And even they, who have communed together, through their earthly
-pilgrimage, in the bonds of familiar intimacy; who have been united all
-their lives long, by the nearest and dearest ties of kindred; even they
-will be subject to the same discriminating judgment at the last. If they
-have been bound together in the holy bonds of the gospel, as well as of
-family affection; if they have been faithful brethren in the Lord, as
-well as in the flesh, “walking with God as friends,” it will be well;
-then, as they “were lovely and pleasant in their lives, in their deaths
-they shall not be divided:” {304} together shall they go to heaven, and
-be admitted to enjoy a more delightful communion with each other, in the
-happy paradise above. But if it be otherwise, if such friends be of
-opposite characters; the one “carnally” the other “spiritually minded;”
-then, their ends must be opposite also; “death” is the portion of one,
-“life and peace” {305a} of the other: their union therefore must be
-dissolved. The world may regard all the members of a family, as nearly
-alike in character; but the difference may nevertheless be great; and the
-distinction, in another world, will be great also. The wicked parent
-shall see its innocent offspring no more; the pious father shall not
-deliver the undutiful child, nor the obedient child its rebellious
-father; {305b} each can save but his own soul. How feelingly and
-powerfully does this consideration appeal to christian families;
-admonishing them, to regard not the present only, but the everlasting
-welfare of each other; to “edify one another” in holiness and godly love;
-lest, after they have been so intimately connected together upon earth,
-while the one is taken to felicity and glory, the other be left to
-“mourning, lamentation and woe.”
-
-How are christian parents bound, to watch over the offspring they so
-tenderly love! Watch they do, with continual anxiety, for the temporal
-benefit of their children, for all that can minister to their comfort and
-honour and advancement in life: they rejoice in the joy of their
-children, and weep when their children weep: but O how infinitely more
-important is the provision for eternity: earthly ties will soon be
-broken; how important, that we should provide for a happy renewal of
-intercourse and love hereafter! Parting now, to meet no more, were
-enough to break the heart; but the bright prospect of a re-union in
-paradise consoles and reconciles; forbidding us “to sorrow as those who
-have no hope.” See then, ye christian parents, to the nurture and
-training of the “olive branches round about your table;” bestow, upon
-their spiritual well-being, an especial and exceeding care; that ye may
-behold them “flourishing in the house of the Lord” above: that, whether
-ye be taken from them, or they from you, there may be comfort in the
-parting. See, all christian relatives and friends, by whatever name ye
-are endeared; see that ye live not in worldly, but heavenly affection:
-instructing, admonishing, animating one another in the profession of the
-true faith and the exercise of all godliness; that so your converse and
-communion may never be embittered by the fear of eternal separation.
-
-Lastly, let the truth, here declared by the infallible word of God, check
-the presumption of the careless and the wicked; and give comfort and
-encouragement to the faithful. The worldling may fancy, because no great
-distinction, between him and others, is made upon earth; because he
-perhaps can see no great reason for such distinction; that, therefore, he
-shall escape in the end; but in the day when “God will judge the secrets
-of men by Jesus Christ,” {307} when “every one shall receive the things
-done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or
-bad,” {308} he will find, that an immeasurable distinction will be made
-between him “that hath served God, and him that hath served him not;”
-between him, whose heart has been given to his Creator and Redeemer, and
-sanctified by the Spirit of grace, and him, who has only made it his
-object to maintain a decent appearance in the world. If we do believe in
-the final judgment, if we believe in the perfect truth and justice of the
-Almighty, we must conclude, that this fearful difference will be made.
-And if it were so dreadful a calamity, to be left to fall in the
-tremendous overthrow of Jerusalem, what will it be, to be left an
-everlasting-prey to the tortures of Satan and of sin?
-
-But let the true believer, the righteous servant of God in Jesus Christ,
-take encouragement and comfort: there is no exercise of faith, no holy
-meditation, no fervent prayer, no religious deed, no pious intention or
-design, however secret from the eyes of men, which can escape the notice
-of their heavenly Father: though justice is not, cannot be, done to their
-characters here; though sometimes the greatest injustice and injury and
-wrong; yet shall they be triumphantly and gloriously vindicated at the
-last: though they be on earth forsaken or oppressed, though they bear the
-burden of private affliction or public scorn, in a “world which is not
-worthy of them,” they shall be visited and acknowledged and received at
-the last; shall lift up their heads with honour and with joy, and be
-admitted into a kingdom, which is more than worthy of all their faith and
-all their constancy; the Redeemer has marked them for His own; He will
-single them out, on the last day, from the crowd of countless multitudes,
-as objects of his compassion and favour; will take them into the arms of
-His mercy, and so “they shall be forever with the Lord.” {309}
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XVII.
-GOD MADE MAN UPRIGHT; MAN MAKES HIMSELF MISERABLE.
-
-
- ECCLES. vii. 29.
-
- _Lo_, _this only have I found_, _that God hath made man upright_,
- _but they have sought out many inventions_.
-
-IN this remarkable book, Solomon discusses the various earthly means
-employed by the human race, for the attainment of happiness; and he
-decides upon the utter insufficiency of them all. Nor is he to be
-regarded as making the enquiry from mere matter of speculation, but as
-declaring to the world the result of his own experience, as well as the
-counsels of the Most High. Exalted to the very summit of worldly
-prosperity and greatness, and learned in all the arts and sciences, he
-possessed advantages, in the pursuit of happiness, far beyond the common
-lot of mortality; if it were to be found upon earth, he would have been
-sure, in himself or some of his favoured dependents, to have made the
-discovery. But he declares, by many remarkable repetitions, his utter
-inability so to do; he gives up the matter as hopeless and impossible;
-“all, (even the fairest and the best of human schemes,) is vanity and
-vexation of spirit;” “that which is crooked cannot be made straight, and
-that which is wanting cannot be numbered.” {311}
-
-And this conclusion corresponds with the experience of mankind in every
-age: happiness has always been their object; philosophers have laid down
-rules for its acquirement, and every variety of expedient has been tried;
-but all in vain; there is no permanent pleasure or satisfaction upon
-earth: independently of the crosses and vexations from without, by which
-it is so continually disturbed, there is something in the constitution of
-man, in the present state of his mind and heart and affections, by which
-the attainment of happiness, from temporal means alone, is positively
-forbidden.
-
-The royal preacher, thus convinced of this truth, turns his thoughts to a
-solution of the case, and sums up his observations, on the conduct and
-condition of man, in the words of the text. Instead of arraigning, like
-some bold and impious cavillers of our day, the wisdom or goodness of the
-Creator in the introduction of evil into the world, he gives the true
-account of the matter; and lays the blame where alone it is due, upon the
-disobedience and degeneracy of man. And in so doing, he bears testimony
-to the truth of one of the most important communications made to us in
-the revealed word of God—the original innocence and the fall of our first
-parents. This fact has been daringly called in question by certain
-professed believers of divine revelation, by some who boast themselves
-peculiarly entitled to the christian name. Anxious to exalt the moral
-excellency of human nature, and to disprove the doctrine and necessity of
-the atonement, through the prevailing efficacy of the Saviour’s
-incarnation and sufferings, such vain disputers absolutely deny, in the
-very face of God’s word, that any such total and dreadful change has ever
-taken place in the state of mankind; they contend, that our
-understandings and affections are now the same, as when we came
-originally from the hands of our Creator. It appears, however, that the
-_wisest_ of men took a different view of this momentous subject; that he
-received the Mosaic account, recorded in the opening of the book of
-Genesis, according to its plain and natural interpretation; and he has
-delivered to us his judgment, by the inspiration of that Holy Spirit,
-under whose guidance it was impossible for him to err.
-
-Solomon introduces his declaration upon this point in a very awakening
-manner; in a manner frequent with the inspired writers, when about to
-deliver a sentence of peculiar weight and importance; “Lo, this only have
-I found;” behold, attend to this truth; this is the result of my
-observations, this the “conclusion of the whole matter,” this the
-explanation of all the evil and unhappiness in the world, that “God hath
-made man upright, but they have sought out many inventions;” that man was
-created innocent by the wise and merciful Author of his being; formed for
-pure unalloyed enjoyment; and the marring and misery, which he
-experiences, are solely attributable to the change induced by his own
-apostacy and rebellion; to his seeking out ways and means of happiness,
-contrary to the will and appointment of his Creator. “God saw every
-thing that He had made, and behold, it was very good;” {314} and man, the
-lord of creation, was not less fitted than the objects around him, to
-answer the good and gracious purposes of heaven. So God “created man in
-His own image; in the image of God created He him; male and female
-created He them;” {315} in the image of holiness, and therefore happy.
-
-How far man has fallen from this state of uprightness, is a question
-which has caused much difference and contention in the christian world;
-some persons, from a desire of exalting the free grace of God, declare
-that the divine image in man was totally corrupted and lost by the fall;
-that there remains, in his unregenerate nature, no spirit or particle of
-excellency, no perception of what is good; that his nature is a mere
-chaos of disorder, a mass of decay, which is altogether incapable of
-producing any thing but “confusion and every evil work.” On the other
-hand, it is contended, that the wreck of man’s nature was but partial;
-that there remains a considerable disposition to practice, as well as
-approve, “whatsoever things are pure and honest and lovely and of good
-report;” that man is still able, by his own judgment and strength, in
-many things to please God and to serve Him. It does not fall within our
-purpose, on the present occasion, to attempt any accurate adjustment of
-this difference; but we may observe, that it is dangerous to insist upon
-either extreme. A belief, that man can will or do nothing, is apt to
-lead to a persuasion that he has nothing to will or do; that his
-salvation is a work totally independent of himself; a measure of grace
-absolutely forced upon him: and a belief, is that man able of himself to
-“refuse the evil and to choose the good,” that he “knows how to walk and
-to please God,” creates a spirit of self-righteousness, at once
-destructive of the sinner’s hope; preventing his dependence upon the
-all-sufficiency of God, and subversive of the truth of the gospel.
-
-A faculty of discernment between good and evil, for the moral government
-of man, is evidently vouchsafed to his unrenewed nature; and a power, in
-dependence upon the divine teaching, to accept or reject the proposals of
-mercy and grace, does surely remain to us, or else the numberless
-exhortations of God to the sinner appear to be of no benefit and no
-meaning: and who can reasonably suppose, that sinners would have been so
-frequently and severely condemned, for refusing that grace, which they
-were positively incapable of accepting. The language of our ninth
-Article on this point appears to be most temperate and unobjectionable:
-“Man is very _far gone_ from original righteousness, and is of his own
-nature inclined to evil, so that the flesh lusteth always contrary to the
-spirit.” With this statement we may rest content.
-
-One of the many bitter fruits of the fall is, that man no longer seeks
-his happiness in God, where alone it can be found, but in ways of his own
-devising, in the crooked ways opened to his view and imagination by the
-destructive enemy of his soul; no longer in innocence and holiness and
-obedience, but in vicious inclinations and pursuits, “in the lust of the
-flesh and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life;” {317} in those
-very principles and means, which brought “death into the world and all
-our woe:” it is no wonder, therefore, that happiness, from a search like
-this, should not be found. They, who search in this manner, are like the
-wicked spirit, “walking through dry places, seeking rest and finding
-none;” like the dove of Noah, in the overwhelming of the waters, roving
-about on weary wing, and finding no resting place for the sole of her
-foot. Nor is it possible for man to be blessed again with perfect peace,
-peace without any interruption or alloy, until he be altogether restored
-to “the image of Him that created him:” the nearer he approaches to that
-restoration, the more he will assuredly possess of true satisfaction and
-delight; but the blessing can never be complete, till the original
-defilement be utterly purged away, till his understanding is enlarged for
-a full knowledge of the good and great and glorious Creator; till he can
-be brought to love and serve Him without any mixture of infirmity; till
-he returns not only to His favour, but into His immediate presence, in
-the second Eden, of eternal bliss.
-
-Still may man enjoy, even upon earth, no inconsiderable degree of peace
-and happiness. The promises and blessings of the gospel impart a “joy
-and gladness” to the believer, and fill him with comfort, which the world
-can neither give nor take away: the avoiding and abhorring of evil will
-prevent those painful reflections, which inhabit the mind of the reckless
-sinner: the life of faith in a merciful Saviour, the worship and service
-of God, the works of piety and love, the walk of uprightness and
-integrity, though accompanied with imperfections, and, therefore, with
-abatements of comfort, yet do infallibly produce a great tranquillity of
-soul, and unspeakable emotions of holy joy; the sincere Christian
-contemplates his present condition with happy, though humble persuasion
-of acceptance with his God; and looks forward with an animated exulting
-hope of the perfect consummation of his felicity, in another and a better
-world. The trials and troubles of this life do indeed still continue;
-yet they have no power to harm, and therefore none to distress him; he
-“casts his burden upon the Lord.” But in the natural, unrenewed,
-unconverted world, there is no such redeeming principle, no qualification
-of evil, no pure sources of delight: let the votaries of earthly
-enjoyment seek it with what ardour and devotedness they may, it is a
-phantom which is ever eluding their grasp; flitting before their eyes in
-the shape of promises and visions, but never in substantial possession.
-
-It is indeed sadly instructive, to consider the numberless devices to
-which men are driven, in their search after happiness, when once they
-have forsaken the faith and fear of God; how busy they are in the
-invention of new scenes and pursuits; quitting one after another, as each
-deceives and fails; how they are wearing and wasting away the little span
-of life, in vain experiment and profitless enquiry. How are the opulent
-contriving their multiplied means and opportunities of enjoyment, with
-all their splendour of establishment, and a train of dependents obedient
-to their will! And if we could form a judgment by outward appearances,
-we might be inclined to pronounce them happy: but under this beautiful
-veil, with all this pomp of circumstance, many a corroding care, many a
-mortified desire, many a bitter disappointment, lie constantly concealed.
-
-To envy the rich, as if they were the certain possessors of comfort and
-ease, is one of the greatest of all mistakes and follies; happiness must
-dwell in the mind and the heart; it must depend altogether upon the state
-of mind and heart; it is not to be purchased with money; money, we must
-grant, may be made to minister to it, but this must entirely depend upon
-the disposition, the spirit, the manner, in which it is used: the
-smallest pittance upon earth, possessed in the faith of the gospel, in
-the fear and love of God, produces infinitely more enjoyment, than the
-countless treasures of those, who seek or spend or save them, with a view
-to themselves and this world alone.
-
-Some are revelling in the dreams of ambition; and imagine, that if they
-could attain a particular eminence, they should be happy: but the road is
-steep and slippery, toilsome and dangerous; and the summit, if ever they
-reach it, is not a land of repose, not the habitation of contentment and
-peace; “seekest thou great things for thyself? seek them not.” {322}
-Ambition is always dissatisfied; if not the most unclean, it is one of
-the most tormenting spirits in the bosom of man; and yet it is fondly and
-generally cherished both by rich and poor. Be humble; be moderate; be
-content; if thou wouldest be happy.
-
-In what are called the pleasurable scenes of life, it is unnecessary for
-me further to insist, how vainly we rove in quest of substantial delight:
-this indeed is a truth still more level to the experience of us all; it
-is a path we have often trodden, but never I think with satisfaction.
-Witness the continual changing, the endless variety of amusements, which
-are found necessary in order to relieve satiety and disgust, necessary
-even when they are innocent; and in sinful pleasures, in lust and
-intemperance of every kind, it is needless to tell you, there can be no
-peace; health is impaired and the conscience is burdened; they are like a
-two-edged sword, cutting on both sides, destroying both body and soul.
-
-The force of these arguments may be made to appear from another
-consideration; for whatever delusions may be practised upon men, to
-induce them to reckon and build upon earth alone; to trust for happiness
-to their own inventions, to human schemes and devices; yet will they
-never, in their serious moments, contend for the wisdom of their choice;
-or say, that their expectations have been answered; they will never, when
-they come to die, recommend to their friends, assembled round their bed,
-the course which they pursued, as a sure foundation of comfort in their
-lives, and peace in their latter end; the dying father will not recommend
-it to his children, nor the dying brother to his brethren. No: it will
-then be seen, either by the tears of bitter remorse or the agonies of
-unrepented guilt, that the way of the world was “the broad way that
-leadeth unto destruction;” that the soul can never find rest, till it
-returns to the forsaken paths of righteousness, to the lost image of its
-God.
-
-And thanks to the unspeakable mercy of God in Christ Jesus, the way of
-recovery is abundantly made known; the kingdom of heaven, with all its
-joys and treasures, is opened to every believer. Wisdom has come down
-from above, to tabernacle with sinful man; to lighten his darkness, and
-to rejoice his soul; and “_her_ ways are ways of pleasantness, and all
-her paths are peace”—pleasantness and peace to those, who seek them with
-their whole heart, implicitly and devotedly, as manifested in the
-gracious revelation of their God.
-
-But unhappily, in the way of religion also, in their professed walk of
-faith, men will be seeking out many inventions of their own, instead of
-submitting themselves, with simplicity and godly sincerity, to the gospel
-of Jesus Christ. They are seeking to accommodate His divine law to their
-corrupt inclinations and indulgences, to the maxims and fashions and
-interests of an ensnaring world: and thus they fail of the happiness,
-which they were led to expect. No wonder, that they find not the
-christian promises realised; that they fall short of the comfort, as they
-do of the obedience of faith. To the believing in our crucified Lord,
-with all the heart and soul; to “the seeking first His kingdom and His
-righteousness;” to the “forsaking all and following Him;” to “the spirit
-of God dwelling in us, and mortifying the deeds of the body;” to the
-sincere desire after holiness “as He is holy;” to “the fulfilling of the
-law of righteousness;” to a living hope of “the inheritance that fadeth
-not away”—to these things, the promise of life is made; of joy and favour
-here, and eternal felicity hereafter; but if we, in dependence upon our
-own vain inventions, seek to be blessed in any other way; with a less
-entire belief, and a less holy profession, and a less devoted obedience,
-and a less exalted hope, we must not complain or wonder, if we lose our
-object and aim; “Be not deceived, God is not mocked; for whatsoever a man
-soweth, that shall he also reap; he that soweth unto the flesh, shall of
-the flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth unto the spirit, shall of
-the spirit reap life everlasting.”
-
-The merciful God, when He created man innocent and happy, graciously
-revealed to him the means, by which his innocence and happiness might be
-preserved; and shewed thereby, that they were inseparable, that the loss
-of the one would be the loss of the other. “The Lord God commanded the
-man, saying, Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat: but of
-the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it; for
-in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.” {327a} And
-no sooner had Adam disobeyed, no sooner was his innocence forfeited, than
-his happiness was gone; he found to his sorrow, as he would not believe
-to his comfort, the truth of his Creator’s word: and thus miserably ended
-the first covenant of God with man, the covenant of obedience and works.
-
-Under the covenant of grace, by the blessed and eternal Son of God, it is
-revealed to us, with equal clearness, how the lost happiness of man is to
-be recovered; “the way we know:” “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and
-thou shalt be saved;” {327b} “set your affections on things above, not on
-things on the earth:” {327c} this is the way, call it by what name you
-please—a condition, or a means; it is the only way: happiness, here or
-hereafter, is attainable in no other. For this, we have the assurance of
-that word, which we have seen, under the first covenant, awfully
-fulfilled; of that word, which can never fail. My brethren, I cannot
-doubt, that we are all of us convinced of this truth: then let us pray
-fervently and faithfully, that the conviction may live in our hearts;
-that we may, from this day forward, go to “the fountain of living waters,
-and not hew out for ourselves broken cisterns, that hold no water;”
-{328a} that we may renounce the vanity of all human inventions, and seek
-our happiness in God, and God alone. “Be not conformed to this world;
-but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind; that ye may prove,
-what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God:” {328b} that ye
-may “have your fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting life.” {328c}
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XVIII.
-THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD REVEALED TO THEM THAT FEAR HIM.
-
-
- PSALM xxv. 14.
-
- _The secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him_; _and He will
- shew them His covenant_.
-
-THE secret of the Lord means, that which cannot be known unless the Lord
-reveal it; and the phrase here implies, an intimate knowledge of the
-divine perfections, of the dealings and dispensations of God; a holy and
-vital communion with Him; an entire trust in His providential care and
-government; together with that peace, which always dwells in the bosom of
-a true, penitent, pious believer. All this, including, as it does, a
-full acquaintance with the doctrines and duties, the privileges and
-comforts of the life of faith, is called “the secret of the Lord,”
-because it is hidden from the natural man, and cannot possibly be
-comprehended or discovered without divine revelation.
-
-Such knowledge and such blessings are not the growth of earth; they are
-not the produce of the human intellect or the human heart; they must come
-by spiritual communication, from the fountain of wisdom and truth. When
-man was driven from the bright abode of paradise, his understanding was
-darkened; losing the favour, he lost the image of his Maker, and thus
-became naturally estranged from those holy thoughts and affections, which
-constitute his chief happiness and glory. Nor is it possible for him to
-recover this spiritual frame of mind, these heavenly views, this holy and
-happy acquaintance with God, unless the hand, by which the image was
-originally stamped, repair the wretched ruin in which it now lies.
-Whoever would know the ways of God, must be taught of God; to all, who
-are not so taught, they are impenetrably secret. Thus spake the wisest
-of men; “The Lord giveth wisdom, out of His mouth cometh knowledge and
-understanding. Then shalt thou understand righteousness and judgment and
-equity; yea, every good path.” {331a} And thus the apostle, “Eye hath
-not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man the
-things which God hath prepared for them that love Him;” {331b} that is,
-man, in his natural state, of ignorance and rebellion against God, cannot
-form a notion of the value of heavenly blessings; of the enlarged views,
-the sublimed affections, the sustaining comforts and joys, attainable by
-an inheritance of the divine promises, both here and hereafter. But, as
-the apostle proceeds, “God hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit; for
-the Spirit searcheth all things, yea the deep things of God. For what
-man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of a man which is in
-him; even so the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God;” as
-we exercise our thoughts and judgment upon human matters, by the help of
-human reason, by the natural powers of the mind, so must we attain the
-knowledge of divine matters, by the aid of a divine spirit; by a holy
-illumination and guidance; not indeed by miraculous illapses, but still
-by the distinct and actual operation of heavenly grace, silently
-producing its effects upon the understanding and heart.
-
-The pride of man, the disputer of this world, does not submit to this
-proposition and teaching; perhaps commonly regards them in the light of
-enthusiasm; he has no notion, that there are any secrets in religion,
-which his own skill and judgment are not sufficient to reveal; he
-disbelieves every thing, which he cannot comprehend or feel; and affects
-to throw a shade of discredit and contempt upon all those religious
-sentiments and affections, to which he is a stranger. There are not a
-few such persons in the christian world; who profess to believe all the
-doctrines of the Bible, and to know all that need or can be known, and
-yet never submit themselves to, scarcely can be said to pray for or
-desire, the aid and direction of Almighty God; who imagine, that their
-liberal education and their common sense entitle them to pass a full and
-adequate judgment upon all spiritual subjects; and to form a correct
-notion of all spiritual privileges and blessings.
-
-This is a dangerous and fatal error; a most unfounded presumption; a
-gross ignorance of the very element and nature of evangelical truth: such
-persons only judge of the word of God, of the ordinances and benefits of
-religion, as they would judge of any mere human history; of any worldly
-occurrence or advantage: they take, what they are pleased to call, a
-rational view of Christianity; but the only view, which deserves the name
-of rational, is, not that which appeals to reason alone, but that which
-is according to truth; according to the acknowledged revelation of God’s
-sovereign will. Let us again hear the apostle: “Which things also we
-speak, not in the words which man’s wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy
-Ghost teacheth.—But the natural man receiveth not the things of the
-Spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him, neither can he know
-them, because they are spiritually discerned.” {334} The merely rational
-man, therefore, is a carnal man; not indeed an absolute stranger to the
-word of grace, but unenlightened by it; he has no true taste for holy and
-divine things; it is altogether impossible for him to appreciate their
-merits, or to know any thing of their practical effects.
-
-A familiar instance or two may serve to illustrate this truth. How can
-any man, who neglects the worship of God, pretend to decide upon its
-importance and utility? How can he presume to deny its comfortable and
-salutary influence upon the soul, its powerful efficacy upon the
-character and life? It is a matter of experience; of which he therefore
-is unqualified to judge.—He that is a stranger to the grace of God in his
-heart, may despise those, that regard it and live by it, as fanatical
-persons, who are deluded by visionary ideas and groundless assurances:
-but he is only judging others by himself; and it would be marvellous
-indeed, if he, who is avowedly living without the influence of divine
-grace, should bear witness to the benefit and happiness which it
-confers.—What can the intemperate man know of the blessings of
-temperance? Nothing: except by the want of them.—What can the covetous
-man know of the pleasures of benevolence and liberality?—the licentious
-of the excellence of purity, or the ignorant of the treasures of
-wisdom?—Because the sinner, when overtaken by sickness or affliction,
-declares that he derives no comfort from religion, are we therefore to
-conclude, that religion has no comforts at all? Could we think it
-probable, that the promises of the gospel would afford consolation to
-him, in an evil hour, when he had all along been an alien to their
-nature, when they had been unheeded or despised?
-
-It is quite clear, that the benefits and blessings of our holy religion,
-that the knowledge of God’s word, the power of His Spirit, and the
-effects of His ordinances, must ever remain a secret to those, who have
-no intercourse with these things, and set their hearts against them. And
-whenever the Christian hears his conduct condemned, or his hopes
-undervalued, by such persons, he may treat them, not with proud disdain,
-but with a holy disregard: whatever their station in society may be,
-whatever their learning, whatever their reputation for judgment in
-worldly affairs, upon spiritual or scriptural matters their opinion is of
-no weight or worth.
-
-“The secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him.” The fear of the
-Lord, in this passage, as in many others of Holy writ, denotes the sum
-and substance of religion; it implies a sincere faith and trust in God,
-an awful sense of His majesty, an humble and anxious enquiry after the
-knowledge of His will, with a holy determination of obedience. And, in
-addressing these words to a christian congregation, we may understand
-them as implying that fear and service of God, which proceed from a vital
-belief in the whole of His revealed law, in the gospel of His ever
-blessed Son, our supreme Lawgiver and King; as implying moreover an
-entire concurrence in all the measures ordained for our salvation. The
-fear of God, though common to all believers under every divine
-dispensation, will vary in its operation and extent, according to the
-nature and fulness of their dispensation; it will lead them to believe
-and love and obey, according to their knowledge, to their opportunities
-and means of grace, and therefore the believer in the gospel shews the
-working of this holy principle in the full bearing of evangelical fruit.
-
-All who so believe and live, shall have the secret of the Lord abundantly
-revealed; “He that hath My commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that
-loveth Me; and he that loveth Me shall be loved of My Father; and I will
-love him and will manifest Myself unto him. The Comforter, which is the
-Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in My name, He shall teach you all
-things.” {338} The humble disciples of Christ are blest in all their
-researches after divine truth and knowledge: when they contemplate the
-perfections of the Godhead, their capacities are enlarged, their
-affections devoutly engaged, their hearts disposed to profit withal. A
-deep sense of the majesty and power of Jehovah leads them to reverence
-Him; a sense of His justice leads them to walk uprightly; of His
-omnipresence, to live holily; of His goodness, to serve Him with
-gratitude and love. Whilst the cold philosopher, whilst the
-worldly-minded and the sinner view these great subjects only with a
-theoretical eye, without any moral or religious improvement, the
-spiritual believer is powerfully moved and affected; and walks in the
-light of truth every day and hour.
-
-In their devotional exercises, the faithful servants of the Lord are
-peculiarly blessed; are made sensible of His presence and His power.
-When they pour forth their prayers and praises at the throne of grace;
-when they thus hold a nearer communion with their reconciled God, a
-heavenly tranquillity and delight are spread over their souls; they know
-and feel their connexion with “the Father of spirits,” and they rise from
-their devotion with an humble confidence, that the tribute of their heart
-has been accepted; that their fervent supplications will be answered, in
-God’s appointed time and way, through the merits and intercession of a
-merciful Redeemer. To these inspiring hopes and persuasions the
-impenitent sinner is an utter stranger: if he prays at all, it is but the
-outward service of the lips; there can be nothing of the spiritual
-principle of devotion, and therefore nothing of its fruit.
-
-Again: when the humble pious believer sits down to the study of the
-Bible, with a pure desire to discover and perform the holy will of God;
-to be nourished with the bread of life; and to draw, from the fountain of
-truth, the waters of eternal salvation; the grace of the Holy Spirit is
-with him, to remove the veil from his corrupt heart, and thus to open and
-enlarge his understanding: by this means he perceives “the wondrous
-things” of the divine law, and applies them for his own personal
-edification and comfort. The true import of the doctrines, there
-contained, is progressively unfolded to his view; and the full bearing,
-of every precept and rule of life, is pressed with increasing force and
-authority upon his heart. He admires and reverences the holy book; he
-loves all that it contains; his soul is rapt in the contemplation of the
-stupendous mystery of goodness and godliness; it elevates his prospects
-and affections above this lower world; he has “tasted the good word of
-God, and the powers of the world to come;” {341} he beholds, with the eye
-of faith, his inheritance in the skies; and this his heavenly view
-brightens as he advances.
-
-Every sincere Christian can bear witless, that his acquaintance with the
-word of life is continually improving; that in every page, and almost in
-every passage, he is perpetually discovering fresh truth and beauty,
-fresh obligations and delights. Of all this, the carnal-minded and the
-sinner are profoundly ignorant; to them the Bible is comparatively a dead
-letter: they see little of its harmony or its excellency; and where they
-do see, it has no lively or permanent effect upon their heart; no more,
-than any other book, of history, or morality, or amusement.
-
-The righteous are not free from suffering and pain, from trials and
-afflictions; but then they enjoy, under every visitation, a source of
-comfort and satisfaction, which the thoughtless votaries of this world
-cannot possibly experience. There dwelleth, in their hearts and minds,
-the peace of God; and that must ever be the gift of God, which He will
-never bestow upon His enemies; the peace of God, which fills them with a
-holy calm, and reconciles them to every thing. In seasons of trouble,
-the triumphs of the gospel are especially manifested; and the “secret of
-the Lord” especially revealed. The soul is in a more impressible
-condition; more ready to learn of Him, who “was meek and lowly of heart;”
-and therefore more capable of the enjoyment of His promised rest.
-“Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted.” {342}
-
-The sensual and the proud are disappointed and mortified and rebellious
-under the various troubles of life; the Christian receives them in a
-different spirit, as tokens of his heavenly Father’s love; and tokens of
-love he finds them to be. They, who “walk by sight,” are ever
-complaining of hardships and inequalities in the world; they who “walk by
-faith,” can perceive in them all the sovereign and gracious hand of the
-Almighty, who “doeth all things well.” They, who live upon the favour of
-the world, must always be rendered unhappy by its frowns; but the
-Christian lives above it, and cares little for any opposition or evil
-report: he is fortified and comforted by a secret power, and protected by
-an invisible arm: and this power shall continue with him, if he continue
-faithful, even unto the end. When his journey through the wilderness is
-about to terminate, when he has arrived at the borders of the flood, and
-is entering upon the shores of the heavenly Canaan, when nature sinks and
-the soul is departing, then does the Lord reveal himself, in a manner not
-to be seen and not to be told: there is a hidden energy, a light within,
-a sustaining spirit, a mysterious and merciful communion with the Lord of
-life and death. This indeed is an awful secret, and one which the guilty
-can never know; which none can know, who do not, with all their heart and
-soul, embrace the promises of salvation revealed to them in the gospel:
-the foretaste of heavenly rest, like the rest itself, remaineth only for
-the people of God. They who have so feared and loved the Lord, as to
-have served Him with a good conscience and with integrity; they who have
-so believed and trusted in their Saviour, as to have followed
-whithersoever He led, as to have sacrificed every unholy gratification
-and pursuit, for the love of His name and for the “one thing needful,”
-they shall find, in their latter moments, a peace known only to
-themselves, a joy with which no “stranger can intermeddle.” The Lord
-will effectually “shew them His covenant:” they were made by baptism
-“members of Christ and children of God,” and became thereby entitled,
-through the free mercy of God in Jesus Christ, to an “inheritance in the
-kingdom of heaven;” having abided in that covenant, and walked faithfully
-therein, they will never doubt, but God will assuredly perform His part;
-and He will give them a full insight into the blessings, which He has
-covenanted to bestow; they have all along entertained a lively
-apprehension of the nature and principles of this holy covenant, and of
-their own correspondent obligations; its holy promises and its gracious
-rewards have been through life the solace of their souls; and it
-continues, yea increases, to the last; not indeed enjoyed in perfection
-here below, but enjoyed as the earnest and pledge of the fulness of their
-eternal felicity.
-
-In this manner, my brethren, “acquaint yourselves with God,” and come to
-the true knowledge of His perfections and His ways, and live in the
-animating ennobling hope of a brighter manifestation of His glory
-hereafter—in this manner, by a spirit of humble, faithful, entire
-dependence upon Him, through the mercy of Jesus Christ; by fervent
-importunate prayer for the illumination and aid of the Holy Ghost; by
-“seeking first the kingdom of God and His righteousness by loving Him
-with all the heart and soul,” and “walking in His fear all the day long.”
-Thus are we to be taught of God, thus only can we acquire a capability
-and disposition to be taught; thus growing in grace, we grow in wisdom,
-in holy experience, in happy communion with our Lord and Saviour.
-
-Receive this instruction, “high and low, rich and poor, one with
-another;” it is equally necessary for all. Unless this spiritual lesson
-be learnt, the stores of human science, the treasures of human wisdom,
-are vain and worthless; they can impart no knowledge, no true and saving
-knowledge, of the ways and dealings of the Most High; they cannot bring
-the sinner to his Maker: on the contrary, they prevent and hinder him, by
-ministering a spirit of pride and self-sufficiency. If thou wouldest
-know God, fear Him, and be taught of His Spirit and His word; this is His
-own appointed means, and there is no other. And ye poor, unlearned as ye
-may be, seek the Lord in this way, and ye shall assuredly find Him: His
-secret shall be with you; and He will graciously teach you more, than you
-can attain from all the world besides; more than the wisest can learn in
-any other way.
-
-“The way of the wicked is as darkness; they know not at what they
-stumble: but the path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth
-more and more unto the perfect day.” {347} The Lord revealeth Himself
-unto the righteous, day by day; they grow in wisdom, as in years: the
-nearer they approach to the completion of their hopes, to the end of
-their earthly pilgrimage, to their heavenly and eternal kingdom, the
-clearer will be their knowledge, and the more delightful their
-anticipations; even until that day, when the veil of the flesh shall be
-utterly removed, when they shall “see their God face to face, and know
-even as also they are known.” {348}
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XIX.
-RESIST THE BEGINNINGS OF EVIL TEMPTATION.
-
-
- PROVERBS iv. 14, 15.
-
- _Enter not into the path of the wicked_, _and go not in the way of
- evil men_. _Avoid it_, _pass not by it_, _turn from it and pass
- away_.
-
-THIS is one of those short, comprehensive, moral directions, with which
-the holy Scriptures abound, for our safe conduct in life; directions,
-that are seldom attended to with the earnestness, which their importance
-demands. Studied such words should be, with devout meditation and the
-spirit of prayer; imprinted on the memory, fixed in the heart. We are
-apt to trust too much to generalities in religion; we do not sufficiently
-concern ourselves with its individual precepts and practical admonitions.
-And I wish now to enlarge upon this point, before we enter into a
-consideration of the text; hoping that it may induce you, by God’s help,
-“to take heed how ye hear” such lessons of instruction.
-
-For the attainment of a religious character, and the means of walking
-holily and uprightly in our course through life, doubtless the main thing
-is, to establish sound principles in the heart; and without such
-principles all the rules and helps in the world will prove of little
-avail; never to be depended upon in the hour of temptation and trial.
-Accordingly we find, in the word of God, these mainsprings of action
-continually insisted on, as of the highest necessity to be settled in the
-soul. A true, a right faith is inculcated, as the great foundation of
-all spiritual obedience; a vital faith in God, as our Creator, Redeemer,
-and Sanctifier; a faith in His revealed word, in all the great doctrines
-of life and salvation there propounded to fallen man; a faith in the
-necessity of obeying all the commandments therein delivered for the
-formation of our character and the regulation of our lives; a faith in
-the world to come, after the death of the body; a world depending, for
-happiness or misery, upon our choice and conduct here. The love of God
-and the fear of God are also laid down as most powerful principles of
-thought and action; as spreading an influence over the whole of our
-behaviour.
-
-Still however, the establishment of these first principles is not of
-itself sufficient for the complete direction and government of our lives.
-So manifold and various are the temptations to which we are exposed; so
-numerous the trials we are called to bear, that particular instructions
-and commands are also needful for us, in order that we may be prepared to
-meet the different circumstances which are perpetually arising, in order
-that we may be taught how to reduce our principles to practice; and to
-apply the declaration of God’s will to our ordinary intercourse and
-experience with the world.
-
-For this purpose, we find the old scriptures every where abounding with
-rules, for the performance of every duty, and the avoidance of every sin:
-for the immediate service and worship of God, for the discharge of every
-honest and honourable obligation we owe to our neighbour; for the
-correction of all those evil affections and passions, to which the
-corrupt heart of man is so lamentably prone. Nor in the new testament,
-where the foundation of faith is more clearly and broadly laid down, are
-such rules less frequent, or less urgently enforced. We might indeed
-expect, what actually is the case, that as a clearer and fuller
-revelation, that as a higher principle and view, would require a more
-holy and perfect observance, a greater purity and integrity and
-blamelessness of character, therefore the several duties demanded of us,
-in our walk with God, would be laid down and marked with the greater
-accuracy. Accordingly we do find, for this purpose, “line upon line and
-precept upon precept” repeated and urged with the greater fulness and
-particularity; that we may not, by any unholiness or deficiency in our
-conduct, disgrace that more glorious revelation, with which we have been
-favoured as believers in the gospel of Jesus Christ. Look at His own
-blessed discourses, especially His sermon on the mount; look at the
-epistles, which His servants, inspired by the Holy Ghost, have left for
-our guidance and government; and see what full instructions they contain,
-for our duty to God and our duty to man. It is wonderful, for how many
-cases they provide; for how many instances in our daily experience; how
-they teach us, on the one hand, the practice of every virtue, shew all
-the bearings of it and the steps that lead to it; how they caution us, on
-the other, against every besetting sin; how they point out the manner, in
-which it gains an influence over us, and cut it up by the root.
-
-I have embraced the present opportunity of enlarging on this point, with
-a view of awakening your attention to, and inducing you to study and
-treasure up, the various scriptural rules for holy living: I have done
-this, because many suppose, that the fixing of a good principle—of faith,
-for instance,—is all that is requisite; if it were so, why should so many
-rules have been given in that holy book, in which there can be nothing
-unnecessary or superfluous? God, who knows the heart and all the ways of
-man, knew how wise and needful it was, to deliver express admonitions and
-exhortations to each individual duty; that our faith might not be vague
-and unprofitable, but abounding in fruit, in the fruit of holiness unto
-everlasting life.
-
-But it is time now to turn to the text, which furnishes us with one of
-the most important cautions for our safe and christian government. It
-might be thought, that every true believer in that blessed Redeemer, who
-came “to cleanse him from all unrighteousness,” would have such a horror
-of sin, as effectually to secure him from its dominion; as to prevent us
-from the necessity of admonishing him against its fascination and its
-power; but such unhappily is far from being the case. Many, who make a
-considerable profession of the gospel, are betrayed into grievous
-inconsistencies; many, who set out with promising hopes and good
-resolutions, are led astray and overcome; many, for want of attending to
-the warning given in the text, for want of narrowly watching the
-beginnings of evil. Feeling a sincere and decided abhorrence of the
-grosser sins, they expose themselves without fear to slighter
-temptations; should they be, in some small matter, inveigled and led into
-the path of error, it is expected that they shall instantly perceive
-their danger; that they shall repent and be forgiven, and be more guarded
-and resolute for the time to come.
-
-But they have not formed a proper estimate of the seducing nature of sin;
-they know not how the power of the tempter increases with every success:
-instead of their being alarmed and disgusted with the first commission,
-they become, from the corruption of their nature, the more captivated and
-seduced: it is easier for the enemy to draw them on to the second step,
-than it was to persuade them to the first; their conscience becomes more
-easily silenced and reconciled; they begin to think, that the strictness,
-for which they once contended, is not so requisite; they become
-accustomed to evil; make excuses for it; take delight in it; are
-flattered with the empty praises and congratulations of their new
-companions; and proceed by degrees to abandoned and ruinous lengths. The
-fact is, that they have been all the while provoking the Spirit of the
-Lord to desert them: He was grieved at their very first departure, from
-the path of innocence and integrity; it shewed a carelessness of the ways
-of God; it argued, that His fear and His love were declining in their
-heart: with every renewed commission of evil, the Spirit was more and
-more quenched, till at length He left them to themselves; weak, helpless,
-incapable of resistance; in the dominion of the enemy, slaves of sin.
-
-What I am here describing, has been the miserable experience of thousands
-of unwatchful and irresolute Christians; who have fallen into the snare,
-yea at last into the ruinous abyss of evil, from which they have never
-afterwards escaped, because they were too “wise in their own conceits”
-and too confident in their own strength, to take a warning against the
-peril of yielding to the first temptation; because they ventured into the
-borders of forbidden ground, and were insensibly led on to the fatal
-lengths, which they once held in abomination.
-
-How many a youth have we known, trained from his earliest infancy in the
-holy principles of the gospel, the hope and the promise of his anxious
-parents, the joy of his family and friends, yet, from incautiously
-listening, on some unsuspected occasion, to the advice of an evil
-counsellor, and induced to make experiment of some unhallowed pleasure,
-thereby shaken in his integrity and thrown off his bias; prevailed upon
-to repeat the pressing indulgence; thence to proceed to others; till, in
-the end, the character has been totally changed,—marred, corrupted,
-ruined. It seemed but a little matter that first courted his consent;
-what, though sinful pleasures did surround him in his new scene and his
-new company, he, poor innocent youth, had no intention of joining in
-them; was determined to stand aloof. For a while he did so; and
-maintained the pious and virtuous and christian habits, in which he had
-been trained; the habits of prayer, and holy reading, and holy
-meditation, and uprightness of conduct: but he began to give way, to
-“fall from the stedfastness of his faith in Christ;” {358} one religious
-observance after another was broken in upon; one scruple after another
-overcome; till at last he was stripped of every portion of the garment of
-righteousness, and left “miserable and poor and naked,” with nothing to
-hide his wretchedness and shame; the dishonour of his father, the grief
-of his mother’s heart; disowned by his family, disowned by his God: a
-misery to himself; dying the death of a sinner. And whence came all this
-load of misery upon him?—on account of his first unguarded yielding.
-
-This representation has been but too frequently verified: yet not to the
-young only has such heedlessness proved a snare and destruction. We may
-see its consequences ravaging around us almost every day; in persons of
-every age and condition. How many a sabbath-breaker has contracted his
-dreadful habit from a very small beginning of neglect? At the first he
-was tempted very occasionally to absent himself from the House of his
-God; to indulge now and then, extremely seldom, in worldly pleasure; or
-to engage, in a thoughtless hour, in the dispatch of worldly business;
-but his affection and reverence for the holy day by degrees grow colder,
-and the temptations became stronger: the Lord’s House was, in a great
-measure, forsaken; the Lord’s day became his day of dissolute pleasure;
-or his day of business and accounts, as best suited his condition; and
-hence followed, as it must of necessity, the total decay of religious
-principle and religious character.
-
-Thus it is also, in a remarkable degree, with the vice of intemperance;
-no man proceeds to its abominable and fatal extremities all at once: but
-no man, whatever his principles may have been, is secure from its
-horrible influence, if he is once tempted habitually to depart from the
-holy rules of sobriety; however seldom the habit may be at first
-indulged. It is indeed especially true of this awful vice, that if the
-enemy once gains a footing in the heart, he seldom leaves it, till the
-heart is his own.
-
-Thus it is, once again, with evil company of every description; it is
-ensnaring beyond all suspicion, and beyond all calculation: wicked or
-worldly companions infuse their venom, into the mind and the bosom,
-gradually and insensibly: even if they have no intention so to do, as in
-truth they too often have, their very presence and conversation and
-habits are so corrupting, that it is impossible for any one, who is
-familiarly acquainted with them, to escape the contagion; in fact,
-whoever seeks, or whoever tolerates such company, has a lurking
-disposition to evil, though it may be unperceived and unsuspected by
-himself. Flee from every approach to this treacherous and dangerous
-ground, as you would “flee from the wrath to come.”
-
-From this statement, which indeed is but imperfect and feeble in
-comparison with the magnitude of the evil, against which I am seeking to
-warn you, my hearers; from this you may be better prepared, by God’s
-grace, to receive and value and apply the important admonition of the
-text: you will observe how particularly, how urgently, with what
-repetition, what varied forms of expression, the wise man delivers his
-charge; so delivers it the more, because he speaks feelingly, from
-dear-bought experience; because he himself had been lamentably ensnared,
-for want of attending to it in his own case.
-
-Let us hearken to the counsel of this inspired and experienced guide: he
-says, “Enter not into the path of the wicked;” never be prevailed upon to
-set your foot on this forbidden ground; “go not in the way of evil men,”
-trust not yourself in their company or in any of their goings: further he
-says, “Avoid it,” avoid this ensnaring way; be at pains to keep clear of
-it; use your utmost watchfulness to discover it; go in another direction,
-in the way of the upright and holy. And, as if this caution were
-insufficient for his purpose, he adds, “Pass not by it;” suffer not
-yourself even to approach it, to look upon it; lest you be beguiled by
-its false charms, and unwarily led to desire them. Not willing yet to
-cease from admonishing, in order to make a yet deeper impression, he
-concludes, “Turn from it and pass away;” the instant you perceive it,
-turn round with the dread of danger; as you would if you discovered
-yourself on the edge of a precipice, in fear of falling headlong; turn at
-once, and pass decidedly and quickly away.
-
-In obedience to these rules, my brethren, consists our great security,
-under the guidance of infinite wisdom and the support of almighty power:
-the grace of God is ever ready to be bestowed, ever at hand to “preserve
-us from falling;” but God expects and requires us, in the use of this
-grace, to employ every means of prudence, and to strive with a holy and
-unbending resolution: this grace is afforded for the very purpose, that
-we may so watch and work; and if we do not thus improve it, with
-circumspection and diligence, it will be withdrawn. Never so much as
-listen to any sinful proposal, to any doubtful invitation; stay not to
-reason upon it at all; turn away with holy jealousy; never suffer the eye
-to dwell upon a forbidden object, to dwell even for a moment; through the
-eye it may find a passage to the heart, and inflame it with unlawful and
-hurtful desire: resist at once; the first victory is the easiest, as well
-as the surest. Say to the temptation, as your Lord said to the tempter,
-“get thee hence, Satan;” “flee from him and he will flee from
-you”—“escape for thy life.”
-
-And here I must add an observation upon the means, by which we may be
-enabled to follow this momentous advice of the wisest of men. We must
-“watch and pray, that we enter not into temptation;” {364} we must go
-forth into the world in the spirit of watchfulness and prayer; praying,
-not only that we may have the grace to watch, but also when the trial
-actually arises, when we are watching. In the presence of temptation, or
-if we do but perceive or suspect that it is coming, let the soul be
-lifted up to the “Lord of all power and might;” let the language of the
-heart, if not of the lips, be poured forth in pious aspiration to God; if
-it be but a word, a wish, or a thought, it will be clothed with strength,
-and minister a stedfastness to the mind and heart. We are thus animated
-by the assurance of divine support, and fixed in our holy determination
-of resistance to all evil. Much depends, for safety and success, upon
-this habitual spirit of devotion; it is our buckler and shield in every
-moment of conflict; without it, we are standing, in the feebleness of
-nature, before the mighty enemy of our souls; ready to “be taken captive
-by him at his will.” {365a} “Be ye therefore sober (that is, be serious)
-and watch unto prayer;” {365b} and thus “go forth conquering and to
-conquer.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XX.
-THE LOVE OF CHRIST FOR THOSE WHO DO THE WILL OF GOD.
-
-
- MARK iii. 35.
-
- _Whosoever shall do the will of God_, _the same is my brother and my
- sister and mother_.
-
-FROM this, and one or two other passages in the gospels, it has been
-sometimes imagined, that our blessed Lord set no value on the common
-relationships, the natural ties, the tender endearments of life; and that
-He intended to teach His disciples, by His own example, to neglect such
-considerations altogether; as if all Christians had an equal claim upon
-our affection; as if the spiritual brotherhood were the only object
-worthy of our regard; as if parents and brothers and sisters were merely
-upon a footing with the rest of mankind. This notion is entirely
-erroneous; it is a mistaken conclusion from the words and conduct of our
-Lord.
-
-His own example, on several occasions, has afforded a sanction to the
-feelings of private friendship, as well as of family affection. How
-deeply was He moved at the death of Lazarus! “Jesus wept, then said the
-Jews, behold how He loved him!” {367a} And of our Lord’s disciples we
-read, that there was one, treated with peculiar tenderness and regard;
-one, “who leaned on His bosom;” {367b} one, distinguished by the high and
-honourable name of the “beloved disciple.” And this disciple, the
-evangelist St. John, has drawn one of the most striking pictures of an
-affectionate family, ever represented to the eye and the heart of man:
-“There stood by the cross of Jesus, His mother, and His mother’s sister,
-Mary the wife of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene. When Jesus therefore saw
-His mother, and the disciple standing by whom He loved, He saith unto His
-mother, Woman, behold thy son! Then saith He to the disciple, Behold thy
-mother! And from that hour that disciple took her unto his own home.”
-Jesus not only loved and protected His mother through life, but was
-solicitous to provide for her future well-being, even amidst the agonies
-of the cross; commending her to His dearest personal friend; and by way
-of effectually securing _his_ regard and _her_ confidence, He calls John
-the son, and Mary the mother: Behave to each other as mother and son; and
-it is all I can ask or require. This must be admitted as a proof, that
-Jesus felt most tenderly and peculiarly for His nearest earthly relation:
-and it shews, that those passages, which have been supposed to favour a
-contrary opinion, have been wrongly interpreted.
-
-Let us now consider the circumstances which led to the declaration in the
-text. It appears, that the earnestness and perseverance of Jesus in
-teaching the people, notwithstanding the opposition of the Pharisees, had
-given disquietude to His friends and brethren, that is, to His near
-relations, some of whom did not believe in Him. They seem to have
-desired Him to forbear and discontinue His ministry at that particular
-time, supposing that He had exceeded the bounds of prudence; and it
-further appears, that they had induced Mary, His mother, to concur in
-this improper design; which conveyed a reflection upon His wisdom, and
-the perfection of His character. They came, therefore, when He was
-teaching the people; and, not being able to approach Him for the
-multitude, they sent to speak with Him. But Jesus, aware of their
-intention, answered by enquiring, who His mother and brethren were;
-thereby intimating, that they had no right to interfere on such an
-occasion, nor had any authority over Him in respect of His important
-work; that His spiritual affection to His disciples, in the advancement
-of their eternal interests, was greater than any natural affection, which
-He bore to His relations, in a mere earthly point of view; that His love
-to men’s souls had the greatest consideration and weight with Him; that
-even His mother was nearer to Him as a true believer, than on account of
-her natural relationship; and that His brethren would derive no advantage
-or favour from Him, if they were not also believers.
-
-Jesus then proceeded to declare, that His true disciples, even though
-they had no connexion with Him by the natural tie of blood, would be
-regarded in the light of relations; would be the objects of His sincere
-affection and esteem; “He looked round on them which sat about Him, and
-said, Behold My mother and My brethren, for whosoever shall do the will
-of God, the same is My brother and My sister and mother.” We cannot but
-observe, that these words are addressed, not merely to the disciples of
-that day, but to every individual Christian throughout the world;
-_whosoever_, of any age or nation, should do the will of His heavenly
-Father, by hearing, believing, obeying His revealed word, by embracing
-the gospel of salvation, he would, in life, in death, in judgment, and
-for ever, be honoured and blessed; even as the brother, sister, or mother
-of Him, who is the Lord of all, and the King of glory.
-
-How encouraging, how delightful an assurance, to be persuaded, that in
-all our difficulties and troubles, in all our bereavements and desertions
-and afflictions, through this vale of tears, we have a friend, a
-relation, at the right hand of God, the omnipotent Redeemer; who is
-advanced, after His earthly humiliation, to the throne above, for the
-very purpose of “receiving gifts for men;” and of distributing them for
-the relief and assistance of all His loving and faithful brethren. How
-fortunate do the needy children of men esteem themselves, if they have a
-kind relative or friend in a high quarter; one possessed of honour and
-wealth and power. They feel themselves ennobled by the connexion; and
-are raised above the fear and apprehension of want, by a confidence in
-his influence and generosity. But what are the highest and greatest of
-earthly relatives, in comparison with the glorious everlasting Son of
-God; with Him who “hath put all our enemies under His feet;” with the
-“high and holy one that inhabited eternity?”
-
-Earthly friends may and do fail, often when they are most needed; an
-untoward occurrence, a groundless displeasure arises; and all our
-expectations from them are suddenly swept away. But with Jesus “there is
-no variableness, neither shadow of turning:” He searches our hearts; and
-as long as they are really and stedfastly united with Him, no casualties,
-no outward appearances can estrange us from His favour. Earthly friends
-die, one after another; and often at a time, when they are become most
-dear and most necessary to us; but Jesus liveth for evermore; and the
-union, we form with Him, is in no danger of being severed by any change
-of time or circumstance; but goes on progressively and perpetually
-increasing. The very disasters, which often tend to disunite us from our
-earthly friends and brethren, serve but to bind us the more closely to
-the Saviour; in adversity, in poverty, in contempt, in persecution, we
-find Him the nearer and dearer; always most ready to succour us, when
-most wanted and desired: always ready, and always able. So that, if the
-whole world were to fail us, His abiding favour would more than
-counterbalance all the evils of our lot. “When even my father or my
-mother forsaketh me, the Lord taketh me up;” {373} He is in the stead of
-parents, in the stead of all: “the Father of the fatherless, and the God
-of the widow;” the Lord of consolation, and the Lord of love. The
-upholding of His Spirit will sustain our infirmities; one beam of His
-gracious mercy will cheer all the darkness, which the world casteth over
-our souls.
-
-The disciples of Jesus experience His friendly comfort every day and
-hour: even if there were no other world than this, they feel themselves
-abundantly blessed in their connexion with Him, by His present affection
-and grace; but there _is_ another world; where their joy and love will be
-continued, and their union with Him perfected in glory. He is called, in
-gracious condescension, “the first-born among many brethren;” {374a} He
-has suffered and died and triumphed and risen again, risen “as the first
-fruits of them that sleep;” {374b} and His brethren, “who endure unto the
-end,” shall also rise from the sleep of death, and “see Him as He is, and
-be like Him:” {374c} they shall “be the children of God, being the
-children of the resurrection.” {374d}
-
-And “do not our hearts burn within us” at the representation of this
-blessedness? Do we not desire the honour, the privilege, the advantage,
-the excellency of being thus united, in a bond of holy endearment, to the
-glorious Son of God, to the Saviour of our souls? Undoubtedly we do:
-unless our understandings be so darkened and our affections so depraved
-and debased, that we are incapable of choosing between good and evil,
-that we “put darkness for light and light for darkness.” There cannot be
-one amongst us, who does not profess to set a value upon the favour and
-friendship of his Lord; upon the relationship which, as christians, we
-are graciously permitted to bear to Him. Not one of us would go to rest,
-content and happy, with the prospect of being deprived of this
-distinguished and heavenly blessing. Let us know and remember then, that
-our relationship to Him is not like that of earthly families, a mere name
-which we have inherited from infancy; and which will necessarily continue
-without our care or concern. We became related to Him by our baptismal
-covenant; but there must be something more than baptism; something more
-is required than a mere profession, than an outward belonging to His
-visible church, in order to our being acknowledged as His brethren.
-Brethren by name all of us are; nay, we have been spiritually admitted
-into holy connexion with Him: but Jesus regards those only, as accepted
-members of His family, who believe in Him with all their heart and soul;
-who look to Him, with a single, entire, and constant dependence, for life
-and salvation; those, who “are daily renewed in the spirit of their
-minds;” and desire and strive to bring all their affections into a
-righteous subjection to Him and His holy law; those, in a word, “who do
-the will of God.”
-
-We cannot sufficiently reprobate the practice of those persons, who
-boastfully claim the Saviour as their “familiar friend,” without an
-abiding concern and a strenuous endeavour to walk as He walked, in all
-the ways of spiritual and moral integrity. Consider, I pray you, His own
-clear text on this point: “If ye love Me, keep My commandments:” {377}
-there can be no other evidence of our saving interest in the Lord, but
-that which He Himself has established. His true disciples and brethren
-must bear His image; and not the marred, corrupted, hideous likeness of
-the author of sin and death. This it is, to be spiritually and
-effectually incorporated into the family of Jesus Christ; thus is our
-relationship to be proved and cherished: he that walketh as a brother and
-a friend, will be owned as such; he, that faileth so to walk, will be
-disowned and cast away, whatever his pretensions: “better had it been for
-that man if he had never been born;” better still, if he had never been
-born “of water and the spirit;” if he had never “named the name of
-Christ.” Let us then faithfully remember, not only the joys and
-privileges of the brethren of our Lord, but the means also, which are
-absolutely necessary for the proof and establishment of this holy title;
-the conditions, the evidences, and the duties of so high and happy a
-state.
-
-And from our Lord’s example in the instance before us, we may gather
-several particulars for our instruction in life: He gave His relations to
-understand, that it was not so much the natural tie which He valued, as
-the spiritual; not, as we have already explained, that He was devoid of
-natural affection, but that the spiritual bond was of so much higher
-importance in His esteem. In applying this principle for our adoption
-and regulation, certainly great allowance must be made, and sound
-discretion used; allowance for our mutual infirmities; and discretion,
-for the sake of preserving domestic harmony and peace. Far be it from
-us, to disclaim and renounce every one of our family, who liveth not as a
-faithful follower of Christ; he has a natural hold upon us, which must
-not be harshly or hastily broken.
-
-Independently of a universal feeling of benevolence for all mankind; it
-is evidently the will of God, that the different members of each family
-should be especially attached together, for the sake of promoting each
-other’s interest and comfort; and thus of contributing to the good of
-society at large; to the increase of the general stock of happiness, and
-the diminution of evil.
-
-And this, the design of a merciful Providence, which is manifest to our
-common reason and our common feelings, is abundantly verified and
-enforced by the holy word of God. The fifth commandment in the law
-distinctly recognizes and requires the exercise of domestic affection;
-and it is repeatedly confirmed, under the gospel covenant, by the pen of
-an inspired apostle. That apostle has farther declared, that “if any
-provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he
-hath denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel.” {379} And the
-sense of this precept may be properly extended, to sanction and command
-all those peculiar offices, of kindness and countenance and support,
-which the members of a family can perform for each other. Under ordinary
-circumstances therefore, if there be no opposing necessity, the natural
-tie is to be respected by the Christian, and bound upon his conscience
-and his heart.
-
-Nor is such a connexion to be dissolved, but in cases of extremity; for
-this among other reasons, that there is always a hope, of the recreant
-and abandoned becoming, by the mercy of God, at length reclaimed and
-converted; and of this great blessing the pious relative may be made an
-instrument, by his fervent prayer, his affectionate counsel, and the
-constant influence of his good example.
-
-But all this hinders us not from looking, with a very different eye, upon
-the spiritual and the worldly relation; upon the good and the evil;
-though both may be objects of our kind personal offices, the nature and
-degree of our affection may vary most exceedingly. Our love for the
-truly christian relative has a fervour, a purity, a delight, which
-nothing but the mutual working and spirit of religion can possibly
-generate: the happiness proceeds from that sacred, heavenly source, from
-which both of us draw our principles and hopes; from the consciousness of
-our common interest in the great Redeemer, and our common relationship to
-Him: we are both “members of Christ and children of God;” inheritors of a
-better kingdom; to which we are journeying together, and of which we love
-to be discoursing; it is a bond of union, which nothing can separate; not
-distance, not death: for this is the great consideration, the great
-enhancement of our joy and comfort, that the love which we are bearing
-for one another, in the kingdom of grace, shall be renewed and matured in
-the kingdom of glory. And unless there be this principle of attachment
-between relations, this common faith and hope, this exercise of piety and
-godliness, this interchange of holy affection, all other attachments,
-however requisite for this world, are but time-serving and poor: death
-will be the dreadful extinction. But when the natural affection is thus
-combined with the spiritual, and draws its nourishment from it, they
-produce together a happiness, which none but such relations can know.
-
-And further, we are taught by this example of Christ, that every sincere
-believer, with whom we are made acquainted, with whom we have
-intercourse, is to be treated as a brother; whatever be his situation in
-life, he is an object of affection far more noble and delightful, than
-any human tie can possibly produce; and is entitled to our best and most
-benevolent services. We may not be familiarly associated; we may not
-dwell with him as with an earthly relative; there may be a distance of
-rank between us; but we love and honour him, for the Lord’s sake and his
-own sake, as one of God’s redeemed people, with whom we hope to dwell in
-love for ever; and therefore our soul delighteth “to communicate with him
-and to do him good.” Pity that there is not, in the christian world,
-more of this spirit of the blessed Jesus; more friendly sympathy and
-brotherly interchange; more regard for one another, as members of the
-same holy family; the rich for the rich, the poor for the poor, the rich
-and poor for each other. Far different would be our condition in this
-world, if all were thus regarding, thus feeling for, thus helping one
-another. Why is it not so? For the want of a true christian faith and
-principle. If the tree were good, the fruit would be thus beautiful.
-
-My brethren, allow me affectionately to recommend this subject to your
-private and most serious consideration; to your daily prayers; as a
-subject, in which your own interest in the Saviour is deeply involved; as
-a subject, intimately connected with all your best promises and hopes, in
-this life and the life to come. And may the God of love shed His spirit
-abroad amongst us, and “pour into our hearts this most excellent gift of
-charity, the very bond of peace and of all virtues.” Has Jesus, our
-common Lord and Master, our heavenly and eternal King, declared, of every
-faithful disciple, that “the same is to Him, as a brother and sister and
-mother?” Then remember His example, and remember His words, “_as_ I have
-loved you, that ye love one another:” remember them, or you will be
-forgotten by Him: “love the brotherhood,” or you do not belong to Christ;
-your profession is hypocrisy. “Walk in love, as Christ hath loved you;”
-let it be your daily walk: the reward is great, in every point of view;
-great upon earth, in present comfort and peace and honour; greater on the
-latter day, in the approving declaration of your Lord; “Inasmuch as ye
-have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it
-unto Me:” {384} greatest in heaven, where we shall be made “perfect in
-love;” in the love of God, and of the holy angels, and all His redeemed
-people, for ever and ever.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XXI.
-ON SEEKING OUT THE WORKS OF THE LORD AND PRAISING HIM.
-
-
- PSALM cxi. 1. 2.
-
- _I will give thanks unto the Lord with my whole heart_; _in the
- assembly of the upright and in the congregation_.
-
- _The works of the Lord are great_, _sought out of all them that have
- pleasure therein_.
-
-ONE of the greatest hindrances to the Christian life, in the true
-believer, is his perpetual intermixture with the world, his constant
-occupation with the business of his daily calling, with earthly pleasures
-and pursuits. The world, in its very nature, in the spirit which it
-breathes, in the cares which it engenders, in the temptations which it
-spreads, stands in opposition to the gospel, to the Christian’s walk with
-God; it unfits his mind for spiritual contemplation; it gives him a
-disrelish for holy delights; it calls aside his thoughts from God, from
-heaven, and from heavenly things; and makes him forget his obligation to,
-and dependence upon, the merciful and over-ruling providence of the Most
-High.
-
-And yet it is undoubtedly our duty to live in the world; to partake, in a
-certain degree, of its pleasures, as well as of its labours and cares.
-It is the will and decree of God, that mankind should provide “by the
-sweat of their brow” for their subsistence and well-being in life:
-integrity and industry in the exercise of our calling are among the
-appointed means, by which we must “Work out our salvation.” Since
-therefore we are obliged to mix with the world, our great object should
-be, to guard against its engrossing and corrupting influence; to retain
-all our possessions in a spirit of humble and constant reliance upon the
-sovereign power and disposal of the Almighty; to be lifting up our
-hearts, in the course of our daily employment, above all secular
-concerns, to the author of our being, to the giver of our talents and our
-time, to the judge of all our actions. And besides, some portion of each
-day must be distinctly set apart for holy reading, meditation, and
-prayer. Without such rules and observances, the christian principle
-cannot possibly be maintained; faith and zeal will grow cold, the
-communion with God be gradually impaired, the affections estranged, and
-the obedience destroyed.
-
-These remarks may serve to introduce an exposition of the 2nd verse of
-the text. “The works of the Lord are great:” yet great as they are, they
-cannot be understood nor perceived by those, who are absorbed in earthly
-ideas and pursuits. The attention will thus be entirely drawn off from a
-contemplation of the works of Jehovah; and the mind will entirely rest
-upon its own labours and objects. To our own hand and our own arm, to
-our own skill and enterprise, to our own advantage and honour, we shall
-refer all the transactions of life, and all the success and enjoyment
-with which we are blessed. The dealings of our heavenly Father, both
-with ourselves and with the world around us, will be utterly overlooked;
-and however we may believe, as a speculative truth, that His “providence
-orders and governs all things both in heaven and earth,” we shall be in
-no way improved or affected by that belief; in fact, we shall have no
-real or practical persuasion of His providential government: we shall be
-blind to His manifold mercies vouchsafed to ourselves, to our brethren,
-and to the Church at large.
-
-The works of the Lord must be “sought out;” that is, they must be
-mindfully and diligently observed, in order to their being adequately
-understood; nay, if we would know any thing of their vastness or their
-excellency. We must be continually looking beyond human motives, human
-exertions, human experience, if we would in any measure, comprehend or
-perceive the merciful interpositions and dealings of God. We must be in
-the constant habit of connecting the ordinary operations and occurrences
-of life with a higher power, with the counsel and government of heaven; a
-gracious promise is given, that “all things shall work together for good
-to them that love God;” and we must be always endeavouring to trace this
-working, and observe the striking manner in which this effect is
-produced. We shall thus be able to perceive, how continually our
-merciful Father is watching over us, is crowning our honest designs and
-labours with success, and is bringing good even out of evil itself. We
-shall perceive, how wonderfully He directs us to the most suitable means
-of accomplishing our laudable purposes: how He over-rules those events,
-over which we had no controul, for our benefit and prosperity; how He
-raises up to us friends and fellow-workers, when we least expected them;
-and provides us comforters, where we looked for none; how, in the season
-of danger, of which we are not even aware, He spreads over us the shield
-of safety, and we come forth unhurt; how He compels the designs, even of
-our enemies themselves, to minister in the end to our advantage; how, in
-the various calamities and sorrows, privations and disappointments,
-sicknesses and pains, which He does permit to befal us, He brings us
-consolation under them, and makes us to see and acknowledge, that what we
-lamented as a grievance, is turned into a signal blessing. And whenever,
-in any of our concerns or experiences, we fail to trace the mercy of God,
-it is, for the most part, because we do not sufficiently seek it out;
-because we are resting in our own short-sighted views; because we are
-“walking by sight and not by faith,” in “the flesh and not in the
-spirit;” desiring benefit in our own ways, and not humbly discerning the
-ways of the Lord; impatient under the means, and not considering the end;
-looking at the earthly instrument and agent, and forgetting the prime
-Mover of all.
-
-What I am seeking to recommend to you is this, not a mere principle or
-matter of belief, but the importance of a constant, daily observance of
-the events and transactions of life, in reference to the almighty power
-and goodness of God. It is a point not attended to, even by many sincere
-Christians, as it ought to be; as to the generality, day after day passes
-by, without any such reference at all. Every thing proceeds, in their
-notion and view, from their own will and work, from the good or evil
-working of others; and they are affected accordingly; rejoicing or
-complaining, elevated or cast down. They have no consideration of the
-great Ruler and Preserver; they might almost be said to “live without God
-in the world;” it amounts, at least, to a practical disowning of His
-providence.
-
-But I must repeat, that even from many sincere Christians this great
-influential doctrine does not receive all the attention, which its
-importance demands. They are convinced, that “the works of the Lord are
-great;” that His mighty operations are continually manifested, in the
-moral and spiritual government of mankind; but they do not sufficiently
-carry this conviction into their own daily walk in life. Far would we be
-from implying, that such reflections ought, in any way, to interfere with
-our circumspection or diligence in worldly concerns; or that we are
-familiarly to mix up religious observations with ordinary business or
-pleasure; but we should have a mind and heart ever open to perceive the
-gracious interpositions and visitations of heaven; we should be alive to
-every providential deliverance from accident or danger, both in ourselves
-and others: to the vouchsafement of every blessing, both temporal and
-spiritual. And they, who are thus disposed and ready, will find many
-opportunities drawing them to God: many circumstances and events, which
-they once regarded somewhat in the light of chance, they will then
-clearly ascribe to the sure, though silent working of that invisible
-power, by which every thing in the universe is governed and sustained.
-
-But the works of the Lord are “sought out” by those only, “who have
-pleasure therein:” and this will explain to us the true cause, why such
-lamentable numbers of professed believers seldom or never seek them out
-at all. They have no _pleasure_ in their thoughts upon the Almighty:
-they love Him not, serve Him not with a devoted and delighted heart;
-their conscience is uneasy and self-condemning, and therefore they
-reluctantly turn their thoughts to their great Sovereign and Judge; it is
-rather a pain than a pleasure to them, so to do. “Loving the world and
-the things of the world,” they have no taste for spiritual enjoyment of
-any kind: in extraordinary emergencies, when the interference of an
-over-ruling power is irresistibly thrust upon their notice, they do not
-refuse to join with their brethren in acknowledging the fact: but as for
-searching out His ways and dealings in their daily experience, they are
-decidedly disinclined and averse to it; the injunction of such a practice
-is repugnant to their views and feelings and desires.
-
-Nor can any, but the pious and faithful servant of God, find delight in
-this holy and profitable exercise: and the longer he lives, the more
-clearly he perceives the hand of the Almighty in every thing; in
-discomfiting the evil and blessing the good: he sees and admires the
-wonders of grace, as well as the wonders of providence, vouchsafed to
-others as well as himself; to the Church in all ages. He reads, in the
-word of truth, of the signal manner, in which the Lord has delivered His
-people from the foundation of the world; not only by the miraculous
-interposition of His omnipotent arm; but also in the ordinary course of
-His dealings with them. How merciful and manifold have been His ways of
-enlightening them when in ignorance, and converting them when in sin.
-How pitifully and patiently has He borne, not only with their
-infirmities, but with their guilt and rebellion; and graciously reclaimed
-them from the path of error and ruin, by the mercies of His chastising
-rod. Nor do the defeat and destruction of wicked men afford less
-decisive proof, than the deliverance of the righteous, of the greatness
-of the Lord’s works: the whole history of the Church shews Him to have
-been great in justice, as in mercy: and, we may add, in truth also.
-Often indeed have the promises of divine favour, and the denunciations of
-vengeance, been fulfilled in the most unexpected and marvellous manner;
-by instruments apparently altogether unequal to the momentous object
-designed. But “the Lord worked for His people; and there is no restraint
-to the Lord to save by many or by few.” {395}
-
-And amongst his friends and brethren in the Lord, the christian also
-beholds many satisfactory and encouraging instances of the working of
-heavenly power: he sees them advancing in their spiritual course,
-steadier in principle, and improved in character, “growing in grace and
-in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.” And wherever he
-observes the increase of true religion, there he also finds, to his
-heart’s delight, a correspondent increase of contentment and happiness;
-the power of the gospel is manifest before him, in the altered characters
-and lives of men; and in all this, he perceives and admires the gracious
-operations of a merciful God.
-
-But the christian is best acquainted with himself; studies the most
-narrowly his own conduct, and life; he judges indeed, with deep humility,
-of the manifestation of divine power in his behalf, sincerely conscious
-of his undeservings; still he can truly bear witness that in his own
-case, his own experience also, the works of the Lord have been great.
-Though still far, in spirit and in character, from what he ought to be
-and would be; he finds himself continually gaining the mastery over his
-evil affections and habits, and drawing nearer to God; perpetually
-advancing in holiness, as in knowledge; more “hungering and thirsting
-after righteousness, and more filled;” taking more delight in spiritual
-ordinances, and shewing the fruit of them in his life and conversation.
-And when he considers his own sinful nature, and the powerful enemies
-opposed to him, he cannot but ascribe this change in his heart, this
-improvement in his conduct, to the mighty workings of heavenly grace.
-Unworthy as he is of God’s favour, he does find a well-spring of comfort
-established in his soul; comfort at all times, especially in the hour of
-tribulation; either he is provided with the means of deliverance, or the
-tribulation itself is converted into a blessing. He is also made in many
-ways, the instrument of benefit to others, to his family or friends; and
-every door of usefulness that is opened to him, he gratefully
-acknowledges to be opened of the Lord. In all the good he receives or
-does, and all the evil he escapes or prevents, he traces the power and
-mercy of his God; “not unto me, O Lord, not unto me, but unto Thy name be
-the glory and the praise.” Thus he imitates the conduct of the Psalmist,
-recorded in the text; “I will give thanks unto the Lord with my whole
-heart:” it is not a formal service, not a partial tribute, not a
-reluctant offering: all the powers of his understanding and all the
-affections of his soul are employed in magnifying the majesty and
-loving-kindness of the “author and giver of every good gift.”
-
-And the grateful Christian imitates the Psalmist yet farther; he does not
-hide the sense of God’s goodness within his own bosom; nor confine the
-mention of it to the narrow boundary of his closet; but declares it
-openly as opportunity serves; first of all “in the assembly of the
-upright,” or, according to the better version of the Prayer Book,
-“secretly among the faithful;” in the company of his family and his
-religious friends. When he has experienced or observed the peculiar
-mercies of his almighty and merciful Father, he delights to speak of
-them; though with humility, yet with fervour and joy. Such is the
-natural disposition of man, when he feels deeply the obligation of
-benefits conferred: if an earthly friend has enriched or favoured him, he
-thankfully makes mention of the kindness: and shall he do less for the
-abundant, the infinite goodness of his God? Shall he not rejoice to
-proclaim it in the very overflowing of his heart?
-
-There are persons, who would draw a line of distinction between the two
-cases; and say, that our obligations to God should be felt only, and our
-obligations to man should be both felt and proclaimed. It is probable,
-that such observations, however sincerely made, generally proceed from
-the want of spirituality of heart: there is an aversion to the
-introduction of religious topics, however sober or seasonable. That they
-are often indiscreetly introduced, often in a spirit of
-self-righteousness, and fanatical pretension, we cannot deny: but the
-abuse of any holy exercise is not to prevent us from the use. Look at
-the recorded lives of any pious Christians, of those who are held up to
-us as patterns of righteousness, whom in fact we profess to admire; and
-see how ready and forward they were, on all occasions, to speak of the
-manifold works which God had wrought for them, of the kindness which they
-had experienced at His hands. The Psalms are full of such expressions
-and resolutions: the text is a decided instance: let it have its effect
-upon us: let every one who has been favoured of the Lord, delight to be
-“talking of His doings:” not intrusively, not boastingly, as if he were a
-special favourite of heaven; as if he would make it appear, that the Lord
-were kinder to him than to others: but with simplicity and singleness of
-mind. The true believer abhors the two extremes, of spiritual pride on
-the one hand; and of cold-hearted insensibility on the other. He feels
-himself all undeserving of the bounty of the Lord, and is astonished that
-it should be so bestowed upon _him_, who is “not worthy to gather up the
-crumbs under his master’s table;” but the bounty _is_ bestowed, and he
-cannot let it pass unnoticed or undeclared.
-
-Again, the Psalmist says, “in the assembly of the upright and in the
-congregation.” He vows, that not only in the company of his faithful
-friends, but also in the great congregation, in the holy temple, the
-power and mercy of Jehovah shall be publicly proclaimed. {401} Not that
-any particular acts, of providence or grace, could be there mentioned by
-name; but that the thankfulness, which he feels for them, would put new
-life and energy into his praises, in the House of God. And this also we
-shall do well to imitate; this we shall assuredly imitate, if we have the
-true spirit of faith and piety. At all times, the sincere worshipper has
-so powerful a sense of the divine goodness in his heart, as to preserve
-him, in his public thanksgivings, from indifference and languor; but
-there are times, when he is visited with peculiar favour, with signal
-deliverances and blessings; and the remembrance of them will inspire him,
-when he next visits the temple of the Lord, with more than ordinary
-ardour; “out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaketh;” and as
-his love and gratitude rise, his tribute of praise will ascend, in a
-loftier strain, to the fountain of mercy, to the throne of grace.
-
-And God will hear him, and accept the free-will offering; he will return
-from worship in a holier frame, and with a more heavenly temper; the
-incense which he has been wafting to the skies, will leave a fragrance
-behind, and spread to his character; and he will be rendered meet,
-through the grace and intercession of his Redeemer, for further
-manifestations of divine love. And O still better fruit, still happier
-effects of his devout thanksgiving! he will be preparing his soul for
-more exalted praises in the world to come, amid the countless multitude
-of worshippers, in the courts of the Lamb; where the holy-angels and the
-glorified saints shall rejoice together, in seeking out and recounting
-the surpassing love of God to His church and people, to His universal
-creation in all ages. Exulting in the light divine, and sharing together
-the blessedness of the Saviour’s triumph, praise shall be their constant
-employment; and the vaults of heaven shall eternally echo with this their
-joyful theme, “Great and marvellous are Thy works. Lord God Almighty;
-just and true are Thy ways, Thou King of Saints.” {403}
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XXII.
-DILIGENCE AND PERSEVERANCE IN THE CHRISTIAN RACE.
-
-
- PHILIPP. iii. 13, 14.
-
- _Brethren_, _I count not myself to have apprehended_; _but this one
- thing I do_, _forgetting those things which are behind_, _and
- reaching forth unto those things which are before_, _I press toward
- the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus_.
-
-FROM what St. Paul had said in a few verses before, he feared, lest he
-should have seemed to make himself sure of salvation, without the
-necessity of any further anxiety or labour; as if he might rest quietly
-satisfied with his present views and attainments; and had nothing to do,
-but to wait for the certain result. And truly, if such confidence and
-relaxation could ever have been justified, it must have been in the case
-of this apostle; witness the sacrifices which he had made for the gospel;
-his unswerving and invincible faith; his holiness of character; his
-unparallelled labours; and the many signal marks of divine blessing, with
-which he had been distinguished.
-
-But still, he was far from presuming in this way; and the resolution
-which he expresses in the text, and the account which he gives of his own
-spirit and conduct, may furnish us with a very suitable lesson, and teach
-us the absolute necessity of continued watchfulness and diligence and
-perseverance unto the end; may teach us, that we are not, as the prophet
-Ezekiel expresses it, to “_trust_ in our own righteousness;” {405} in any
-principles we have formed, any views we have entertained, any holiness we
-have acquired, any experiences with which we have been blessed; and thus
-grow heedless and secure: but, that the further we advance, the more we
-must be convinced of the need of exertion; the more we shall find to do,
-and the more we shall be enabled to do: who loiters, loses; loses the
-advantage of the ground he has gone over; loses the means of a victorious
-and successful accomplishment.
-
-It will be improving, to those, who listen with humble and teachable
-hearts, who spiritually receive the word of God as the teaching of the
-Spirit of God, if we repeat a considerable portion of the important
-passage connected with the text; let us begin then with the 7th verse.
-“What things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ, yea
-doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the
-knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord; for whom I have suffered the loss of
-all things, (all earthly things) and do count them but dung, (as mere
-refuse and worthlessness) that I may win Christ and be found in Him, not
-having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is
-through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith:
-That I may know Him and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship
-of His sufferings, being made conformable to His death, (by dying to sin
-that I may live to God;) if by any means I might attain to the
-resurrection of the dead,” (to that perfect felicity, to which the saints
-are admitted at the resurrection.) From these words, it might have
-appeared to some, as if the apostle had expected his great object to be
-already accomplished; as if he had arrived at a state of faith and
-holiness, by which he had actually secured this felicity, independently
-of any further vigilance or labour: and therefore he immediately adds, by
-way of caution and correction: “Not as though I had already attained,
-either were already perfect; but I follow after, (keep following after
-the object before me,) if that I may apprehend _that_, (may lay hold of
-_that_ prize,) for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus;” (for
-which He, as it were, has graciously laid hold of me, arresting me in my
-course of blindness and obstinacy, as a malignant persecutor of Him and
-His gospel.) Then follows the text; “Brethren, I count not myself to
-have apprehended;” I reckon not upon the prize as actually won; however
-high and fervent my hope, however undoubted my assurance of ultimate
-success, I cannot be careless, I must not diminish my anxiety or
-activity; my hope can only be sustained in proportion to my vigour in the
-contest; success must depend upon my unbending resolution and unabating
-constancy: the victory is not gained in the middle of the course, and
-cannot be gained till it is finished.
-
-Many of us, no doubt, are aware, that the apostles, as well as our
-blessed Lord, were in the habit of drawing their observations and modes
-of instruction from the common transactions of daily life; from the
-circumstances, by which they were surrounded; from the manners and
-customs of the people, amongst whom they sojourned. Thus, when our Lord
-called Peter and Andrew, who were fishermen, to be His disciples, He
-said, “Follow me and I will make you fishers of men.” And St. Paul, on
-the occasion before us, alludes to certain games or sports, generally
-celebrated, and highly esteemed by the people, whom he was addressing.
-One of these games was the foot-race, in which a number of competitors
-contended together for the prize; and, in the result of which, they and
-their friends were deeply interested. Severe was the previous training,
-which it was necessary for them to undergo; and great and persevering the
-exertion necessary, in order to gain the prize. It would readily occur
-to their minds, that if the racer, who was out-stripping his opponents,
-were so to please himself by the advantage he had gained, by thinking of
-the ground he had successfully gone over, as to relinquish his efforts,
-as to stop and look back upon his wonderful feats, and indolently enjoy
-his satisfaction, that, by such folly he would soon lose his superiority,
-that his past endeavours would have been to little or no purpose; it
-would be perfectly manifest to them, that nothing could ensure his
-success, but the continuance of that activity, which had placed him
-foremost in the trial.
-
-Agreeably to this view and this figure, the apostle took his resolution,
-and formed his principle and conduct in the christian race. “This one
-thing I do;” this is the unswerving purpose of my soul, this the plan and
-object by which my whole course is constantly regulated; “forgetting
-those things which are behind, and reaching forth, (stretching out and
-forward all the faculties of my body and soul) to those things which are
-before, I press toward the mark.” Great and successful as his
-attainments already were, he did not dwell upon them with a complacence
-and security, which should induce him to relax; on the contrary, he
-forgot them, in the comparison and prospect of the exertions which yet
-remained.
-
-And how much less reason have we, my brethren, to be satisfied with our
-past character, with any thing that we have already achieved. Woe to me!
-(may many of us say,) how large a portion of my time has been consumed in
-indifference and trifling! how long was it before I earnestly set out in
-the race at all! and even after it was begun, I proceeded carelessly and
-supinely, as if the prize had not been worth contending for. How idly
-and insufficiently did I prepare for the contest; expecting to gain the
-victory without a sacrifice or a struggle! yea, and perhaps the best of
-us may look rather with shame than satisfaction upon our christian
-attainments: how much further might we have advanced, than we have done,
-if we had commenced the good work in earlier life, or been more diligent:
-how much more enlightened might our minds have now been, had we more
-fervently sought, and more implicitly yielded to, the teaching of the
-Spirit of God; had we been more frequently and earnestly “searching the
-scriptures,” more devout in meditation and more constant in prayer: how
-much more purified our hearts, and “cleansed from all unrighteousness,”
-by a more sincere and unqualified subjection to the divine will; how much
-higher our affections elevated, had they been more conversant with
-heaven; how much more firmly and blamelessly our feet have been fixed in
-the way of God’s commandments, in all the blessed ordinances of the
-gospel, in the narrow path of life eternal, had we been more zealously
-and faithfully walking with God. Nearer should we have been drawn to
-Him, in holier and happier communion, had we not been so long, and so
-often, cold and remiss.
-
-No, my brethren, we have no reason to be dwelling, with such delight and
-confidence, upon the progress we have already made, as to feel ourselves
-privileged to be content. In no case, would this be considered the
-evidence of a true christian principle or view; in no case, would it be
-the means of safety; nor even consistent with the hope of salvation; no,
-not even in an apostle; much less in us, whose faith is so weak, whose
-knowledge so moderate, whose resolutions so wavering, whose attainments
-so comparatively poor. On the contrary, we should sorrow over our past
-failings; be deeply affected on considering how far we have come short of
-what was required of us; and heartily desire and pray, that the grievous
-remembrance may stimulate us to fresh endeavours, with a “new heart and a
-new spirit;” that so we may be “reaching forth to those things which are
-before.” All that we have well done, and all that we have left undone,
-should have, for this purpose, the same effect; experiencing the blessed
-consequences of our holy labour, on the one hand, we should be animated
-and encouraged to persevere in the conflict, that we may gather thereby
-additional comfort and success; and sensible of our deficiencies, on the
-other hand, in a work of such inconceivable and everlasting importance,
-we should be anxious to repair our neglect; and thankful for our
-opportunity of “redeeming the time,” and making further advances.
-
-Thank God, whatever our negligence may have been, all is not lost; the
-course is yet before us, and we may go onward in the spirit and strength
-of the Lord; the prize is yet before us, and it may be won. But it
-requires a full purpose of heart, a fixed determination, an undaunted
-courage, a strenuous exercise of every faculty and every nerve: all that
-we are, and have, must be devoted to the securing of the one great
-object. All the talents of reason, with which our Creator has endued us;
-all the energy of grace, with which our souls are supplied, must
-incessantly be brought to bear upon our high and holy calling. We must
-be daily and hourly proceeding; no lingering, longing looks upon the
-world we are leaving behind us; no loitering amid its vanities and
-follies; no backsliding to its sinful pleasures and pursuits; no
-declining from the strict line of duty, as if it were become wearisome,
-as if it were not fully believed to be right or requisite: “the just
-shall live by faith, but if any man draw back, my soul shall have no
-pleasure in him. But we are not of them who draw back unto perdition;
-but of them who believe to the saving of the soul.” {415}
-
-St. Paul says, “I press toward the mark;” alluding to the mark, or line,
-drawn across the end of the course, to shew where it terminated. The end
-of our course is death; that is the mark, to which we must constantly
-press; never, till we reach it, can our striving be over, can the victory
-be gained. If we perceive ourselves languishing or weary, if the enemy
-of our souls would tempt us, as he undoubtedly will do, to indolence or
-repose, let us instantly pray to our Almighty Father, for a double
-portion of His Holy Spirit, and he will enable us to renew our vigour,
-and maintain our stedfastness. Yea, though the race be so protracted,
-that our limbs may be growing feeble with age, and our vital energies
-decaying, still we shall be inspirited with a courage and strength, that
-will be found abundantly sufficient; and as we near the end, our hopes
-will rise, and our prospect will brighten; the weakness of nature will be
-assisted and compensated by a merciful increase of faith; and we shall
-press onward, through the latter part of the trial, with holier
-confidence and fuller expectation.
-
-And all this, “for the prize of our high calling in Christ Jesus.” What
-was it, that led the people of former days, to enter into the list, and
-engage in the race? Why were they content to undergo such previous
-hardships and privations, in order to qualify them for the task? Why did
-they exert themselves in the contest, so laboriously and painfully, as if
-willing to sacrifice their lives in the struggle? It was for a little
-crown of withering leaves; for the honour of their countrymen’s applause;
-and the approval of their families and friends. How then do they put to
-shame the negligent and indifferent christian; him that refuses to train
-and labour for the conflict of life, for the cause of salvation! What is
-our prize? what are our objects? “an incorruptible crown,” a “crown of
-glory that fadeth not away;” an eternal inheritance in the heavens; the
-approbation of all good men; the welcome acclaim of a “multitude of
-angels which no man can number;” the approval, the everlasting reward of
-the Judge of our christian race. Are not these objects worthy of our
-supreme regard? Is not this worth contending for? Does it not demand
-all our attention, all our anxiety, all our watchfulness and diligence
-and labour? Should not our whole soul be devoted thereto? Ought it not
-to be, comparatively speaking, the sole purpose, for which we care to
-live and hope to die?
-
-Especially when we consider the consequences of our failure, in this
-great enterprise and work. He that lost the earthly race, lost little;
-perhaps it was somewhat of an honour for him to have contended at all:
-but he, who loses the christian race, loses every thing; loses his own
-soul, his precious immortal soul; defeat will be ruin, eternal misery and
-perdition. He that lost the earthly prize on one occasion, might run for
-another on a future day: but when once the spiritual race is run, when we
-have arrived at the mark, at the goal, at the gate of death, no further
-trial will then be vouchsafed; there will never be another opportunity.
-Anxiously perhaps we may desire it; and resolve, as we find ourselves
-approaching to the border of eternity, that if we could be permitted to
-continue our race for a little season, we would “use all diligence” for a
-successful termination; to gain the great prize we appear to be losing:
-but the desire will be vain. We knew the nature of the prize before; we
-knew what was necessary in order to gain it; we declined and refused; we
-chose the broad and easy way of idleness and sin: the night will be come,
-and there will be no more working.
-
-O that before, that long before this time shall come, all our hearts may
-be thoroughly fixed upon the high calling of our God; upon that blessed
-revelation of the gospel, which calls us to life and immortality. O that
-the heart of every hearer may be fixed this day, so as never to be
-diverted from the holy and heavenly purpose; so as to be filled with a
-zeal and ardour, that shall never be extinguished; with invincible
-courage, and irremovable confidence; so that we may never “be weary of
-well-doing,” but persevere unto the end.
-
-The Saviour, on His lofty throne, calls us by _His word_, which announces
-the glorious prize and the conditions of the race; by _His spirit_,
-“which is striving with us;” by His _heralds_ and _messengers_, warning,
-animating, exhorting, persuading; He promises strength for the contest
-and victory in the end, to all who will engage in the great cause, with
-earnestness and sincerity. Awake, arise, we have nothing to fear: “the
-Lord is with us; who shall be against us?” who shall let or hinder?
-Listen, listen to the invitation and the promise! Take them for your
-government and your comfort; “so run as to obtain;” so, that on arriving
-at the end of the christian course, you may be calmly delighted to
-behold, with the eye of faith the crown of victory and of glory, ready to
-be placed upon your head. Often indeed are we permitted to behold the
-evident superiority of grace, at the latter hour; the peculiar accordance
-of divine mercy and strength, triumphing over the weakness of expiring
-nature: many pious Christians have then openly exhibited the most
-undoubted and convincing tokens of heavenly assurance and support; their
-Lord thus manifestly affording them an anticipation of their “crown of
-rejoicing,” and cheering them before their dissolution.
-
-At this awful hour, there may be, and doubtless are, differences of
-spiritual experience in different individuals: but whatever, when we are
-ceasing to labour, be the foretaste of that rest, “which remaineth for
-the people of God;” whatever, when we are setting our foot upon the goal,
-be the outward and visible sign of approaching glory; sure we may be, if
-faithful unto death, that we shall soon enter upon that rest and that
-glory; but a small moment is remaining: the prize is ready at our
-departure: heaven will rejoice over us; the spirits of just men made
-perfect, (many whose names we have honoured, some whom we have seen and
-loved) will rejoice over us; and _we_ shall rejoice with them for ever.
-
- * * * * *
-
- FINIS.
-
- * * * * *
-
- J. GARDNER, PRINTER, BOLTON.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES.
-
-
-{vii} These Sermons, though written for particular Sundays, are most of
-them generally applicable; indeed all of them, with very slight
-alterations or omissions.
-
-{4} Isaiah, ix. 2. Matt. iv. 16.
-
-{5} Eph. iv. 18.
-
-{7} 1 Cor. i, 26–29.
-
-{8} Isai. xxvi. 19.
-
-{9a} Isai lii. 1–3.
-
-{9b} Isai. lx. 1–3.
-
-{10} Matt. ii. 1.
-
-{12} Matt. vi. 23.
-
-{13} 2 Cor. v. 20.
-
-{18} John i. 9.
-
-{19} Col. iii. 3.
-
-{21} 1 Cor. ii. 9.
-
-{23} Eph. iii. 5–9.
-
-{26a} John xvii. 5.
-
-{26b} Philipp. ii. 7.
-
-{26c} John i. 1. 14.
-
-{29a} 1 Tim. iii. 16.
-
-{29b} Rom. v. 8.
-
-{29c} 1 Pet. iii. 18.
-
-{32} Prov. iii. 17.
-
-{34a} Matt. xxv. 34.
-
-{34b} 2 Pet. iii. 13.
-
-{36} Col. i. 12–20.
-
-{39} Acts xv. 18.
-
-{43a} Gen. vi. 3.
-
-{43b} 1 Pet. iii. 20.
-
-{50a} Acts ix. 6.
-
-{50b} 1 Sam. iii. 9.
-
-{53a} Matt. xxiv. 37–39.
-
-{53b} 2 Pet. iii. 5–7.
-
-{54a} 2 Pet. iii. 13, 14.
-
-{54b} 1 Thess. iv. 17.
-
-{55} Eph. iv. 30.
-
-{57} Heb. xi. 7.
-
-{59} Heb. vii. 26.
-
-{60a} Gen. vi. 9.
-
-{60b} Psal. xvi. 8.
-
-{60c} Psal. cxix. 105.
-
-{62a} Gen. vi. 17, 18.
-
-{62b} Gen. ix. 9–11.
-
-{63} Wells’s Paraphr. on Gen. vi. 18.
-
-{65} Gen. vii, viii.
-
-{69} Gen. viii. 13–21.
-
-{71} Ps. ciii. 1–4.
-
-{73} Psal. lxxxix. 37.
-
-{75} Rev. iv. 1–3.
-
-{78} Gen. xxxix. 1–4.
-
-{80} Gen. xxxix. 8.
-
-{89a} The season of Lent.
-
-{89b} Ps. cxxxix. 24.
-
-{90a} Heb. xii. 1.
-
-{90b} Rom. ii. 4.
-
-{92} Eph. vi. 10–13.
-
-{96} Luke xxiv. 15, 16.
-
-{101} Luke xxiv. 18–21.
-
-{102} Luke xxiv. 25, 26.
-
-{103a} Matt. xvi. 16.
-
-{103b} Luke xxiv. 27.
-
-{104a} Luke xxiv. 28, 29.
-
-{104b} Deut. vi. 7.
-
-{105a} Ps. xvi. 8.
-
-{105b} Matt. xvii. 20.
-
-{105c} Luke xxiv. 30, 31.
-
-{107} Psal. cxix. 18.
-
-{108} Phil. iii. 20.
-
-{113a} Psal. lxiii. 1.
-
-{113b} Eph. iii. 18, 19.
-
-{117a} John ix. 4.
-
-{117b} Micah vi. 8.
-
-{125} Art. x.
-
-{130a} Isaiah lv. 6.
-
-{130b} Prov. i. 26.
-
-{132} Heb. iii. 15.
-
-{136} Psal. lxxiii. 25.
-
-{137} Second Sunday after Trinity.
-
-{138a} Psal. cxi. 10.
-
-{138b} Psal. lxxxv. 9.
-
-{138c} Malach. iv. 2.
-
-{138d} Acts x. 35.
-
-{138e} Luke i. 50.
-
-{139} Psalm viii. 4.
-
-{144} Lev. xix. 2.
-
-{145} 1 Peter i. 15.
-
-{148} Rom. viii. 35–39.
-
-{149a} Heb. x. 22.
-
-{149b} Heb. vi. 11.
-
-{150a} Tit. ii. 4.
-
-{150b} Col. i. 12.
-
-{152} 1 John iii. 2.
-
-{158} Isaiah xlv. 9, lxiv. 8.
-
-{161a} 1 Sam. ii. 6–9.
-
-{161b} Isaiah lvi. 12.
-
-{161c} Prov. xxiii. 5.
-
-{168} Psal. xxx. 5.
-
-{169} Isaiah liv. 7, 8.
-
-{171} Psal. exxvi. 5.
-
-{174} 2 Sam. xii. 1–5.
-
-{177} Isaiah v. 20.
-
-{178} 1 Sam. xiii. 14; Acts xiii. 22.
-
-{179} 1 Cor. ix. 27.
-
-{181a} Jeremiah xvii. 9.
-
-{181b} 1 Cor. x. 12.
-
-{183} Rom. vi. 1, 2.
-
-{185} 2 Pet. iii. 18.
-
-{188} Lament. v. 21.
-
-{192a} Isaiah lxvi. 24.
-
-{192b} Dan. xii. 2.
-
-{193a} Jer. v.2; Is. vi. 10.
-
-{193b} Prov. viii. 36.
-
-{193c} Prov. xiv. 12.
-
-{194a} Rom. viii. 13.
-
-{194b} Rev. ii. 11. xx. 14. Pol. Syn. in loco.
-
-{195} Ezek. xviii. 20–23.
-
-{197} Ezek. xviii. 21, 22.
-
-{198a} Heb. xi. 6.
-
-{198b} Habbak. ii. 4; Rom. i. 17; Gal. iii. 18; Heb. x. 38.
-
-{199} Isaiah i. 18.
-
-{200a} 1 John ii. 1.
-
-{200b} 1 John i. 9.
-
-{200c} 2 Pet. iii. 9.
-
-{200d} John vi. 37.
-
-{202} Eph. v. 14.
-
-{204} Ezek. xviii. 24.
-
-{205a} Luke xi. 24–26.
-
-{205b} Heb. vi. 4.
-
-{206a} 1 Cor. x. 12.
-
-{206b} 2 Pet. i. 10.
-
-{206c} Heb. x. 38.
-
-{207a} Rom. viii. 37.
-
-{207b} Rom. ix. 20.
-
-{207c} Gen. xviii. 25.
-
-{207d} Isaiah xlv. 22.
-
-{208a} Rom. viii. 32.
-
-{208b} Tit. ii. 11.
-
-{208c} 1 John i. 7.
-
-{208d} Psalm lviii. 11.
-
-{211} Col. iii. 20.
-
-{213a} Isaiah l. 10.
-
-{213b} Ezek. xxxiii. 11.
-
-{214a} Ezek. xi. 19, 20; xxxvi. 26.
-
-{214b} Ezek. xviii. 31.
-
-{214c} Lev. xix, 2; Numb. xvi. 5; Heb. xii. 14.
-
-{218} John vi. 27.
-
-{220} Phil. ii. 12, 13.
-
-{226a} Luke i. 6.
-
-{226b} Tit. ii. 12.
-
-{227a} Gen. ii. 7.
-
-{227b} 1 Cor. xii. 11.
-
-{229a} 2 Cor. v. 17.
-
-{229b} Rom. xii. 9.
-
-{229c} Acts xxvi. 18.
-
-{231} Prov. ix. 16.
-
-{232a} Isaiah xxv. 6.
-
-{232b} Luke xxii. 29, 30.
-
-{233a} Matt. iii. 8–10.
-
-{233b} Heb. iii. 12.
-
-{234a} 2 Cor. iv. 4.
-
-{234b} Isaiah xliv. 20.
-
-{234c} John iii. 19.
-
-{236} Joel ii. 28, 29; Acts ii. 17, 18.
-
-{242a} Acts iv. 12.
-
-{242b} 1 Cor. iii. 11.
-
-{243a} Isaiah lv. 1–7.
-
-{243b} Zechar. xiii. 1.
-
-{251a} Rev. xxi. 23.
-
-{251b} Psalm xvi. 11.
-
-{260} 2 Cor. iii. 5.
-
-{262} Eph. iv. 1.
-
-{265} James ii. 10.
-
-{267} Matt. xiii. 12.
-
-{269} 2 Pet. iii. 18.
-
-{291} Matt. xxiv. 3–8.
-
-{302a} Tit. ii. 12.
-
-{302b} Gal. vi. 8
-
-{304} 2 Sam. 1. 23.
-
-{305a} Rom. viii. 6.
-
-{305b} Ezek. xviii. 20.
-
-{307} Rom. ii. 16.
-
-{308} 2 Cor. v. 10.
-
-{309} Thess. iv. 17.
-
-{311} Eccl. i. 14, 15.
-
-{314} Gen. i. 31.
-
-{315} Gen. i. 27.
-
-{317} 1 John ii. 16.
-
-{322} Jer. xlv. 5.
-
-{327a} Gen. ii. 16, 17
-
-{327b} Acts xvi. 31.
-
-{327c} Col. iii. 2.
-
-{328a} Jer. ii. 13.
-
-{328b} Rom. xii. 2.
-
-{328c} Rom. vi. 22.
-
-{331a} Prov. ii. 6. 9.
-
-{331b} 1 Cor. ii. 9.
-
-{334} 1 Cor. ii. 13, 14.
-
-{338} John xiv. 21–26.
-
-{341} Heb. vi. 5.
-
-{342} Matt. v. 4.
-
-{347} Prov. iv. 18, 19.
-
-{348} 1 Cor. xiii. 12.
-
-{358} Col. ii. 5.
-
-{364} Matt. xxvi. 41.
-
-{365a} 2 Tim. ii. 26.
-
-{365b} 1 Pet. iv. 7.
-
-{367a} John 11. 35, 36.
-
-{367b} John xiii. 23; xxi. 20.
-
-{373} Psal. xxviii. 10.
-
-{374a} Rom. viii. 29.
-
-{374b} 1 Cor. xv. 20.
-
-{374c} 1 Joh. iii. 12.
-
-{374d} Luke xx. 36.
-
-{377} John xiv. 15–21.
-
-{379} 1 Tim. v. 8.
-
-{384} Matt. xxv. 40.
-
-{395} 1 Sam. xiv. 6.
-
-{401} I will make my thankful acknowledgments to the Lord, not only with
-my lips, or with some slight affections of my mind, but with all my heart
-and soul; and that not only in the private society of those good men,
-whom I am more intimately acquainted withal, but in the public
-congregation of all His people.—_Bishop Patrick_.
-
-{403} Rev. xv. 3.
-
-{405} Ezek. xxxiii. 13.
-
-{415} Heb. x. 38, 39.
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Plain Parochial Sermons, by James Slade
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Plain Parochial Sermons
- preached in the Parish Church of Bolton-le-Moors
-
-
-Author: James Slade
-
-
-
-Release Date: May 25, 2020 [eBook #62223]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLAIN PAROCHIAL SERMONS***
-</pre>
-<p>Transcribed from the 1831 C. J. G. and F. Rivington edition by
-David Price, ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">
-<a href="images/cover.jpg">
-<img alt=
-"Public domain book cover"
-title=
-"Public domain book cover"
- src="images/cover.jpg" />
-</a></p>
-<h1>PLAIN<br />
-PAROCHIAL SERMONS,</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">PREACHED
-IN</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">THE PARISH CHURCH OF
-BOLTON-LE-MOORS,</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">BY
-THE</span><br />
-REV. JAMES SLADE, M.A.,</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall"><i>VICAR OF
-BOLTON</i></span><span class="GutSmall">, </span><span
-class="GutSmall"><i>AND PREBENDARY OF CHESTER</i></span><span
-class="GutSmall">.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">London</span>:<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">C. J. G. AND F. RIVINGTON, ST.
-PAUL&rsquo;S CHURCH YARD.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">1831.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><a name="pageii"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. ii</span><span
-class="GutSmall">BOLTON:</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PRINTED BY J. GARDNER.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><a name="pageiii"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. iii</span>TO THE CONGREGATION<br />
-OF THE PARISH CHURCH OF BOLTON,<br />
-<b>THESE SERMONS</b><br />
-ARE INSCRIBED AND DEDICATED,<br />
-WITH AFFECTIONATE REGARD,<br />
-BY THEIR PASTOR AND FRIEND,</p>
-<p style="text-align: right">J. S.</p>
-<h2><a name="pagev"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-v</span>ADVERTISEMENT.</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> author has been repeatedly
-urged to print a volume of his Parochial Sermons; and perhaps he
-owes some apology to those friends, whose kind advice, on this
-head, has been for years neglected.&nbsp; He was apprehensive,
-that the interest, excited by his discourses from the pulpit,
-would not be adequately revived by their appearance in print; or
-at most, that they would be impressive only upon those who had
-heard them: <a name="pagevi"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-vi</span>and he moreover thought, that the christian world was
-already provided with more than a sufficiency of such
-publications.&nbsp; However, whether these opinions be well
-founded or not, he has been at length prevailed upon to defer to
-the wishes and judgment of others.</p>
-<p>It is almost needless to observe, that the Sermons were
-written without any, the most distant, view to publication; they
-pretend to nothing, but the simple and earnest inculcation of
-christian principle and practice; and as this is the
-author&rsquo;s sole object, so does he pour forth his humble
-prayer, that what, by God&rsquo;s help, he has planted and
-watered, may, by God&rsquo;s blessing, be increased to the glory
-of His own great name, and the edification of His Church.</p>
-<h2><a name="pagevii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-vii</span>CONTENTS.</h2>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON I.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">AWAKE THOU THAT SLEEPEST AND ARISE FROM
-THE DEAD.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p><span class="smcap">Ephesians</span> v.
-14.&mdash;Wherefore He saith, Awake thou that sleepest, and arise
-from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light.</p>
-<p>[Preached January 10th, 1830, 1st Epiph., <a
-name="citationvii"></a><a href="#footnotevii"
-class="citation">[vii]</a> and at Chester Cathedral, August 1st,
-in the same year.]</p>
-</td>
-<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: right">Page <span
-class="indexpageno"><a href="#page1">1</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON II.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE UNSEARCHABLE RICHES OF
-CHRIST.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Ephesians</span> iii.
-8.&mdash;The unsearchable riches of Christ.</p>
-<p>[Preached January 9th, 1831, 1st Epiph.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page20">20</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON III.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE DESTRUCTION OF THE FLOOD.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Genesis</span> vi.
-7.&mdash;It repented the Lord, that He had made man upon the
-earth and it grieved Him at His heart; and the Lord said, I will
-destroy man, whom I have created, from the face of the earth.</p>
-<p>[Preached February 6th, 1825, Sexag.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page38">38</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center"><a
-name="pageviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. viii</span>SERMON
-IV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE PRESERVATION FROM THE
-FLOOD.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Genesis</span> vi.
-8.&mdash;Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord.</p>
-<p>[Preached February 13th, 1825.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page56">56</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON V.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">DO THIS GREAT WICKEDNESS AND SIN AGAINST
-GOD,</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Genesis</span> xxxix.
-9.&mdash;How then can I do this great wickedness and sin against
-God?</p>
-<p>[Preached March 6th, 1825, 3rd Lent.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page76">76</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON VI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">ON THE JOURNEY TO EMMAUS.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Luke</span> xxiv.
-32.&mdash;And they said one to another, Did not our heart burn
-within us, while He talked with us by the way, and while He
-opened to us the Scriptures?</p>
-<p>[Preached April 13th, 1828, 1st Easter, and at Chester
-Cathedral July 12th, 1829.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page95">95</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON VII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">IF THEY HEAR NOT MOSES AND THE
-PROPHETS.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Luke</span> xvi.
-31.&mdash;If they hear not Moses and the Prophets, neither will
-they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead.</p>
-<p>[Preached June 1st, 1823, 1st Trin.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page114">114</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON VIII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PERFECT LOVE CASTETH OUT FEAR.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p>1 <span class="smcap">John</span> iv.
-18,&mdash;There is no fear in love, but perfect <a
-name="pageix"></a><span class="pagenum">p. ix</span>love casteth
-out fear: because fear hath torment; he that feareth is not made
-perfect in love.</p>
-<p>[Preached June 16th, 1822, 2nd Trin.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page134">134</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON IX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">HUMBLE YOURSELVES UNDER THE MIGHTY HAND OF
-GOD.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p>1 Peter v. 6.&mdash;Humble yourselves under
-the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you in due time.</p>
-<p>[Preached June 19th, 1825, 3rd Trin.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page154">154</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON X.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THOU ART THE MAN.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p>2 Samuel xii. 7.&mdash;And Nathan said to
-David, Thou art the man.</p>
-<p>[Preached July 14th, 1822, 6th Trin., and at Chester Cathedral
-July 6th 1823.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page172">172</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE WAY OF THE LORD EQUAL.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Ezekiel</span> xviii.
-25.&mdash;Ye say, the way of the Lord is not equal.&nbsp; Hear
-now, O house of Israel; is not My ways equal? are not your ways
-unequal?</p>
-<p>[Preached October 10th, 1824, 17th Trin.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page189">189</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE NEW MAN.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Ephesians</span> iv.
-24.&mdash;That ye put on the new man, which after God is created
-in righteousness and true holiness.</p>
-<p>[Preached October 13th, 1822, 19th Trin.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page209">209</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center"><a
-name="pagex"></a><span class="pagenum">p. x</span>SERMON XIII.<br
-/>
-<span class="GutSmall">THE WEDDING GARMENT.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Matthew</span> xxii.
-2.&mdash;The kingdom of heaven is like unto a certain king which
-made a marriage for his son.</p>
-<p>[Preached October 31st, 1824, 20th Trin.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page230">230</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XIV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">WALK WORTHY OF THE LORD, BE FRUITFUL AND
-INCREASING.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Colossians</span> i.
-10.&mdash;That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto all
-pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and increasing in
-the knowledge of God.</p>
-<p>[Preached November 9th, 1823, 24th Trin. and at Chester
-Cathedral, August 20th, 1826.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page252">252</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE WORD OF THE LORD PRECIOUS.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p>1 <span class="smcap">Samuel</span> iii.
-1.&mdash;The word of the Lord was precious in those days; there
-was no open vision.</p>
-<p>[Preached December 9th, 1827.&nbsp; 2nd Advent]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page271">271</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XVI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">DISTINCTIONS TO BE MADE ON THE DAY OF
-JUDGMENT.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Matthew</span> xxiv.
-40.&mdash;The one shall be taken and the other left.</p>
-<p>[Preached December 12th, 1824, 3rd Advent.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page290">290</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center"><a
-name="pagexi"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xi</span>SERMON
-XVII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">GOD MADE MAN UPRIGHT; MAN MAKES HIMSELF
-MISERABLE.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Eccles</span>. vii.
-29.&mdash;Lo, this only have I found, that God hath made man
-upright, but they have sought out many inventions.</p>
-<p>[Preached August, 1828, and at Chester Cathedral, June 28th,
-1829.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page310">310</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XVIII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD REVEALED TO THEM THAT
-FEAR HIM.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Psalm</span> xxv.
-14.&mdash;The secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him; and
-He will shew them His covenant.</p>
-<p>[Preached November 19th, 1826, and at Chester Cathedral, July
-29th, 1827.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page329">329</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XIX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">RESIST THE BEGINNINGS OF EVIL
-TEMPTATION.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Proverbs</span> iv. 14,
-15.&mdash;Enter not into the path of the wicked, and go not in
-the way of evil men.&nbsp; Avoid it, pass not by it, turn from
-it, and pass away.</p>
-<p>[Preached October 10th, 1830.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page349">349</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE LOVE OF CHRIST FOR THOSE WHO DO THE
-WILL OF GOD.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Mark</span> iii.
-35.&mdash;Whosoever shall do the will of God, the same is My
-brother and My sister and mother.</p>
-<p>[Preached February 3rd, 1828.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page366">366</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center"><a
-name="pagexii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xii</span>SERMON
-XXI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">ON SEEKING OUT THE WORKS OF THE LORD AND
-PRAISING HIM.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Psalm</span> cxi. 1,
-2.&mdash;I will give thanks unto the Lord with my whole heart; in
-the assembly of the upright and in the congregation.</p>
-<p>The works of the Lord are great, sought out of all them that
-have pleasure therein.</p>
-<p>[Preached November 23rd, 1828.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page385">385</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XXII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">DILIGENCE AND PERSEVERANCE IN THE
-CHRISTIAN RACE.</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">Philipp</span>. iii. 13,
-14.&mdash;Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended; but
-this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind,
-and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press
-toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in
-Christ Jesus.</p>
-<p>[Preached March 28th, 1830, and at Chester Cathedral,
-September 5th, in the same year.]</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page404">404</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h2><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 1</span>SERMON
-I.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">AWAKE THOU THAT SLEEPEST.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Ephesians</span> v. 14.</p>
-<p><i>Wherefore</i>, <i>he saith</i>, <i>Awake</i>, <i>thou that
-sleepest</i>, <i>and arise from the dead</i>, <i>and Christ shall
-give thee light</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> this chapter the Apostle has
-been reminding his Ephesian converts of the state in which they
-were, before they had received and obeyed the call of the
-gospel.&nbsp; The people of Ephesus were highly endowed, in the
-world&rsquo;s estimation, not only with riches, but also with
-talent and learning, and refinement; with all the arts and
-ornaments of civilized <a name="page2"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 2</span>life.&nbsp; And yet, how does St. Paul
-describe them in the 8th verse?&nbsp; &ldquo;Ye were sometimes
-darkness;&rdquo; how in the 12th?&nbsp; &ldquo;For it is a shame
-even to speak of those things which are done of them in
-secret.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Here, you observe, we have a remarkable declaration from the
-mouth of an Apostle, that a people, however talented and learned,
-were still wrapt in the mantle of darkness, with regard to their
-real good and happiness; with regard to their religious and moral
-condition.&nbsp; Whatever nature had done for them, to whatever
-eminence they had been raised by art or industry, they were left
-far short of the object which it concerned them most to
-attain&mdash;an acquaintance with God, a knowledge and practice
-of His law; a peace with Him and with their own
-consciences.&nbsp; So far were they from this, that their
-characters were stained with the most debasing vices; their
-secret sins were too abominable even to be mentioned.</p>
-<p><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 3</span>Thus we
-see how little the instructions and advantages of this world have
-to do with reforming the conduct, or amending the depraved heart
-of man.&nbsp; And what was true in this instance, is true in all;
-there is no teaching, there are no rules of prudence, no maxims
-however wise, no manners however polished, that can cleanse the
-heart of its natural unrighteousness, and curb its natural
-propensity to evil: give what you may, educate as you may, man,
-if left to his own wisdom and strength, will remain what he is by
-fallen nature, a weak, a wayward, and a wicked being; an enemy to
-holiness and to God.&nbsp; There may be a shew of wisdom
-&ldquo;falsely so called;&rdquo; there may be a refined
-conversation and a polished outside; but there will always be
-uncleanness remaining within.&nbsp; The evil principles may wear
-a dazzling veil, and the vices may be clothed in fashionable
-garments, but they will be evil principles and vices still.</p>
-<p>There is but one means by which the <a name="page4"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 4</span>darkness of nature can be scattered,
-and that is by the light of God&rsquo;s truth; but one means by
-which the evil spirit of the natural man can be cast out, and
-that is by the Spirit of God.&nbsp; The blessed Jesus came into
-the world to reclaim and redeem it from the grossness in which it
-was sunk; to open a new scene of things; to impart a new life; to
-banish the thick cloud of error and of sin, in which the world
-hopelessly and irrecoverably lay; and to raise it to the
-knowledge and service, the favour and blessing of an offended
-God.&nbsp; This is the description of the happy effects which the
-gospel is intended and fitted to produce; &ldquo;the people that
-walked in darkness have seen a great light; they that dwell in
-the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath the light
-shined.&rdquo; <a name="citation4"></a><a href="#footnote4"
-class="citation">[4]</a>&nbsp; All, without the gospel, are in
-this miserable condition, whatever they may think of themselves:
-all who sincerely embrace it, are enlightened and happy, however
-<a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>poor and
-humble, and of whatever else they may be ignorant.</p>
-<p>Poor and humble did I say?&nbsp; It is to them, that this
-light is the most easily, and frequently, and effectually
-communicated.&nbsp; The prosperous and the great too often
-resemble the wealthy Ephesians, &ldquo;having the understanding
-darkened, being alienated from the life of God through the
-ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their
-heart;&rdquo; <a name="citation5"></a><a href="#footnote5"
-class="citation">[5]</a> revelling in the self-sufficiency of
-their earthly comforts, proud of their acquirements, fond of
-their own way, they disdain to be taught the humbling truths of
-the gospel from a fellow-creature like themselves: and often has
-the minister of the gospel to be thankful to his Lord and Master,
-that, when he finds his message rejected and despised by his
-wealthier hearers, it still makes its way into the hearts of some
-of the poor: grieved he is indeed, that those, who ought to know
-it best and love it most, should be so deluded by worldly <a
-name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>vanities and
-follies, as to continue, amidst all their advantages of
-education, in spiritual darkness and death; set against the
-messenger, because hating the truth of his message: yet, is it a
-comfort to him, sincere and unspeakable, that he meets with more
-success among the ignorant, as they are called, and the children
-of the poor: that there he finds wisdom, &ldquo;the wisdom which
-is from above;&rdquo; and there he finds friends among the
-friends of God.</p>
-<p>It was so in the Apostle&rsquo;s day; and with some bright
-exceptions, it has been the same in every day: &ldquo;For ye see
-your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after the
-flesh, not many mighty, not many noble are called; but God hath
-chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and
-God hath chosen the weak things of the world, to confound the
-things that are mighty: and base things of the world, and things
-which are despised hath God chosen; yea, and things which are
-not, to <a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-7</span>bring to nought things that are: that no flesh should
-glory in his presence.&rdquo; <a name="citation7"></a><a
-href="#footnote7" class="citation">[7]</a></p>
-<p>All these observations have been made, to connect and explain
-the first word of the text, <i>wherefore</i>; &ldquo;wherefore,
-he saith, awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead, and
-Christ shall give thee light.&rdquo;&nbsp; Inasmuch as it is
-impossible for thee to know and to please God, to attain unto
-holiness and happiness, to save thy soul, by the light of nature,
-(for nature is in fact, of itself and for such a purpose, no
-light at all,) turn to the way, which is opened to thee by the
-shining of the Sun of Righteousness; to that one way, which is
-opened alike for all mankind, rich and poor, learned and
-unlearned; turn to thy Redeemer, in humble faith and hearty
-desire, and &ldquo;He shall give thee light:&rdquo; learn of Him
-and He shall teach thee all that thou needest to know: seek of
-Him, and He shall guide thee into all righteousness and truth;
-lean on Him, and He shall support thee, <a name="page8"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 8</span>through all the course of thy earthly
-pilgrimage; and conduct thee in peace and safety to thy
-journey&rsquo;s end.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wherefore, he <i>saith</i>;&rdquo; there is no
-particular passage in the Old Testament, in which these words of
-the text are found; but they seem to allude to several
-expressions of similar import, in the prophecy of Isaiah.&nbsp;
-In the 26th chapter, there is a passage which describes the
-deliverance of God&rsquo;s people from a state of degradation,
-both political and spiritual, under the figure of a resurrection
-from the dead: &ldquo;Thy dead men shall live, together with my
-dead body shall they arise.&nbsp; Awake and sing, ye that dwell
-in dust; for thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall
-cast out the dead.&rdquo; <a name="citation8"></a><a
-href="#footnote8" class="citation">[8]</a>&nbsp; And again, in
-the 52nd chapter: &ldquo;Awake, awake, put on thy strength, O
-Zion; put on thy beautiful garments, O Jerusalem, the Holy city;
-for henceforth there shall no more come in to thee the
-uncircumcised and the unclean; shake thyself from the dust; <a
-name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>arise and sit
-down, O Jerusalem: loose thyself from the bands of thy neck, O
-captive daughter of Zion: for thus saith the Lord, ye have sold
-yourselves for nought; and ye shall be redeemed without
-money:&rdquo; <a name="citation9a"></a><a href="#footnote9a"
-class="citation">[9a]</a> a powerful call upon the Jewish people
-to cast away their transgressions, through which they had been
-brought into a state of grievous captivity, and to throw
-themselves on the Lord&rsquo;s mercy, and return to the
-Lord&rsquo;s service, that He might break their bonds asunder,
-and visit them with His salvation.&nbsp; One more passage there
-is, to which the Apostle clearly alludes, in the opening of the
-60th chapter: &ldquo;Arise, shine, for thy light is come, and the
-glory of the Lord is risen upon thee.&nbsp; For behold, the
-darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people:
-but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen
-upon thee.&rdquo; <a name="citation9b"></a><a href="#footnote9b"
-class="citation">[9b]</a>&nbsp; Here the prophet foretels the
-glorious dawn of gospel light, and calls upon the Church to arise
-and behold it, <a name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-10</span>shining from afar; to behold it with the eye of faith;
-to look forward to that Saviour, that great &ldquo;fountain for
-sin and uncleanness,&rdquo; which the law and the prophets did
-all with one voice proclaim.&nbsp; The prophet adds, &ldquo;And
-the gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness
-of thy rising.&rdquo;&nbsp; The first coming of the gentile world
-was visible in the footsteps of the wise men, who came
-&ldquo;from the east to Jerusalem,&rdquo; <a
-name="citation10"></a><a href="#footnote10"
-class="citation">[10]</a> to worship the infant Jesus: and ever
-since our Lord&rsquo;s return to the heavens, the gospel has been
-preached to all nations; and accepted, more or less, by the kings
-and potentates of the earth.</p>
-<p>And, as the prophet called on the people of old, to awake and
-arise and turn to the coming light, so St. Paul invited and
-animated his converts and their brethren, to awake and behold the
-glory of the Lord, after it had been fully revealed to the dark
-and sinful world; and so do the ministers of Christ, in every
-age, call upon <a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-11</span>their hearers to arouse from their benighted and lost
-condition, and let this light shine upon their understandings and
-hearts, and direct them in the way of life and salvation.&nbsp;
-For grieved are we to say, that notwithstanding these bright
-beams of grace and truth have been so long pouring forth their
-splendour upon the earth, yet are there many dark corners; and
-many eyes awfully closed against the light: and still more
-grieved are we to say, that even in the land where these beams
-have shone brightest, even in this land, vast numbers yet remain
-total strangers to their enlightening influence and converting
-power: numbers who have had the benefit of being educated under
-the gospel, who have witnessed its happy effects; who have seen
-what it has done for their relations, or friends, or neighbours,
-have yet ungratefully and disdainfully turned away from the
-heavenly light, and &ldquo;walked on still in darkness;&rdquo;
-have sided with the world and Satan and sin, and resisted the
-salvation of their souls.</p>
-<p><a name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>O, that
-they could be brought, O for the grace of God&rsquo;s Holy Spirit
-to bring them, to listen to the warning words of that merciful
-Saviour, to whom, if they now continue to despise Him, they will
-one day lift up their hands in vain: these are His words,
-&ldquo;if the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is
-that darkness.&rdquo; <a name="citation12"></a><a
-href="#footnote12" class="citation">[12]</a>&nbsp; If, after all
-the gracious offers of pardon and life, which thy Redeemer has
-made thee, by His own mouth, and the mouth of His messengers,
-thou still choosest unforgiveness and death, going on in the
-heedlessness of thy impenitent heart, and wantoning in sin, how
-dreadful is thy condition! how infinitely more dreadful, than if
-the voice of mercy had never sounded in thine ears.&nbsp; Be
-convinced: let the love of thy Saviour work upon thee; let the
-love of thine own immortal soul move thee to fly unto Him, the
-great, the only, the everlasting Redeemer.&nbsp; Leave thy way of
-misery and ruin, and turn to Him for comfort and
-deliverance.&nbsp; <a name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-13</span>Turn, while thou hast the power; the night is fast
-coming.&nbsp; Thou knowest not how many more sabbaths, how many
-more invitations and warnings, will be vouchsafed: many thou hast
-had already; enough of them thou hast already slighted.&nbsp;
-Come, ye that are strong, for the strong are often laid low;
-come, ye that are young, for the young are not always spared;
-come, ye aged, for your hour of trial <i>must</i> be nearly run
-out.&nbsp; Come all, while ye may, to the Lamb of God, for
-acceptance and for blessing: there is no safety, and no hope in
-any other: and no hope in Him, when the door is once shut;
-&ldquo;we pray you, in Christ&rsquo;s stead, be ye reconciled to
-God.&rdquo; <a name="citation13"></a><a href="#footnote13"
-class="citation">[13]</a></p>
-<p>The text says, &ldquo;Awake thou that sleepest;&rdquo; it
-means, awake from the sleep of sin; and very fitly is the state
-of the sinner compared to a state of sleep: he is quite
-insensible of his true, his awful condition; he fears not,
-perceives not, the doom that is awaiting him.&nbsp; Satan has <a
-name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>bound up his
-senses; the eyes of his understanding are closed, and his
-knowledge of good and evil is utterly prevented.&nbsp; He is to
-the spiritual world, what the sleeping man is to the natural,
-unconscious of what is going forward to his advantage or his
-injury.&nbsp; Speak to him of mercy, he hears not: &ldquo;sing
-him one of the songs of Sion,&rdquo; it is all in vain: speak to
-him of divine wrath, of eternal punishment; to what purpose,
-while his ear is closed?&nbsp; The whispers of conscience, the
-counsel of friends, &ldquo;the tongues of men or of
-angels,&rdquo; are alike unprofitable, while a deep sleep is cast
-upon the soul.</p>
-<p>And there is a further resemblance: the sinner dreams, of
-happiness arising from worldly prosperity, from plenty and
-pleasure: and as the brain of a poor or disconsolate man, in a
-state of sleep, is often filled with ideas of such things, and he
-awakes and finds them sadly untrue; awakes from his pleasant
-dreaming to his state of drudgery and discomfort; so is the
-sinner often constrained to feel and confess, <a
-name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>that his
-notions of happiness were no better than a dream; that they were
-unsubstantial and unreal, promising much and bringing little:
-still he is unconvinced; pursues his course of trifling, his
-disappointed dreamings, till at length he awakes in another
-world, and thoroughly perceives the wretchedness of his
-condition, which it is then too late, impossible to change.&nbsp;
-From this dreadful, fatal sleep of sin, the gospel is designed to
-rouse us: and I pray God, that our conscience may be effectually
-alarmed and awakened; that we may be alive and active in
-perceiving and following &ldquo;the things that belong unto our
-peace!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The text says further, &ldquo;Arise from the dead;&rdquo; from
-the death of sin; from the state of misery and ruin, in which ye
-insensibly lie.&nbsp; Here is another significant figure: the
-impenitent sinner is not only plunged into a condition of
-helpless wretchedness, but he has no energy to recover from it,
-no quickening or effectual desire of better things; no more
-perception <a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-16</span>of spiritual interests, of heavenly objects, than a
-corpse has of the natural world.&nbsp; When once the breath has
-left the body, the busiest scenes of earth can affect it no
-longer; nothing can &ldquo;charm the dull cold ear of
-death:&rdquo; when the breath of a divine life is not in the
-soul, when the new-creating spirit of God is not received and
-cherished, the beauty of holiness and the all-important interests
-of a spiritual and eternal world produce no effect upon the
-forlorn understanding and the deserted heart: no representations
-of spiritual truth can move the heavy ear of a besotted and
-determined sinner; none, while he is resolved, so to remain: not
-even the voice of the Son of God, &ldquo;charm He never so
-wisely.&rdquo;&nbsp; Till the heart be moved to repentance, till,
-the faculties of the soul are recovered from the fascination of
-stupor and sin, no living impression can be made, even with all
-the force that truth can carry.&nbsp; How often do we find this
-to be the case! how often does the sinner acknowledge the
-justice, <a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-17</span>the certainty, the necessity of what is urged upon him,
-but without any alteration in his character; without any
-effectual or lasting alteration.&nbsp; His heart is unchanged:
-the slave of sin; dead in sin; not alive or open to the force of
-truth, to the doctrines of righteousness or salvation.</p>
-<p>Infatuated sinner! thine own conscience accuses thee; thou
-believest that there will be a world to come, a world of
-recompence, and yet thou turnest not to prepare for it; pray,
-when thou fearest; pray, when thou thinkest of these things; cry
-earnestly to thy Saviour, that he may deliver thee from this
-&ldquo;gall of bitterness and this bond of iniquity;&rdquo; pray
-for the convincing, converting, life-giving Spirit, that He may
-&ldquo;set thine heart at liberty&rdquo; from the thraldom of
-sin; and thus enable thee to listen to the call of the gospel,
-and turn thy feet in earnest to the Redeemer of thy soul.&nbsp;
-For if thou listenest and turnest not, &ldquo;dead thou art while
-thou livest;&rdquo; and when thou diest, eternally <a
-name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>dead; dead to
-all comfort and happiness for ever; dead in a world of woe.</p>
-<p>But if we will (and God grant that we all may) awake and
-arise, &ldquo;Christ will assuredly give us light:&rdquo;
-&ldquo;He is the true light, which lighteth every man that cometh
-into the world;&rdquo; <a name="citation18"></a><a
-href="#footnote18" class="citation">[18]</a> ready to shine upon
-every soul, to lighten it in darkness and quicken it in
-death.&nbsp; Believe in Him, and live in Him, and the clouds of
-ignorance shall be scattered away; and the drowsiness of the soul
-shall be cast off; and the cold heart of the natural man shall be
-warm with life again.&nbsp; In the midst of this world&rsquo;s
-temptations and trials, troubles and perplexities, we shall see
-our way clear, our way to the heavenly Jerusalem; a brightness,
-the brightness of God&rsquo;s presence, will be resting upon our
-souls; the world sees it not, but we shall see and enjoy it every
-hour: dark things will be made light, and &ldquo;crooked things
-will be made straight, and the rough places plain:&rdquo; we
-shall be living above <a name="page19"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 19</span>the world, for &ldquo;our life will
-be hid with Christ in God:&rdquo; <a name="citation19"></a><a
-href="#footnote19" class="citation">[19]</a> cheerful we shall be
-when nature is sad: inspirited when nature is languishing; full
-of praises and thanksgivings when nature is mourning.</p>
-<p>Say, Christian people, have ye never seen the triumph of faith
-over nature&rsquo;s weakness and Satan&rsquo;s power? have ye
-never, in the hour of trial, witnessed that the Saviour was near?
-never observed the fainting spirit animated and sustained? never
-beheld the closing eye, of the dying saint, beaming with heavenly
-fire; and the pale features lighted up with the smile of
-satisfaction and composure and peace?&nbsp; If ye have not, the
-dying Christian will shew you these things&mdash;go to his bed,
-and learn the lesson; go, and catch the hope, that &ldquo;Christ
-will give you light.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>SERMON
-II.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE UNSEARCHABLE RICHES OF
-CHRIST.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Eph</span>. iii 8.<br />
-<i>The unsearchable riches of Christ</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is no passage, in the whole
-range of Scripture, in which the benefits and blessings of the
-gospel are more strikingly and fully represented, than by these
-few words: it is elsewhere described as the &ldquo;pearl of great
-price,&rdquo; as &ldquo;the treasure that fadeth not away,&rdquo;
-as &ldquo;the true riches;&rdquo; but here, as if in addition to
-the former descriptions, it is called, under the direction of the
-Holy Spirit, &ldquo;the unsearchable riches of Christ:&rdquo;
-impossible for men, impossible for angels to search out and
-discover its full excellency and value.&nbsp; The more it is
-examined, <a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-21</span>and the more it is experimentally known, the more is the
-believer convinced of the propriety and truth of this
-description; without a deep enquiry indeed, without a vital
-experience of its blessedness, it is not for any one to
-understand even the nature of its transcendent riches; to the
-world at large they are known only by name: but the sincere
-Christian, who makes them his own, is brought to admire their
-inexhaustible fulness; and to perceive, how utterly they extend
-beyond his comprehension, how highly they are removed above his
-loftiest thoughts and his most ardent imagination: &ldquo;eye
-hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart
-of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love
-him.&rdquo; <a name="citation21"></a><a href="#footnote21"
-class="citation">[21]</a>&nbsp; They lie entirely out of the
-reach of the natural man; and even the spiritual man does but
-imperfectly understand them.</p>
-<p>These unsearchable riches it was the province of St. Paul
-especially to declare <a name="page22"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 22</span>unto the gentile world, that is, unto
-the world at large, when the offer of them had been rejected by
-the Jewish nation: in consequence of which blessed communication
-to the gentiles, the knowledge of them was conveyed, in process
-of time, to our favoured land.</p>
-<p>Many learned persons have believed, that St. Paul himself
-preached in this island; of this, however, there is no certain
-evidence; it is enough for us to know, that we are partakers of
-the benefit of his preaching, that the sound of the gospel, which
-he sent &ldquo;forth into all lands,&rdquo; has long ago reached
-us; and that we are now in the full enjoyment of this inestimable
-privilege.&nbsp; He declares, in the chapter, before us, that
-Jesus Christ, by express revelation, made known to him the great
-mystery, the unfathomable purpose of His mercy; &ldquo;which in
-other ages was not made known unto the sons of men, as it is now
-revealed unto the holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit: that
-the Gentiles should be fellow-heirs, and of the <a
-name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>same body,
-and partakers of His promise in Christ by the
-gospel.&rdquo;&nbsp; Unto me, he says, &ldquo;who am less than
-the least of all saints, is this grace given, that I should
-preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of
-Christ.&nbsp; And to make all men see what is the fellowship of
-the mystery, which, from the beginning of the world, hath been
-hid in God, who created all things by Jesus Christ.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation23"></a><a href="#footnote23"
-class="citation">[23]</a></p>
-<p>You perceive here the object of the Apostle&rsquo;s preaching;
-it was, that all mankind, we among the number, might be brought
-acquainted with the glorious scheme of eternal redemption, and be
-made partakers of its unspeakable blessings.&nbsp; And is there a
-heart so cold, as not to beat with gratitude, in the remembrance
-of such mercy; as not to take an interest in such a testimony of
-divine love?&nbsp; If we knew no particulars respecting it, the
-very announcement and promise of an infinite treasure, of a
-treasure in the mansions of eternity, were sufficient to awaken
-our <a name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 24</span>most
-profound attention: it often does so, when carried by the
-missionary to the heathen and the stranger; they, who never heard
-before the good tidings of salvation, are arrested by the voice
-of the messenger, and hang upon his lips with a longing anxiety,
-and receive his message to the comfort of their souls: and can we
-remain unmoved by such considerations; we, who know the purport
-of the heavenly message; we, who profess to believe that it is
-sent for our everlasting salvation from sin and death; to
-reconcile us to an offended God, to deliver us from the
-intolerable bondage of Satan, to make us happy while we live,
-happy when we die, happy for ever in another world, in the
-kingdom of heaven?&nbsp; Though the mercy is too great to be
-adequately understood, though &ldquo;the love of Christ passeth
-knowledge,&rdquo; shall this prevent us from contemplation and
-enquiry? shall we not rather, on this very account, entertain a
-more fervent desire to understand and know, of this mystery of
-goodness, all <a name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-25</span>that is possible to be known?&nbsp; Whoever, indeed, has
-not this desire, cannot take any lively interest in the
-revelation which he professes to believe, cannot have sincerely
-embraced it; knowing, as he does, the subject and purpose of the
-gospel, he is in a worse situation than many an ignorant heathen;
-his heart more hard and unimpressible; his eyes more closed
-against the light; his affections more difficult to be roused and
-engaged.&nbsp; May the Lord touch the heart of all such heedless
-professors; or the very publicans and sinners, the darkest and
-most despised of the earth, will &ldquo;enter into the kingdom of
-heaven before them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Hoping that we all are deeply concerned in this important
-matter, that we do place a most exalted value on the riches of
-Christ, and earnestly desire to partake of them, I beg that we
-may enter together, with humble minds and spiritual desires, into
-some examination of their nature and excellency; and enquire in
-<a name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 26</span>what
-respects, and for what reasons, they are unsearchable.</p>
-<p>1.&nbsp; In the first place, what is the foundation of all our
-blessedness and all our hope, as the redeemed and adopted
-children of God; as brought from a state of enmity and rebellion,
-into favour with Him; as having any claim upon His mercy; any
-prospect of recovering our lost happiness, of saving our souls
-alive?&nbsp; What, I say, is the foundation on which we expect
-these marvellous acts of grace?&nbsp; It is, that the everlasting
-Son of God left &ldquo;the glory which he had with the Father
-before the world was,&rdquo; <a name="citation26a"></a><a
-href="#footnote26a" class="citation">[26a]</a> and &ldquo;took
-upon Him the form of a servant,&rdquo; <a
-name="citation26b"></a><a href="#footnote26b"
-class="citation">[26b]</a> the nature of man: it is, that the
-&ldquo;Word, who in the beginning was with God and was
-God,&rdquo; &ldquo;was made flesh&rdquo; and came and
-&ldquo;dwelt among us, full of grace and truth.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation26c"></a><a href="#footnote26c"
-class="citation">[26c]</a>&nbsp; Here then, in the very outset,
-is unsearchable mercy; the immensity of the divine
-Redeemer&rsquo;s condescension and love!&nbsp; Who can search,
-who can understand it?&nbsp; <a name="page27"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 27</span>&ldquo;It is higher than heaven, what
-canst thou know&rdquo; of it?&nbsp; Admire thou mayest, and adore
-and love; but it is beyond the stretch of thy created powers to
-conceive, beyond the capacity of any creature.&nbsp; The great
-truth is revealed and the work is accomplished; and here thou
-must leave it, in humble faith and overwhelming emotion.</p>
-<p>2.&nbsp; We may consider, in the next place, the preciousness,
-the value, the efficacy of the incarnation and sufferings of our
-Redeemer.&nbsp; All the attributes of the Godhead are perfect and
-infinite; His holiness and justice, as well as His mercy.&nbsp;
-Man, by transgression, fell into a state of unholiness; his
-nature became corrupt; his understanding debased, his affections
-and passions and desires all sinful; as such he could not
-possibly be accepted or blest by the infinitely holy God, by Him
-&ldquo;who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity:&rdquo; he
-became, to borrow the language of men, vile and hateful in
-God&rsquo;s sight; he resembled Satan and the wicked spirits, <a
-name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 28</span>who fell, for
-their transgression, from the heavens.&nbsp; And so, with regard
-to justice; the infinitely just God could not, without some means
-of atonement or satisfaction, shew favour to a disobedient,
-offending, rebellious creature; it was contrary to His essential
-character and nature so to do: nor can we form any true idea of
-the value of that sacrifice, on the part of another, which could
-be held sufficient to reconcile the great Jehovah to a creature
-&ldquo;laden with iniquity:&rdquo; the displeasure being
-infinite, the distance and separation between God and His
-creatures infinite, the sacrifice must be infinite also, and
-exceeding the bounds of our comprehension.&nbsp; And yet, strange
-to say, though the means of the sinner&rsquo;s re-admission, to
-the favour and blessing of a holy and just God, must of necessity
-be beyond our powers of conception, there are persons, who object
-to the Christian doctrine of the atonement, solely on the ground
-of its being incomprehensible.&nbsp; But we, my brethren,
-&ldquo;have not so learned Christ;&rdquo; we are ready <a
-name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>to bow with
-thankfulness to the revelation of the great Jehovah, by whose
-unsearchable wisdom and mercy the plan of our redemption was
-formed: we are ready to acknowledge with reverence, that
-&ldquo;great is the mystery of godliness; God was manifest in the
-flesh.&rdquo; <a name="citation29a"></a><a href="#footnote29a"
-class="citation">[29a]</a></p>
-<p>3.&nbsp; Intimately connected with this consideration is the
-recollection of God&rsquo;s exceeding love towards us, in that
-&ldquo;while we were yet sinners Christ died for us.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation29b"></a><a href="#footnote29b"
-class="citation">[29b]</a>&nbsp; In our very state of guilt and
-rebellion it was, that He came into the world; that He did and
-suffered so much, &ldquo;to seek and to save that which was
-lost.&rdquo;&nbsp; Suppose that man had never transgressed; and
-that God had sent an angel, to shew him the way to a happier and
-higher condition, than that in which he was created: this would
-have been an act of free and undeserved mercy; but that He should
-have sent His beloved Son, to &ldquo;suffer for sins, the just
-for the unjust,&rdquo; <a name="citation29c"></a><a
-href="#footnote29c" class="citation">[29c]</a> to be born and to
-tabernacle in a world of guilt and <a name="page30"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 30</span>sorrow; to be exposed to rejection
-and scorn, to indignity and cruelty; to endure the conflicts of
-Satan and the bitterest agonies of death; this was indeed an act
-of love, surpassing the bounds of thought; a mystery of goodness
-&ldquo;into which angels desire to look,&rdquo; but cannot
-penetrate.&nbsp; Every believing soul must be overpowered by such
-a contemplation; must be lost in wonder, love, and praise.</p>
-<p>4.&nbsp; Nor can we learn the manner or degree, in which our
-merciful Lord is at this moment bestowing blessings upon His
-Church, and upon every individual believer.&nbsp; When He
-ascended up to heaven, His work of mediation was not finished; He
-then took upon Him the office of interceding for His people in
-all ages: presenting their prayers, and desires, and all their
-services, for acceptance at the throne of grace; pleading His
-merits for them; observing all their necessities and wants; and
-sending His holy spirit and His holy angels, to minister to their
-infirmities: not a wounded spirit, but He is still ready to <a
-name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>bind up and
-heal; not a sigh from a contrite heart, but He knows and answers;
-not a child of ignorance, but He is willing to instruct; not a
-returning prodigal, but He meets; not a prayer or thanksgiving,
-not a godly thought or wish, of a sincere worshipper and pious
-servant, but He accepts and blesses: He is ever with us, though
-unseen; with us by His providence and grace; &ldquo;about our bed
-and about our path;&rdquo; pouring his benefits upon us,
-temporal, and spiritual: yea upon all His people, at every moment
-of time, throughout the whole world.&nbsp; We are lost in this
-mystery of mercy&mdash;we can but believe, and gratefully apply
-the benefit to our souls.</p>
-<p>5.&nbsp; And what are the privileges of Christ&rsquo;s
-redeemed people?&nbsp; What their present state, what their
-glorious inheritance?&nbsp; How unsearchable both the one and the
-other!&nbsp; The humble believer, the repenting sinner, the
-sincere and faithful servant derives, from the fountain of mercy
-which is opened unto him, a perpetual stream of <a
-name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>increasing
-satisfaction and delight; he finds, that &ldquo;there is no end
-thereof;&rdquo; that it is a fountain, which he never can
-fathom.&nbsp; The sense of pardon and reconciliation with God
-affords a comfort to his soul, which flows the more abundantly,
-the longer he dwells upon it; as he journies onward in the way of
-salvation, his hopes are more enlivened, and his fears more
-calmed; even when he began to walk with his God, he felt that all
-around him was joy, and deemed his recompence in this life amply
-sufficient; but, at every step he advances in communion with his
-God and Saviour, he perceives more and more that &ldquo;His ways
-are ways of pleasantness and all His paths are peace;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation32"></a><a href="#footnote32"
-class="citation">[32]</a> and this experience will be enlarged
-the longer he lives, even beyond his present anticipation.&nbsp;
-The word of God has fresh stores for him every day; of knowledge,
-of comfort, and of grace: the Spirit of God has fresh supplies;
-to succour his infirmities, to elevate him in <a
-name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 33</span>prayer and
-meditation, to guide him in perplexity, to strengthen him in
-trial, to console him in trouble and affliction, to raise him
-above the world, and place his affections in heaven.&nbsp; Thus
-will his joy in the Lord increase, till he comes to the end of
-his pilgrimage: and, in the end, the riches of redeeming love
-will be infinitely enhanced: who shall number or declare
-them?&nbsp; Which of us can now understand the preciousness of a
-Christian&rsquo;s hope, the comfort of a Christian&rsquo;s peace,
-at that hour, when his soul is struggling for departure?&nbsp;
-Who can now enter, as the dying man does, into the vast
-difference between the bright hope of being saved, and the gloomy
-fear of being lost; between the prospect of being for ever with
-the Lord, and the dismal foreboding of the terrors of the evil
-one?&nbsp; We have now but a slight conception of the feelings
-and views, in that momentous hour; but we shall one day know: God
-grant that the knowledge may be peace!</p>
-<p><a name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 34</span>And if
-we die in peace, then shall we be more than ever convinced of the
-truth of the text; we shall then perceive, how little we
-comprehended, in our mortal state, of the blessedness of the
-saints at rest, of &ldquo;the rest that remaineth for the people
-of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; And, at the resurrection, other scenes will
-follow, with more abundant tokens of confirmation: who can
-conceive the happiness of rising with the just; of hearing with
-joy the trumpet of the archangel; of beholding, with an eye of
-rapture, the beaming of that glorious morn; of meeting the smile
-of a compassionate Judge and Saviour; of being called to His
-right hand, &ldquo;come, ye blessed of my father, inherit the
-kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world:&rdquo;
-<a name="citation34a"></a><a href="#footnote34a"
-class="citation">[34a]</a> what mind on earth is equal to these
-things?</p>
-<p>And then will succeed the consummation of our felicity,
-&ldquo;the new heavens and the new earth, wherein dwelleth
-righteousness;&rdquo; <a name="citation34b"></a><a
-href="#footnote34b" class="citation">[34b]</a> the enjoyment of
-the <a name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-35</span>presence of God and the Lamb; the personal sharing of
-the service, the honour, and the delight of angels and
-archangels, through all eternity.&nbsp; Of this we cannot pretend
-to form an estimate in our mortal condition; while the veil is
-hanging before our eyes; the holy Spirit, by many a sublime
-image, lifts our imagination as high as it can be carried; but
-still, the representation must be feeble, when compared with the
-glorious reality; after all that has been said, if we arrive at
-the heavenly city, the appearance will be new, the happiness new
-to us all.&nbsp; Unsearchable it is now, unsearchable it will be
-then; a wonder of love that will never be satisfied, a mansion of
-glory that will never be completely surveyed.</p>
-<p>But we shall doubtless behold, on seeing &ldquo;face to
-face,&rdquo; more of the fulness of the riches of Christ; shall
-penetrate further into that mystery of divine love, which planned
-the merciful work of our redemption before the foundation of the
-world; shall see more <a name="page36"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 36</span>of the meetness of the
-Saviour&rsquo;s sufferings; of His mighty conquest over sin and
-death; of the greatness of His kingdom and the &ldquo;majesty of
-His glory.&rdquo;&nbsp; We shall then see and admire that now
-invisible bond, by which the whole company of the Lord&rsquo;s
-servants and people, heavenly and earthly, have been sustained
-and kept together: how men below, and saints at rest, and angels
-in heaven, have been bound in spiritual union, through all the
-ages of time; how the vast multitude of holy creatures in the
-universe have felt a common interest and benefit in their blessed
-Lord. <a name="citation36"></a><a href="#footnote36"
-class="citation">[36]</a>&nbsp; When they are all assembled
-together in adoration round His throne, we shall know more of
-this endearing bond; it will then be manifest, and be perfected
-for ever.</p>
-<p>I need not attempt to go further; certainly none of us will
-deny the unsearchableness of the riches of Christ.&nbsp;
-Certainly every one of us is ready to exclaim, O that I may be
-partaker of them; all this <a name="page37"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 37</span>world, nay, a thousand worlds are
-nothing in comparison.&nbsp; These riches are now offered to you:
-they are waiting your acceptance; receive them with all your
-heart, and they are yours; you do not expect them to be forced
-upon you; you do not expect this happy portion without choosing
-it, without prayer and without striving for it; ask earnestly,
-seek diligently, and it shall be yours; your inexhaustible
-treasure, in time and to eternity.</p>
-<h2><a name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 38</span>SERMON
-III.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE DESTRUCTION OF THE FLOOD.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Genesis</span> vi. 6. 7.</p>
-<p><i>It repented the Lord</i>, <i>that He had made man upon the
-earth and it grieved Him at His heart</i>; <i>and the Lord
-said</i>, <i>I will destroy man</i>, <i>whom I have created</i>,
-<i>from the face of the earth</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> expression in the former clause
-of the text has, to some persons, afforded matter of surprise;
-and certainly the language is remarkable; representing the
-Almighty as repenting of the work of creation, and grieved at the
-heart, not merely on account of the wickedness of man, but that
-he was ever made.&nbsp; Yet the language, when properly
-considered, is no more remarkable, than that of numberless <a
-name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 39</span>other
-passages in Holy Writ; it is stronger perhaps; it may carry the
-customary mode of speech somewhat further; but that is all.&nbsp;
-We are perfectly aware, that the Godhead is incapable of being
-affected and changed by contrary passions, as we are; the purpose
-of Jehovah is fixed, upon the basis of infinite wisdom, from
-everlasting to everlasting; nothing can occur, of which He was
-previously ignorant; nothing to afford any grief or uneasiness;
-&ldquo;known unto God are all His works from the beginning of the
-world;&rdquo; <a name="citation39"></a><a href="#footnote39"
-class="citation">[39]</a> and it is impossible for us to
-interpret the text, or any similar phrase, according to the sense
-in which we understated such words, when applied to creatures
-like ourselves.</p>
-<p>It was absolutely necessary for the inspired writers, in
-describing the nature and dealings and dispensations of God, to
-have recourse to such terms, as we are in the habit of using
-towards one another.&nbsp; His constant observance of us is
-represented <a name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-40</span>by saying, that the <i>eye</i> of God is upon all our
-ways; His gracious readiness to answer our prayers, is
-represented by saying, that His <i>ear</i> is ever open: but who
-ever supposes that eye or ear, or any bodily parts, are possessed
-by the Godhead?&nbsp; So neither are we to impute to God, who is
-a pure spirit, any bodily passions; though He is said to love and
-to hate, to be angry and to be pleased.&nbsp; Of course it only
-means, that the effect of any particular conduct or transaction
-of His creatures upon Him, is similar to what it would be upon
-us, when under the influence of our natural passions; that He
-rewardeth good, as we do, when we love or are pleased; and
-punisheth evil, as we do, when we hate or are angry.&nbsp; The
-text merely intimates the measure, which the Almighty was
-determined to adopt, in consequence of the great and universal
-wickedness of mankind; of their having so far fallen from the
-noble end of their creation.</p>
-<p>Having tried many gracious methods of <a
-name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>indulgence
-with them, and sought to reclaim them by every probable and
-possible means, and having found that His goodness and
-forbearance, instead of &ldquo;leading them to repentance,&rdquo;
-only hardened them in guilt, He now saw fit to change His
-overtures of mercy into the sentence of condemnation; and to send
-a deluge for the destruction of that people, who would not
-&ldquo;turn and live:&rdquo; and this is all that can be intended
-by God&rsquo;s repentance and grief.</p>
-<p>But it happened in those days, as it has too frequently
-happened with the sinful and rebellious ever since, that the
-people believed not the threatenings denounced against them;
-whether they doubted the power of God to inflict so extraordinary
-a punishment; or whether they built their hopes upon the vain
-expectation of His mercy; or whether the wickedness of their
-hearts and lives led them entirely to cast off the belief of God
-and His word, and to plunge unheeding into the gratifications and
-pollutions of vice; whatever were the operating motive,
-&ldquo;they would <a name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-42</span>not turn and seek after God.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yet these
-infatuated people were not lost for want of further instruction
-and admonition.&nbsp; God mercifully thinks of His creatures,
-though they are forgetful of Him.&nbsp; He had raised unto them
-preachers of righteousness; and sent His Holy Spirit to work upon
-their consciences, to convert them from the delusions of evil, to
-teach them the knowledge of His ways, and persuade them to desist
-from their work of self-destruction.&nbsp; But there is a day, to
-nations as well as to individuals, beyond which the goodness and
-patience of God will no longer forbear: &ldquo;My spirit,&rdquo;
-says He, in the chapter before us, &ldquo;shall not always strive
-with man.&rdquo;&nbsp; It had been working in the human heart,
-ever since the fall; inspiring His servants to point out the way
-of salvation; and struggling with the wayward inclinations, the
-perverse opposition of His creatures; to mortify the power of
-sin, and lead them to recover the favour and happiness, which
-their first parents by transgression had lost.&nbsp; But <a
-name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>it shall not
-<i>always</i> strive; and the approaching termination of their
-trial was thus graciously declared to this &ldquo;disobedient and
-gainsaying people.&rdquo;&nbsp; God spake thus by the mouth of
-Noah: &ldquo;The days of man (the time which I will allow, to see
-if &lsquo;haply he will repent and seek after Me,&rsquo;) shall
-be a hundred and twenty years.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation43a"></a><a href="#footnote43a"
-class="citation">[43a]</a>&nbsp; All this period was to elapse
-between the denunciation of the divine vengeance and its
-execution; and to this St. Peter alludes, when speaking of
-&ldquo;the long-suffering of God, that waited in the days of
-Noah, while the ark was preparing;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation43b"></a><a href="#footnote43b"
-class="citation">[43b]</a> while Noah himself, the great
-&ldquo;preacher of righteousness,&rdquo; warned all around him of
-the certainty and the terror of this impending calamity.&nbsp;
-All entreaties, however, and warnings, and threatenings; all
-present mercies and past experiences, were vain.&nbsp; They
-despised the faith and rejected the preaching of the patriarch,
-and ridiculed his preparation of the ark; but they could not <a
-name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 44</span>&ldquo;make
-the word of God of none effect;&rdquo; His judgment overtook them
-in the midst of their rebellious career; the flood came at the
-appointed time; desolation was spread over the face of the earth;
-and all its inhabitants, with the exception of one family, were
-indiscriminately involved in the wide-wasting ruin.</p>
-<p>Let us pause for a moment, to apply the consideration of this
-part of the history to ourselves.&nbsp; To all who are wilfully
-walking in the ways of sin, the good and gracious God is
-continually addressing His warning and expostulating voice; by
-His holy word, abounding with the most awakening admonitions and
-awful examples; by His appointed ministers, superadding their
-feeble endeavours to inculcate the doctrines and set forth the
-terrors of that word &ldquo;by line upon line and precept upon
-precept;&rdquo; by various occurrences in life, by reverses and
-privations and afflictions and sickness and death; by the
-strivings of the Holy Spirit, and the alarms of conscience; by
-flashing <a name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-45</span>at intervals, in vivid colours, the conviction of an
-hereafter upon the mind and heart; and compelling the sinner to
-see, whether he will heed it or not, the peril and the
-dreadfulness of his situation.&nbsp; Of all who hear me there
-cannot be one, but has experienced, more or less, these
-manifestations of mercy and of terror: Are there not some by whom
-they have been disregarded?&nbsp; We have all of us been
-instructed and reminded and admonished, in a great variety of
-ways; have we &ldquo;profited withal?&rdquo;&nbsp; Have we been
-awakened from the dreams of sensual pleasures, from the stupor
-and infatuation of sin?&nbsp; Can we now lift up our hearts in
-sincerity to God, and thank Him that we have been brought, by
-this or that warning, into nearer and holier communion with Him;
-to serve Him in righteousness and truth, and to seek, in right
-earnest, the salvation of our souls?&nbsp; If it be otherwise
-with us, if we have neglected the seasons of grace, or if we have
-returned, after a temporary humiliation and conviction to <a
-name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>the vanity of
-our former habits and pursuits, let us, if we believe the word of
-God, lay seriously to heart the solemn declarations on this head,
-with which that word abounds&mdash;that there is a limit
-prescribed even for the divine compassion and forbearance; a
-period marked out, beyond which God will not manifest His favour,
-&ldquo;though it be sought with tears;&rdquo; beyond which,
-&ldquo;His spirit will not strive with man;&rdquo; and whenever
-that spirit shall be withdrawn, the conscience will become
-hardened, the understanding benighted, and the sinner
-&ldquo;given over to a reprobate mind.&rdquo;&nbsp; God allows,
-indeed He has already allowed, to every one of us, abundant space
-and opportunity for repentance, as He did of old to the
-ante-diluvian race; and if we, like them, are negligent of His
-merciful admonitions, we must expect, like them, to go on from
-one degree of wickedness to another, till the &ldquo;measure of
-our iniquity be filled;&rdquo; till we are hurried into
-everlasting perdition.</p>
-<p>No doubt, when the threatenings of the <a
-name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>Almighty
-began to be executed; when the mighty waters were descending from
-above, and rising in billows from the deep below; when these
-people saw the ark, whose building and preparation they had
-despised, floating in security upon the surface of the waters,
-gladly would they have been admitted: no longer did they question
-the power of God, or the truth of His word; or hold in contempt
-the preaching of His prophets; earnest then, no doubt, was their
-supplication for mercy; and they must have wished, in the
-bitterness of their hearts, that they had listened to the
-declarations and instructions of that holy minister of God, who
-was provided with a refuge; who was escaping unhurt amidst the
-rolling of the waves, which threatened <i>them</i> with immediate
-and inevitable destruction.&nbsp; But their conviction came too
-late; the days of reconciliation were ended; the door of the ark
-was shut; never to be opened again, till the flood had wrought
-its vengeance, and exterminated the sinners from the earth.</p>
-<p><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 48</span>Has not
-the like, the parallel of this dreadful case, been frequently
-discovered by ourselves?&nbsp; Have we not seen, or at least
-heard of persons, who have held out impenitently all their lives
-long against every means of grace and reclaim, by which they have
-been visited, and then at last, when suddenly overtaken by a
-sickness unto death, have distressfully desired that comfort and
-refuge, which they have never appeared to find?&nbsp; Their
-attention has been called, their eye directed to the ark of
-salvation, the gospel of the blessed Jesus; but having taken no
-interest in it before, having discarded and rejected it, they
-have seemed to behold it only in dismay and despair.&nbsp; Man,
-it is true, is not an adequate judge in such a case; he could not
-possibly decide, whether they were saved or not; but there was
-fear all around; their friends were denied the consolation of
-persuading themselves, that the door of mercy was opened; the
-sinner cried in agony, but there was no visible sign, that the
-cry <a name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 49</span>was
-heard; no respite to the afflicted conscience; and no repose upon
-the countenance, that betokened the blessedness of peace.</p>
-<p>Suppose not, that this is a scene pourtrayed for the mere
-purpose of a momentary excitement or present effect; it is a true
-description of what has too frequently occurred; and it falls
-indeed, as every representation must fall, infinitely short of
-the terrible reality.&nbsp; Readily can we imagine the sufferings
-and sorrow and distress of the people, who were drowning, with
-the ark before their eyes; and must we not conclude, that the
-impenitent sinner under the gospel, when he comes to die, will
-behold, with even deeper feelings of anguish, the ark of
-righteousness into which he has never sought to enter; when he
-finds or fears, that the overflowings of ungodliness are sinking
-his soul to ruin, can any description exaggerate, can any
-description equal, the wretchedness of his condition?</p>
-<p>The very idea and contemplation of these <a
-name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 50</span>things may
-well lead us, with all sincerity and fervour, to implore the
-grace of God, while it is so freely offered, and to &ldquo;seek
-Him while He may be found;&rdquo; and O that it may lead us
-gladly and unfeignedly to embrace the covenant of safety, which
-is graciously propounded to us in the gospel; and to &ldquo;give
-all diligence&rdquo; to fulfil every condition which that
-covenant contains.&nbsp; We shall not, if we value our eternal
-welfare, think it sufficient not to &ldquo;deny the Lord that
-bought us,&rdquo; not to despise the means which He has provided
-for our preservation and deliverance; we shall turn to Him with
-all our heart, grateful for the means of salvation, and anxious
-to employ them all.&nbsp; &ldquo;Lord what wilt Thou have me to
-do?&rdquo; <a name="citation50a"></a><a href="#footnote50a"
-class="citation">[50a]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Speak, Lord, for thy
-servant heareth;&rdquo; <a name="citation50b"></a><a
-href="#footnote50b" class="citation">[50b]</a> this is the
-language that befits a sinner, who has no hope but in God&rsquo;s
-covenanted mercy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Our time is in the Lord&rsquo;s hands;&rdquo; we know
-not, if little or much remain: <a name="page51"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 51</span>Arise, defer not a day.&nbsp; His
-spirit is now striving within us; to purify our affections, to
-change our corrupt nature, to form the christian principle and
-temper in our souls; let us then, without doubt or delay, humbly
-and thankfully concur with His holy operations, and strive with
-Him, while we may: not lingering and loitering about the ark with
-thoughtless indifference, as if our minds were not made up,
-whether it be worth while to enter; but, in the full and perfect
-and abiding persuasion, that it is the only refuge for man, let
-us secure, as far as it is possible, our rest and habitation
-there; and then we need not fear the overwhelming of the waters,
-come they ever so suddenly or ever so soon; we shall be raised
-above them all, unhurt and undismayed; we shall ride safely and
-triumphantly over the foaming billows; and settle at last upon
-the heavenly Ararat, the &ldquo;mountain of the Lord of
-Hosts,&rdquo; the everlasting abode of tranquillity and
-bliss.</p>
-<p><a name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>But of
-this happy termination we shall have occasion to speak more at
-large, in another discourse; when we come to treat of the
-character of Noah, and the circumstances of his wonderful
-preservation.&nbsp; In the mean time, let us observe, that the
-deluge is a subject of most awful consideration; not merely in
-itself, as sweeping away into perdition almost all the human
-race, and changing the very form and structure of the globe; but
-also as being a resemblance and emblem of other visitations of an
-offended and avenging God:&mdash;in the first place, of the
-overthrow of Jerusalem, and the miserable and general destruction
-of its rebellious people.&nbsp; &ldquo;As the days of Noe were,
-so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.&nbsp; For as in
-the days that were before the flood they were eating and
-drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe
-entered into the ark, and knew not until the flood came and took
-them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of <a
-name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>man
-be;&rdquo; <a name="citation53a"></a><a href="#footnote53a"
-class="citation">[53a]</a> so unlooked for, so amazing, so
-disastrous to His enemies.</p>
-<p>This stupendous event may also be regarded as typical of
-another period, infinitely surpassing all the rest in terror and
-in awe;&mdash;the coming of Christ to judge the world, to execute
-His final vengeance upon those who would not be reclaimed by His
-mercy.&nbsp; The face of nature will then be destroyed by another
-process; by a direful and universal conflagration.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;By the word of God the heavens were of old, and the earth
-standing out of the water and in the water: whereby the world
-that then was, being overflowed with water, perished: but the
-heavens and the earth, which are now, by the same word are kept
-in store, reserved unto fire against the day of judgment and
-perdition of ungodly men.&rdquo; <a name="citation53b"></a><a
-href="#footnote53b" class="citation">[53b]</a>&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Nevertheless we, according to His promise, look for new
-heavens and a new earth, (a new state) wherein dwelleth
-righteousness.&nbsp; Wherefore, beloved, seeing that <a
-name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 54</span>ye look for
-such things, be diligent that ye may be found of Him in peace,
-without spot, and blameless.&rdquo; <a name="citation54a"></a><a
-href="#footnote54a" class="citation">[54a]</a>&nbsp; All that
-have ever lived shall be summoned again into existence; the
-righteous to be separated, and &ldquo;caught up to meet the Lord
-in the air,&rdquo; <a name="citation54b"></a><a
-href="#footnote54b" class="citation">[54b]</a> and to be conveyed
-into the regions of eternal blessedness; the wicked, to perish,
-to die, not a bodily but a spiritual death; to be consigned
-together to a place of banishment and wretchedness and horror and
-despair.&nbsp; The miserable unbelievers and the obstinate
-transgressors, in the days of Noah, shall then return to the
-earth from which they were swept away; not to enjoy again their
-revelry and licentiousness; not to be favoured with another day
-of grace; but to receive, with all their companions in evil, with
-all that have ever &ldquo;followed their pernicious ways,&rdquo;
-the full and eternal recompence of their deeds.&nbsp; This will
-indeed be a day of desolation, &ldquo;of lamentation and mourning
-and woe,&rdquo; of &ldquo;weeping and wailing <a
-name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 55</span>and gnashing
-of teeth;&rdquo; of which awful day no words, no example, no past
-event, nor even imagination itself, can afford an adequate
-representation.</p>
-<p>God Almighty grant, that we may never know its terrors; that
-we may profit from the warnings and experience, which are
-mercifully vouchsafed unto us; may embrace, with all our hearts,
-the covenant of salvation into which we have professedly entered;
-and, amidst the wreck and ruin of the world, may be delivered
-with an everlasting deliverance, for the sake, and through the
-merits, of that omnipotent Saviour, who was with Noah in the ark;
-who has guarded, and will continue to guard, the ark of His
-Church in all ages; whose mercy and truth are pledged for the
-final preservation of His faithful people: God Almighty grant
-this blessing unto us all, through the aid and operation of that
-&ldquo;Holy Spirit, whereby we are sealed unto the day of
-redemption.&rdquo; <a name="citation55"></a><a href="#footnote55"
-class="citation">[55]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 56</span>SERMON
-IV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE PRESERVATION FROM THE
-FLOOD.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Genesis</span> vi. 8.<br />
-<i>Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> a former discourse, your
-attention was called to the execution of divine vengeance upon
-the sinful race of man, by the tremendous visitation of a
-universal deluge; I would now direct your contemplation to
-another point of view; to a fulfilment of the gracious promises
-of God made to a distinguished believer and a faithful servant;
-to his preservation from the general ruin; to the covenants of
-mercy established with him; to the blessings and deliverances
-thus proclaimed and typified to the Church of God in all
-ages.</p>
-<p><a name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 57</span>Noah,
-be it first observed, was possessed of that principle, which is
-the sure and only foundation of true righteousness; and to which
-the Almighty has, in every age, manifested His especial
-favour&mdash;the principle of <i>faith</i>; of a settled, vital,
-influential belief in the sovereignty, the providence, and the
-word of God: he doubted not the truth either of a threatening or
-a promise, and withheld not the obedience, which his belief
-implied or required.&nbsp; Of this St. Paul assures us; &ldquo;By
-faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved
-with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house; by the
-which he condemned the world, and became heir of the
-righteousness which is by faith;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation57"></a><a href="#footnote57"
-class="citation">[57]</a> he condemned the world, inasmuch as his
-example, his preaching, and his deliverance furnished matter of
-accusation against them; he pointed out and led the way to a
-place of safety; he escaped destruction, and the rest of <a
-name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>the people
-might have escaped also; and thus he proved, that they justly
-perished in the unbelief and obstinacy of their hearts.&nbsp;
-Hence he became the heir of those promises and that happiness, to
-which the righteous believer, by God&rsquo;s mercy, is entitled;
-he was blessed, not merely with that temporal preservation, which
-the ark afforded him in the flood; but also with that spiritual
-and heavenly salvation, of which the ark was an emblem and a
-sign.</p>
-<p>And further; Noah is described, in the verse following the
-text, as &ldquo;a just man and perfect in his
-generations.&rdquo;&nbsp; His faith, as we have already
-intimated, was not, like that of many professors of religion, a
-mere outward and formal assent; it resided in his heart, as well
-as in his understanding; and shewed itself in his disposition,
-his character, and his life.&nbsp; Believing in the goodness of
-God, he loved Him; in the power and justice of God, he feared; in
-the infallible truth and authority of God, he <a
-name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>obeyed.&nbsp;
-With an enlightened reason and conscience, he studied the duty of
-ordinary life; his duty to God and man; and he performed it
-faithfully.&nbsp; &ldquo;He was perfect in his
-generations;&rdquo; not that he had attained unto absolute,
-positive perfection; for that is impossible to any mere man, in
-his fallen condition; it was only &ldquo;the man Christ
-Jesus,&rdquo; the incarnate God, that was &ldquo;holy, harmless,
-undefiled, separate from sinners;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation59"></a><a href="#footnote59"
-class="citation">[59]</a> but Noah, in the midst of a
-&ldquo;disobedient and gainsaying people,&rdquo; was sincere and
-upright; he lived in no wilful or habitual opposition to his God;
-he had that degree of perfection, which is the mark and fruit of
-genuine faith; and shews, that the frail creature is brought into
-a state of acceptance with his Creator.&nbsp; He engaged heartily
-in the cause of religion; there was nothing in the world, which
-he was not ready to renounce for it; there was no ordinance, nor
-command of God, which it was not his unbending <a
-name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 60</span>purpose to
-obey; desirous was he &ldquo;to serve Him, in holiness and
-righteousness all the days of his life.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
-therefore it is yet further said, that &ldquo;he walked with
-God;&rdquo; <a name="citation60a"></a><a href="#footnote60a"
-class="citation">[60a]</a> &ldquo;setting the Lord (as David
-speaks) always before him;&rdquo; <a name="citation60b"></a><a
-href="#footnote60b" class="citation">[60b]</a> living in a
-perpetual sense of the divine presence; acting as under the
-continual observation of that Almighty Being, who was acquainted
-with all his ways; and whose word was &ldquo;a lamp unto his feet
-and a light unto his path.&rdquo; <a name="citation60c"></a><a
-href="#footnote60c" class="citation">[60c]</a>&nbsp; He walked in
-communion with God, by his life and conversation, as well as by
-faith, and meditation, and prayer; and he preached to a
-&ldquo;backsliding and stubborn generation,&rdquo; by his example
-as well as by his word.</p>
-<p>We cannot wonder, that such eminent holiness and obedience,
-shining forth in the midst of so much profligacy and corruption,
-were honoured with the signal favour of Almighty God.&nbsp; A
-righteous character, which is always <a name="page61"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 61</span>&ldquo;of great price in the sight of
-God,&rdquo; is peculiarly honourable in an age overspread with
-impiety and guilt.&nbsp; The man, who stands forth to maintain
-the cause of God against a universal host of enemies; who is
-untainted by the moral contagion which is every where diffused
-around him; who perseveringly opposes the mighty stream of
-iniquity, which is ready to overwhelm his soul; that man is a
-spectacle for angels to behold with joy; and one in whom the holy
-God Himself is well-pleased; he is as &ldquo;a light shining in a
-dark place,&rdquo; made more conspicuous and attractive by the
-surrounding gloom.&nbsp; Such was Noah; and God distinguished him
-accordingly by especial tokens of favour and blessing: for He
-said, &ldquo;Behold I, even I, do bring a flood of waters upon
-the earth, to destroy all flesh, wherein is the breath of life,
-from under heaven; and every thing that is in the earth shall
-die.&nbsp; But with thee will I establish my covenant; and thou
-shalt come into the ark, thou, <a name="page62"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 62</span>and thy sons, and thy wife, and thy
-sons&rsquo; wives with thee.&rdquo; <a name="citation62a"></a><a
-href="#footnote62a" class="citation">[62a]</a></p>
-<p>A question has been raised respecting the nature of the
-covenant here intended; but the words themselves, taken in
-connexion with the subject, would lead us to conclude, that the
-covenant to be established, in the first instance, was a covenant
-of safety in the ark, during the flood; and this sense is
-abundantly confirmed by the same word being afterwards used in
-the 9th chapter, when God made His promise to the patriarch, that
-the world should never again be so destroyed: &ldquo;Behold, I
-establish my covenant with you, and with your seed after you, and
-with every living creature that is with you&mdash;neither shall
-all flesh be cut off any more by the waters of a flood; neither
-shall there any more be a flood to destroy the earth.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation62b"></a><a href="#footnote62b"
-class="citation">[62b]</a>&nbsp; Yet, though this was the
-immediate import of the covenant, it probably had, like the ark
-itself, a further and a typical <a name="page63"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 63</span>signification, which is thus very
-admirably expressed by one of the best commentators; &ldquo;I
-will most certainly make good the promise I have formerly made to
-thee, of preserving thee and thy family from the said
-destruction; and further I will make good, in due time, to thee
-or thy seed after thee, <i>all</i> those covenants or promises,
-which I have made to mankind from the beginning of the world, and
-which remain to be made good; especially the grand covenant
-concerning the promised seed, of Messiah: to which end, I will
-certainly preserve thee and thy family from the destruction I am
-now bringing on the rest of mankind.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation63"></a><a href="#footnote63"
-class="citation">[63]</a></p>
-<p>The first covenant made by God with Adam, was a covenant of
-works, of unsinning obedience; this was broken, and thence came
-death.&nbsp; The second covenant made with Adam, was that of
-grace and salvation by Jesus Christ, who should &ldquo;come in
-the fulness of time;&rdquo; this latter <a
-name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 64</span>covenant was
-confirmed with Noah, the representative of mankind in the new
-world after the flood; and the covenant, thus renewed with him,
-was to extend to all his posterity; to generations unborn, to all
-that would become, as he was, &ldquo;heirs of the righteousness
-which is by faith.&rdquo;&nbsp; Through him, deliverance was
-preached to the people before the flood; through him, everlasting
-deliverance from sin and death was promised to believers in every
-future age.&nbsp; In the covenant, therefore, made with Noah, all
-mankind have an interest, an especial interest at this day; the
-promised deliverer, whom Noah represented, is come; we
-&ldquo;have seen the salvation of our God;&rdquo; the gospel of
-peace is proclaimed; and nothing is wanting but our faithful
-acceptance of it.</p>
-<p>Proceed we now with the history of Noah&rsquo;s preservation:
-&ldquo;The waters prevailed exceedingly upon the earth (a hundred
-and fifty days), and all the high hills, that were under the
-whole heaven, were covered&mdash;and all flesh <a
-name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>died that
-moved upon the earth, Noah only remained alive, and they that
-were with him in the ark.&nbsp; And the ark rested in the seventh
-month, upon the mountains of Ararat.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation65"></a><a href="#footnote65"
-class="citation">[65]</a>&nbsp; Thus was the divine promise
-literally fulfilled, and the fidelity of the patriarch signally
-acknowledged and rewarded.&nbsp; What must have been the emotions
-of this holy man, as he was floating, through the long eventful
-period, upon the surface of the raging waters!&nbsp; How deep and
-lively his conviction of the adorable goodness and the perfect
-truth of God!&nbsp; How fervent his gratitude, how sublime his
-joy, at escaping unhurt amid the desolation of the world!&nbsp;
-How indescribable his feelings of horror and of awe, at the
-sufferings of those countless multitudes, who were perishing
-around him; over whose lifeless bodies he was riding in peaceful
-security, reserved to be the father of a new-born world!&nbsp;
-Similar to these are the impressions of every sincere believer,
-<a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 66</span>on
-beholding both the providential and spiritual dispensations of
-the Lord.&nbsp; Deeply is he convinced of the &ldquo;goodness and
-severity of God;&rdquo; of His goodness to the righteous, His
-severity to the disobedient and evil: Every divine promise and
-every denunciation of divine judgment have been fully
-accomplished in due season; &ldquo;not one jot or one tittle of
-the word of God has failed.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Christian, moreover,
-by his own experience, can testify the truth and loving kindness
-of God: he has sought and found a refuge in the ark of salvation,
-in the gospel of peace; he has been taken out of a corrupt and
-troubled world, and raised above it; so that, while the billows
-of adversity have been rolling all around, and the overbearings
-of iniquity have every where prevailed, he has felt himself in a
-state of security; inclosed by divine mercy &ldquo;on the right
-hand and on the left;&rdquo; protected by the power of Jehovah;
-all things, even the most unruly elements, &ldquo;working
-together for his good:&rdquo; when &ldquo;the rain descends, and
-<a name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 67</span>the floods
-come, and the winds blow,&rdquo; he hears and sees it all without
-dismay; nay, with gratitude to his heavenly Preserver; hoping and
-believing, that the waves of trouble are bearing him to the
-celestial Ararat, upon which he shall alight, in God&rsquo;s
-appointed time, and &ldquo;find rest unto his soul.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But, in the midst of his satisfaction and joy, there is a
-consideration, which strikes a damp upon his soul, and fills him
-with grief and terror; it is, the miserable condition of those
-his fellow-creatures, who have been regardless of their salvation
-and have perished: the Saviour &ldquo;called, but they would not
-answer;&rdquo; He assured them of the coming desolation, but they
-would not take heed; He offered them mercy, but they turned away:
-and the flood came upon them unawares; and it is painful to think
-of them, where they now are, and how many they have been.&nbsp;
-And not only for those who are gone, but for numbers still
-living, does the charitable Christian also feel: it is not for
-him to <a name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 68</span>be
-forward in judging, not for him to condemn; &ldquo;he hopeth all
-things, and believeth all things;&rdquo; but when he sees
-multitudes around him manifestly walking in the &ldquo;broad way
-of destruction,&rdquo; he cannot help feeling both pity and pain;
-especially if any of his neighbours or friends be found in this
-awful state of heedlessness and sin; especially if any who are
-near and dear unto him.&nbsp; He cannot help grieving for them;
-they will have, at least, his tears and his prayers.&nbsp; Would
-that such sinners might feel for themselves, what others feel for
-them; would that they might turn and live!&nbsp; Their case is
-not like the case of those who were perishing in the flood; they
-are not yet consigned to destruction; would to God that they
-might turn and live!</p>
-<p>At length, &ldquo;the waters were dried up from off the earth,
-and the face of the ground was dry.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;And Noah
-went forth&rdquo; out of the ark, and &ldquo;builded an altar
-unto the Lord, and offered burnt <a name="page69"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 69</span>offerings upon the altar,&rdquo; in
-thanksgiving for his miraculous preservation; &ldquo;and the Lord
-smelled a sweet savour;&rdquo; <a name="citation69"></a><a
-href="#footnote69" class="citation">[69]</a> He accepted the
-incense of the sacrifice, approved and honoured the piety and
-gratitude of Noah.</p>
-<p>In all our deliverances and escapes, in all the benefits and
-blessings we receive at the merciful hands of God, let us never
-fail to imitate this bright example of righteousness: be it our
-first, our immediate act, to waft unto the skies the incense of
-adoration and praise.&nbsp; The faithful and observant Christian
-does indeed perpetually notice the interposition of divine
-Providence in his behalf; and he never fails to render the
-tribute of his heart at least, if not of his lips, to the great
-Deliverer: but besides this, there are few of us, who have not,
-in some striking instances, been wonderfully rescued from
-imminent danger and destruction; preserved in frightful accident,
-or raised from a sickness which was seemingly <a
-name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 70</span>unto
-death.&nbsp; Has the favour been duty remembered with
-gratitude?&nbsp; Did it bring us on our knees before the throne
-of mercy?&nbsp; Did we present our offering with that humble
-sense of our own unworthiness, and that devout acknowledgment of
-God&rsquo;s love, which gave us just reason to believe that the
-offering was accepted, through Jesus Christ our Lord?&nbsp; And
-ever since, has an altar been raised in our hearts; have our
-affections been dedicated to God, as a memorial of the past
-deliverance, and a fulfilment of the purpose for which we were
-mercifully spared?</p>
-<p>And there is a deliverance greater and mightier than all, of
-which every faithful servant in the gospel is enjoying, at once,
-both the hope and the benefit; a deliverance, of which
-Noah&rsquo;s was a type, from the bondage and penalty of sin;
-from eternal misery, and ruin.&nbsp; Are we penetrated with a
-sense of this marvellous mercy?&nbsp; Do we worship our great
-Redeemer in spirit and in truth?&nbsp; Do we <a
-name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 71</span>love Him with
-all our heart and soul?&nbsp; Do we proclaim abroad our gratitude
-and love, in the presence of a contemptuous world?&nbsp; Noah was
-immediately and powerfully reminded of the divine goodness
-accorded to himself, by beholding the face of nature all desolate
-and void: and thus, when we behold around us the dismal ravages
-of sin, and contemplate, with the eye of faith, the ruin which
-they will finally bring, are there not afforded to <i>us</i>,
-exulting as we are in the hope of our own redemption, abundant
-memorials of the favour of God to ourselves?&nbsp; &ldquo;Bless
-the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless His holy
-name.&nbsp; Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His
-benefits: who redeemeth thy life from destruction, and crowneth
-thee with loving kindness and tender mercies.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation71"></a><a href="#footnote71"
-class="citation">[71]</a></p>
-<p>My brethren, if we would find, as &ldquo;Noah found, grace in
-the eyes of the Lord,&rdquo; we must be like him, in faith and
-obedience, in &ldquo;faith which worketh by love.&rdquo;&nbsp; <a
-name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 72</span>We must be
-ready, at the divine command, to leave the &ldquo;pomps and
-vanity of a wicked world, and all the sinful lusts of the
-flesh,&rdquo; and prepare the means of our deliverance, in the
-way which God mercifully points out.&nbsp; We must dare to be
-singular in the midst of a gainsaying and reviling people; and
-maintain our integrity in the face of a backsliding age.&nbsp;
-If, in the hour of danger and destruction, we would have God for
-our deliverer and friend, we must seek Him and serve Him, whilst
-we are in health and safety: thus will He be our portion in life,
-in death, in judgment, and for ever.</p>
-<p>We are hereby led, in the last place, to consider the promise
-and pledge, which God was pleased to afford to the patriarch
-immediately after the flood; that &ldquo;the waters would no more
-become a flood to destroy all flesh.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I do set
-my bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a covenant
-between me and the earth&mdash;and I will look upon it, that I
-may remember the everlasting covenant between God <a
-name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 73</span>and every
-living creature of all flesh that is upon the earth.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Whether there had ever been a rainbow before the flood, is a
-point that cannot absolutely be determined; probably not; but if
-there had been, it makes no difference; the bow was then
-consecrated to be the token of a covenant of mercy, between God
-and man; and whenever the descending shower and the darkened sky
-recal to mind his former vengeance on the ungodly, we may take
-comfort on beholding this bright display of majesty and beauty,
-&ldquo;this faithful witness in heaven;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation73"></a><a href="#footnote73"
-class="citation">[73]</a> our hearts may then be gladdened by the
-remembrance and assurance of God&rsquo;s everlasting love: we
-behold the seal of heaven, ratifying the promise of divine
-favour: and the believer may justly regard it, not only as a
-token of security against a future deluge, but also as a hopeful
-intimation of God&rsquo;s mercy in all the storms of this mortal
-life, in every threatening flood.&nbsp; We may view it, with
-delighted eyes, as a blessed <a name="page74"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 74</span>memorial of the truth and
-faithfulness of that Almighty Protector, whose word is pledged
-for the preservation of His people, at all times and under all
-possible circumstances.&nbsp; His mercies, of providence and
-grace, can never fail; and an earnest of these mercies we may
-discover, when we look upon the bow in the cloud; it is, in a
-secondary sense at least, emblematical of God&rsquo;s everlasting
-covenant with His faithful people, that He will &ldquo;never
-leave them nor forsake them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Nor is it without authority, that we are thus extending the
-import of this heavenly sign: St. John in one of his beatific
-visions, &ldquo;looked and behold a door was opened in heaven,
-and behold a throne was set in heaven, and there was a rainbow
-round about the throne.&rdquo; <a name="citation75"></a><a
-href="#footnote75" class="citation">[75]</a>&nbsp; The saints in
-light are thus represented as beholding the abode of their God,
-encircled with the token of His covenanted mercy; an evidence to
-them, that they have finally escaped the devastation of the
-world; <a name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-75</span>that the floods and storms have for ever subsided; that
-none of the imperfections and troubles and dangers, from which
-they have been rescued, shall ever again disturb their mind or
-mar their happiness.</p>
-<p>Hear then, in few words, the conclusion of the whole matter:
-let the destroying deluge awaken in us, by divine grace, a living
-conviction of the infallibility of God&rsquo;s word, of the
-certain &ldquo;perdition of ungodly men;&rdquo; let the
-deliverance of Noah and his family assure our hearts in the
-expectation of the glorious redemption of every believer and
-servant of God.</p>
-<p>Let us enter the ark of salvation, prepared by our great
-Redeemer; enter and abide there; and we shall be carried
-triumphantly over the stormy elements of the world; and be
-conducted &ldquo;unto the haven where we would be:&rdquo; the
-dove will bring unto us the olive branch of peace; and the
-transcendent beauty of the celestial rainbow shall appear without
-a cloud, and bless our souls with the perfect assurance of
-eternal safety and joy.</p>
-<h2><a name="page76"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 76</span>SERMON
-V.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">DO THIS GREAT WICKEDNESS AND SIN AGAINST
-GOD.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Genesis</span> xxxix. 9.</p>
-<p><i>How then can I do this great wickedness and sin against
-God</i>?</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> history of Joseph, by whom
-these memorable words were uttered, is full of interest and
-instruction.&nbsp; He presents unto us the splendid and rare
-example of a person advanced, from the lowest estate, to
-distinction and wealth and power; and yet preserving his piety
-and integrity unimpaired.&nbsp; Not all the luxury and
-blandishments of a court of unbelievers could tempt him to forget
-that gracious almighty benefactor, by whom he had been rescued
-from danger, and raised to prosperity and <a
-name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-77</span>greatness.&nbsp; We all know how apt are the
-understanding and heart of man to be captivated and corrupted by
-the enjoyment of earthly pomp and pleasure, under any
-circumstances; but especially when they are attained by a sudden
-and unexpected elevation.&nbsp; Joseph had been cruelly left by
-his brethren in a state of utter destitution.&nbsp; Taken out of
-the pit into which they had inhumanly cast him, he was sold as a
-slave to a company of people, who were passing by, and carried
-into Egypt; by accident, as it appeared, but really under the
-guidance and direction of an all-wise providence, to accomplish
-the wonderful purposes of His divine will.</p>
-<p>The scriptural account of his rapid rise to favour and
-eminence, in this his new abode, is exceedingly striking; and
-shews the especial regard which the Almighty bears for His
-righteous and faithful servants; there is no situation of life
-too obscure for the notice of His all-seeing eye; none too low
-for Him to interpose in <a name="page78"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 78</span>behalf of His people, and exalt them
-to usefulness and honour.&nbsp; &ldquo;Joseph was brought down to
-Egypt; and Potiphar an officer of Pharaoh, captain of the guard,
-an Egyptian, bought him of the hands of the Ishmeelites, which
-had brought him down thither.&nbsp; And the Lord was with Joseph,
-and he was a prosperous man; and he was in the house of his
-master the Egyptian.&nbsp; And his master saw that the Lord was
-with him, and that the Lord made all that he did to prosper in
-his hand.&nbsp; And Joseph found grace in his sight, and he
-served him; and he made him overseer over his house, and all that
-he had he put into his hand.&rdquo; <a name="citation78"></a><a
-href="#footnote78" class="citation">[78]</a></p>
-<p>Thus favoured and advanced, this holy man never forgot, as too
-many do, that gracious Being, to whose loving kindness he was
-indebted; instead of growing vain of his superiority, as if he
-had raised himself merely by his own talent or industry, he
-referred all his blessings to God&rsquo;s bountiful providence,
-and rendered unto <a name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-79</span>Him the return of a grateful and faithful service.</p>
-<p>It was not long before his fidelity was put to the trial; and
-the manner in which he escaped the snare, that was laid for him,
-affords a remarkable proof not only of his integrity, but of his
-faith, his piety, his religion, his gratitude and love to God:
-the only principles upon which any dependence can be placed in
-the temptation of an evil hour.&nbsp; Joseph, when powerfully
-solicited to betray the confidence, and despoil the honour of his
-master, might have contented himself with declaring the
-numberless acts of kindness which he had received at
-Potiphar&rsquo;s hand; the recompence of faithfulness which he
-owed for them all; or the fear of bringing upon himself disgrace
-and ruin, by so atrocious a crime; considerations indeed, which
-actually had no small influence and weight upon his mind.&nbsp;
-But he goes much further, and appeals to a higher authority, to a
-nobler principle; to one which was calculated to give unto every
-minor consideration <a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-80</span>a tenfold effect; to secure the performance of that
-duty, which reason and honour and conscience suggested; he
-appealed to his God, from the fountain of whose mercy he had
-derived all his benefits and blessings; and to whom therefore,
-his sincere unswerving obedience was unreservedly due.&nbsp; Like
-every pious and good man, he remembers and regards the human ties
-by which he is bound; and instances, in feeling language, the
-kindness and estimation of his earthly master; &ldquo;Behold, my
-master wrotteth not (knoweth not) what is with me in the house,
-and he hath committed all things that he hath to my hand; there
-is none greater in this house than I.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation80"></a><a href="#footnote80"
-class="citation">[80]</a>&nbsp; But then this man of God, after
-thus recounting the signal favour which had been shewn him by an
-earthly master, does not rest his duty upon saying, &lsquo;how
-can I abuse the unbounded confidence reposed in me; how can I
-prove myself so unworthy of my lord?&rsquo;&nbsp; But
-immediately, <a name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-81</span>as if it were the habitual suggestion of his mind,
-elevates his thoughts and affections to his master in heaven; to
-Him, who had put it into the heart of Potiphar thus to
-distinguish and bless him; to Him, by whose grace alone he had
-been what he had been, a faithful and dutiful servant; and by
-whose gracious interposition &ldquo;all things had worked
-together for his good.&rdquo;&nbsp; For such surpassing mercy
-poured down upon him from heaven, he could not bear the thought
-of making so base a requital; and exclaimed in the energy of his
-soul, &ldquo;How can I do this great wickedness and sin against
-God?&rdquo;&nbsp; Resting upon such a principle, the triumph of
-his virtue was complete; it enabled him to disregard whatever
-evil consequences might ensue; and to stand against the subtlest
-wiles of the tempter, and under circumstances of imminent peril,
-a noble monument of the power of religion; upright in his duty to
-God and man.</p>
-<p>Much edification may the Christian gather from the narrative
-before us; and <a name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-82</span>happy would it be for the Christian world, if the
-principle, here so splendidly illustrated, were in fuller
-operation.&nbsp; It might indeed be thought, that with the
-superior knowledge we enjoy, of the transcendent mercy and
-goodness of God, of the extent and bounty of His providence, as
-well as the riches of his grace; that, with the clear revelation
-of the divine will, the glorious manifestation of gospel light,
-to us so abundantly vouchsafed; that, taught as we have been to
-look upon God as our reconciled Father in Jesus Christ, as the
-&ldquo;author and giver of every good gift&rdquo; in this world,
-and the spring of all our blissful hopes of an inheritance in the
-brighter world to come; it might have been thought, under these
-superior advantages and means of grace, that in all the events of
-life, in every temptation and trial, our affections would be
-certainly raised, above every earthly consideration, to the high
-and holy God; that, when we are pressed with the solicitations of
-evil, it would immediately occur to our minds and enter <a
-name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 83</span>into our
-hearts, how abhorrent the offence must be to that perfect and
-glorious Being, in whose image we are professedly recreated; how
-grievous to that Holy Spirit, in whom we ought to live and walk;
-how disgracefully and basely unworthy of those spiritual
-privileges, to which we have been restored; of the great mercies
-we have already received; and the still greater we are yet
-expecting, from the redemption which hath been wrought for us by
-the ever blessed Jesus; it might be concluded, that Christians,
-when tempted to injury and evil, would immediately refer the
-matter to the blessed word and will of their divine master, and
-exclaim, with a pious and grateful feeling, &ldquo;how can I do
-this great wickedness and sin against God?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Yet, is it not notorious, that a great, an overwhelming
-portion of the inhabitants of this enlightened land, are governed
-in a very small, if in any degree, by this pure sense of
-spiritual and religious obligation?&nbsp; Commonly, when they are
-<a name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>solicited
-to sinful gratifications and pursuits, &ldquo;God is not in all
-their thoughts:&rdquo; whether they yield or not, depends partly
-upon the strength of their natural inclination; partly upon the
-light in which the sin may be regarded by the world around them;
-upon the extent to which it may affect their worldly reputation;
-upon what they may calculate to gain or lose by their
-conduct.&nbsp; The law of custom has manifestly a greater
-influence than the law of God; nay, what are called the <i>rules
-of honour</i>, which, in many instances, are flagrantly repugnant
-and opposite to the divine will, (and might rather be called the
-rules of <i>dishonour</i>,) are appealed to, in a Christian
-country, as the arbiters of right and wrong; while the
-&ldquo;honour that cometh from God only&rdquo; is totally
-disregarded and forgotten.&nbsp; And even of those, who are
-unacquainted with the precise terms of these fallacious rules,
-what multitudes are there, whose practice and conduct are
-determined by considerations merely human; who will be guided <a
-name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 85</span>by a feeling
-of gratitude to an earthly benefactor, and yet have no sense or
-remembrance of the favour of an all-merciful God; who will be
-deterred from evil by the dread of offending an earthly superior,
-that has power only over the body, and yet possess in their
-hearts no fear whatever of Him, &ldquo;who is able to destroy
-both body and soul in hell.&rdquo;&nbsp; Where there are no
-better guides, no higher inducements than these, &ldquo;to refuse
-the evil and to choose the good,&rdquo; we cannot be surprised at
-the licentiousness and corruption, which so unhappily prevail;
-nor even at the flagrant and shameless commission of that
-calamitous sin, which Joseph rejected with such holy
-disdain.&nbsp; Against the impetuous desires and cravings of the
-flesh; the assiduous entreaties of wicked companions; and the
-beguiling charms, which Satan so well knows how to spread over
-all the ways and works of evil; against all these combining
-together, it cannot be expected, that any human <a
-name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 86</span>motives or
-maxims, any earthly feelings alone, should be able successfully
-to stand.</p>
-<p>Not that such motives or maxims or feelings are to be despised
-or disregarded; not that any just or lawful consideration,
-however trivial, should be overlooked, which may be instrumental,
-in any degree, to preserve us from evil.&nbsp; Far is it from
-being the design of the gospel, to supersede the dictates and
-rules of reason; the workings of conscience; or the influence of
-natural affection, of hope and joy and gratitude and love; the
-gospel purifies all these motives, and guides them aright, and
-directs the exercise of them into the proper channel.&nbsp; But
-even the best of them, with the sincere Christian, are as nothing
-when compared with his religious principle, with the faith and
-fear and love of God: when tempted to sin, he thinks of that Holy
-Being, with whom he has entered into covenant; of that gracious
-Redeemer, who hath endured so much for his sake, who hath <a
-name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 87</span>brought him
-into the way of salvation, by whose favour he is enjoying
-&ldquo;the life that now is, and the promise of that which is to
-come;&rdquo; he thinks of the Holy Spirit, &ldquo;by whom he has
-been regenerated and made a child of grace;&rdquo; he would not
-quench that sacred flame and energy, by which his corrupt nature
-has been enlightened and purified; from which &ldquo;all good
-desires, all good counsels, and all just works do proceed;&rdquo;
-by which his soul is animated with the inspiring hope of
-beholding his God face to face, in perfect righteousness and
-everlasting glory.&nbsp; He loves to please, he cannot bear the
-thought of offending, the Lord of majesty and mercy; and looks to
-Him for strength in the hour of trial.&nbsp; The constant habit
-of thus lifting up, in the spirit of prayer, the thoughts and
-affections to God; the full and abiding persuasion of His
-manifold mercies to the faithful, of His terrible judgments to be
-executed upon the disobedient and the impenitent <a
-name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 88</span>sinner, will
-always be found the surest, the only sure, preservative from
-sin.</p>
-<p>And how can that man, who believes, with all his heart and
-soul, in the glorious revelation of the Gospel; in the miseries
-which he may thereby escape, and the happiness which he may
-attain; in the means ordained for his accomplishment of these
-momentous purposes; how can he fail or cease to maintain a lively
-remembrance of the goodness and wisdom and power of God?&nbsp;
-Will he not &ldquo;set the Lord alway before him;&rdquo; and
-under the countenance and protection of his Saviour, and in the
-awful presence of his Judge, will he not feel himself powerfully
-actuated to restrain and resist every guilty inclination, and to
-decline from the danger and dishonour of every evil way?&nbsp;
-&ldquo;How can I do this great wickedness and sin against&rdquo;
-my Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier&mdash;the Almighty God,
-whose I am, and whom I serve?</p>
-<p>This reflection is also calculated to excite <a
-name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 89</span>our attention
-to the duties of this holy season, <a name="citation89a"></a><a
-href="#footnote89a" class="citation">[89a]</a> prescribed by the
-Church for our christian improvement; the duties of
-self-examination and repentance.&nbsp; Convinced, that every
-wilful sin renders us unworthy of acceptance with that God,
-&ldquo;who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity,&rdquo; let
-us retire into our chamber and take our private hour, and cast a
-searching eye over our character and life, intent upon
-discovering every stain and blemish; let us &ldquo;see if there
-be any wicked way in us,&rdquo; and pray fervently to be
-&ldquo;led into the way everlasting.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation89b"></a><a href="#footnote89b"
-class="citation">[89b]</a>&nbsp; Let the sinfulness of our
-condition by nature, the sinfulness of our thoughts and words and
-works, pass in review before us; nor let the soul ever rest
-content, till we have made our peace with God;&mdash;by an humble
-abasement under the sense of our undeservings; by unfeigned
-sorrow for the past; by a holy, steady, entire resolution, to
-watch more carefully, and walk more circumspectly; by laying
-aside <a name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-90</span>&ldquo;every weight, and the sin which doth so easily
-beset us.&rdquo; <a name="citation90a"></a><a href="#footnote90a"
-class="citation">[90a]</a></p>
-<p>When we duly think of the long-suffering and forbearance of
-our offended Father; of His great mercy in &ldquo;sparing us when
-we deserved punishment;&rdquo; sparing us to repent of our faults
-and follies, to advance in holiness and righteousness, to further
-the everlasting interest of the soul; surely we shall then be
-penetrated with a deep sense of the divine compassion; and the
-goodness of God &ldquo;will answer its blessed purpose and lead
-us to repentance.&rdquo; <a name="citation90b"></a><a
-href="#footnote90b" class="citation">[90b]</a>&nbsp; &lsquo;How
-can I persist in abusing the patience which has borne with me so
-long?&nbsp; How shall I continue to neglect any duty, which so
-merciful a God has commanded, for the edification and salvation
-of my soul?&nbsp; How shall I rebelliously cherish any sinful
-indulgence, which is opposed to His holy law; and thus forfeit my
-claim to that heavenly inheritance, which my Saviour has died to
-procure for the true believer, for the penitent and contrite <a
-name="page91"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 91</span>in
-heart?&nbsp; How can I do less than abhor the sin, which His
-blood was shed to expiate and cleanse away; less, than delight
-and advance in the way of righteousness which He has opened to
-me;&rsquo; even till &ldquo;I come unto the measure of the
-stature of the fulness of Christ.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Reflections, deliberations, resolutions such as these,
-sincerely formed and cherished, would very effectually, by divine
-grace, assist us in attaining that disposition of mind and heart,
-which might lead us habitually to raise our thoughts to God,
-under every circumstance, and at every time of temptation.&nbsp;
-There would thus be cast around us a sacred wall of defence; a
-perpetual barrier against the inroads of Satan and of sin; and if
-at times they should, when we are suddenly thrown off our guard,
-break in upon the heart and lay it waste, they would speedily be
-expelled, and the breach would be healed without delay.&nbsp;
-Thus we shall become more jealous over ourselves, more
-circumspect and watchful; we shall never <a
-name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 92</span>feel easy,
-while betraying, into the hands of the enemy, the merciful and
-glorious work of God.&nbsp; With a love for His goodness, a
-reverence for His truth, and a fear of His judgments, abiding in
-the heart, we shall fly from every approach of evil, and dwell in
-safety beneath the shadow of His wing: &ldquo;we shall be enabled
-to withstand in the evil day, and having done all to
-stand.&rdquo; <a name="citation92"></a><a href="#footnote92"
-class="citation">[92]</a></p>
-<p>It is our distinguished privilege to be enlightened by the
-&ldquo;wisdom which is from above,&rdquo; to &ldquo;be strong in
-the Lord, and in the power of His might:&rdquo; God forbid that
-we should return to the &ldquo;beggarly elements of the
-world,&rdquo; and seek to draw our principles and strength from
-this polluted source.&nbsp; Had we never been blessed with the
-light of revelation, we must have been content with such means of
-duty, as our dark state afforded: we must have been governed and
-guided like the heathen, whom we now pity.&nbsp; But, as we are
-supremely favoured with the <a name="page93"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 93</span>knowledge of the true God, as
-&ldquo;our fellowship is with the Father, and with his Son Jesus
-Christ;&rdquo; as the Holy Spirit is given to &ldquo;help our
-infirmities;&rdquo; let us, in every temptation, remember our
-infinite obligations to the great and merciful Jehovah, and trust
-in the sufficiency of His almighty power.</p>
-<p>After thus &ldquo;walking with God as friends;&rdquo; having,
-for the sake of His friendship, struggled with our evil
-propensities; having despised the vanity and folly, and renounced
-the love of the world, we shall experience more and more, the
-value of His favour, and the fulness of His grace; serving Him in
-humble gratitude, we shall be acknowledged as His own peculiar
-people, and He will be our God; in all perplexities we shall find
-Him our guide, in all trouble our comfort and support; amid the
-crooked paths of vice He will &ldquo;make our way plain before
-His face;&rdquo; the &ldquo;snare will be broken and we shall be
-delivered;&rdquo; He will honour us among men; &ldquo;such honour
-have <a name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 94</span>all
-His saints;&rdquo; and this will be an earnest of our everlasting
-honour in His heavenly abode, in perfect friendship and communion
-with Him, in that blessed place where sin and temptation will be
-no more, &ldquo;where nothing that defileth can enter.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 95</span>SERMON
-VI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">ON THE JOURNEY TO EMMAUS.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">Luke</span> xxiv. 32.&nbsp;
-<i>And they said one to another</i>, <i>Did not our heart burn
-within us</i>, <i>while He talked with us by the way</i>, <i>and
-while He opened to us the Scriptures</i>?</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is a portion of one of those
-affecting and instructive pieces of history, with which the
-sacred scriptures every where abound.</p>
-<p>After the resurrection of Jesus, on the very same day, two of
-His disciples were journeying together to a village called
-Emmaus, a few miles distant from Jerusalem.&nbsp; And as they
-went, &ldquo;they talked together of those things which had
-happened.&rdquo;&nbsp; <a name="page96"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 96</span>And certainly never was there
-furnished to disciples an occasion of more interesting
-conversation.&nbsp; They were at no loss for a subject; their
-feelings were deeply moved, their circumstances most peculiar;
-they had just been bereaved of their Lord; and were left, as they
-thought, helpless and hopeless upon the wide world: they had been
-attending the sad scene of His sufferings; and doubtless had been
-witnessing his awful crucifixion; abundance of matter therefore,
-was afforded them for reflection and discourse.&nbsp; But besides
-this, they had heard the report of their Lord&rsquo;s
-resurrection; and as they did not at all understand the purport
-of it, appeared indeed scarcely to believe an event so
-extraordinary, they were probably consulting what to expect, or
-what to do.&nbsp; &ldquo;And it came to pass, that, while they
-communed together and reasoned, Jesus Himself drew near, and went
-with them.&nbsp; But their eyes were holden, that they should not
-know Him.&rdquo; <a name="citation96"></a><a href="#footnote96"
-class="citation">[96]</a>&nbsp; Either <a name="page97"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 97</span>He assumed a different form, or He
-supernaturally influenced their sight, that they should not at
-first recognize Him.</p>
-<p>Jesus, let us observe, appeared to the disciples, while they
-were engaged in holy meditation and converse; and thus, though no
-longer visible in the world, He may still be expected, at all
-times, to favour His true disciples in a similar manner.&nbsp;
-While they are conversing upon the things belonging to His
-kingdom, upon the wonders of His love, and the riches of His
-grace, upon their high privileges and expectations, upon the
-doctrines and precepts of His holy word, upon the duties and
-experiences of their earthly pilgrimage, upon their walk with God
-here, and their hope of dwelling together with Him for ever
-hereafter; while they are musing and discoursing of these things,
-the blessed Jesus will join company with them, though unknown and
-unseen; and will shed over their conference a holy and heavenly
-benediction.&nbsp; A reproach it is to vast numbers <a
-name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 98</span>of His
-professing disciples, that they are not more anxious to embrace
-such opportunities of enjoying the favour and presence of their
-Lord; that many, even intimate friends and near relations, amid
-the endless variety of their subjects of conversation, are
-scarcely ever found to exchange a sentiment or a word, upon the
-most interesting and important of all topics; the love of their
-Lord and the edification of their souls.&nbsp; Eagerly do they
-embrace every opportunity of ministering to the passing
-amusement, or the temporal welfare, of each other; the only
-subject, which appears to be forbidden ground, is the subject of
-an eternal life to come, their spiritual well-being here and
-hereafter.</p>
-<p>But let me not be misunderstood on this point; I am not
-speaking of the promiscuous intercourse of society; not of
-religious discussions or allusions amid the ordinary business of
-life; not of that irreverent and dangerous habit, into which same
-believers have been incautiously <a name="page99"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 99</span>betrayed, of detailing to one another
-their continual and familiar experiences; I am speaking of the
-private and sober communing of christian friends, who are
-dwelling together, or journeying together, as the disciples to
-Emmaus: and truly, &ldquo;with the bible in their hands and the
-Saviour in their hearts,&rdquo; it is wonderful how they can
-forbear from spiritual intercourse.&nbsp; If the everlasting
-truths of the gospel have made a deep impression upon their
-minds; if, for the promises therein revealed, it is their object
-to live and to die; if they have one common hope of their
-calling, &ldquo;one thing needful&rdquo; which occupies their
-affections; if they have the same exalted view of a glorious
-kingdom in heaven; if they are living together in love, and
-comforting themselves, that the holy bond shall never be broken,
-that it shall be renewed in a happier world and last for ever;
-then it would be strange if their thoughts and their conversation
-should never turn upon a subject of such overwhelming interest;
-upon a topic so abundantly <a name="page100"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 100</span>fruitful in materials for mutual
-edification.&nbsp; The idea of the Lord being present with us in
-our conferences is an animating and ennobling idea: but we cannot
-expect His holy presence in the scenes of vanity and frivolity;
-nor can we expect it at any time, if the thought and desire of
-Him be altogether excluded.&nbsp; From the cold moralist, or the
-worldly-minded disciple, from those who have no practical concern
-for the gospel or for their souls, we need not look for a word of
-spiritual communication; it is abhorrent to their feelings and
-inconsistent with their notions; but the sincere Christian should
-&ldquo;think on these things.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;The world will
-love its own,&rdquo; and follow its own; its own friends and
-maxims and ways: but &ldquo;we are not of the world,&rdquo; and
-better fruit is expected from us.</p>
-<p>But to return to the history before us.&nbsp; Having listened
-for a time to the earnest discourse of the disciples, Jesus at
-length, as if a stranger, enquired into the subject, which
-engrossed their minds and rendered them so sorrowful: &ldquo;And
-the one of <a name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-101</span>them whose name was Cleopas, (the same, it is thought,
-as Alpheus, who was the father of two Apostles and nearly related
-to our Lord Himself,) answering, said unto Him, art thou only a
-stranger in Jerusalem, and hast not known the things, which are
-come to pass there in these days?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;And he said
-unto them what things?&rdquo; said it, probably, with a view of
-giving them an opportunity of declaring their opinions, upon what
-had taken place, as also upon Himself and the nature of His
-kingdom: &ldquo;and they said unto Him, concerning Jesus of
-Nazareth, which was a prophet mighty in deed and word, before God
-and all the people: and how the chief priests and our rulers
-delivered Him to be condemned to death, and have crucified
-Him.&nbsp; But we trusted, that it had been He who should have
-redeemed Israel; and beside all this, to-day is the third day
-since these things were done.&rdquo; <a name="citation101"></a><a
-href="#footnote101" class="citation">[101]</a>&nbsp; They
-concluded, that their bright hopes of redemption were
-extinguished, were all <a name="page102"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 102</span>dead and buried with Jesus: even
-though they had heard of His rising again, according to His own
-promise, which they had just alluded to, still they had no
-expectation of holding any further intercourse with Him, of any
-further display of His power in their behalf.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then he said unto them, O fools (O unwise and blinded
-people) and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have
-spoken; ought not Christ (ought not your Messiah prophesied of
-old) to have suffered these things and enter into His
-glory?&rdquo; <a name="citation102"></a><a href="#footnote102"
-class="citation">[102]</a>&nbsp; Is it not clearly foretold by
-your prophets, by Isaiah especially in his 53d chapter, that the
-redeemer of Israel should be &ldquo;despised and rejected of
-men,&rdquo; should bear &ldquo;their griefs and carry their
-sorrows,&rdquo; &ldquo;should be led as a lamb to the slaughter,
-should be numbered with the transgressors,&rdquo; should make
-&ldquo;His grave with the wicked (should die with malefactors)
-and with the rich in his death,&rdquo; (should be buried in the
-sepulchre of the rich,) and <a name="page103"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 103</span>after that &ldquo;prolong His
-days,&rdquo; and then that &ldquo;the pleasure of the Lord should
-prosper in His hand?&rdquo;&nbsp; According to your own
-prophecies then, and in order to their fulfilment, has not Jesus
-done that, as Messiah, which He was required to do?&nbsp; Instead
-of being offended, and giving up the cause, ye ought to be fully
-convinced, that He is &ldquo;the Christ, the son of the living
-God.&rdquo; <a name="citation103a"></a><a href="#footnote103a"
-class="citation">[103a]</a>&nbsp; Then, &ldquo;beginning at Moses
-and all the prophets, He expounded to them in all the sacred
-scriptures the things concerning Himself.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation103b"></a><a href="#footnote103b"
-class="citation">[103b]</a>&nbsp; How enlightening and convincing
-must this discourse have been!&nbsp; But it is not preserved to
-us: with so complete a body of information and evidence, it did
-not please the Almighty to favour the world.&nbsp; We are left to
-gather the instruction by diligent observation and study; and
-thankful may we be, that there still remain most abundant sources
-of satisfactory knowledge on this head; that the prophecies and
-types of the Saviour in the Old <a name="page104"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 104</span>Testament, when compared with their
-fulfilment, are sufficiently clear for the conviction of every
-honest and well-disposed mind.</p>
-<p>After this, the disciples &ldquo;drew nigh unto the village
-whither they went; and Jesus made as though He would have gone
-further.&nbsp; But they constrained Him, saying, Abide with us;
-for it is toward evening, and the day is far spent.&nbsp; And He
-went in to tarry with them.&rdquo; <a name="citation104a"></a><a
-href="#footnote104a" class="citation">[104a]</a>&nbsp; And thus
-He still favours His disciples, and will do as long as the world
-stands; when they heartily desire His abiding presence, it will
-never be denied; wherever the place or whatever the occasion,
-their Lord, if wished for and welcome, will be of their company:
-in the domestic circle, in the converse of friends, in the sacred
-hour of solitude; &ldquo;when thou sittest in thine house, and
-when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when
-thou risest up.&rdquo; <a name="citation104b"></a><a
-href="#footnote104b" class="citation">[104b]</a>&nbsp; We have
-only to lift our thoughts to Him; &ldquo;to set Him <a
-name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 105</span>always
-before us; and He will be at our right hand, that we shall not be
-moved.&rdquo; <a name="citation105a"></a><a href="#footnote105a"
-class="citation">[105a]</a>&nbsp; At all times He will be found
-&ldquo;a present help;&rdquo; but especially when we are
-associated or assembled in remembrance of Him.&nbsp; Such is the
-promise of His word: &ldquo;where two or three are gathered
-together in my name, there am I in the midst of them:&rdquo; <a
-name="citation105b"></a><a href="#footnote105b"
-class="citation">[105b]</a> gathered together for consultation,
-for worship, for any holy purpose.</p>
-<p>Jesus, when He had entered into the house with the two
-disciples, acted in a manner which served to bring Him to their
-knowledge: &ldquo;As He sat at meat with them, He took bread and
-blessed it, and brake and gave to them; (though a supposed
-stranger, He appeared as the head of the family; blessing and
-distributing, as His custom had been at their ordinary meals:)
-And their eyes were opened, and they knew Him: And He vanished
-out of their sight;&rdquo; <a name="citation105c"></a><a
-href="#footnote105c" class="citation">[105c]</a> immediately left
-them to ponder upon the amazing things which they had
-heard.&nbsp; <a name="page106"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-106</span>&ldquo;And they said one to another, Did not our heart
-burn within us, while He talked with us by the way, and while He
-opened to us the Scriptures?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Cleopas and his friend were unquestionably favoured beyond the
-common lot of disciples: to hear the sacred oracles explained by
-Him, who was at once the subject and fulfilment of them; by Him,
-through whose spirit the prophets and holy men of old all spake;
-to hear them perfectly explained and illustrated by the voice of
-the Son of God, might well make a vivid impression upon their
-minds, and fill their bosom with fervent and rapturous delight:
-Yet, though we cannot be so singularly blessed, there may be
-communicated to us a measure of that knowledge, which these
-disciples enjoyed; there may be imparted to us no inconsiderable
-portion of the same holy animation.</p>
-<p>Our merciful Lord, on withdrawing His visible presence from
-this world, sent, according to His promise, another Comforter; a
-Comforter, who should &ldquo;guide <a name="page107"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 107</span>His people into all truth;&rdquo;
-should &ldquo;give them a right judgment in all things,&rdquo;
-and spread a holy influence over their affections and
-desires.&nbsp; And now, when we are reading His word, when musing
-upon it with devout meditation, and conversing with one another
-upon its exalted truths, its heavenly purposes, its abundant
-promises and blessings; and now, when we hear the word from the
-lips of those ministers, who, however unworthy in themselves, are
-commissioned to speak in His great name, our hearts may burn
-within us, and &ldquo;our eyes may be opened to behold wondrous
-things out of His law;&rdquo; <a name="citation107"></a><a
-href="#footnote107" class="citation">[107]</a> we may still be
-powerfully impressed, if we have, what we are taught by our
-church to pray for, &ldquo;grace to hear meekly the word, and to
-receive it with pure affection, and to bring forth the fruits of
-the Spirit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>May I not appeal, in justification of these remarks, to some
-of you here present?&nbsp; Have not your minds, when intent <a
-name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 108</span>upon the
-doctrines of the gospel, and taking a view of heavenly things,
-been sometimes visited with a holy illumination, which has seemed
-to raise you above the world, and to make you feel more sensibly,
-that &ldquo;you have your conversation in heaven?&rdquo; <a
-name="citation108"></a><a href="#footnote108"
-class="citation">[108]</a>&nbsp; Have not the ties of earth been
-loosened, while your soul was expatiating on the deep things of
-God, on His wisdom and power and love, on the dealings of His
-providence and grace, on the glories of His eternal
-presence?&nbsp; Have you not, in some such moments, been so
-impressed, as to return to the world with a degree of reluctance;
-and, like the disciples at the transfiguration, almost tempted to
-say, of your spiritual and heavenly visions, &ldquo;it is good
-for me to be here?&rdquo;&nbsp; These are no enthusiastic
-imaginations; they are the sober and solid effects of the
-realized presence of our Redeemer; they are the burnings of
-heart, of which the disciples spake; they are the foretaste of
-our knowledge and joy and light and <a name="page109"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 109</span>life above.&nbsp; Doubtless they are
-to be encouraged with humility and sobriety; doubtless they may
-degenerate into enthusiasm; for there is no spiritual good, which
-may not be abused: but the fear of enthusiasm is not to hinder us
-in gathering comfort and delight from the study of scriptural
-truth, from holy and exalted meditation.&nbsp; The world may call
-it weakness and folly; for it cannot be understood by the world;
-but the Christian knows for it a better name; and few eminent
-Christians have there been, who would not readily bear witness to
-the truth of these things, who have not felt the inspiriting,
-uplifting power of divine contemplation.</p>
-<p>And this, like all other exercises of true faith and piety, is
-of great practical importance; it is fruitful in righteousness to
-all who &ldquo;think soberly;&rdquo; it serves them, when they
-return to the busy scenes of earth, as an animation to duty; it
-purifies their affections and renders the world little in their
-eyes; it arms them for conflict, and reconciles them to trouble:
-in the <a name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-110</span>midst of trials, of disappointments and bereavements,
-of struggles and difficulties, of frowns and oppositions, they
-remember, with thankfulness and comfort, the spiritual joys they
-have experienced, and expect to be blessed with them again: yes,
-in their darker hours, they remember, that the Sun of
-righteousness, has shone brightly upon them, and the beams are
-still reflected; though they cannot at present perceive Him so
-clearly, though He seems, like Jesus with the disciples, to have
-&ldquo;vanished out of their sight,&rdquo; He has left a glory
-behind, and will again visit them with the fulness of His favour;
-and they go on their way &ldquo;not faithless, but
-believing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To those who have been thus in the habit of pious and
-scriptural meditation; of intently dwelling upon the sublime
-mysteries, and the gracious promises, and the noble examples, and
-the striking histories of the word of God; to them it is needless
-to recommend a continuance of the good work; it is a christian
-obligation, <a name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-111</span>which they can never think of declining; and besides
-this, the delight and improvement, which it affords, are its own
-sufficient recommendation.&nbsp; But upon all, who have unhappily
-neglected this their great privilege and duty, I would most
-earnestly press the importance of attending to this point, as a
-matter of bounden necessity.&nbsp; It is not enough to form an
-acquaintance with the leading truths of the gospel, as a matter
-of faith and profession; there is much to be learnt upon a nearer
-inspection, much indeed that can never be learned without it;
-much to enlarge and exalt the understanding; to renew the heart
-and regulate the life.&nbsp; The necessary intercourse, which
-most of us have with the world, is of a lowering and defiling
-nature; estranging the heart from a love of holiness and of God:
-and in order to correct this evil, scriptural study and spiritual
-consideration, as well as fervent prayer, are indispensable.</p>
-<p>Let not any day pass over your heads <a
-name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 112</span>without
-some portion of the Bible, some subject of divine revelation,
-being brought distinctly to your view.&nbsp; The exercise will
-interfere with none of your earthly duties, but will help you in
-the performance of them all; will smooth whatever there be of
-ruggedness in your way; will strengthen you in the hour of
-temptation, and comfort you in perplexity and trouble.&nbsp; Many
-an encouraging promise and many an enlivening assurance will
-recur to your memory; and &ldquo;a word in season how good is
-it:&rdquo; examples of suffering and patience, of striving and
-perseverance, of warfare and triumph, will kindle in your breast
-an emulous ardour, and you will say, &lsquo;By the help of the
-Lord, I will &ldquo;go and do likewise.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; Thus
-will the Bible be a never-failing source of strength and
-consolation all the day long; as the waters, which flowed from
-the flinty rock, accompanied and refreshed the Israelites, ever
-and anon, in their journey through the wilderness, so will your
-spiritual musings, <a name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-113</span>suggested by the very hardships or troubles of life, be
-a perpetual stream of refreshment to your souls, even &ldquo;in a
-dry land thirsty land, where no water is.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation113a"></a><a href="#footnote113a"
-class="citation">[113a]</a></p>
-<p>And by this means you will be preparing and training your
-souls for a happier communion with the Saviour in another world;
-where all the dealings of His providence, and all the wonders of
-His grace, will be more fully and gloriously manifested.&nbsp;
-And if the heart of the Christian now burn within him, at the
-contemplation of heavenly truth and redeeming love; now, in his
-frail tenement of clay; how unspeakable will be his delight, when
-these things are revealed to his pure spirit, in the realms of
-perfection and bliss.&nbsp; Then will he know more of &ldquo;the
-love of Christ which passeth knowledge;&rdquo; then will he see
-more of &ldquo;the length and breadth and depth and height&rdquo;
-<a name="citation113b"></a><a href="#footnote113b"
-class="citation">[113b]</a> of the mystery of mercy; he will see
-God &ldquo;face to face&rdquo; and &ldquo;know even as he is
-known.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-114</span>SERMON VII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">IF THEY HEAR NOT MOSES AND THE
-PROPHETS.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Luke</span> xvi. 31.</p>
-<p><i>If they hear not Moses and the Prophets</i>, <i>neither
-will they be persuaded</i>, <i>though one rose from the
-dead</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Let</span> us advert to the occasion on
-which these words were delivered, to the parable of which they
-form a part.&nbsp; The case there presented to us by the
-description of the rich man is unhappily of frequent occurrence
-in every age.&nbsp; Surrounded by all the luxuries that wealth
-could furnish, he looked for nothing beyond them: how many fellow
-mortals there were near his dwelling, deprived of the
-necessities, while <a name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-115</span>he was revelling in the superfluities of life, was no
-care, no consideration of his; the selfish enjoyment of this
-world entirely absorbed his affections, and threw a veil over all
-expectation of a world to come: satisfied, that he had
-&ldquo;goods laid by for many years,&rdquo; he imagined that he
-had nothing to do, but to &ldquo;eat, drink, and be
-merry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But such ignorance and insensibility did not prevent him from
-being called to account; such forgetfulness of his latter end did
-not retard the evil day.&nbsp; He died&mdash;and was buried, we
-may conclude, with costly preparation answerable to the splendour
-in which he had lived.&nbsp; This however, was the last service
-which his riches were able to render him; and melancholy it was,
-when contrasted with the state, in which his soul was existing,
-while his treasures were employed in doing honour to the lifeless
-body.&nbsp; He found in that state, what he might have discovered
-before, that riches, if selfishly employed in purposes of vanity
-and pleasure, <a name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-116</span>are a deadly snare; that earthly indulgences, if
-pursued with excess, to the neglect of duty towards God and man,
-instead of being a blessing, are paving the way to misery; he
-found, &ldquo;what an evil and bitter thing it is,&rdquo; to
-squander the favours of heaven without remembering &ldquo;the
-author and giver of every good gift.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Perceiving therefore, by sad experience, his own deplorable
-condition, he is represented as being moved with a feeling of
-pity for his brethren: his first anxiety, indeed, was naturally
-for himself&mdash;for some alleviation, at least, of the
-wretchedness of his fate; but when he was informed that such
-desire was fruitless, that even the assuagement of his pain was
-impossible, that there was no means of conveying even a drop of
-water to cool the thirst upon his tongue, that the great gulf was
-finally and irremoveably fixed, he then hoped that something
-might be done for his brethren who were still surviving; they had
-not yet passed the boundary of life and grace; <a
-name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 117</span>and
-therefore he entreats that, while the far-spent day was shining
-upon them, Lazarus might be despatched from his abode of bliss,
-to warn them of the untimely end to which they were hastening;
-and induce them effectually to repent before &ldquo;the night
-should come, in which no man can work.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation117a"></a><a href="#footnote117a"
-class="citation">[117a]</a></p>
-<p>Abraham&rsquo;s answer is, &ldquo;they have Moses and the
-prophets, let them hear <i>them</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; A messenger
-from the court of heaven could tell them nothing new; they are
-already acquainted with their duty and the consequences of
-neglecting it: Jehovah has revealed unto them His blessed will,
-and clearly made known what is required of them, &ldquo;to do
-justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with their
-God.&rdquo; <a name="citation117b"></a><a href="#footnote117b"
-class="citation">[117b]</a>&nbsp; His covenant with their
-fathers, and the promulgation of His law, have been attested by a
-series of signal miracles, which they do not pretend to dispute;
-and in every page of their history are recorded God&rsquo;s
-promised blessings to <a name="page118"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 118</span>the good, and the execution of His
-vengeance upon the evil; and, therefore, in as far as knowledge
-is concerned, they have all the intelligence that can be
-desired.</p>
-<p>But the wretched man, in the agony of his own feelings, and
-the earnest desire to preserve his family from such woe, still
-pursues his request.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nay, father Abraham;&rdquo;
-but, though they have neglected the ordinary calls of heaven,
-assuredly, if so astonishing an admonition were granted to them,
-as that of one risen from the dead, they would be thereby
-persuaded to repent.&nbsp; Then follows the answer of the text,
-&ldquo;If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they
-be persuaded, though one rose from the dead.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
-thus the conference ended.</p>
-<p>From this conclusion of the parables two important
-observations may be drawn <i>first</i>, that if men fail to be
-convinced and converted, to be led to their God and their duty,
-by those sufficient means of grace which are already vouchsafed
-to them, they would not be likely to yield to <a
-name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>any
-extraordinary means; and, <i>secondly</i>, that no such
-additional means are to be expected.</p>
-<p>1.&nbsp; In all cases of spiritual and practical unbelief, in
-all cases where the declarations of the Almighty are disregarded,
-the fault lies not so much in the understanding as in the
-heart.&nbsp; The revelations of heaven are at variance with those
-interests and pursuits, which the heart is inclined and resolved
-to retain; and on this account, and by this means, the mind is
-prejudiced and set against such revelations, and they are not
-fully and implicitly believed.&nbsp; They call men to the love
-and practice of holiness, to which our degenerate nature is
-averse; the pleasures of sin are preferred, and the voice of God
-is unheeded: they teach us, that all earthly objects and
-possessions, in themselves, are vain, and call us to prepare for
-an everlasting inheritance above; the sensual and worldly-minded
-think and feel, that &ldquo;it is good for them to be
-here,&rdquo; and are not disposed to place their affections upon
-<a name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 120</span>the
-promise of an hereafter.&nbsp; We none of us professedly
-disbelieve the revelation of heaven, any more than the brethren
-of the rich man did; and therefore I need not stay to argue the
-point on that ground.&nbsp; The doctrine before us is this, that
-men, professing to believe, to have received abundant evidence of
-the truth, and yet refusing to act upon that belief, would not be
-induced so to act, by any violent appeal to their senses or
-natural powers, even though it were the work of a divine
-interposition in their behalf.</p>
-<p>What do we believe?&nbsp; That, after this life, which
-experience tells us must soon terminate, and which may, at any
-moment, be unexpectedly and suddenly brought to a close, we shall
-immediately enter upon another and an eternal state of being; and
-that our condition, in the endless life to come, will be happy or
-miserable, according to the manner in which we have passed our
-short pilgrimage upon earth, whether in a belief of the gospel or
-in unbelief; in obedience or <a name="page121"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 121</span>disobedience; in holiness or
-sin.&nbsp; Now, if we really and vitally believe these truths,
-their importance is so striking, that nothing could possibly
-suggest to the mind a weightier consideration.&nbsp; And if these
-truths be only superficially credited, it must be owing to some
-corrupt and perverted affections, which throw a veil over the
-understanding, and render it proof against all moral means of
-conviction.&nbsp; Perhaps some strange and startling occurrence,
-such as the re-appearance of a friend from the dead, might
-forcibly affect the imagination for a time; and, filling us with
-alarm and apprehension, might fill us also with vehement
-resolutions of amendment: but the imagination is a weak principle
-to build upon; the impressions it receives are commonly very
-transient; they gradually wear away on the presentation of fresh
-images, in our commerce with the world: and if there be not a
-solid spiritual conviction, in the mind and heart, of the awful
-realities of an hereafter, if the conviction does not <a
-name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 122</span>rest upon
-the divine evidence accorded by the Spirit and the word of God,
-the effects of sudden surprise or consternation will soon vanish
-away; the latent dispositions of the soul will break forth again;
-the old habits, of recklessness and evil, be reassumed; the world
-again victorious.</p>
-<p>For the truth of these things, I appeal, if not to yourselves,
-(as in many instances, I reasonably may) but if not, to those
-around you.&nbsp; How many examples have occurred, within the
-compass of your own experience, of extraordinary visitations
-having produced but a very short-lived influence upon the heart
-and character?&nbsp; How often have we seen the careless awakened
-by an alarming sickness, by an approach of the king of terrors,
-(which can hardly be supposed less convincing than an angel from
-heaven, or a spirit from the blest), and yet awakened only to
-return, on the removal of danger, to the slumbers of
-insensibility and sin.&nbsp; The solemn promises, which the
-terrified sinner made to his friends, his minister, <a
-name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 123</span>and his
-God, were but the offspring of fear; the creatures of
-imagination; born only for the moment; soon disappearing, when
-the crisis was past.</p>
-<p>And when the stroke of death has actually fallen upon a
-relative or friend, we have sometimes seen it overwhelm the soul
-of a heedless survivor, and bring him to himself, to serious
-thought and repentance; he began to sit loose to the remaining
-interests of life; he looked with anxiety to the world unknown,
-and formed resolutions of devoting his years to a constant
-provision for futurity; but all to no ultimate purpose; the
-subject had sued for his attention before, and been
-rejected.&nbsp; When his affections have had time to cool, he
-finds that no new importance has really been given to the truth;
-the evidences of it rest as they did; others have lost friends as
-well as he; it is the common lot of mortality; and he cannot keep
-alive the impression for ever; the world must be attended to; and
-one object after another continues to gain an ascendancy, <a
-name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 124</span>till his
-new-born hopes and fears are extinct; till his principles and
-conduct and views return to their old level, from which they will
-in future become the more difficult to be raised.</p>
-<p>It is unnecessary for me to insist, that this is no ideal
-picture, drawn for the mere occasion of placing the subject in a
-strong light; your own acquaintance with the world may furnish
-you with living resemblances of it; and it is unhappily the lot
-of Christian Ministers, who have more frequent opportunity of
-witnessing such impressions, to observe, in the end, their
-repeated and lamentable failure; to perceive how far they fall
-short of lasting conviction and salvation.</p>
-<p>Well, therefore, in the affectionate and faithful discharge of
-our duty, may we call upon our hearers to weigh, in the
-dispassioned hours of health and tranquillity, the nature and the
-moment of those divine truths, which the gospel clearly reveals
-unto man; to judge rightly and truly of their everlasting import;
-and to <a name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-125</span>embrace them, from the undeniable evidence already
-presented, with all the heart and all the soul.&nbsp; We call,
-however, upon our hearers, not as if the vital impression
-depended upon themselves alone, upon the exercise of their own
-judgment or the workings of their own conscience.&nbsp; We call
-upon them to pray for, and be guided by, the mighty operation of
-the Spirit of God: He is ever ready to enlighten and instruct and
-quicken and determine them; giving us His grace, &ldquo;that we
-may have a good will, and working with us, when we have that good
-will.&rdquo; <a name="citation125"></a><a href="#footnote125"
-class="citation">[125]</a>&nbsp; Listen to His teaching; obey His
-godly motions; follow up the convictions which He brings to the
-mind and heart.&nbsp; Light enough is perpetually given, to guide
-you into all truth; live in the light; walk in the light.</p>
-<p>Thus, indeed, every additional admonition, which a gracious
-God may be pleased to vouchsafe unto us, will be turned to good
-account; our faith will be confirmed, our affections purified,
-our knowledge increased, <a name="page126"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 126</span>our resolutions strengthened and
-settled; &ldquo;unto him that hath, shall more be given;&rdquo;
-the sincere and pious believer will advance, at every call, a
-step nearer to his Saviour and his God; the still small voice of
-heavenly warning will be heard, even amidst the ordinary
-occurrences of life; the wonderful dealings of providence and the
-manifold means of grace will be turned to godly account; the
-instructions and examples of the living, and the contemplation of
-the saints at rest, will alike afford materials for spiritual
-edification.&nbsp; But if the great call to liberty and life be
-habitually neglected, to liberty from sin and shame, and life to
-holiness and glory, then the mind and heart are not in a
-condition to take advantage of occasional excitement; it strikes,
-but it does not overcome; it rouses, but the stupor returns.</p>
-<p>2.&nbsp; Proceed we now to the second observation which may be
-drawn from the text, that when men reject the abundant evidence
-of truth, and the gracious invitations of heaven already given,
-when they <a name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-127</span>have resisted the strivings of the Spirit of God, they
-are not to expect Him to deviate from the ordinary rules of His
-providence and grace, for the sake of removing their wilful
-blindness, and overcoming their perverseness and obstinacy.</p>
-<p>It is a part of the divine economy, in the salvation of man,
-that he should of his own free will, by the grace of God
-preventing and assisting, &ldquo;refuse the evil and choose the
-good:&rdquo; and therefore man is not to expect from the Almighty
-any such interference in his favour, as might absolutely overrule
-his will, and compel him to hearken and obey.&nbsp; God&rsquo;s
-infinite mercy is sufficiently manifested in His offer and
-promise to save those rebellious sinners, who listen to the
-teaching of His Spirit, who are willing to be saved in His own
-appointed way.&nbsp; To save those who quench the light afforded
-them, who discover no such willingness, who unthankfully turn
-away and refuse the inestimable gift presented to them, would be
-in direct opposition to the whole tenour of the word <a
-name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 128</span>of
-God.&nbsp; And experience concurs with Scripture to inform us,
-that no such extraordinary interposition is generally
-vouchsafed.&nbsp; The Jews, in our Saviour&rsquo;s time, had read
-of the miracles of Moses and the prophets, professed to credit
-their inspiration, and their mission from on High; they had seen
-the astonishing miracles of Christ Himself; and might, if they
-would, have perceived the fulfilment of their prophecies in Him;
-many of them were eyewitnesses to the signs and wonders attendant
-upon His crucifixion; to the earthquake, and the supernatural
-darkness, and the rending of the veil of their temple; nor could
-they deny His resurrection from the dead.&nbsp; Against all this
-body of evidence, against all the means of conviction, they
-persevered in their rejection of Him.&nbsp; And the time came,
-when no further testimonial was to be granted; they were left
-&ldquo;to fill up the measure of their fathers;&rdquo; they died
-in their sins.</p>
-<p>In addition to all these opportunities and advantages afforded
-to the Jew, we <a name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-129</span>enjoy, at this day, the fulness of the manifestation of
-the gospel; the real nature of the Messiah&rsquo;s kingdom is
-clearly and completely revealed unto us; the blessings of the
-gospel are set before us, in the most conspicuous and glorious
-light; we have all the certainty, which mortals can have, of a
-world to come; all the knowledge which our imperfect faculties
-could receive, of the nature of that world; and all the means of
-grace and hopes of glory.&nbsp; And if by all these mercies we
-are not convinced and persuaded, we can have no right or reason
-to look for any preternatural or overpowering interposition, even
-from the goodness and long-suffering of God.&nbsp; Rather may we
-fear that judicial infatuation, so frequently alluded to in
-Scripture, of the closed eye, the dull ear, and the gross
-obdurate heart.&nbsp; O let the sinner, instead of flattering
-himself with the delusion, that some extraordinary thing will one
-day be happening to him, which shall disengage him from earth,
-and fix his thoughts on heaven and <a name="page130"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 130</span>eternity, O let him rather apprehend
-that the time is approaching, when the measure of his iniquity
-shall be filled up, and God will be no longer found.</p>
-<p>I am not asserting, that such signal interferences have never
-been vouchsafed; that such loud awakenings have never been
-successful: I mean, that they are not in the ordinary course of
-divine providence, and are not to be expected.&nbsp; I mean to
-say, that where the grace of the gospel is continually resisted
-in the heart and life, the careless recusant is seldom reclaimed
-through the medium of any extraordinary visitation; whether of
-sickness, of accident, or any terrible calamity.&nbsp; The man,
-who entrusts his soul to the hope and operation of such
-occurrences, is placing it in imminent jeopardy.&nbsp; Whoever
-will save his soul alive, let him, without delay, &ldquo;seek the
-Lord, while He may be found, and call upon Him while He is
-near;&rdquo; <a name="citation130a"></a><a href="#footnote130a"
-class="citation">[130a]</a> peradventure God may &ldquo;laugh at
-his calamity, and mock when his fear cometh.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation130b"></a><a href="#footnote130b"
-class="citation">[130b]</a></p>
-<p><a name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 131</span>And
-in other ways also does the same evil principle work, the same
-evil habit of &ldquo;resisting the grace of God:&rdquo; many
-persons, who express themselves thoroughly convinced of the truth
-of the christian revelation, and the absolute necessity of a
-spiritual obedience and a holy walking with God, put off their
-work of righteousness, from year to year, in the hope, not of any
-great or appalling event, but that some new circumstances may
-arise, which shall make it more convenient for them to renounce
-the world, and attend, without let or hindrance, to the salvation
-of their souls; they will have gained a sufficiency of earthly
-comforts, or they will be tired of the world; they will be
-growing old and feeble, and naturally more inclined to think of
-heavenly things.&nbsp; But this is only the same temptation as
-the former, presented in another shape; the &ldquo;convenient
-season&rdquo; is hoped for in vain; Satan never suffers us to be
-without a hindrance, real or imaginary; our attachment to the
-world does not wear <a name="page132"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 132</span>off; we grow older without growing
-more religious, without drawing nearer to God; and we never are,
-it is impossible we should be, <i>naturally</i> disposed to
-&ldquo;turn and seek after Him:&rdquo; thus the delusion goes on;
-and we &ldquo;will not be persuaded;&rdquo; and thus, too
-frequently, the &ldquo;expectation cometh utterly to an end for
-evermore.&rdquo;&nbsp; There is no trusting to anything, but the
-<i>present</i> conviction and determination, but the instant and
-unreserved &ldquo;obedience of the heart unto
-righteousness;&rdquo; &ldquo;to-day, if ye will hear His voice,
-harden not your hearts.&rdquo; <a name="citation132"></a><a
-href="#footnote132" class="citation">[132]</a></p>
-<p>In conclusion, I call upon you to think on the condition of
-the rich man in torment.&nbsp; His anxiety for a special
-interference in behalf of his brethren is represented as useless
-to <i>them</i>, but it may be salutary to <i>us</i>: It may
-assure us of the wretchedness of that place, to which he was
-condemned; may incline us, by the inspiration of God&rsquo;s Holy
-Spirit, to value and improve His gracious gifts, while they are
-mercifully <a name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-133</span>bestowed; may determine us, while we have the
-all-sufficient light of the gospel, to be guided thereby into the
-way of peace; we may learn from this awful lesson, that if (God
-forbid that it should be so) but <i>if</i> any of us should be
-similarly doomed, we shall mourn for ourselves, and be anxious,
-that the companions we have left may be our companions no more;
-let us take heed for ourselves, and be anxious for one another in
-time, while the heed and anxiety may be crowned with success; may
-lead us to seek and find God&rsquo;s favour and mercy, and so
-&ldquo;escape from the wrath to come.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-134</span>SERMON VIII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PERFECT LOVE CASTETH OUT FEAR.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">1 <span
-class="smcap">John</span> iv. 18.</p>
-<p><i>There is no fear in love</i>, <i>but perfect love casteth
-out fear</i>: <i>because fear hath torment</i>; <i>he that
-feareth is not made perfect in love</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Of</span> all the sources of happiness,
-which the merciful God has opened to us, the most pure and
-abundant are the feelings of affection and love.&nbsp; I appeal,
-for the truth of this, not to the understandings, but to the
-hearts of those that hear me; and they will at once testify,
-unless corrupted and perverted by selfish or vicious habits, that
-such, even with regard to earthly happiness, is undoubtedly the
-fact.&nbsp; Persons indeed of inferior principle, of <a
-name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 135</span>irregular
-and irreligious lives, frequently draw from this source the most
-considerable portion of their pleasure, whatever abatements it
-may receive from their sin and folly: and when the passions are
-attempered, and the affections purified and exalted, by the
-influence of our holy religion, by the refining energy of the
-spirit of God, the delight naturally and necessarily becomes
-proportionably greater.&nbsp; &ldquo;To love one another&rdquo;
-is not only our first earthly duty, as injoined by the Saviour,
-but also our highest interest and advantage, as contributing to
-the happiness of all.</p>
-<p>If then so much enjoyment is derived by mankind from the
-exercise of mutual love, how much more from the love of
-God&mdash;the pure, the gracious, the ever blessed God;
-&ldquo;who loadeth us with His benefits;&rdquo; who made us what
-we are, and gave us what we have; who created us for His glory,
-who redeemed us from sin and death, who sanctifieth all that
-trust in Him, that they may be happy for ever: <a
-name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 136</span>in a word,
-whose goodness to us knows no bounds, but those which are set by
-our own perverseness and ingratitude.&nbsp; Almighty and most
-merciful Father, &ldquo;whom have I in heaven but Thee? and there
-is none upon earth that I desire beside Thee.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation136"></a><a href="#footnote136"
-class="citation">[136]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Graft in our hearts the
-love of Thy name;&rdquo; we cannot love Thee as Thou hast loved
-us; but give us the grace to love Thee with holy sincerity; with
-that devout and reverent affection, which shall render all other
-objects of desire comparatively indifferent to us, and make us
-satisfied with Thy favour, whatever else we want; which shall
-calm our apprehensions, when we think of an hereafter; and allay
-the uneasiness which arises in our breasts, when we reflect upon
-Thine infinite holiness, and our own degenerate condition.</p>
-<p>Perhaps it may be imagined, that this is a state of
-blessedness attainable by few, if any, upon earth: some may urge
-the text against us, and say that this blessedness <a
-name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 137</span>is promised
-only to perfect love, which mortals can never hope to attain; and
-that it is inconsistent with those numerous passages of
-Scripture, which admonish us of the necessity of fear; that in
-the admirable collect of our Church for this day, <a
-name="citation137"></a><a href="#footnote137"
-class="citation">[137]</a> we are instructed to pray for &ldquo;a
-perpetual fear and love of God&rsquo;s holy name.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-How then can we possess the love which casteth out fear?&nbsp; I
-will endeavour to reply to these observations; and pray God that
-we may all derive, from the consideration of this subject, a more
-true and lively and abiding sense of the nature and necessity of
-that love towards Him, which, as His adopted children and the
-inheritors of His kingdom, we are absolutely bound to
-entertain.</p>
-<p>Unquestionably true it is, that the fear of God is, and ever
-has been, indispensable to all His faithful servants; as well
-under the mild dispensation of the gospel, as under the severer
-discipline of the law.&nbsp; &ldquo;The fear of the Lord is the
-beginning <a name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-138</span>of wisdom.&rdquo; <a name="citation138a"></a><a
-href="#footnote138a" class="citation">[138a]</a>&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Surely his salvation is nigh them that fear Him.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation138b"></a><a href="#footnote138b"
-class="citation">[138b]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Unto you that fear my
-name shall the Sun of Righteousness arise, with healing in His
-wings.&rdquo; <a name="citation138c"></a><a href="#footnote138c"
-class="citation">[138c]</a>&nbsp; And accordingly the Apostle
-observes, &ldquo;In every nation, he that feareth Him, and
-worketh righteousness, is accepted with Him.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation138d"></a><a href="#footnote138d"
-class="citation">[138d]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;His mercy is on them
-that fear Him, from generation to generation.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation138e"></a><a href="#footnote138e"
-class="citation">[138e]</a>&nbsp; But what is the nature of this
-fear?&nbsp; It is not a slavish principle, not a disturbing and
-distressful feeling.&nbsp; It consists in an awful sense of
-God&rsquo;s glorious perfections; of His divine Majesty,
-unspotted purity, infinite knowledge and power; of His presence
-pervading every part of the creation, even the very mind of every
-intellectual being; such a sense, as to fill us with the deepest
-humility, perceiving ourselves unworthy even to stand in the
-sight of Him, &ldquo;who is of purer eyes than to behold
-iniquity;&rdquo; such <a name="page139"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 139</span>a sense, habitually impressed upon
-the heart, as inclines and constrains us to &ldquo;follow the
-good&rdquo; which He loves, and &ldquo;depart from the
-evil&rdquo; which He abhors.</p>
-<p>And this principle is plainly and entirely consistent with the
-sincerest love: our love indeed is powerfully increased by the
-reflection, that our heavenly Father, of whose attributes we form
-conceptions so awful and sublime, should condescend to bestow
-such regard upon His frail and fallen, His disobedient and
-rebellious children; it may teach us to exclaim with the
-liveliest emotions of gratitude, as well as with humble adoration
-and astonishment, &ldquo;Lord, what is man that Thou art mindful
-of him, and the son of man that Thou visitest him?&rdquo; <a
-name="citation139"></a><a href="#footnote139"
-class="citation">[139]</a>&nbsp; Good reason, therefore, had the
-framers of our Liturgy, for directing us to implore the united
-influence of a perpetual fear and love of God&rsquo;s holy
-name.</p>
-<p>But the fear spoken of in the text is of another kind; it
-relates to uneasy and <a name="page140"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 140</span>distressful apprehensions respecting
-our acceptance with God; to a feeling of doubt and distrust,
-whether we are, in deed and in truth, partakers of the gracious
-promises of the gospel; whether we are living in a state of
-reconciliation with God; whether we have within us that earnest
-of the Holy Spirit, which is the pledge and seal of our
-redemption; whether, in a word, we are objects of God&rsquo;s
-favour here, and have a well-grounded hope of his mercy
-hereafter.</p>
-<p>That this is the state of mind represented to us by the
-beloved Apostle, is clear from his own reasoning; &ldquo;for
-fear,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;hath torment:&rdquo; now the fear of
-God, as above described, has no torment at all; it makes us
-humble, and fills as with reverential awe, but it tends to
-comfort and peace.&nbsp; We could not entirely love a Being,
-whose manifestation inspired us with terror and dismay; and this
-is the very reason why many, when they come seriously to consider
-their condition, are filled with confusion and alarm; because
-they <a name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 141</span>do
-not love God in sincerity and truth: their affections have been
-set on the world; and therefore their title to salvation, upon
-the terms proposed to them in the gospel, is clearly
-insufficient; they have served other masters, and have reason to
-tremble for their reward from the great Lord and Master in
-heaven; they have employed their talents for other purposes, than
-those for which they were committed, and therefore, when they
-think of making up their accounts, their lord presents himself as
-&ldquo;an austere man,&rdquo; exacting more than they will be
-able to render: no man can heartily love God, without an entire
-obedience of the heart; this they have never shewn, and therefore
-have never loved Him: how then can they expect His favour; how
-can they reflect upon their condition with composure and
-comfort?</p>
-<p>Truly is it said, that such fear hath torment; for of all the
-uneasiness which the mind can suffer here, the most painful is
-that, which is produced from an apprehension <a
-name="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 142</span>of
-&ldquo;the terrors of the Lord;&rdquo; better not to have known
-the greatness of the salvation promised, than to neglect the
-means of securing it; better not to have heard of an hereafter,
-than to have a reasonable dread upon the spirits, what that
-hereafter shall be.&nbsp; They who have greater cause for fear
-than for hope, must, if they are given to meditate and look
-forward, find it cast a dismal shade over every scene and
-prospect of life; they may contrive to drown their serious
-thoughts, in the midst of worldly pursuits and intemperate
-pleasures; but this is only for the passing hour; they cannot
-possibly think, that their condition is thus really
-improved.&nbsp; But why take so much pains to mitigate or conceal
-a misery, which it is in our power, by God&rsquo;s gracious
-mercy, effectually to prevent?&nbsp; Escape from these torments
-of the conscience by a sincere devotedness to the service of your
-Almighty Father, in the gospel of His beloved Son; by cherishing
-in the heart that &ldquo;perfect love for Him, which casteth out
-fear.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page143"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 143</span>Yet
-is this possible, it may be said, for weak and imperfect
-man?&nbsp; Is it not rather a state at which we should aim, than
-one at which we can ever hope to arrive?&nbsp; Certainly the
-imperfect creature can never attain to actual perfection in any
-moral or spiritual duty; but his will and desire may be perfect,
-though his service is not; and in this sense, the duty of perfect
-love is equally binding upon all believers.&nbsp; It is a very
-common persuasion, and dangerous as it is common, that the
-standard of christian duty is raised much higher in the gospel,
-than it is necessary for the generality of Christians even to
-think of reaching; that some of the commands, there given, are
-intended only for the chosen few, more eminent than the rest of
-mankind in spiritual attainments; and thus too many professing
-disciples of our Lord, imagining themselves not bound by such
-extensive obligations, are content with measures of obedience,
-infinitely less than those, which are positively required;
-content with a state of heart and life, far <a
-name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 144</span>short of
-that, which the gospel recognises and injoins.&nbsp; But this is
-a mere delusion, to suit the wayward fancy and the corrupt
-inclination of man: where do we read in the Bible of such
-limitations and exceptions?&nbsp; Where do we find one set of
-rules for eminent Christians, and another for Christians in
-general?&nbsp; Are not all its precepts, and all its principles,
-and all its instructions, of universal obligation?&nbsp; When the
-Saviour promised His divine blessings to &ldquo;the poor in
-spirit,&rdquo; to them that &ldquo;hunger and thirst after
-righteousness,&rdquo; to &ldquo;the pure in heart;&rdquo; were
-the conditions intended only for the disciples around Him on the
-mount?&nbsp; Were they not also designed for His followers in
-every age?&nbsp; And when the Lord commanded Moses to
-&ldquo;speak unto all the congregation of the children of Israel,
-and say unto them, Be ye holy, for I the Lord your God, am
-holy,&rdquo; <a name="citation144"></a><a href="#footnote144"
-class="citation">[144]</a> does the precept concern only the
-people of old?&nbsp; Is it not equally applicable to
-Christians?&nbsp; Yea, it <a name="page145"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 145</span>is urged upon us all by the mouth of
-an Apostle. <a name="citation145"></a><a href="#footnote145"
-class="citation">[145]</a>&nbsp; The same is true of every
-spiritual doctrine, every moral command recorded in the Book of
-Life: there is no means of grace, no measure of obedience
-ordained, which a Christian can safely neglect.</p>
-<p>Whatever, therefore, be meant in the text by <i>perfect</i>
-love, that love it is the bounden and necessary duty of us all to
-attain and to cherish.&nbsp; And what is really meant by this
-expression, may be most readily and fully understood from a
-precept of the divine law, as confirmed and enforced by our
-blessed Redeemer; &ldquo;Thou shalt love the Lord thy God, with
-all thine heart and with all thy soul and with all thy
-strength.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is the love described in the text;
-perfect in <i>kind</i>, as admitting of no rival principle, of no
-competition with &ldquo;the world or the things that are in the
-world,&rdquo; with any or all of them together; imperfect in
-<i>degree</i>, on account of the infirmity of our faith, of <a
-name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 146</span>the
-weakness and corruption of human nature.</p>
-<p>We cannot be at a loss to understand this distinction; yet it
-may be further illustrated by an example from ordinary
-life.&nbsp; The most affectionate and dutiful child will fail
-occasionally to please and obey its parent; but there will be a
-constant desire and endeavour to please: to have excited the
-parent&rsquo;s displeasure, will bring uneasiness and sorrow; and
-therefore the violations of duty will be neither wilful nor
-habitual.&nbsp; And this sincere affection, for a kind and good
-parent, never ceases to produce delight; the child indeed,
-feeling so much respect and reverence, will be afraid of
-offending, afraid of the unworthiness, afraid of the dishonour;
-yet the service of obedience is rendered from choice, and not
-from constraint; with emotions of joy, with a grateful endearment
-of soul: slavish terror there is none; it is banished by the
-overpowering principle of love.</p>
-<p>The case is similar, with respect to the <a
-name="page147"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 147</span>love of
-God: whoever, from a sense of the relationship which he is
-privileged to bear to the almighty and gracious Creator; whoever,
-from a contemplation of the high and holy perfections of the
-Godhead; whoever, from a perception of the divine goodness and
-mercy, does truly love the great and glorious Lord of all, will
-constantly delight to serve Him; sensible indeed of his manifold
-weaknesses and deficiencies, and thereby brought to grieve, and
-rendered the more fearful to offend; but still entertaining no
-doubt, that his services, imperfect and unworthy as they are, are
-accepted at the throne of grace, through the merits of his
-Redeemer, and as the fruit of faith in His prevailing name.&nbsp;
-For no earthly consideration would he exchange this heavenly joy
-and satisfaction; and no earthly event or dispensation, however
-afflicting, can drive him even to distrust, much less to
-despair.&nbsp; Though nature feels her bereavements and her
-troubles, his faith is strong; and it assures him, that the very
-chastisements <a name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-148</span>of the Lord are inflicted in mercy.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Who,&rdquo; says the Apostle, &ldquo;shall separate us
-from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or distress, or
-persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril or sword?&nbsp;
-Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him
-that loved us.&nbsp; For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor
-life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things
-present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other
-creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God,
-which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation148"></a><a href="#footnote148"
-class="citation">[148]</a></p>
-<p>In speaking, however, of the holy confidence, with which we
-are inspired by the sincere love of God, far would I be, as far
-as possible, from confounding it with that self-sufficient and
-presumptuous tone into which some persons have been unbecomingly
-betrayed, when describing their spiritual condition.&nbsp;
-Humility is the foundation of the Christian&rsquo;s confidence:
-he trusts, only because he is &ldquo;strong in the <a
-name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 149</span>lord, and
-in the power of His might;&rdquo; he is sufficient, only because
-&ldquo;all his sufficiency is of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; And the purer
-his love, and the higher his attainments, the more humbly and
-modestly does he speak of them: he talks not of certainty,
-&ldquo;as if he had already attained,&rdquo; but delights himself
-with &ldquo;full assurance of faith,&rdquo; <a
-name="citation149a"></a><a href="#footnote149a"
-class="citation">[149a]</a> with &ldquo;full assurance of
-hope;&rdquo; <a name="citation149b"></a><a href="#footnote149b"
-class="citation">[149b]</a> his is not an extravagant joy,
-proceeding from the arrogant assertion of an elective claim, but
-a holy tranquillity of soul, arising from faith in the
-Redeemer&rsquo;s undeserved mercy; from unfeigned love to the
-most benevolent and perfect Being; and reposing itself upon the
-unchangeable promises of Jehovah.</p>
-<p>We do not question, my brethren, the claims of Almighty God to
-our perfect love.&nbsp; Is He not our Creator? and could He have
-formed us with any other design, than to make us happy?&nbsp; If
-reason could have doubted this truth, revelation makes it
-clear.&nbsp; And are we not preserved, every <a
-name="page150"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 150</span>moment of
-our lives, by His infinite wisdom and mercy and power?&nbsp; And
-though we are forgetful of His sustaining hand, still He feeds us
-with the bounties of nature; and invites us to partake of the
-riches of His grace.&nbsp; What are the greatest blessings, which
-a human being, which any creature could possibly desire?&nbsp; To
-be delivered from evil, and to enjoy everlasting good.&nbsp; And
-did not the adorable Son of God take upon him the infirmities and
-sufferings of our mortal state, to redeem us from misery, and
-exalt us even to glory?&nbsp; And does not the Holy Spirit
-condescend to dwell in our tabernacles of flesh, that He may
-cleanse us from every sinful defilement, &ldquo;purify unto
-Himself a peculiar people zealous of good works,&rdquo; <a
-name="citation150a"></a><a href="#footnote150a"
-class="citation">[150a]</a> and make us &ldquo;meet to be
-partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light?&rdquo; <a
-name="citation150b"></a><a href="#footnote150b"
-class="citation">[150b]</a>&nbsp; Could we, even if we had been
-worthy, have desired, have imagined for ourselves, blessings so
-great and favours so exalted, as those which the good and
-gracious God <a name="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-151</span>is showering down upon us?&nbsp; Shall we not then be
-inclined, from every consideration, shall we not be determined,
-by God&rsquo;s grace, to love this heavenly benefactor with all
-our heart&mdash;from a principle of gratitude; from an admiration
-of divine perfection; from the inspiring hope and prospect of our
-eternal salvation?&nbsp; Yes, let us give unto Him, not that
-divided affection, which is the vain offering of a degenerate and
-degraded world; but the full and unreserved energies of the
-soul.&nbsp; If a portion of our heart be engrossed by any other
-object, we are not the true people of the Lord; we render Him not
-a reasonable or acceptable service; our love is embittered with
-fear; with a fear that has, and will have, torment.&nbsp; Lord,
-let our affections be altogether devoted unto Thee; pour Thy
-spirit of love into our hearts, for the sake of Him &ldquo;who
-loved us and gave Himself for us;&rdquo; we cannot love Thee here
-upon earth as we would do, but be pleased to accept what Thou <a
-name="page152"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 152</span>enablest us
-to give, the tribute of a sincere heart; and let it be to us a
-never-failing source of humble confidence and holy comfort; so
-that we may anticipate the joyful hour, when we shall be removed,
-from this imperfect state of being, to a purer and happier world;
-where, with affections exalted and understandings enlarged, we
-shall render Thee a more delightful and laudable service; with
-angels and archangels, and all the company of heaven.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;God is love;&rdquo; and when the veil of the flesh is
-laid aside, and we are admitted into His glorious presence,
-&ldquo;we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He
-is;&rdquo; <a name="citation152"></a><a href="#footnote152"
-class="citation">[152]</a> then will our felicity be complete,
-complete for ever; then, in the fullest sense of the words, we
-shall be &ldquo;made perfect in love.&rdquo;&nbsp; Here then,
-without a question, our true happiness lies; here is our all: let
-us pray that we may never lose sight of it; that the desire, now
-<a name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 153</span>kindled,
-may never be extinguished; that every &ldquo;heart may there be
-fixed, where true joys are to be found, through Jesus Christ our
-Lord.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-154</span>SERMON IX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">HUMBLE YOURSELVES UNDER THE MIGHTY HAND OF
-GOD.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">1 <span
-class="smcap">Peter</span> v. 6.</p>
-<p><i>Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God</i>, <i>that
-He may exalt you in due time</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is nothing, which more
-peculiarly marks the character of the faithful Christian, than
-the manner in which he submits himself to the appointments and
-dispensations of his God.&nbsp; The worldly and carnal spirit
-either frets and repines under the visitations of misfortune, or
-is disconsolate and cast down; or, at the best, bears up with a
-mere animal fortitude against them: it finds no comfort to flee
-unto, <a name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-155</span>but such as is afforded by the vain world, in which it
-has already met with vexation und disappointment; and if the
-world is unable to secure a continuance in prosperity, still less
-is it able to provide a refuge in the dismal days of sorrow.</p>
-<p>So lamentably indeed has this truth been experienced by many,
-that they have been driven to the fallacious and fatal expedient
-of attempting at once to drown their cares in intemperance; they
-have found nothing in the world sufficient to satisfy their
-reason, or to soothe their irritated feelings; and therefore have
-destroyed their faculties, that they might not reflect; and cut
-short the thread of that life, which they imagined themselves
-unequal to support: and some indeed have had recourse to a more
-speedy and awful means of delivering themselves from the burden
-of mortification and grief; ill prepared as they were, their own
-hand of violence has hurried them into the presence of their
-Judge.&nbsp; And even they, who have been preserved from these
-most <a name="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-156</span>miserable extremities, have sufficiently testified by
-their conduct, that the world has nothing satisfactory to offer,
-for the healing of a wounded spirit, or the removal of a load of
-sorrow.</p>
-<p>Religion, the religion of the gospel, is the only source from
-which true comfort or support can possibly be drawn; and we see
-her triumphs manifested in the most blessed and remarkable manner
-when the faithful servant of God is overwhelmed with trouble; we
-perceive his mind in a state of tranquillity, under a conviction,
-that the Lord &ldquo;doeth all things well;&rdquo; and
-remembereth mercy, no less in chastisement, than in the time of
-prosperity; his unquiet emotions are subdued into holy subjection
-to the divine will; his affections are set the more earnestly on
-things above; the vanities of earth have lost their hold; and
-there ariseth in the heart that &ldquo;peace of God, which
-passeth all understanding.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They who have been much conversant with scenes of sickness or
-of sorrow, cannot <a name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-157</span>fail to have observed the truth of these remarks, to
-have been struck with the vast difference in the behaviour of
-men, in proportion as they have imbibed the true spirit and
-principle of the gospel.&nbsp; Some we have seen dismayed,
-disturbed, and restless; with nothing in their countenance, but
-vexation or anguish; others, cheerfully bearing up under the
-evils which have befallen them; and, by their expressions of
-joyful resignation, delighting and comforting the friends, who
-were shedding over them the tears of sympathy; the power of the
-word of God, the &ldquo;joy of the Holy Ghost&rdquo; has been
-visible in their very features.&nbsp; Those persons, who have
-beheld such an example, have been favoured with an instructive
-lesson, which they should &ldquo;grave on the tablet of their
-heart;&rdquo; a lesson teaching them, faithfully and forcibly,
-where to look for aid in the reverses and afflictions of
-life.</p>
-<p>Yet, in order to lead us more effectually to cultivate, and to
-reap the benefit of, this heavenly frame of mind, let us <a
-name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 158</span>now
-consider the bearing of the apostolic charge in the text,
-&ldquo;Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of
-God.&rdquo;&nbsp; Here we may discover powerful reasons
-intimated, why we should bring ourselves into a state of entire
-submission to the divine will, and rest satisfied and resigned
-under every dispensation.&nbsp; The hand of God is mighty: He is
-the sovereign Lord of all; has an absolute right to dispose of
-His creatures, according to His good pleasure; and is alone able
-both to know and to do, what their several necessities
-require.&nbsp; They, therefore, who profess themselves His
-people, are bound, by that very profession, unreservedly to
-submit to His sovereign disposal: &ldquo;Shall the clay say to
-him that fashioneth it, what makest thou?&nbsp; O Lord, Thou art
-our Father, we are the clay, and Thou our potter; and we all are
-the work of Thy hand.&rdquo; <a name="citation158"></a><a
-href="#footnote158" class="citation">[158]</a>&nbsp; He who
-created, He who redeemed us, He to whom alone we can look for
-sanctification and life, should and will maintain the dominion <a
-name="page159"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 159</span>over us: He
-that gave us our being, must be able, and cannot be unwilling, to
-&ldquo;give us all things needful both for our souls and
-bodies.&rdquo;&nbsp; We understand not how He formed us from the
-dust of the earth; so neither can we understand the methods of
-His providence; but, as &ldquo;the life is more than meat,&rdquo;
-so may we trust His goodness and His power, to preserve, in the
-best and wisest manner, the being of those, who seek His
-protection and submit to His government.&nbsp; A wise son yields
-to an affectionate father, even in points where he cannot
-comprehend the entire wisdom of his discipline and correction;
-yields, not only because experience has taught him the benefit of
-subjection, but also for the sake of obedience to a father, who
-is entrusted with the guidance of him, and has a right to be
-obeyed; much more should we, the adopted children of the Most
-High, bow with meekness and reverence before an Almighty and
-heavenly Father, though we altogether comprehend not the purpose
-<a name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 160</span>of the
-trials, which He bringeth upon us: they are chastisements of
-mercy, of whatever kind they be, and moreover are ordained by
-Him, who has the entire undisputed right of dominion over us.</p>
-<p>Another consideration here suggested is, that all resistance
-is vain; &ldquo;the mighty hand of God&rdquo; is
-uncontrollable.&nbsp; Utterly weak and fruitless were all the
-assembled powers of the universe, combined against His wall: what
-can a frail creature do, child of the dust, akin to the
-worm?&nbsp; If God strikes, who shall stay or avoid the
-blow?&nbsp; Whatever visitation He is pleased to send, to a
-family or to an individual&mdash;of sickness, of calamity, of
-death&mdash;there is no keeping it out of the dwelling; it may be
-softened by resignation, it may be removed, and even blessed, by
-prayer; but we cannot hinder the accomplishment of God&rsquo;s
-will.&nbsp; In the language of the pious Hannah, &ldquo;The Lord
-killeth and maketh alive; He bringeth down to the grave and
-bringeth up&mdash;He raiseth up the poor out of the dust, and
-lifteth up the <a name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-161</span>beggar from the dunghill, to set them among princes,
-and to make them inherit the throne of glory: for the pillars of
-the earth are the Lord&rsquo;s, and He hath set the world upon
-them.&nbsp; He will keep the feet of His saints, and the wicked
-shall be silent in darkness; for by strength shall no man
-prevail.&rdquo; <a name="citation161a"></a><a
-href="#footnote161a" class="citation">[161a]</a></p>
-<p>Yes truly; the afflicting hand of God is mighty in operation,
-both to the wicked and the good; the former are constrained to
-feel, though they will not heartily or practically acknowledge,
-that there is no dependence to be placed on the schemes or
-exertions of man; no trusting, that &ldquo;to-morrow will be as
-this day and much more abundant.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation161b"></a><a href="#footnote161b"
-class="citation">[161b]</a>&nbsp; When &ldquo;riches shall have
-made themselves wings and have flown away;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation161c"></a><a href="#footnote161c"
-class="citation">[161c]</a> when the favourite or the friend have
-been cut off; when the bodily frame is under the influence of
-alarming disease; then the sinner, if he be not spiritually
-humbled, will, at least be made sensible, that there is a power
-which can <a name="page162"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-162</span>lay him low; the conviction is forced on his mind,
-though he may refuse to act upon it; his conscience is smitten,
-though he will not obey its emotions; it assures him of the
-vanity of human devices, of human dependencies and strength,
-though it fail to incline him to his God.</p>
-<p>How blessedly different the effect of the mighty hand of God
-upon the sincere Christian!&nbsp; Even the heaviest affliction,
-the most untoward or adverse occurrence, produces, when he comes
-to reflect, a salutary influence on his mind and heart.&nbsp;
-Perceiving that it is the natural tendency of a smooth
-uninterrupted course, to make him rest satisfied with earthly
-enjoyments, and draw aside his attention from the sublimer
-delights and the more substantial interest of heavenly things, he
-acknowledges, not only with acquiescence, but with gratitude, the
-severer dispensations of providence; he knows, that his faith
-must be tried and his patience made perfect; it is the very
-object for which he is placed in this transitory state of
-existence; <a name="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-163</span>he therefore implores his gracious Father, to sanctify
-to him the crosses and disappointments below, and make them
-minister to the completion of his happiness above; whatever they
-are, they are less than his transgressions deserve; whatever they
-are, they are &ldquo;of God&rsquo;s sending,&rdquo; to lead him
-to reflection and repentance; and very efficacious are they for
-the fulfilment of this merciful purpose; perhaps the only means
-by which he could have been preserved from falling, amidst the
-snares and temptations that surround him.&nbsp; The Christian is
-ready to confess, and many we have heard with thankfulness
-confessing, that of all the mercies received from the hands of
-God, the most distinguished, because the most effectual for his
-salvation, are the vicissitudes and troubles of life: how many a
-sincere believer, by the discomfiture of his earthly prospects,
-has been led to fix his heart more intently and stedfastly, upon
-the unchangeable felicity of heaven; how many, at the death of a
-friend, have <a name="page164"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-164</span>sought more earnestly and experienced more abundantly,
-&ldquo;the power of the spirit of consolation;&rdquo; and have
-thereby been led to transfer their affections to that blessed
-world, where christian friends shall meet, and never separate
-again.&nbsp; How many, by the infirmities of the body, have been
-admonished and persuaded to make a better provision for the
-health and well-being of the soul!&nbsp; The hand of God has been
-mightily laid upon them, to rescue them from the tyranny of sin
-and Satan, to place them in the enjoyment of &ldquo;the perfect
-law of liberty,&rdquo; manifested in the gospel; to save their
-souls alive.</p>
-<p>Let us not regard the various calamities that befal us, of
-whatever nature they may be, as the mere result of human design
-or contingency; for whether they be occasioned by our own
-imprudence and neglect, or by the instrumentality of an evil
-world, they are permitted and ordained by a wise and merciful
-God, to draw us nearer to Himself; to teach us the utter
-insufficiency of all earthly <a name="page165"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 165</span>interests and possessions; and to
-raise our thoughts to the glory of an eternal kingdom.&nbsp; And
-if we receive them in a christian spirit, they will never fail to
-answer their high and holy purpose.&nbsp; Let us therefore watch
-and pray, that we may duly consider every calamitous day as a
-sacred opportunity, as a season of grace, as the rod of our
-Almighty Father to chastise us from sin: let it call us to deep
-meditation and contrition, to serious examination of heart; for
-it is only by the religious and spiritual observance of such
-seasons, that we can ever hope to derive from them improvement
-and comfort.</p>
-<p>Remark and remember the language of the text, &ldquo;Humble
-<i>yourselves</i> under the mighty hand of God;&rdquo; it is not
-enough that we be humbled, in a worldly sense, by the stroke of
-misfortune; that is a consequence, which may of necessity ensue:
-the loss of possession may drive us into needy solitude; the loss
-of health destroy our energy and activity; the loss of reputation
-bring us to shame; the loss of <a name="page166"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 166</span>friends oblige us to mourn, from the
-very feelings of nature; but all this while, there may be no
-humility of heart, no self-abasement, no voluntary humiliation
-under &ldquo;any of the dispensations of heaven:&rdquo; the
-&ldquo;hand of God hath touched us;&rdquo; but we may not,
-nevertheless, be vitally touched ourselves, with a proper sense
-of the trials, which He has called us to endure: we must fall low
-before His footstool; we must bend our knees in humble fervent
-prayer; we must implore the aid of His Holy Spirit, to open our
-understandings, that we may perceive the graciousness of His
-dealings with us; and to enlarge our hearts, that we may take the
-full benefit of His &ldquo;loving correction;&rdquo; we must
-unfeignedly and fully confess, on our own part, that unworthiness
-and iniquity, which excited God&rsquo;s displeasure, and required
-His afflicting visitation; and that mercy, on God&rsquo;s part,
-which seeketh to reclaim us from error; to &ldquo;purge our
-conscience from dead works;&rdquo; to make us more alive to the
-&ldquo;things which belong <a name="page167"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 167</span>unto our peace;&rdquo; to lead us
-from the vanities of time to the momentous realities of
-eternity.</p>
-<p>If we thus improve the sorrowful events that await us, we
-shall find a happy deliverance from them all; and it is the only
-possible means, by which we can be happily delivered: this the
-text implies; &ldquo;Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of
-God, <i>that He may exalt you</i>;&rdquo; that you may thus be
-rendered meet to partake of His mercy; that He may visit and
-comfort you in your low estate; and make it instrumental to your
-spiritual exaltation.&nbsp; If you murmur or complain, or do but
-naturally mourn; if you manifest only the frettings of a worldly
-disposition and temper, your case thereby becomes still more
-grievous and intolerable; the heart is vexed by its vain and
-rebellious strivings; &ldquo;the sorrow of the world worketh
-misery and death.&rdquo;&nbsp; You are thus preventing the
-benediction of heaven from descending upon you; you are closing
-up the avenues, through which the grace of <a
-name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 168</span>God may
-find its way into the heart; you are neglecting that remedy, by
-which alone the stricken soul can be healed, by which your
-trouble may be converted into a blessing.&nbsp; Embrace the
-proffered means; humble yourself beneath the burden, with
-&ldquo;a godly sorrow,&rdquo; for the sin that has brought it;
-bend yourself beneath the storm of heaven, and the Sun of
-righteousness will soon shine forth, and cheer you with His
-brightest beam; &ldquo;the God of consolation,&rdquo; your
-Redeemer, your unchangeable friend, &ldquo;the same yesterday,
-to-day, and for ever,&rdquo; will turn your darkness into light;
-your &ldquo;weeping will endure but for a night, and joy will
-come in the morning.&rdquo; <a name="citation168"></a><a
-href="#footnote168" class="citation">[168]</a></p>
-<p>Or, if it be not literally so; if deliverance come not so
-speedily as you desire or expect, it will assuredly come in
-God&rsquo;s &ldquo;due time;&rdquo; He may wait, to try the
-strength of your patience and your faith; may seem for a season,
-as though He heareth not your prayer; but rest assured, <a
-name="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 169</span>He does
-hear, and the answer is preparing: the wise and benevolent author
-of four blessings knows best when to bestow them; depend upon His
-mercy, and trust Him for the time: the delay will be nothing, as
-compared with the comfort when it arrives: the very delay will
-minister to the fulness of your joy: you will perceive the truth
-of the divine character, as drawn by the pencil of the prophet;
-you may apply the prophetic description to yourself; &ldquo;For a
-small moment have I forsaken thee; but with great mercies will I
-gather thee.&nbsp; In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for
-a moment; but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on
-thee, saith the Lord thy Redeemer.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation169"></a><a href="#footnote169"
-class="citation">[169]</a></p>
-<p>God will exalt every humble and faithful servant, in due time,
-even in this world; not perhaps to earthly greatness and honour;
-but, what is infinitely more important, to the height of His own
-blessed favour; to the delight of a peaceful reconciliation with
-Himself; to <a name="page170"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-170</span>the happiness of an approving conscience; to a
-&ldquo;hope full of immortality:&rdquo; and, after death, He will
-crown that hope with a glorious consummation; will exalt that
-servant to the skies; far beyond the reach of change, of trouble,
-or of fear.&nbsp; The Christian, like the Captain of his
-Salvation, &ldquo;will be made perfect through sufferings;&rdquo;
-like Him, when the combat is over, will receive the crown of
-glory, and sit down for ever at the right hand of his Father and
-his God.</p>
-<p>He will then more fully see and admire the gracious dealings
-of his merciful God and Saviour; will see, what reason he had to
-be thankful for the chastisements of heaven; how they have
-trained and prepared his soul for the happiness of the blest; how
-wonderfully they have ministered to the fulness of his joy.&nbsp;
-Bear then patiently; bear, I ought to say, thankfully, what the
-Lord layeth upon thee; it is His hand that &ldquo;worketh all in
-all,&rdquo; His hand of might and mercy.&nbsp; Thou canst not
-always trace His designs and operations; <a
-name="page171"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 171</span>if thou
-couldst, where would be the exercise of thy faith?&nbsp; But if
-thou wilt believe and trust Him, if thou wilt bow and submit, He
-will thus exalt thee in due time, when thou art ready, when thy
-trial is completed, when thy appointed work is done.&nbsp; This
-is the seed-time; sow, and thou shalt see it spring up; labour,
-and wait for the harvest; &ldquo;they that sow in tears shall
-reap in joy.&rdquo; <a name="citation171"></a><a
-href="#footnote171" class="citation">[171]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-172</span>SERMON X.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THOU ART THE MAN.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">2 <span
-class="smcap">Sam</span>. xii. 7.</p>
-<p><i>And Nathan said to David</i>, <i>Thou art the man</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> parable, of which these words
-are a part, is admired, even for its elegance and simplicity, by
-every one who is capable of appreciating its merit.&nbsp; It
-serves also to illustrate, in the clearest manner, the advantage
-of this mode of instruction; which is intended, in the first
-place, by a lively representation of the productions of nature,
-or the incidents of common life, to convey an adequate notion of
-a truth or doctrine in easy and familiar terms; and to leave a
-more striking impression of it upon the memory and the
-heart.&nbsp; The parable has a further advantage: the instruction
-<a name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 173</span>it
-affords is not at once unfolded to the mind; the attention and
-the feelings are first awakened, by the relation of some
-interesting occurrence, apparently unconnected with the object in
-view; by which means, an assent is gained over to the side of
-truth, before the understanding has had time to be prejudiced, by
-the workings of self-love, or the disinclination to religious
-admonition.</p>
-<p>Such was precisely the case with the parable before us.&nbsp;
-Had Nathan addressed to David a direct and formal expostulation,
-it is probable that the king would have considered his
-interference as intrusive and impertinent; would have either
-driven him from his presence, or have been prepared, by some
-plausible excuse, to cast a veil over the hideousness of his
-crimes.&nbsp; But the royal offender, though he could readily
-palliate his own atrocity, could not bear to hear of cruelty in
-another.&nbsp; When it was reported to him, that there were two
-men in a city, the one rich and the other poor; that the rich <a
-name="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 174</span>man, when
-there came a traveller unto him, spared to take of the abundance
-of his own flock, and of his own herd, and took from the poor man
-a little ewe lamb, which was all he had in the world; took it
-from him under the most affecting circumstances; &ldquo;for he
-had bought and nourished it up, and it grew up together with him
-and with his children; it did eat of his own meat, and drank of
-his own cup, and lay in his bosom, and was unto him as a
-daughter.&rdquo;&nbsp; When the king heard all this, his feelings
-were violently excited, &ldquo;his anger was greatly kindled
-against the man; and he said to Nathan, as the Lord liveth, the
-man that hath done this thing shall surely die.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation174"></a><a href="#footnote174"
-class="citation">[174]</a>&nbsp; This was the moment for making
-the application: and judge of David&rsquo;s shame and confusion
-of face, on finding that all his pity, and all his anger, and all
-his condemnation, had in truth been directed against himself:
-&ldquo;Thou art the man.&rdquo;&nbsp; He could not help
-perceiving, that great <a name="page175"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 175</span>as was the cruelty, which he had
-been reprobating in the case laid before him, he had been guilty
-of still greater himself: though he had the whole kingdom for the
-exercise of his legitimate choice, he would rather deprive an
-humble servant of the only object of his conjugal affection,
-deprive him, by becoming, in the first instance, accessary to his
-murder.</p>
-<p>We may here observe, how terrible is the infatuation of
-sin.&nbsp; It might have been thought that David, if he had not
-immediately perceived the full intention of the prophet in laying
-this parable before him, would at least, from an instantaneous
-recollection of his own notorious guilt, have treated, with some
-degree of lenity or forbearance, the barbarity of which Nathan
-appeared to be complaining; that he would not so soon have
-denounced against a delinquent, so much less heinous than
-himself, the utmost severity of punishment.&nbsp; But, as if his
-own conscience were clear, he immediately exclaimed against the
-imagined offender, as a wretch <a name="page176"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 176</span>unfit to live; he does not appear to
-have been awakened to a sense of his own crimes, till he heard
-the overwhelming application, &ldquo;Thou art the man.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Such is generally the fascination of sin; it darkens the
-understanding, and deadens the conscience, and renders men
-insensible to their real condition.&nbsp; It is the great object
-of the enemy of our souls, an object in which he too often
-fatally succeeds, to make us blind, not only to the heinousness
-and danger, but also to the very existence of guilt: so that,
-however acute we may be in perceiving the transgressions of
-others, and however severe in reprobating and condemning them, we
-are, in very frequent instances, utterly regardless of our
-own.&nbsp; Many, it is to be feared, there are, who persist in a
-course of sin day after day, and year after year, without once
-feeling any lively or serious compunction; while they have
-frequently, in that time, been reproachfully animadverting upon
-the mote which they have detected in their brother&rsquo;s
-eye.</p>
-<p><a name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-177</span>Perhaps of all the temporal consequences of sin, the
-operation of this evil habit is one of the most calamitous; for
-it not only prevents us from a repentance of the past, but serves
-as an encouragement to our reckless perseverance in sin; it
-destroys the very principle of vital religion; removing entirely
-from our hearts the love and fear of God; and filling us with
-&ldquo;envy, hatred, and malice and all
-uncharitableness.&rdquo;&nbsp; Let David&rsquo;s infatuation be a
-warning to us, let it induce us to take diligent heed, lest we be
-irreclaimably &ldquo;hardened by the deceitfulness of sin;&rdquo;
-lest the conscience be at length so entirely seared, as to become
-callous to the very perception of iniquity; as to make us
-&ldquo;call evil good, and good evil; to put darkness for light,
-and light for darkness; to put bitter for sweet, and sweet for
-bitter.&rdquo; <a name="citation177"></a><a href="#footnote177"
-class="citation">[177]</a></p>
-<p>Before, however, we further proceed to the practical
-inferences which may be drawn from this subject, it may be proper
-<a name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 178</span>to
-notice some irreverent and reproachful remarks, which have been
-made on the flagrant crimes of a person so distinguished as
-David.&nbsp; Is it possible, some have urged, that such guilt,
-and such hardihood in guilt, could have been found in the
-&ldquo;man after God&rsquo;s own heart?&rdquo; <a
-name="citation178"></a><a href="#footnote178"
-class="citation">[178]</a>&nbsp; But this honourable appellation,
-be it observed, was given to David, not on account of his moral
-or spiritual purity, but on account of the excellence of his
-character as a king; he was so named in opposition to Saul, who
-had acted in wilful disobedience to the divine commands, and
-therefore, in the administration of his government, was not a man
-after God&rsquo;s own heart; that is, he did not (as David did,
-in this particular,) perform God&rsquo;s will.</p>
-<p>Again, it has been said, could an inspired person possibly
-fall into such a complication of evil?&nbsp; Miraculous
-inspiration, we answer, was not given to the sacred pen-men, as a
-certain preservative from the corruption of sin, but to enable
-them to <a name="page179"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-179</span>reveal the will of God; to guard them, in this respect,
-from error; and to &ldquo;guide them into all truth:&rdquo; their
-carnal appetites and passions were not supernaturally overruled;
-they still had their choice between good and evil; though
-revealing to mankind the holy law of God, they might themselves
-neglect the duties which it injoined: many instances are recorded
-of the abuse of spiritual gifts, many examples of their
-consisting with unholiness and transgression.&nbsp; The very
-chief of the apostles intimates to us the personal care and
-watchfulness and labour which were necessary, &ldquo;lest, having
-preached to others, he himself should be a castaway.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation179"></a><a href="#footnote179"
-class="citation">[179]</a></p>
-<p>Not but that David&rsquo;s guilt was most deplorably
-inconsistent with his high character and office, and was a
-dishonour to religion itself; I am only shewing, that it was not
-incompatible with the appellation which he had received, and the
-high and holy functions which he was called to discharge.&nbsp;
-And be it remembered, to <a name="page180"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 180</span>David&rsquo;s honour, that though
-his sin was aggravated, his confession of it was full and
-unreserved; that he most humbly and religiously submitted to the
-penal retribution of his offended God; that his repentance was
-bitter and sincere: it was &ldquo;a repentance indeed never
-afterwards repented of:&rdquo; continually was his harp attuned
-to the bewailing of his own depravity; continually was he
-descending from the lofty strains of thanksgiving and joy, and
-pouring forth in the abasement of his soul, the doleful notes of
-mourning and lamentation.</p>
-<p>And, in truth, there was abundant cause; for the crimes of
-David afford one of the most melancholy instances of the
-violation of conscience, of a departure from the service of the
-Most High.&nbsp; Let it fill us with humility and fear.&nbsp; If
-so eminent a servant of God could fall into such abominations,
-how deeply concerned, how &ldquo;instant in prayer,&rdquo; how
-vigilant and careful should we be, lest our feet be betrayed into
-evil!&nbsp; We see to what <a name="page181"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 181</span>criminal and dangerous excess human
-nature may be led, if we fail to cherish the grace of God; and
-are abandoned to the government of our own corrupt desires, and
-the tyranny of our spiritual adversary.&nbsp; To the lukewarm and
-the wavering I need scarcely say, that without greater
-seriousness and circumspection, they will assuredly be
-overthrown: but let me also admonish the faithful Christian; him,
-who appears to be safely pursuing the even tenour of his way; who
-may be led, by the regular and habitual discharge of religious
-duties, into a state of presumptuous confidence and slumbering
-security; him I would admonish, from the instance of David,
-&ldquo;that the heart is deceitful above all things, and
-desperately wicked;&rdquo; <a name="citation181a"></a><a
-href="#footnote181a" class="citation">[181a]</a> that it may,
-when most implicitly trusted, most dangerously betray; let David
-teach &ldquo;him that thinketh he standeth to take heed lest he
-fall.&rdquo; <a name="citation181b"></a><a href="#footnote181b"
-class="citation">[181b]</a></p>
-<p>Some perverse and worldly-minded <a name="page182"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 182</span>persons have made a very different
-use of the lamentable case before us; it has encouraged them in
-wilful transgression; it has served them as a &ldquo;cloak for
-their sin.&rdquo;&nbsp; Surely, say they, if David could so
-flagrantly transgress, how can we be expected to preserve our
-integrity?&nbsp; If he was accepted of God, indulgence would
-readily be extended to the comparatively trifling offences of
-inferior servants.&nbsp; True; we cannot be perfect; we may hope
-for pardon; but we are not, on that account, to sin
-presumptuously; not to offend, because God is merciful: this did
-not David.&nbsp; Whoever deliberately sins from the hope of
-God&rsquo;s mercy, is taking the surest was to deprive himself of
-that mercy.&nbsp; There is frequently great error in the notion
-of trifling offences: no offence is trifling in the sight of an
-infinitely holy God: much less any wilful offence.&nbsp; The
-magnitude of a fault chiefly depends upon the circumstances under
-which it is committed; much more readily could we urge an excuse
-for him, who is heedlessly or suddenly <a
-name="page183"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 183</span>borne away
-by impetuous passion and carnal desire, than for him, who
-presumes deliberately to trample upon the law of God, because
-another has been forgiven.&nbsp; Shall we thus abuse the mercies
-of redeeming love?&nbsp; &ldquo;Shall we continue in sin that
-grace may abound?&nbsp; God forbid.&nbsp; How shall we that are
-dead to sin, live any longer therein?&rdquo; <a
-name="citation183"></a><a href="#footnote183"
-class="citation">[183]</a>&nbsp; Would we find the favour that
-David did, we must seek it, like him, in the true spirit of
-penitence and devotion; we must &ldquo;confess our wickedness,
-and be sorry for our sin:&rdquo; we must hate the works and
-workers of iniquity: we must imitate David, not in his crimes,
-but in his repentance and reformation.</p>
-<p>Let us learn another lesson from the history before us; let it
-teach us the importance of being always disposed and ready to
-receive spiritual counsel; of being in the habit of applying to
-ourselves every opportunity of improvement, with which we may be
-blessed.&nbsp; Too many, like <a name="page184"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 184</span>David, are extremely backward to
-receive an intimation of their own errors, and to avail
-themselves of the benefit of reproof.&nbsp; They are sufficiently
-quick-sighted in discovering the applicability of reproach, to
-their neighbour; without even suspecting that it may suit their
-own case and condition.&nbsp; How many have acknowledged the
-propriety and force of admonitions and rebuke, which they have
-heard in the house of God, without ever taking them home to their
-own breasts; and this undoubtedly is one cause, why the voice of
-public instruction produces, in general, so little effect upon
-the characters and conduct of men.&nbsp; While they are pleased
-to imagine, that the representations and censures of the preacher
-are suited to others rather than to themselves, no wonder that
-they retain their neglectful, sinful, unprincipled habits, in
-defiance of every remonstrance, and every warning.&nbsp; Instead
-of torturing their ingenuity, to discover to what particular
-persons in the congregation a discourse may <a
-name="page185"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 185</span>be most
-fitly and beneficially applied, let them rather be anxious to
-inquire, how far it may be accommodated to their own case; and to
-all those, who presume to make a further inquiry, who are looking
-around for the delinquencies of their neighbour, we would say,
-restrain thy wandering eye, and look within, &ldquo;Thou art the
-man.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A readiness to take advantage of religious instruction, is one
-of the surest evidences of a christian spirit, and one of the
-greatest blessings that a Christian can enjoy.&nbsp; It manifests
-a christian spirit, inasmuch as it shews an humble sense of our
-own failings and imperfections, and an anxious desire to recover
-from them all; to &ldquo;grow in grace and in the knowledge of
-our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation185"></a><a href="#footnote185"
-class="citation">[185]</a>&nbsp; It is one of the greatest
-blessings to the Christian, because there is seldom a day, seldom
-an hour that passes, from which he may not derive some spiritual
-benefit.&nbsp; While the reckless <a name="page186"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 186</span>and self-conceited, who dwell with
-complacency upon their state and character, perceive not any
-counsel adapted to their wants, the humble-minded are gathering
-edification from every thing around them; from all they hear and
-all they see: doubtless, it must be so; for how can they, who
-think themselves whole, discover the need of a physician, how can
-they apply a remedy?</p>
-<p>Suffer me to entreat you, in conclusion, that whenever you are
-seriously impressed with a conviction of evil, or the neglect of
-any christian duty, you will carry home the impression, to have
-its full effect upon the heart.&nbsp; For want of this care and
-this habit, many a salutary lesson, that strikes for the moment,
-is afterwards thrown away, unheeded and forgotten: and thus the
-very means of grace, which are ordained to recover us from sin,
-and enable us to &ldquo;work out our salvation,&rdquo; become the
-instruments of confirming us in error and guilt.&nbsp; The mind,
-which is continually accustomed to receive and to <a
-name="page187"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 187</span>neglect
-religious instruction, may be thereby brought into a heedless and
-torpid state, from which it is well nigh impossible to be
-roused.&nbsp; Not that any thing &ldquo;is impossible with
-God:&rdquo; but I appeal to experience, and ask, whether it is
-not a notorious matter of fact, that many amongst us have for
-years uniformly persevered, in the same neglect of christian
-duties, the same worldly principles, the same evil courses, the
-same habits of intemperance and licentiousness and profaneness;
-and it will not be denied, that they have, in these years,
-frequently heard the voice of expostulation, and perceived the
-justice, the force, and the importance of it.&nbsp; Then why are
-they still unreclaimed?&mdash;because they have never followed up
-the conviction of &ldquo;Thou art the man.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>God grant, that this admonition may have its full effect upon
-us; that we may go and meditate, and pray; pray daily for the
-blessing of an humble and a teachable heart; pray for God&rsquo;s
-grace, to correct all our sinful follies, and supply all <a
-name="page188"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 188</span>our
-deficiencies.&nbsp; Probably, my brethren, we have been
-&ldquo;leaning too little upon the hope of this heavenly
-grace;&rdquo; we have been relying upon our own perception of
-right and wrong, our own choice and decision, our own feeble
-resolutions; if so, no wonder that we have failed, in our work of
-repentance and spiritual change.&nbsp; &ldquo;Turn Thou us unto
-Thee, O Lord, and we shall be turned:&rdquo; <a
-name="citation188"></a><a href="#footnote188"
-class="citation">[188]</a> here lies our hope and our strength,
-in the renewing influence of the Spirit of God.&nbsp; As we do
-desire, so let us fervently pray, that we may, in our course of
-penitence, imitate the example of the royal psalmist, and let
-contrition &ldquo;have its perfect work;&rdquo; that we may, here
-below, with heart and soul, join in the pious and repentant
-strains of David&rsquo;s harp, and thus may be admitted to sing
-to other harps hereafter, in the chorus of the Redeemed
-above.</p>
-<h2><a name="page189"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-189</span>SERMON XI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE WAY OF THE LORD EQUAL.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Ezek</span>. xviii. 25.</p>
-<p><i>Ye say</i>, <i>the way of the Lord is not equal</i>.&nbsp;
-<i>Hear now</i>, <i>O house of Israel</i>; <i>is not my way
-equal</i>? <i>are not your ways unequal</i>?</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> main purport of this chapter
-was, to obviate some objections which had been groundlessly
-entertained against the dealings of God with His people.&nbsp;
-They were at that time suffering in a state of captivity; and the
-calamities attendant upon it had been threatened long before, as
-a punishment for the sins of their ancestors.&nbsp; The Jews,
-therefore, assuming that this was the only cause of divine
-vengeance; imagining, in the blindness <a
-name="page190"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 190</span>and pride
-of their hearts, that there were no delinquencies of their own to
-deserve such retribution, presumed to charge the Almighty with
-injustice, for this visitation of His wrath.</p>
-<p>The prophet, in the opening of the chapter, thus remonstrates
-with them: &ldquo;What mean ye, that ye use this proverb
-concerning the land of Israel?&rdquo; (concerning the evils with
-which it is afflicted,) that ye say, in the language of
-accusation and reproach, &ldquo;the fathers have eaten sour
-grapes and the children&rsquo;s teeth are set on
-edge?&rdquo;&mdash;thereby meaning, that the present generation
-are unjustly punished for the transgressions of their
-forefathers.&nbsp; &ldquo;As I live, saith the Lord, ye shall not
-have occasion to use this proverb any more in
-Israel.&rdquo;&nbsp; I will make so visible a discrimination
-between the righteous and the wicked, between those who tread in
-the steps of their wicked progenitors, and those who take warning
-by their examples, that you shall not have any further occasion
-to use this proverb amongst you.</p>
-<p><a name="page191"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 191</span>The
-Jews, in this as in many other instances, misunderstood and
-perverted the dispensations of the Most High.&nbsp; God had
-declared, that He would &ldquo;visit the sins of the fathers upon
-the children,&rdquo; and that He &ldquo;would shew mercy unto
-thousands of those that loved Him;&rdquo; from which they
-inferred, that worldly calamities, in the one case, and
-prosperity in the other, constituted the sole recompence, which
-they were severally to expect: they supposed, that when a nation
-was punished, on account of the general depravity, no respect was
-had to the different merits of individuals, of which that nation
-consisted; and that, when a people were prospered and exalted, as
-the reward of righteousness, they were all, of necessity, the
-objects of divine favour.&nbsp; Whereas, these temporal rewards
-and punishments formed but a part of the dispensation, under
-which they were placed.&nbsp; God had far other means in store,
-to bless the faithful and to afflict the transgressor.&nbsp;
-Under every visitation, His unerring eye could <a
-name="page192"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 192</span>discern
-between the evil and the good; the one, however prosperous in a
-worldly point of view, He could mortify and humble; and the
-other, in whatever evil they might be involved, He could favour
-and bless.</p>
-<p>But there was still another consideration, to which the Jews,
-though they practically disregarded it, were specially directed;
-a consideration, which might have taught them, how the seeming
-irregularities, of which they complained, would be completely
-rectified; it was that of a final judgment, of a world to
-come.&nbsp; Their prophet Isaiah expressly says of the
-transgressors, that &ldquo;their worm shall not die, neither
-shall their fire be quenched.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation192a"></a><a href="#footnote192a"
-class="citation">[192a]</a>&nbsp; And Daniel more particularly
-intimates the awful difference between the conditions of the
-righteous and the wicked in a future state; &ldquo;many of them
-that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake: some to
-everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting
-contempt.&rdquo; <a name="citation192b"></a><a
-href="#footnote192b" class="citation">[192b]</a>&nbsp; But <a
-name="page193"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 193</span>the
-Israelites &ldquo;had eyes and saw not, ears and heard
-not;&rdquo; <a name="citation193a"></a><a href="#footnote193a"
-class="citation">[193a]</a> they listened only the temporal
-promises of God, and excluded from their minds the prospect of a
-final retribution, of a kingdom to come.&nbsp; The prophet
-awakens them to this consideration in the 4th verse,
-&ldquo;Behold, saith the Lord, all souls are Mine:&rdquo; as they
-are all equally My creatures, so My dealings with them shall be
-without prejudice or partiality; &ldquo;The soul that sinneth, it
-shall die:&rdquo; this denunciation could not possibly be
-understood of temporal death; for that, they knew, must pass
-equally upon all: it must relate to a final execution of
-judgment, to future misery and destruction.&nbsp; The Jews were
-familiar with this form of speech and this application of it: of
-wisdom it is said, &ldquo;They that hate me, love
-<i>death</i>.&rdquo; <a name="citation193b"></a><a
-href="#footnote193b" class="citation">[193b]</a>&nbsp;
-&ldquo;There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end
-thereof are the ways of <i>death</i>.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation193c"></a><a href="#footnote193c"
-class="citation">[193c]</a>&nbsp; A similar mode of speech, we
-may observe, <a name="page194"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-194</span>frequently occurs in the New Testament also; in which
-we continually find expressions and figures borrowed from the
-Old: &ldquo;If ye live after the flesh, ye shall die; but if ye,
-through the spirit, do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall
-live.&rdquo; <a name="citation194a"></a><a href="#footnote194a"
-class="citation">[194a]</a>&nbsp; And, in the book of Revelation,
-mention is made of the <i>second death</i>; <a
-name="citation194b"></a><a href="#footnote194b"
-class="citation">[194b]</a> a term which was in use among the
-Jews themselves, though not found in their inspired
-writings.&nbsp; And in the same sense, we shall perceive, the
-figure is repeatedly employed in the chapter before us.</p>
-<p>The prophet therefore vindicates the justice and equity of God
-on two substantial grounds: he directs his murmuring and
-rebellious people to consider, that they were visited with
-calamity for their own transgressions, as well as for those of
-their forefathers; and he refers them to the future and final
-judgment of the Almighty, in which the prosperity of the <a
-name="page195"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 195</span>wicked and
-the sufferings of the righteous alike terminate; in which both
-shall receive their just and everlasting recompence.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither
-shall the father bear the iniquity of the son; the righteousness
-of the righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the
-wicked shall be upon him.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Have I any pleasure
-at all that the wicked should die, saith the Lord God, and not
-that he should return from his ways and live?&rdquo; <a
-name="citation195"></a><a href="#footnote195"
-class="citation">[195]</a></p>
-<p>The passages last mentioned may introduce to our notice two
-considerations, most distinctly and forcibly stated in the latter
-part of this chapter, in both of which we are very deeply and
-peculiarly interested; they are these; that if the wicked repent
-of their evil ways and turn heartily to God, they shall be
-forgiven and received into His favour; but that if the righteous
-fall away, they shall be condemned and perish: on the one hand,
-there is ample encouragement to the sinner to return; <a
-name="page196"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 196</span>on the
-other, an awful admonition, to the righteous, of the necessity of
-perseverance unto the end.&nbsp; How gracious the instruction in
-either point of view!&nbsp; If it were not for the heavenly
-assurance of the offer of pardon to all, without partiality or
-exception, many a flagrant transgressor, when brought to a sense
-of his sin and shame&mdash;his conscience pierced with the
-remembrance of so manifold offences against a just and holy God,
-his soul over-burdened with the load of guilt&mdash;might sit
-down disconsolate and despairing in the shadow of death: and if
-it were not for a warning voice, bidding them, as they hope for
-salvation, to persevere, the righteous, when assailed by
-temptation, might at length be induced to yield, under a
-presumption, that their former obedience, that the good deeds
-they had already performed, would turn the balance in their
-favour, and procure for them acceptance at the tribunal of God,
-though they were ultimately found in the way of evil.&nbsp; Into
-this error the Jews had actually fallen; <a
-name="page197"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 197</span>and do, as
-it is affirmed, continue unto this day; and others might
-&ldquo;follow their pernicious ways.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Each of the important doctrines, which we are now considering,
-is declared by the prophet in the most explicit and unequivocal
-terms.&nbsp; &ldquo;If the wicked will turn from all his sins
-that he hath committed, and keep all My statutes, and do that
-which is lawful and right, he shall surely live, he shall not
-die.&nbsp; All his transgressions that he hath committed, they
-shall not be mentioned unto him: in his righteousness that he
-hath done, he shall live.&rdquo; <a name="citation197"></a><a
-href="#footnote197" class="citation">[197]</a>&nbsp; None of his
-former transgressions shall exclude him from the privileges and
-blessings of God&rsquo;s people; he shall be freely and fully
-received, without reproach, into a gracious covenant with his
-God.&nbsp; This condition of acceptance manifestly implies a
-vital belief in the sovereignty and mercy of God; for without
-this, none would be encouraged to turn unto Him with the hope of
-forgiveness and favour: &ldquo;He <a name="page198"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 198</span>that cometh to God must believe that
-He is, and that He is the rewarder of them that diligently seek
-Him.&rdquo; <a name="citation198a"></a><a href="#footnote198a"
-class="citation">[198a]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;The just shall live by
-his faith;&rdquo; <a name="citation198b"></a><a
-href="#footnote198b" class="citation">[198b]</a> and the duties
-which the prophet prescribed to his people, as the means of
-saving their souls alive, were evidently regarded by him as the
-fruit of that faith.&nbsp; Thus, therefore, they were left
-without excuse; no longer able to say, &ldquo;that the way of the
-Lord was not equal;&rdquo; for so far from having decreed to
-involve them all in the same indiscriminate punishment, He was
-willing, nay desirous, of admitting into His favour even the most
-disobedient and abandoned amongst them.&nbsp; Although in a state
-of miserable bondage, He would either &ldquo;break their bonds
-asunder,&rdquo; and provide them with a place of refuge; or He
-would make their bodily afflictions minister to the well-being of
-their souls.&nbsp; If the light of His countenance shone upon
-them, happy was their lot in the <a name="page199"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 199</span>darkest hour of suffering and
-privation: and if they did not live to enjoy a restoration to the
-privileges of their own land, still might they rejoice, in the
-prospect of being restored to their forfeited inheritance in the
-mansions of eternal peace.&nbsp; Would they but forsake the
-idols, after which they were gone astray, and turn to &ldquo;love
-the Lord their God with all their heart and soul and
-strength,&rdquo; &ldquo;ceasing to do evil, and learning to do
-well,&rdquo; though &ldquo;their sins were as scarlet, they
-should be as white as snow; though they were red like crimson,
-they should be as wool.&rdquo; <a name="citation199"></a><a
-href="#footnote199" class="citation">[199]</a>&nbsp; Surely none
-but the obstinate and rebellious, none but the hardest and most
-ungrateful heart, could complain of the dealings of God.&nbsp;
-Wonderful indeed was the patience which had borne with them so
-long; adorable the mercy which was still held out for the
-encouragement and return of a backsliding people.</p>
-<p>Under the gospel dispensation, the same gracious doctrine is
-yet more fully revealed.&nbsp; <a name="page200"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 200</span>&ldquo;If any man sin, we have an
-Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation200a"></a><a href="#footnote200a"
-class="citation">[200a]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;If we confess our sins,
-He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us
-from <i>all</i> unrighteousness.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation200b"></a><a href="#footnote200b"
-class="citation">[200b]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;The Lord is
-long-suffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish,
-but that <i>all</i> should come to repentance.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation200c"></a><a href="#footnote200c"
-class="citation">[200c]</a>&nbsp; Texts indeed there are without
-number of the same merciful import; and numerous also are the
-examples, recorded in Holy writ, in which the Saviour vouchsafed
-His loving kindness and favour to the weary and heavy-laden
-sinner; &ldquo;seeking and saving those that were lost;&rdquo;
-and thus affording us the most ample assurance of the truth of
-His own gracious promise, &ldquo;Him that cometh to me I will in
-no wise cast out.&rdquo; <a name="citation200d"></a><a
-href="#footnote200d" class="citation">[200d]</a>&nbsp; Are there
-any amongst us, my brethren, who have not yet made their peace
-with God; any, whom Satan hath hitherto held fast in &ldquo;the
-gall of bitterness, and the bond of iniquity;&rdquo; who <a
-name="page201"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 201</span>feel the
-wretchedness of their condition here, and are alarmed at the
-expectation of what may come hereafter?&nbsp; May &ldquo;the
-goodness of God lead them to repentance!&rdquo;&nbsp; However
-deep and dangerous the wounds which sin has made in their hearts,
-there is &ldquo;balm in Gilead,&rdquo; if they will earnestly
-seek it, and apply it to their souls: their offended Lord is
-still &ldquo;waiting to be gracious;&rdquo; and though they have
-been prodigally wasting his bounty in riotous living, yet if they
-be at length pierced to the heart by the misery to which it has
-brought them, and be truly desirous of returning to their
-peaceful home, and be ready, with all humility and contrition, to
-acknowledge their unworthiness, and to seek again the divine
-favour, from which they have been so unhappily estranged, then
-they will be received even with welcome; if but one sinner
-return, there &ldquo;will be joy in heaven;&rdquo; and the family
-of the blest will hail his reception; and his wanderings shall be
-mentioned no more.&nbsp; &ldquo;Awake thou <a
-name="page202"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 202</span>that
-sleepest and rise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee
-light.&rdquo; <a name="citation202"></a><a href="#footnote202"
-class="citation">[202]</a></p>
-<p>But let not this gracious offer of mercy be abused; let it not
-act as an encouragement to a continuance in sin, under a notion
-that transgressions, however multiplied and aggravated, may be,
-at any future day, repented and forgiven.&nbsp; The grace of
-repentance, like every other good gift, cometh from God; and the
-proffered mercy, which is long and obstinately rejected, may be,
-and often is, withdrawn.&nbsp; If we will not hear, while the
-Almighty now speaks; if we will not answer, while He is now
-calling, &ldquo;the ear may become heavy that it cannot
-hear,&rdquo; and we may be left to perish in our sins.&nbsp; One
-word more; think of the many sudden departures; you are not
-without awakening and awful examples; your eye may be closed in
-death, while it is turned away from your God; or if you should be
-permitted to experience a few days&rsquo; alarm, God alone knows
-what effect it may produce <a name="page203"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 203</span>upon the heart.&nbsp; Seek Him
-&ldquo;in health and wealth;&rdquo; the work is of amazing
-magnitude and everlasting importance; it demands all your vigour,
-all the unclouded faculties of your soul.</p>
-<p>And let those who have embraced the blessed gospel, in
-sincerity and truth, who are believing in the name of Jesus for
-salvation, and &ldquo;are fruitful in every good word and
-work,&rdquo; ever bear in mind the absolute necessity of
-persevering in the good and holy cause.&nbsp; For of what service
-can it be, to begin the race with animation, and to pursue it,
-for a season, with ever so great activity, if they loiter before
-the end, and relinquish their exertions &ldquo;for the prize of
-their high calling?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;When the righteous
-turneth away from his righteousness and committeth iniquity, and
-doeth according to all the abominations that the wicked man
-doeth, shall he live?&nbsp; All his righteousness that he hath
-done shall not be mentioned; in his trespass that he hath
-trespassed, and in his sin that he hath sinned, <a
-name="page204"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 204</span>in them
-shall he die.&rdquo;&nbsp; Here also we must allow, that
-&ldquo;the way of God is equal.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation204"></a><a href="#footnote204"
-class="citation">[204]</a>&nbsp; For surely it argues the most
-depraved and abandoned state of mind and heart, to depart from
-our God and our Redeemer, after having been once convinced of the
-truth and the blessedness of His holy religion; having
-&ldquo;tasted how gracious the Lord is,&rdquo; having experienced
-the guidance and comfort and support of his all-powerful spirit,
-having had our &ldquo;hopes full of immortality,&rdquo; having
-enjoyed a foretaste of the happiness of heaven, after all to fall
-away, and prefer to these exalted objects, the miserable
-pleasures, the base indulgencies, the perishable possessions of
-earth!&nbsp; A change so disastrous must reduce the understanding
-and heart into the worst condition of which they are
-capable.&nbsp; It is the evil spirit, which had been once cast
-out, returning to his abode, with seven other spirits more wicked
-than himself, and dwelling there, as in a settled home, and <a
-name="page205"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 205</span>the last
-state of that man is worse than the first. <a
-name="citation205a"></a><a href="#footnote205a"
-class="citation">[205a]</a>&nbsp; The Apostle represents the
-matter to us in this light: for so difficult is it for a person,
-in such a state, to be worked upon by any consideration, that he
-describes it, in his strong language, as an actual impossibility:
-&ldquo;it is impossible, (he says) for those who were once
-enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made
-partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word of
-God, and the powers of the world to come, if they shall fall
-away, to renew them again unto repentance;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation205b"></a><a href="#footnote205b"
-class="citation">[205b]</a> and then he adds the reason,
-&ldquo;seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh,
-and put Him to an open shame;&rdquo; they maintain the horrid
-principles and character of those who &ldquo;crucified the Lord
-of glory;&rdquo; they deliberately renounce his friendship, and
-become &ldquo;enemies to the cross of Christ;&rdquo; they cast a
-shameful reproach upon Him, infinitely greater than it is
-possible for those enemies to do, <a name="page206"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 206</span>who were never admitted into the
-privilege and happiness of His favour.&nbsp; Fain would we hope,
-that this is a case of rare occurrence; but it is possible, or
-why should the prophet and Apostle have represented it?&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Therefore, let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed
-lest he fall;&rdquo; <a name="citation206a"></a><a
-href="#footnote206a" class="citation">[206a]</a> &ldquo;let him
-give all diligence to make his calling and election sure.&rdquo;
-<a name="citation206b"></a><a href="#footnote206b"
-class="citation">[206b]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;The just shall live by
-his faith: but if <i>that man</i>, (however faithful and just he
-has been) draw back, my soul shall have no pleasure in
-him;&rdquo; <a name="citation206c"></a><a href="#footnote206c"
-class="citation">[206c]</a> this is the proper translation of the
-passage.&nbsp; God Almighty of His infinite mercy grant, that the
-words which follow this text, addressed by the Apostle to the
-faithful disciples of old, may be realized by all of us here;
-&ldquo;we, (says he,) are not of them who draw back unto
-perdition; but of them that believe to the saving of the
-soul.&rdquo;&nbsp; Pray to God without ceasing for grace to
-persevere: His Holy Spirit, if sought and cherished and used,
-will enable us to be faithful and to overcome, <a
-name="page207"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 207</span>will
-&ldquo;make us more than conquerors, through Him that loved
-us.&rdquo; <a name="citation207a"></a><a href="#footnote207a"
-class="citation">[207a]</a></p>
-<p>In conclusion then, I ask, &ldquo;is not the way of the Lord
-equal?&rdquo;&nbsp; And of those, who presume to arraign it, are
-not the ways unequal?&nbsp; Equal and merciful do all the ways of
-God appear, whenever they can be traced; equal and merciful they
-are, whether they can be traced or not.&nbsp; &ldquo;O man, who
-art thou that repliest against God?&rdquo; <a
-name="citation207b"></a><a href="#footnote207b"
-class="citation">[207b]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Shall not the judge of
-all the earth do right?&rdquo; <a name="citation207c"></a><a
-href="#footnote207c" class="citation">[207c]</a>&nbsp; Humble
-thyself, and accept His proffered mercy: Hear His words;
-&ldquo;Look unto Me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth:
-for I am God, and there is none else.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation207d"></a><a href="#footnote207d"
-class="citation">[207d]</a>&nbsp; Salvation is all that the
-sinner can desire; and surely he can repose, without doubt or
-distrust upon the all-wise, all-merciful, omnipotent God.&nbsp;
-Understanding and experiencing, in so many instances, the divine
-wisdom and mercy, we can have no difficulty in believing, that
-God &ldquo;doeth all things <a name="page208"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 208</span>well.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;He that
-spared not his own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how
-shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?&rdquo; <a
-name="citation208a"></a><a href="#footnote208a"
-class="citation">[208a]</a>&nbsp; Most unreasonable, most
-ungrateful would it be to question or complain.&nbsp; No true
-believer does so: he is thoroughly convinced of the truth of
-God&rsquo;s word, and the equity of God&rsquo;s dealings and
-dispensations.&nbsp; This is his concern, this the great purpose
-resting in his soul, to be reconciled to God in His own appointed
-way; to be made an inheritor of His eternal kingdom.&nbsp; He
-knows, and it is enough for him to know, that &ldquo;the grace of
-God, which bringeth salvation, hath appeared to all men;&rdquo;
-<a name="citation208b"></a><a href="#footnote208b"
-class="citation">[208b]</a> he believes, and he acts upon the
-belief, that &ldquo;the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from
-all sin;&rdquo; <a name="citation208c"></a><a
-href="#footnote208c" class="citation">[208c]</a> he seeks to
-&ldquo;wash and be clean,&rdquo; and faithfully waits for the
-promised blessing: &ldquo;Verily there is a reward for the
-righteous; verily He is a God that judgeth the earth.&rdquo;<a
-name="citation208d"></a><a href="#footnote208d"
-class="citation">[208d]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="page209"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-209</span>SERMON XII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE NEW MAN.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Eph</span>. iv. 24.</p>
-<p><i>That ye put on the new man</i>, <i>which after God is
-created in righteousness and true holiness</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> treating of these words, it
-shall be my first object to explain their real nature and
-import.&nbsp; St. Paul has been describing, in this chapter, the
-character of the unregenerate Gentiles, who &ldquo;walked in the
-vanity of their mind, having the understanding darkened, being
-alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in
-them, because of the blindness of their heart.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
-this description applies, with almost equal force and truth, to a
-considerable portion of <a name="page210"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 210</span>those who have &ldquo;named the name
-of Christ:&rdquo; though they acknowledge with their lips the
-truth and obligation of the christian religion, they still
-&ldquo;walk in the vanity of their minds.&rdquo;&nbsp; As to any
-saving view of the truth, &ldquo;the understanding is <i>yet</i>
-darkened:&rdquo; and though their ignorance be removed, with
-respect to a revelation of the divine will, they are as far as
-ever from &ldquo;the life of God;&rdquo; though the mind is
-enlightened with the knowledge of the fact, the blindness of the
-heart remains.</p>
-<p>The Apostle proceeds to say of his Ephesian converts,
-&ldquo;but <i>ye</i> have not so learned
-Christ&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;if so be, that ye have heard
-Him&rdquo; (or rather, as the phrase may properly imply,
-<i>forasmuch</i> as ye have heard Him) &ldquo;and have been
-taught by Him as the truth is in Jesus.&rdquo;&nbsp; And what had
-they heard, as necessary to their salvation by His name, and what
-is the truth they had been taught?&mdash;&ldquo;that ye put off,
-concerning the former conversation (the former life and conduct),
-the old man, <a name="page211"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-211</span>which is corrupt, according to the deceitful
-lusts&rdquo; (the worldly principles and the sinful habits above
-described, to which you were addicted before your conversion);
-and &ldquo;be renewed (or made new) in the spirit of your mind;
-and that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in
-righteousness and true holiness;&rdquo; the change thus produced
-being so great and important as to be compared to a new creation;
-the inner man being totally different from what he was
-before.&nbsp; It is said, moreover, that the new man &ldquo;is
-created <i>after God</i> in righteousness;&rdquo; this is fully
-explained by the same Apostle, in his Epistle to the Colossians,
-where he is treating on the same subject; he there speaks of the
-converts being renewed &ldquo;after the image of Him who created
-them.&rdquo; <a name="citation211"></a><a href="#footnote211"
-class="citation">[211]</a>&nbsp; At the creation of Adam, God is
-represented as saying, &ldquo;Let us make man in our image, after
-our likeness,&rdquo; that is, in perfect innocence and
-purity.&nbsp; Thus was Adam formed, perfectly upright and <a
-name="page212"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 212</span>holy: by
-disobedience his nature was changed; he became sinful and unholy;
-and this change was entailed upon all his posterity.&nbsp; The
-object, therefore, of the new creation is to restore in us, as
-far as we are now capable of it, that image of divine
-righteousness, which man lost by the fall.&nbsp; On considering,
-then, the holy nature of God, we are at once made acquainted with
-that change, in the natural man, which the gospel teaches and
-requires; we are brought to perceive and acknowledge that
-&ldquo;true holiness,&rdquo; which as Christians we are bound to
-desire and attain.</p>
-<p>The same truth may be said to have been substantially revealed
-to the servants of God under the old dispensation: there is no
-express mention indeed of a new creation of the individual; but
-the prophets every where assert, what is similar in effect, that
-no wicked person, without hearty repentance and an entire change
-of character, must expect the divine favour.&nbsp; To this
-purpose is the language of <a name="page213"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 213</span>Isaiah: &ldquo;Wash you, make you
-clean; put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes;
-cease to do evil, learn to do well.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation213a"></a><a href="#footnote213a"
-class="citation">[213a]</a>&nbsp; The unclean and unrighteous
-cannot stand before God.&nbsp; &ldquo;As I live, saith the Lord
-God, (by the mouth of Ezekiel) I have no pleasure in the death of
-the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live; turn
-ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die, house of
-Israel?&rdquo; <a name="citation213b"></a><a href="#footnote213b"
-class="citation">[213b]</a>&nbsp; The prophet thereto plainly
-intimating, that notwithstanding all that goodness and
-long-suffering of the divine nature, which is expressed in a most
-compassionate invitation, and is confirmed even by the solemnity
-of an oath, yet if sinners did not &ldquo;turn from their evil
-ways,&rdquo; there was no remedy, but they must die.&nbsp; And
-the same prophet on another occasion, uses language very similar
-to that of the text; &ldquo;I will put a <i>new</i> spirit within
-you, and I will take the stony heart out of their
-flesh&mdash;that they may walk in my statutes and keep mine <a
-name="page214"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 214</span>ordinances,
-and do them, and they shall be my people, and I will be their
-God.&rdquo; <a name="citation214a"></a><a href="#footnote214a"
-class="citation">[214a]</a>&nbsp; Agreeably to this, the same
-people are subsequently exhorted, to &ldquo;cast away from them
-all the transgressions whereby they had transgressed, and to make
-them a new heart and a new spirit.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation214b"></a><a href="#footnote214b"
-class="citation">[214b]</a>&nbsp; However therefore, the New
-Covenant doth exceed the Old, with regard to the clearness of its
-manifestations, and its fuller dispensations of grace, yet are
-there in both of them the same consistent terms of reconciliation
-and salvation for rebellious man; in both are injoined the same
-purity of spirit, and integrity of character; this is the plain,
-uniform, infallible intimation of both, that &ldquo;without
-holiness no man shall see the Lord.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation214c"></a><a href="#footnote214c"
-class="citation">[214c]</a></p>
-<p>That the people of old were but partially awake and alive to
-the great change required to be wrought in them, from sin to
-righteousness, from the love of evil to the love of good, from a
-&ldquo;bondage unto <a name="page215"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 215</span>the elements of the world&rdquo; to
-the glorious liberty of the children of God, is too fully proved
-from the complaints of patriarchs and prophets and holy men of
-every determination.&nbsp; The sound of the gospel, thank God,
-has now gone forth into all lands, and brought &ldquo;life and
-immortality to light;&rdquo; it has awakened many nations, who
-lay fast bound in the slumbers of spiritual death; but whether it
-has vitally and savingly awakened a greater proportion of those,
-to whom the glad tidings have been revealed, is a matter of
-reasonable doubt.&nbsp; At least, if we compare what man is by
-nature, with what he may be and ought to be by divine grace, it
-must appear, from the life and conduct of the great majority in
-the christian world, that they have by no means attained that
-renovation of spirit and principle and character, which can
-entitle them to the appellation of new creatures.</p>
-<p>Of how many may it be said, (and their own consciences will
-bear witness to the truth of the accusation,) that their thoughts
-<a name="page216"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 216</span>are
-ordinarily flowing in much the same channel, their passions
-yielding to the same excitements, and their pursuits directed to
-the same end, as they would have been, had the pure doctrines and
-precepts of Christ never been promulgated.&nbsp; Vast numbers, in
-the visible Church of Christ, who profess some regard for
-religion, instead of raising their affections to the standard of
-the gospel, are seeking to <i>bring down</i> the immoveable
-standard of the gospel to <i>them</i>: and greater numbers still,
-of reckless men, bestow not so much as a thought upon that
-spiritual change, which is absolutely essential to the christian
-character.&nbsp; For what is the religion of thousands amongst
-us?&mdash;merely, if I may so call it, that traditionary
-acquaintance with divine things, which is acquired in infancy;
-that outward assent to evangelical truths, which was handed down
-to them by their forefathers; a cold respect for the shadow,
-without any concern for the substance: they are content to
-observe the forms of religion, because <a
-name="page217"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 217</span>they have
-been accustomed so to do, and their neighbours do the same; and
-to attend to what are called the decencies of life, because they
-would otherwise be disreputable; to crimes and to holiness
-strangers perhaps alike; satisfied to do no worse, than they see
-the multitudes around them doing; and resting their claim to
-God&rsquo;s favour on a few moral pretensions, or even on the
-absence of scandalous immorality; probably looking for exemption
-from the penalties of the divine law, because their
-transgressions have never been such, as to expose them to the
-scourge of the law of man.</p>
-<p>This, however deplorable, is a true description of no
-inconsiderable portion of our christian land; to none of
-<i>us</i>, we may hope, is the description strictly applicable;
-but it is too probable, that there are many amongst us, who
-partake more or less of the character here delineated; who
-practically regard the christian religion as a system to be
-accommodated to their dispositions and habits and pursuits of <a
-name="page218"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 218</span>life, and
-not as demanding a total alteration in their views and tempers
-and motives of action.&nbsp; Though their thoughts are directed
-to objects, far above those of &ldquo;the heathen who know not
-God&rdquo; and though their morality, upon the whole, be of a
-higher order and a purer cast, yet are their affections willingly
-led captive by the ensnaring vanities and engrossing interests of
-this lower world: heaven is the object of their settled creed,
-but it is not the main purpose to which their endeavours are
-anxiously and daily directed; in balancing between this or that
-pursuit, their thoughts are intent only upon providing for
-&ldquo;the meat that perisheth,&rdquo; without any enquiry or
-concern, how they may best provide for &ldquo;that which endureth
-unto eternal life.&rdquo; <a name="citation218"></a><a
-href="#footnote218" class="citation">[218]</a>&nbsp; And the
-morality, on which they so complacently rest, has frequently no
-connexion whatever with the christian faith; referable rather to
-philosophy than the gospel, to &ldquo;the praise of men <a
-name="page219"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 219</span>than the
-praise of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; Hence it follows, that their moral
-obedience is lamentably defective; extending only to the
-performance of those duties, which least oppose their inclination
-or their temporal advantage; while even such duties are but
-imperfectly discharged.&nbsp; Their self-government is wretchedly
-defective; the controul of their thoughts, the mastery over their
-passions, the command over their tongue, are attainments which
-they seldom bind it upon their conscience to acquire.&nbsp; And
-though they be turned from idols to worship the living and the
-true God, the fruit of their service, as well as the irregularity
-of it, affords but too clear a proof, that they &ldquo;worship
-him not in spirit and in truth.&rdquo;&nbsp; However improved, in
-their moral character, by their acquaintance with the christian
-religion, they cannot possibly have imbibed its spirit; nor have
-arrived at that happy change of the natural man, which can be
-denominated by a new creation.&nbsp; They are working out, or
-rather <a name="page220"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-220</span>seeking to work out, their salvation on maxims of human
-expediency, and in accommodation to human interests; not with
-&ldquo;fear and trembling,&rdquo; lest they should lose the
-inestimable prize; they are not evincing, that it is &ldquo;God
-that worketh in them both to will and to do.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation220"></a><a href="#footnote220"
-class="citation">[220]</a></p>
-<p>I have thus enlarged, on the presents occasion, upon the
-enormous deficiencies of christian character, because it is of
-great importance for us to understand, what is not accordant with
-the principles of the gospel, as well as what is: it is of vital
-consequence, that we should be thoroughly aware of the
-insufficiency of that spirit and view, of those maxims and
-motives of those habits and observances, which pass current for
-religion in the world.</p>
-<p>We cannot put on the new man, unless we put off the old; and
-we cannot put off the old, unless we thoroughly understand in
-what it consists.&nbsp; The work is too commonly supposed much
-easier and much less comprehensive, than it really is: <a
-name="page221"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 221</span>many
-vicious habits may be corrected, without any essential or
-fundamental alteration of character.&nbsp; A man may become weary
-of the pursuits, disgusted with the follies, worn and sated with
-the profligacies of life; he may find his circumstances
-impoverished, his reputation impaired, his worldly interest
-obstructed: and such considerations as these may generate a
-purpose of moral reform.&nbsp; Or the sinner may feel himself
-oppressed with the increasing weight of years; infirmities are
-coming fast upon him; and his conscience, in many a whisper of
-fear, tells him that something should be done, some preparation
-made, for the world to which he is hastening, for the account
-which he will speedily be called to render.&nbsp; The idea of
-dying with those depravities, to which he has clinged through
-life, is awful and insupportable.&nbsp; The more flagrant of them
-are accordingly corrected; and the rest, which are less startling
-and disquieting, are undisturbedly retained.&nbsp; In all this
-there is no change of principle, <a name="page222"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 222</span>no vital alteration: the old man
-continues; less hideous in features and outward appearance, but
-the very same in reality.&nbsp; With this partial renovation the
-mind is satisfied; the conscience is becalmed; the sinner
-dies.</p>
-<p>Through the &ldquo;deceivableness of unrighteousness,&rdquo;
-through the wiles of Satan and the evil propensity of our own
-hearts, we are always in danger of being too easily content with
-our spiritual condition; we look too much to the outward and
-visible form, and too little within; to little to the habitual
-principle, the constraining motive, the cast of character: and it
-is in this, that the difference between the old and the new man,
-in the christian world essentially consists.&nbsp; Suffer me to
-point out again a few of the broad lines of distinction.&nbsp;
-The old man, whatever of religion he may profess, lives
-principally for himself and the world; he may think of religion,
-and speak of it, and pray for it with the lips, but it has no
-dwelling place in his heart, is not the <a
-name="page223"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 223</span>business of
-his life.&nbsp; However observable, in many respects, his moral
-deportment may be, his character is seldom consistent.&nbsp; From
-some evil pursuits he abstains, in others he wilfully and
-constantly indulges; some evil passions are kept in creditable
-order, others are let loose; some duties he professedly performs,
-and others he professedly omits.&nbsp; And nothing is done with a
-true christian motive, or christian view; nothing from a sense of
-absolute and uncompromising obedience to the will of God.&nbsp;
-Nor is it surprising, that there should be such deficiencies and
-inconsistencies in his character; he has no principle or means,
-by which he can possibly walk uprightly with his God.&nbsp; He
-does not &ldquo;believe with the heart unto righteousness;&rdquo;
-he does not seek, nor desire, to &ldquo;live in the spirit and
-walk in the spirit;&rdquo; there is no life in his devotion, no
-sincerity in his prayer: he &ldquo;asks not faithfully&rdquo; for
-repentance and holiness, and they cannot be &ldquo;effectually
-received.&rdquo;&nbsp; He is not disposed to bring his
-understanding <a name="page224"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-224</span>and heart into subjection to the divine will.&nbsp; He
-studies not that holy word, which ministers the principle of a
-divine life, and the spirit of obedience to the soul.&nbsp; He
-lives for earth and not for heaven.&nbsp; He is too proud to be
-taught the humiliating doctrines of revelation; too full of
-himself, to bow implicitly to his Redeemer.&nbsp; In a word,
-nature is his book and not the Bible; the world is his teacher
-and not the Spirit of God; earthly and not spiritual subjects are
-the delight of his heart; he walks not &ldquo;by faith, but by
-sight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The new man is the reverse of all this; he humbles himself, as
-a sinner, at the foot of the cross, under a deep sense of his own
-guilt and the divine mercy; desirous only to be reconciled and
-saved; he constantly studies the mysteries God&rsquo;s word, with
-a submissive understanding and an obedient heart; he rests his
-only hope on the merit of a Redeemer, whose promises and whose
-law he receives with all his mind and soul and strength; <a
-name="page225"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 225</span>he prays
-&ldquo;without ceasing&rdquo; for the Holy Spirit, is directed by
-His teaching, supported by His power, and comforted by His
-heavenly illumination.&nbsp; Doubtless he must live <i>in</i> the
-world, and <i>by</i> the world, as well as other people; but he
-does not live <i>for</i> the world; his heart is not there, his
-delight is not there; he is a redeemed pilgrim, journeying in a
-far country, returning to his Father&rsquo;s house; and his heart
-is musing on the &ldquo;many mansions&rdquo; there, and full of
-the inspiring influential hope, that one of them is prepared for
-him.</p>
-<p>Such holy principles are continually manifested by a
-determination of purpose, a decisiveness of character, a devoted
-spirit of uniform obedience to the revealed will of God.&nbsp; As
-the conscience bears witness, so does the life: &ldquo;the tree
-is known by its fruit;&rdquo; all evil affections are resolutely
-mortified, all sinful pleasures and pursuits utterly
-abandoned.&nbsp; The sincere Christian, the new man, has an
-earnest desire and care upon his soul, to be &ldquo;righteous
-before God, walking in all the commandments <a
-name="page226"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 226</span>and
-ordinances of the Lord blameless.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation226a"></a><a href="#footnote226a"
-class="citation">[226a]</a>&nbsp; For this blessing he daily
-prays; in this work he daily advances: &ldquo;loving the Lord God
-with all his heart,&rdquo; and &ldquo;loving his neighbour as
-himself,&rdquo; he is of all men the most inclined, as he is
-assuredly the most bound, to &ldquo;live soberly, righteously and
-godly in this present world.&rdquo; <a name="citation226b"></a><a
-href="#footnote226b" class="citation">[226b]</a></p>
-<p>These remarks suggest the necessity of further admonition on
-this head.&nbsp; Many persons have been led to entertain
-enthusiastic notions on the subject of the new man, the new
-creation, the new birth.&nbsp; They have supposed it principally
-to consist in certain inward experiences or feelings, which they
-have been enabled to trace to some particular event or period:
-the Holy Spirit, as they believe, then beginning, for the first
-time, to work upon their understandings and hearts; and thus
-leaving an indelible impression, the seal of their redemption,
-the earnest of their certain acceptance with God.&nbsp; Far are
-we from <a name="page227"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-227</span>denying, that such sudden conversions may and do take
-place: still farther from denying that, whether sudden or
-gradual, a change from the old to the new man is attributable to
-the aid of a divine energy and power.&nbsp; It is, properly
-speaking, a new creation; the imparting of a new nature: and
-cannot be effected without the hand of the original Creator:
-without the operation of that Spirit, which &ldquo;moved upon the
-face of the waters,&rdquo; which &ldquo;breathed into the
-nostrils the breath of life, so that man became a living
-soul.&rdquo; <a name="citation227a"></a><a href="#footnote227a"
-class="citation">[227a]</a>&nbsp; Our Liturgy has correctly and
-fully embodied the testimony of scripture, on this as on other
-points: we are taught to pray, that God will &ldquo;<i>create</i>
-in us new and contrite hearts.&rdquo;&nbsp; This blessing must
-proceed from that Holy Spirit, who still in His ordinary
-dispensations, as formerly in His miraculous gifts,
-&ldquo;divides unto every man severally as He will;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation227b"></a><a href="#footnote227b"
-class="citation">[227b]</a> not as it were capriciously, but
-according to His own infinite wisdom <a name="page228"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 228</span>and goodness, as He judges expedient
-to the case of each individual.&nbsp; But this divine grace is
-not communicated for the mere purpose of producing a glowing
-affection, a familiar experience, an enraptured view of spiritual
-things: nor can any inward feelings alone prove that such grace
-has been administered at all: the proof must be manifested, in
-the way pointed out by the text: the new man &ldquo;is created,
-after God, in <i>righteousness and true
-holiness</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; A holy character and a righteous life
-are the proper and indispensable evidences of such a change; a
-faithful walking with God, a sober self-government, an upright
-dealing with all mankind.</p>
-<p>I counsel you, my brethren, in the language of truth and the
-spirit of affection, to be content with no other evidence:
-equally far be you removed from that carnal profession of the
-gospel, which despises or neglects the mighty change required of
-every sincere believer; and from those fanciful notions of
-spiritual <a name="page229"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-229</span>experience, which leave the heart and the character
-arrayed in the spotted garment of sin: both in the one case and
-the other, you will be &ldquo;grieving the spirit,&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;quenching the spirit.&rdquo;&nbsp; In your principles and
-life, as well as in your views and affections and desires,
-&ldquo;let old things pass away, and all things become
-new;&rdquo; <a name="citation229a"></a><a href="#footnote229a"
-class="citation">[229a]</a> &ldquo;put off the old man with the
-deceitful lusts,&rdquo; and thus let the new man be put on.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Abhor that which is evil: cleave to that which is
-good.&rdquo; <a name="citation229b"></a><a href="#footnote229b"
-class="citation">[229b]</a>&nbsp; This is the method ordained of
-God, by which we are to &ldquo;work out our salvation;&rdquo;
-this our plain, this our necessary duty.&nbsp; Pray we fervently,
-strive we diligently, that we may be thus effectually turned from
-sin to holiness, &ldquo;from darkness to light, from the power of
-Satan unto God.&rdquo; <a name="citation229c"></a><a
-href="#footnote229c" class="citation">[229c]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="page230"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-230</span>SERMON XIII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE WEDDING GARMENT.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Matt</span>. xxii. 2.</p>
-<p><i>The kingdom of heaven is like unto certain king which made
-a marriage for his son</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is my intention, in this
-discourse, to explain the several particulars of the parable
-before us; which may be regarded, in the <i>first</i> place, as
-descriptive of the dispensation of the gospel to the people of
-Israel and the world at large; and, in the <i>second</i> place,
-as instructing us in that peculiar fitness necessary to all, who
-shall be admitted to enjoy the privileges and happiness of the
-kingdom of God.</p>
-<p>The state of the gospel, our Saviour informs us, may be
-compared to the conduct of a king at the marriage of his son; <a
-name="page231"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 231</span>or rather,
-as the meaning is, at the marriage <i>feast</i> which he gave on
-that occasion: the circumstances which might, in that case, be
-supposed to occur, aptly represent a variety of particulars
-belonging to the gospel dispensation.</p>
-<p>Before, however, we enter upon the parable, it may be
-remarked, that spiritual blessings are frequently set forth in
-the holy scriptures, under allusions to feasting and
-refreshment.&nbsp; Thus Solomon of old: &ldquo;Wisdom hath
-builded her house, she hath hewn out her seven pillars: she hath
-killed her beasts; she hath mingled her wine; she hath also
-furnished her table.&nbsp; Come, eat of my bread, and drink of
-the wine which I have mingled.&nbsp; Forsake the foolish, and
-live; and go in the way of understanding.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation231"></a><a href="#footnote231"
-class="citation">[231]</a>&nbsp; And thus the prophet Isaiah, in
-describing the state of the gospel: &ldquo;In this mountain shall
-the Lord of hosts make unto all people a feast of fat things, a
-feast of wines on the lees, of fat things full of marrow, of
-wines on <a name="page232"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-232</span>the lees well refined.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation232a"></a><a href="#footnote232a"
-class="citation">[232a]</a>&nbsp; And thus our blessed Lord
-Himself: &ldquo;I appoint unto you a kingdom, as My Father hath
-appointed unto Me, that ye may eat and drink at My table in My
-kingdom.&rdquo; <a name="citation232b"></a><a
-href="#footnote232b" class="citation">[232b]</a></p>
-<p>1.&nbsp; Let us now proceed with the parable: &ldquo;He sent
-forth his servants to call them that were bidden to the wedding
-(feast); and they would not come.&rdquo;&nbsp; This probably
-alludes to the first period of the promulgation of the gospel;
-under the preaching of John the Baptist and of the earliest
-disciples; the former endeavouring to prepare the hearts of men
-for the kingdom and coming of Christ; and the latter proclaiming
-His glorious arrival, preaching the truth of His gospel, and
-confirming the word by a display of miraculous power.&nbsp; But
-the Jews had been a carnal people, &ldquo;holding the truth in
-unrighteousness;&rdquo; and they refused to give ear to those
-holy instructions, which called upon them to &ldquo;lay the axe
-to the root of all sin,&rdquo; and to &ldquo;bring <a
-name="page233"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 233</span>forth
-fruits meet for repentance.&rdquo; <a name="citation233a"></a><a
-href="#footnote233a" class="citation">[233a]</a>&nbsp; This it
-was that prevented them, not only from a cordial acceptance of
-the gospel, but even from a fair examination and inquiry; they
-would not listen to such doctrine; their heart was decided
-against it: to this it was owing, these carnal habits and views,
-that when their Messiah came, they were not ready to receive Him
-in the way which He required.&nbsp; Ready enough were they to
-admit Him in their own way; agreeably to their own notions and
-desires, as an earthly conqueror, as the dispenser of temporal
-blessings and rewards; but not as the abolisher of sin; not as a
-preacher of righteousness; not as a herald, announcing to them
-the necessity of holiness in this world, and the inheritance of
-glory in the world to come.&nbsp; Not all His amazing miracles,
-not all His fulfilment of their own prophecies, not all the power
-of His word, could convince their understandings; because they
-had &ldquo;an evil heart of unbelief:&rdquo; <a
-name="citation233b"></a><a href="#footnote233b"
-class="citation">[233b]</a> and therefore, <a
-name="page234"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-234</span>notwithstanding His awful warnings, His earnest and
-affectionate invitations, &ldquo;they would not come&rdquo; unto
-Him, that they might find rest unto their souls.</p>
-<p>Here we behold, as in a glass, the real ground of every
-rejection of the Saviour in every age; it is not because men deny
-His excellency, or His power, or His mercy, or the greatness of
-His kingdom: it is because they &ldquo;love this present evil
-world,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;god of this world hath blinded their
-minds,&rdquo; <a name="citation234a"></a><a href="#footnote234a"
-class="citation">[234a]</a> through the deceitfulness of
-sin.&nbsp; Even though eternal salvation is offered them, and
-they do not disbelieve it; still, awful to think! the Saviour is
-rejected for perishable interests and sensual indulgences.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;He feedeth on ashes; a deceived heart hath turned him
-aside, that he cannot deliver his soul, nor say, is there not a
-lie in my right hand?&rdquo; <a name="citation234b"></a><a
-href="#footnote234b" class="citation">[234b]</a>&nbsp; Men walk
-on in darkness because they love it; and they &ldquo;love
-darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil.&rdquo;
-<a name="citation234c"></a><a href="#footnote234c"
-class="citation">[234c]</a></p>
-<p><a name="page235"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-235</span>2.&nbsp; But the Jews were not yet cast off, without
-further admonition and entreaty.&nbsp; &ldquo;Again He sent forth
-other servants, saying, tell them who are bidden, behold I have
-prepared my dinner; my oxen and my fatlings are killed, and all
-things are ready; come unto the marriage&rdquo; feast.&nbsp; But
-&ldquo;they made light of it,&rdquo; and offered a variety of
-groundless excuses.&nbsp; This may chiefly refer to the fuller
-manifestation of the gospel, after the resurrection and ascension
-of our blessed Lord; for the parable, as we shall more clearly
-perceive in the sequel, is partly of a prophetic nature; and
-intended to represent to the Jews their persevering spirit of
-obstinacy, and the punishment which would ensue; that some of
-them at least, when the fulness of the time should come, might be
-struck with the force of this predictive representation, and be
-converted to the &ldquo;truth as it is in Jesus.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Every thing requisite for the sumptuous feast was liberally
-provided: in the days of the apostles, abundant indeed was the
-confirmation of the truth and doctrines of <a
-name="page236"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 236</span>the gospel;
-bright the manifestation of heavenly glory, that was shed abroad
-upon it.&nbsp; Then were strikingly fulfilled the words of their
-prophet Joel; &ldquo;I will pour out My Spirit upon all
-flesh&mdash;also upon the servants and the handmaids in those
-days will I pour out My Spirit.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation236"></a><a href="#footnote236"
-class="citation">[236]</a>&nbsp; Accordingly the gifts of the
-Holy Ghost&mdash;were openly poured forth, and mighty were the
-deeds done and the words spoken by His servants, under the
-operation of His marvellous power: the old dispensation was fully
-brought to bear upon the new: it was shewn how the character of
-Jesus corresponded, in His birth and life and death and
-resurrection and ascension, as well as in His offices of Priest
-and Mediator and King, with various prophecies and types
-exhibited in the ancient scriptures.&nbsp; The benefits and
-blessings of the christian dispensation were more particularly
-and largely set forth: the feast was fully displayed before them,
-in all its rich and magnificent abundance.&nbsp; Many <a
-name="page237"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 237</span>were then
-induced to enter into the guest chamber, and partake of the
-heavenly repast; but many more, the Jewish nation at large, made
-light of it, and went their way.&nbsp; And not only so: not only
-was the invitation unheeded and despised; but the remnant, that
-is, some who were not content with disobeying the call,
-&ldquo;took his servants, and entreated them spitefully and slew
-them;&rdquo; persecuted the disciples even unto death.</p>
-<p>3.&nbsp; We now come to a part of the parable, which must of
-necessity receive a prophetic interpretation: &ldquo;When the
-King heard thereof, he was wroth, and he sent forth his armies
-and destroyed those murderers, and burnt up their
-city.&rdquo;&nbsp; This plainly points out the Roman armies
-ravaging Judea, destroying Jerusalem, and putting the inhabitants
-to the sword; an event, which did not take place till many years
-after.&nbsp; Neither, in truth, is there mention made, in the
-gospel history, of the Jews having slain any of the disciples,
-whilst their Lord was with them.&nbsp; They <a
-name="page238"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 238</span>were
-murderers of the Son of God, and of many of His apostles and
-disciples after Him; thus &ldquo;filling up the measure of their
-iniquity,&rdquo; and drawing down upon themselves, and their
-nation at large, the most tremendous visitation of divine wrath,
-ever inflicted in this world upon a rebellious people.</p>
-<p>4.&nbsp; We are next carried forward to another period in the
-gospel dispensation; a period in which we ourselves are deeply
-and peculiarly interested; from which we date all the spiritual
-mercies and advantages, all &ldquo;the means of grace and hopes
-of glory,&rdquo; which have been vouchsafed to our souls.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Then saith the king to his servants, the wedding (the
-wedding feast) is ready, but they which were bidden were not
-worthy.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Israelites who were honoured, as the
-people of God, with the first invitation and call to the gospel,
-shewed themselves unworthy of it, by their ungrateful and
-obstinate rejection.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go ye therefore into the
-highways, and as many as ye shall find, bid to the
-marriage&rdquo; <a name="page239"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-239</span>feast: go ye, as we may interpret the words of our
-Lord, go ye, My ministers and messengers, into the world at
-large, and carry My invitation to the Gentiles; to as many as ye
-shall find; and proclaim to them that My table is spread for all:
-since the people, who were first bidden, have &ldquo;not heard
-when I spake, nor answered, when I called,&rdquo; the
-&ldquo;kingdom of heaven is now thrown open to all
-believers,&rdquo; so that &ldquo;whosoever shall call upon the
-name of the Lord shall be saved:&rdquo; My kingdom shall no
-longer be confined to one peculiar race; the time is come, when
-the blessedness of it shall be diffused abroad as &ldquo;the
-waters cover the sea:&rdquo;&nbsp; I am ready to &ldquo;make a
-covenant with all flesh&rdquo;&mdash;a covenant of peace&mdash;of
-benefits and mercies, such as their &ldquo;eyes have never seen,
-nor ears heard;&rdquo; the universal banquet is spread; bid them
-all to come.&nbsp; &ldquo;So those servants went out into the
-highways, and gathered together all as many as they found, both
-bad and good: and the wedding (table) was furnished <a
-name="page240"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 240</span>with
-guests:&rdquo; for it was not unusual, we must observe, in those
-countries, for men of the highest rank and distinction to admit
-to their tables, on remarkable occasions, persons of the lowest
-condition.</p>
-<p>And this part of the parable also was representative of a
-future period; for though Christ had received homage from some in
-the Gentile world, and had signified His favour to others as well
-as the Jews, it could not be said, that the blessings of His
-gospel were at that time distinctly offered to the world at
-large.&nbsp; By St. Peter, in the first instance, in the case of
-Cornelius, and afterwards more fully by St. Paul, the Apostle of
-the Gentiles, were the good tidings universally announced and
-spread.&nbsp; This accords with the invitation in the parable,
-where we find that no exceptions were to be made: the
-&ldquo;servants gathered together all, both bad and good;&rdquo;
-thus, to men of all characters and descriptions the gospel was
-indiscriminately preached: the best greatly <a
-name="page241"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 241</span>needed it;
-and even to the worst the door of grace and repentance was
-opened.</p>
-<p>Doubtless, there are vast differences in the characters of
-unregenerate men, of the very heathen &ldquo;who know not
-God.&rdquo;&nbsp; Some will use, more faithfully than others, the
-feebler light of natural religion; and thus arrive at a higher
-state of moral rectitude and respectability.&nbsp; But whatever
-comparative excellence any one may attain, in such a state, he is
-at best a polluted sinner: fallen from the favour and family of
-God; without the power to rise and return; the inheritor of sin
-and death, without the means of salvation.&nbsp; God must be
-reconciled, and the gate of mercy thrown open; or the sinner must
-perish.&nbsp; And it is for the offended God alone, to appoint
-the means of reconciliation; and proclaim the conditions of
-pardon and mercy.&nbsp; Jesus Christ, the eternal Son of God, is
-the only means of deliverance; by His incarnation and sacrifice
-has atonement been made for man; &ldquo;there is no other name
-under heaven <a name="page242"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-242</span>given among men, whereby we must be saved;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation242a"></a><a href="#footnote242a"
-class="citation">[242a]</a> &ldquo;other foundation can no man
-lay.&rdquo; <a name="citation242b"></a><a href="#footnote242b"
-class="citation">[242b]</a>&nbsp; The moralist must lay aside his
-vain pretensions, and humble himself at the foot of the cross;
-must come to the Saviour and learn of Him; come and be
-&ldquo;baptised for the remission of sins;&rdquo; come, that his
-character may be essentially changed by the Spirit and the word
-of God; that he may have new desires, new affections, new
-principles, new prospects: and many of &ldquo;the children of
-this world,&rdquo; amiable in their disposition and reputable in
-their conduct, deceive themselves in this matter; perceive not
-their need of a Saviour, &ldquo;trusting in themselves that they
-are righteous;&rdquo; good in their own eyes, good in the
-estimation of their neighbours, they undervalue and neglect the
-gospel; and therefore still continue &ldquo;dead in trespasses
-and sins.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But the bad as well as the good were gathered together; not
-only to those, whose conduct had been honourable among men, <a
-name="page243"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 243</span>and whose
-characters were fair; but to notorious delinquent, yea, even to
-the worst of sinners, the door of the guest-chamber is open; all
-are invited; all, if they will comply with the conditions and
-rules of the feast, shall be fed; publicans and sinners,
-extortioners and unjust, disobedient and reprobate, all are the
-objects of the Saviour&rsquo;s mercy; &ldquo;Come unto me, all ye
-that are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you
-rest.&rdquo;&nbsp; The invitation is free and universal; none who
-rightly seek admission, shall be excluded.&nbsp; This exactly
-agrees with the language of the evangelical prophet: &ldquo;Ho,
-every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that hath
-no money; come ye, buy and eat.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Let the
-wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts: and
-let him return unto the Lord, and He will have mercy upon him;
-and to our God, for He will abundantly pardon.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation243a"></a><a href="#footnote243a"
-class="citation">[243a]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;The fountain is opened
-for sin and for cleanness;&rdquo; <a name="citation243b"></a><a
-href="#footnote243b" class="citation">[243b]</a> &ldquo;wash you,
-make you <a name="page244"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-244</span>clean;&rdquo; laden as ye are with iniquity come but to
-your Saviour, in sincerity and truth, with a contrite and
-repentant heart; come, as He has invited you; look to the
-all-sufficiency of His sacrifice; believe in Him for
-justification and life; be ready to learn of His example and to
-receive His spirit and His law into your heart, and you shall be
-admitted to His holy banquet, and be made welcome at His table;
-you shall find comfort in the presence of your Lord, and in them
-&ldquo;that sit at meat with you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>5.&nbsp; We are now led to the last and most striking part of
-this parable: the king came in to see the guests; to see whether
-they conducted themselves worthily of his entertainment, and
-appeared in the dress which he had provided, for such as were
-unable to furnish themselves.&nbsp; And thus, with regard to the
-heavenly feast, the guests are strictly and constantly
-accountable for their behaviour.&nbsp; Our blessed Lord watches
-the demeanour of all who profess to accept His invitation in the
-gospel; <a name="page245"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-245</span>observes, how every one, who is &ldquo;admitted into
-the fellowship of His religion,&rdquo; fulfils the conditions
-required of him.&nbsp; Nor is it the external demeanour alone,
-which engages His notice and inspection; He sees through the
-innermost windings of every heart, and will infallibly
-&ldquo;judge righteous judgment.&rdquo;&nbsp; No violation of His
-will, in thought, or word, or deed; no insincerity or deceitful
-appearance can possibly remain undetected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When the king came in&mdash;he saw there a man who had
-not on a wedding garment.&nbsp; And he said unto him, friend, how
-earnest thou in hither, not having a wedding
-garment?&rdquo;&nbsp; The man could not pretend to offer an
-excuse: he knew the rules of the feast, and had wantonly
-neglected them; he was, like many other ungrateful people,
-regaling himself upon a benefactor&rsquo;s bounty, but shewed him
-no respect or regard: being therefore self-condemned, &ldquo;he
-was speechless.&rdquo;&nbsp; Thus will it be with every negligent
-and disobedient Christian, when the Lord comes <a
-name="page246"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 246</span>to make
-enquiry into his character: to justify himself, he will feel to
-be impossible; thoroughly has he known his Lord&rsquo;s will, and
-full often has his conscience reproved him for not performing it:
-there will be nothing left for him, but unavailing sorrow and
-speechless remorse.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then said the king to the servants, bind him hand and
-foot; and take him away, and cast him into outer darkness, there
-shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.&rdquo;&nbsp; Cast him,
-from the lighted chamber, to the darkness of the night without,
-where he shall bitterly regret the pleasures he has so foolishly
-lost.&nbsp; Sad emblem of that state, whose sadness can be known,
-here upon earth, only by emblematical representation, only by
-such figures as &ldquo;outer darkness,&rdquo; as the &ldquo;worm
-that never dies,&rdquo; and &ldquo;the fire that never shall be
-quenched;&rdquo; a darkness of mind, in the utter regions of
-despair, without a ray from heaven to cheer it; the worm of
-anguish preying upon the soul; and a fire burning, whether
-without or within, or both; raging yet not <a
-name="page247"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-247</span>consuming.&nbsp; God grant, that we may hear only of
-this wretched state &ldquo;by, the hearing of the ear;&rdquo;
-that our eyes may never behold it; that none of us may be
-consigned to this abode of unredeemed and unredeemable misery:
-and, that we never may, let us &ldquo;walk worthy of our
-vocation;&rdquo; of the Lord of that heavenly feast, of which we
-are professing to partake.&nbsp; Put on, my brethren, the wedding
-garment of the gospel; put it on, or intrude not into the
-presence-chamber of your Lord; dread the doom of the hypocrite
-and the despiser; pretend not to partake of the heavenly feast,
-to expect any of the blessings of the gospel, unless ye consent
-and seek to be clothed with the raiment provided by your King;
-with all those christian graces and virtues, which He will enable
-you to obtain.</p>
-<p>If indeed it depended upon ourselves, &ldquo;miserable and
-poor and naked&rdquo; as we are, to provide a suitable covering;
-if the sinner were required to produce, from his own store, the
-raiment of holiness and <a name="page248"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 248</span>righteousness, and thus make himself
-acceptable to his Saviour and his God; then would he have much
-reason to urge for his unworthiness and deficiency: for he has no
-means of making any such provision; he has not &ldquo;wherewith
-he shall come before the Lord:&rdquo; his heart is corrupt; his
-character is unholy; and he has no power to change them.&nbsp;
-But the provision does not depend upon ourselves; what the Lord
-commands us to be clothed with, He has mercifully prepared: He
-gives His Holy Spirit, to change the heart and reform the
-character; to enable us to &ldquo;put off the old man with the
-deceitful lusts, and to put on the new man, which after God is
-created in righteousness and true holiness.&rdquo;&nbsp; This
-spiritual clothing the Lord offers to all His followers; and woe
-be to those, who refuse or slight it: for this is a contempt of
-His divine mercy; a defiance of His authority and command: the
-expectation of His favour, on such terms, is adding insult to
-presumption.&nbsp; If we do make a profession of belonging <a
-name="page249"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 249</span>to Him, let
-us not thus foolishly cast away our hope; let us not deceive
-ourselves by imagining, that we can possibly maintain a title to
-the privileges and blessings of the gospel, whilst we are living
-in the neglect of those ordinances and laws, which the Lord has
-graciously appointed as the means of our acceptance with
-Him.&nbsp; They who neglect the means, will assuredly lose the
-end; will be numbered among the despisers of their
-Saviour&rsquo;s mercy.</p>
-<p>And in order to keep alive in our minds that deep concern,
-which so momentous a subject demands, frequently let us be
-meditating upon that awful hour, when the King shall come in to
-visit and inspect His guests: His eye shall be upon every one,
-and every one&rsquo;s eye upon Him; imagine yourself then in the
-guest-chamber without a wedding garment; ready and desirous to
-sink into the earth; but there will be nothing to cover your
-guilt and shame: though you have entered in with the other
-guests, and taken <a name="page250"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-250</span>your station at the feast, you will be called out from
-among them, and everlastingly separated from the goodly
-company.&nbsp; A garment you would then, no doubt, most willingly
-accept; but it will be too late; it should have been accepted
-when offered; the season of grace will be past; the time for
-judgment will be come.</p>
-<p>My brethren, you have professedly accepted the invitation of
-your Lord; you have entered into the guest-chamber; and if you be
-not already clothed with the spiritual apparel, provided by His
-grace and mercy, delay not an instant to apply for it: the King
-may come sooner than you expect; I pray that He come not, before
-you are ready to meet Him.&nbsp; And where is this garment to be
-found?&nbsp; Seek His Holy Spirit; search His Holy word: you will
-then not fail to find it, and He will dispose you to put it
-on.&nbsp; Repent and believe; love and obey: &ldquo;cease to do
-evil, learn to do well;&rdquo; thus &ldquo;adorn the doctrine of
-God your Saviour in all <a name="page251"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 251</span>things.&rdquo;&nbsp; And then you
-will finally be admitted to the heavenly feast; to the marriage
-supper of the Lamb; to the company of angels; in the courts of
-uncreated light&mdash;&ldquo;for the glory of God doth lighten
-them, and the Lamb is the light thereof;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation251a"></a><a href="#footnote251a"
-class="citation">[251a]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;In whose presence is
-fulness of joy, and at whose right hand there are pleasures for
-evermore.&rdquo; <a name="citation251b"></a><a
-href="#footnote251b" class="citation">[251b]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="page252"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-252</span>SERMON XIV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">WALK WORTHY OF THE LORD, BE FRUITFUL, AND
-INCREASING.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Col</span>. i. 10.</p>
-<p><i>That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto all
-pleasing</i>, <i>being fruitful in every good work</i>, <i>and
-increasing in the know ledge of God</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">One</span> of the great objects of St.
-Paul, in writing his epistles, appears to be considerably
-overlooked by the christian world at large: it was, to lead those
-churches and communities, in which the true foundation of
-Christianity had been laid, to build upon it a corresponding
-character and life.&nbsp; Certainly, a great portion of the
-epistles is occupied in the assertion and explanation of
-christian doctrine; <a name="page253"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 253</span>and this, principally, with a view
-to remove certain errors and prejudices, which the members of
-some churches had entertained; and upon which they had requested
-the apostle&rsquo;s decision.&nbsp; But well knowing how apt the
-human mind is to rest satisfied with speculative views and
-persuasions, he never omits to remind his converts, that much
-more was necessary than the profession of a true faith; that in
-vain would their opinions be rectified, unless their heart was
-also changed; that though they had &ldquo;all faith and all
-knowledge,&rdquo; it would &ldquo;profit them nothing,&rdquo;
-unless the graces and virtues of their holy religion were
-signally manifest in their lives.</p>
-<p>There is scarcely an epistle, in which the apostle does not
-labour, with the most intense desire, with the most full and
-repeated and peremptory injunctions, to press upon them this
-momentous consideration: there is not, in the word of God, a more
-complete digest and code of christian duty, than in the writings
-of St. <a name="page254"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-254</span>Paul; and yet they are, by many, almost exclusively
-regarded as an exposition of deep and mysterious doctrines; as if
-this were the sole end and purpose for which they were
-composed.&nbsp; Well would it have been for the christian world,
-if as much attention had been paid to the practical, as to the
-theoretical subjects in these divine oracles: we should not then
-have witnessed so many disputations, in which charity has been
-lost sight of, nor so much of the &ldquo;form of godliness
-without the power;&rdquo; so many religious terms and
-denominations, of which the ignorant have understood little but
-the name: we should have had less of sect, of party, of invidious
-distinctions of any kind; and more of vital religion amongst
-us.&nbsp; But it is now, as it ever was, with fallen and
-degenerate man; he is fonder of exhibiting the powers of his
-understanding, of exciting his feelings, and of displaying the
-pride of spiritual knowledge, than of reforming his principles
-and regulating his conduct: he has therefore directed his <a
-name="page255"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 255</span>view to the
-mystery of the foundation, and overlooked the directions for
-raising and completing the superstructure.</p>
-<p>Not that the various revelations of doctrine, in the writings
-of St. Paul, are by any means to be lightly regarded; nor that
-they do not demand the most reverential attention and profound
-enquiry: it is of high importance for us to attain a &ldquo;right
-judgment in all things:&rdquo; yet doubtless it would tend more
-to the edification of Christians in general, if they took greater
-heed to the rules and precepts of the divine law, to the evidence
-and fruit of their faith; and to all that neglect them, we would
-say, &ldquo;these things ought ye to have done, and not to leave
-the others undone.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The passage of scripture, from which we are now discoursing,
-will exemplify these remarks.&nbsp; St. Paul, in the very opening
-of his epistle, assures the Colossians, that since the day he
-heard of their conversion, he did &ldquo;not cease to pray for
-them and to desire that they might be <a name="page256"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 256</span>filled with the knowledge of the
-will of God, in all wisdom and spiritual understanding; that they
-might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful
-in every good work, and increasing in the knowledge of
-God.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>1.&nbsp; &ldquo;That ye might walk worthy of the
-Lord.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is scarcely possible for the most cursory
-observer not to perceive, that the faith of the gospel cannot be
-truly embraced with indifference; that the christian name is not
-a mere honorary or professional title, independent of obligations
-and of consequences.&nbsp; As the Bible is rich in promises, so
-is it also clear and necessitating, in the conditions upon which
-those promises are made: as the Redeemer has freely offered unto
-us the benefits of His cross, so has He as plainly injoined upon
-us the indispensable duty of &ldquo;taking up our own cross
-daily,&rdquo; and &ldquo;following the blessed steps of His most
-holy life;&rdquo; as He has reconciled us unto the Father, and
-again adopted us into the blessed family above, so are we
-required, if we <a name="page257"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-257</span>have any part or lot in this matter, to be-have as
-children, who have recovered the forfeited privileges of their
-glorious inheritance, and &ldquo;have their conversation in
-heaven.&rdquo;&nbsp; As we have been &ldquo;bought at so great a
-price,&rdquo; we must continue the subjects and the property of
-the &ldquo;Lord that bought us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>No man, whose nature, whose principles, whose affections,
-whose life, remain unchanged; no man, enthralled by the pleasures
-and devoted to the pursuits of a thoughtless and corrupt world,
-can justly consider himself as an actual partaker of the
-covenanted mercies of God.&nbsp; He may have been admitted by
-baptism into Christ&rsquo;s visible church; he may hope to
-render, at some future day, his baptismal privilege available to
-salvation; but every page of God&rsquo;s revealed word would
-forbid him to regard himself as an accepted &ldquo;inheritor of
-the kingdom of heaven,&rdquo; while his life is palpably at
-variance with the conditions upon which that inheritance is
-vouchsafed; while it is contradictory to <a
-name="page258"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 258</span>the laws,
-and totally inconsistent with the blessings, which the Saviour
-has proclaimed to mankind.&nbsp; Every man must not only perceive
-from the gospel, but be assured by his own reason and conscience,
-that such divine mercies absolutely require and imply some degree
-of worthiness; some correspondence in his views, his temper, and
-his conduct.</p>
-<p>Worthy indeed, in the fullest sense of the word, of such
-transcendent love and favour, of life and immortality, of
-everlasting honour in the presence of the pure and perfect
-Creator, the degenerate creature can never be; he has sinned; and
-&ldquo;the wages of sin is death.&rdquo;&nbsp; But there is a
-fitness, which the Christian, by divine help, must attain; a
-humility and contrition of heart; a sincere belief in God&rsquo;s
-mercy through Christ; a grateful sense of God&rsquo;s undeserved
-goodness; a desire of recovery from the ruin of his fallen
-nature; and withal, a true spirit of acquiescence in those means
-of grace, and that revealed law, ordained to bring the sinner to
-his <a name="page259"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-259</span>Maker; and this conformity, in the character of man, is
-frequently represented in scripture by the name of
-<i>worthiness</i>: he becomes worthy in this respect, inasmuch as
-he fulfils the conditions of the gospel covenant, and is thereby
-rendered a fit object of God&rsquo;s free mercy: without this
-character he would be unworthy, inasmuch as he would shew himself
-unmoved by the marvellous loving-kindness of his Saviour; would
-shew, that he had no real value for the blessings, which the
-gospel places within his reach; no regard for the revelation and
-ordinances of God.&nbsp; It is an observation as true as it is
-common, that the holy gospel designs not to save us <i>in</i> our
-sins, but <i>from</i> them; we must therefore be made willing and
-desirous and careful, to subdue the prevalence of sin, or we
-cannot attain unto salvation; and if the dominion of evil be
-subdued, there will grow up, in our hearts and lives, the
-manifold fruits of righteousness.</p>
-<p>Such was the worthiness, which the apostle prayed and laboured
-to produce <a name="page260"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-260</span>in the early disciples; and if, without this, we are
-hoping to be accepted of the Lord, &ldquo;we are deceiving
-ourselves, and the truth is not in us.&rdquo;&nbsp; The meetness
-indeed, of which we are speaking, is not exclusively our own; it
-must &ldquo;be wrought in us of God;&rdquo; still it is to be
-sought by prayer, and improved with diligence: &ldquo;We are not
-sufficient of ourselves to think any thing, as of ourselves; but
-our sufficiency is of God;&rdquo; <a name="citation260"></a><a
-href="#footnote260" class="citation">[260]</a> yet God will not
-fail to supply us with the means, if we pray for them and use
-them faithfully.</p>
-<p>To this statement I request your especial attention; because
-there are professing Christians, who take an improper view of
-this important matter.&nbsp; Conscious of their own unworthiness
-in point of <i>merit</i>, they are apt to overlook that worthy
-<i>fitness</i>, of heart and character and life, which is
-necessary for every sincere follower, of Christ.&nbsp; The
-proclamations of their own undeservings, and their
-Saviour&rsquo;s free love, are sometimes so loud and frequent, <a
-name="page261"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 261</span>as to lower
-in their minds the sense of moral and spiritual obligation, as to
-make them relax in their duly to God and man; as if they were
-privileged to offend, because they extolled the Saviour, and
-debased themselves.&nbsp; This is a vain and a fanatical spirit:
-Christ alone is worthy to save; but we must endeavour, by His
-sanctifying aid, in all things to be made more and more worthy of
-the exceeding &ldquo;riches of His grace.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>2.&nbsp; And, in order to encourage us in the goodly work, the
-Almighty, whose happiness is infinite and incapable of increase,
-graciously represents Himself as <i>pleased</i>, even with our
-imperfect services: &ldquo;That ye might walk worthy of the Lord
-unto all pleasing.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Though the heavens are not
-pure in His sight,&rdquo; yet does He condescend to &ldquo;visit
-man&rdquo; with His favour, and &ldquo;to regard the son of
-man,&rdquo; who serveth Him, with an approving eye: He is
-pleased, because it is the fruit of the sinner&rsquo;s
-reconciliation, by the death and sufferings of His beloved Son:
-for His <a name="page262"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-262</span>sake, even the feeble struggles of the Christian, in
-the way of duty, if they be resolute and determined, are an
-acceptable service; even the spark of goodness, if it glow with
-sincerity in the bosom, is honoured and rewarded.</p>
-<p>This is an animating consideration: we observe the effect
-naturally produced in the mind of man, even by the approbation of
-a fellow-creature, whom he regards as his superior; what holy
-satisfaction then, and complacency and delight, may we not derive
-from the persuasion, that our humble services are favourably
-viewed by the all-wise and almighty God, who recompenses every
-one according to his work: if God be pleased, whose displeasure
-shall we fear?&nbsp; If &ldquo;God be for us, who shall be
-against us?&rdquo;&nbsp; And O, that we may never forget, that it
-is one of the great purposes of the gospel, to render us, infirm
-and imperfect as we are, pleasing unto Him, through the merits
-and intercession of our Redeemer; by &ldquo;walking worthy of the
-vocation wherewith we are called.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation262"></a><a href="#footnote262"
-class="citation">[262]</a></p>
-<p><a name="page263"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-263</span>3.&nbsp; The apostle proceeds, in the text, to open and
-extend his view of evangelical righteousness.&nbsp; It consists
-not in that partial cultivation of spiritual affections, in that
-modified selection of particular duties, with which the christian
-world is so prone to be content: it obliges the believer to
-&ldquo;be fruitful unto every good work.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is a
-point, in which vast multitudes, in the christian church,
-lamentably and notoriously fail; in which many fail, who make a
-considerable profession of their zeal for religion; and comply,
-to a certain degree, with most of its obligations.&nbsp; There
-are some pleasures or pursuits, which, though they do not pretend
-to reconcile them with the law of God, they still perseveringly
-retain.&nbsp; Upon the whole, they professedly adopt the
-ordinances and requisitions of the gospel: but there are some
-more unpalatable than others; some to which they feel an
-unconquered repugnance: and these they leave out of their
-religious system altogether; to these they never so much as
-resolve <a name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-264</span>to conform.&nbsp; And thus, they fail to manifest,
-(what is confessedly the most difficult, yet the most important
-of all christian attainments,) a surrender of the heart to
-God.&nbsp; Their own inclination, their own judgment, and not the
-divine will, is the rule and standard of their conduct; and no
-doubt, if they felt this strong reluctance to the duties which
-they do perform, these also would be equally neglected: in other
-words, no part of their obedience rests upon a true foundation:
-it proceeds not from a sincere belief in the truth and authority
-of God&rsquo;s word.&nbsp; All the injunctions, all the precepts
-of the gospel are obligatory alike; all equally declarative of
-the divine will, and equally necessary to the spiritual
-renovation of man.&nbsp; And those injunctions and precepts, with
-which we are the least disposed to comply, do in fact require our
-peculiar attention and observance; because they point out to us
-the natural blemishes, which stand most in need of repair;
-because they shew where the greatest danger lies, of our <a
-name="page265"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 265</span>being
-deficient in that complete change, of principle and affection and
-character, which the infallible word of truth has declared to be
-indispensable.</p>
-<p>St. James assures us, that &ldquo;whosoever shall keep the
-whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of
-all:&rdquo; <a name="citation265"></a><a href="#footnote265"
-class="citation">[265]</a> he who reserves to himself any
-particular indulgence or pursuit, which is clearly at variance
-with the will and word of God, obeys not, in any thing, from a
-real christian motive; and shews himself ready, if a sufficient
-temptation were offered, to disobey in any and every point.&nbsp;
-It is true, that there is no &ldquo;good work,&rdquo; which the
-Christian performs with uniform unvarying obedience; but neither
-is there any, in which he does not sincerely desire and endeavour
-&ldquo;to be fruitful;&rdquo; there is no act of righteousness,
-to which he is a stranger; no &ldquo;besetting sin,&rdquo; which
-he is unwilling or unmindful to cast away: though the good fruit,
-to his sorrow, does too frequently fail, after all his
-unqualified <a name="page266"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-266</span>labour; yet the unprofitable branch is pruned again,
-and watered by the tears of repentance, and fructified with the
-dews of heaven, and bears another day.&nbsp; He believes, and
-fears, and &ldquo;loves the Lord his God with all his heart and
-all his soul and all his strength;&rdquo; and therefore, though
-there are many imperfections, there is no reserve in his
-obedience.</p>
-<p>4.&nbsp; The latter clause of the text directs us to a very
-distinguishing feature in the christian character:
-&ldquo;Increasing in the knowledge of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knowledge
-must evidently here be taken, in a larger sense, to signify a
-lively comprehension of religious doctrines and duties, a
-practical understanding of the will and ways of God.&nbsp; In
-this knowledge it is absolutely essential that the true believer
-should be continually advancing: the objects of his faith are of
-such deep and overwhelming interest, that the longer they are
-studied and pursued, the more they will, of necessity, captivate
-his thoughts and strike root into his heart: the more he seeks
-for the <a name="page267"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-267</span>treasures in God&rsquo;s word, the more he will find:
-the more he knows of God, the more he will desire and delight to
-know: feeling the comfort and happiness of a reconciliation with
-his Maker, he is ever anxious to obtain a nearer and holier
-communion with Him; sensible of his absolute and entire
-dependence upon the Redeemer&rsquo;s mercy, he is ever leaning
-upon Him with new satisfaction, with a growing spirit of
-confidence and complacency; the more he thinks of heaven, the
-more &ldquo;his affections are set on things above;&rdquo; the
-more he thinks of the wretchedness of the rejected, the further
-he flies, in terror, from their dreadful abode.&nbsp; The
-consequence of all this must be, a progressive &ldquo;victory
-over the world, the flesh, and the devil;&rdquo; a daily
-improvement &ldquo;in all virtue and godliness of
-living.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And there is yet another consideration; as we value and use
-the gracious gifts of God, they are increased and multiplied unto
-us; &ldquo;whosoever hath, to him shall be given, and he shall
-have more abundance;&rdquo; <a name="citation267"></a><a
-href="#footnote267" class="citation">[267]</a> <a
-name="page268"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 268</span>the lamp
-shines brighter, that is to guide his feet; and his heart is ever
-quickened with fresh energy and zeal, by the influence of the
-Holy Spirit; thus he goeth on from grace to grace, from strength
-to strength, &ldquo;from glory to glory.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The apostle, therefore, in praying that the converts might be
-increasing in the knowledge of God, is praying that they might
-have the invariable mark and earnest of a sincere and genuine
-faith.&nbsp; How little does this point seem to be
-considered!&nbsp; How many content themselves without any regular
-advancement, without any advancement at all; they cannot, after
-all the flattery with which they contrive to deceive themselves,
-be persuaded in their minds, that they grow decidedly better as
-they grow older: a year, perhaps many years ago, they were as
-religious, as fruitful in piety and good works, as they are now:
-no increase of spiritual knowledge, no new grace, no fresh habit
-of obedience, no additional exertions to mark the lapse of time;
-no passion subdued, <a name="page269"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 269</span>no unholy pursuit abandoned, no vice
-mortified and forsaken.&nbsp; Wherever this is the case, the
-gospel has not been sincerely received into the heart; it has not
-been felt as the &ldquo;power of God unto salvation;&rdquo; it
-has not been, as it is designed to be, an effectual instrument of
-righteousness to the soul.&nbsp; To those, who remain in so
-careless and indifferent and unimproving a condition, we must
-say, that &ldquo;our preaching has been vain, and their faith is
-also vain.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Possibly there may be some amongst us, who never yet bestowed
-an adequate attention on this important point; if any such there
-be, I would urgently exhort them, as they tender the salvation of
-their souls, to neglect this point no longer; deeply to enquire
-without delay, whether they &ldquo;are growing in grace, and in
-the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation269"></a><a href="#footnote269"
-class="citation">[269]</a>&nbsp; Let them enter with earnestness
-upon this necessary consideration; let it be frequently repeated:
-Is my faith increased <a name="page270"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 270</span>and strengthened?&nbsp; Is my
-character more holy, my conduct more upright?&nbsp; Does my
-temper improve?&nbsp; Are my passions better regulated; my
-thoughts more spiritual; my devotions more pure and fervent; my
-affections more detached from the world, more fixed on God and
-heaven?&nbsp; My life and conversation, are they more accordant
-with the precepts and the example of my Saviour?</p>
-<p>But the topics of enquiry are too numerous to be mentioned; I
-will only add, that the sincere believer sets the &ldquo;prize of
-his high calling&rdquo; continually before him; and advances to
-it, in holiness and righteousness, every day; keeps advancing
-till his race is run; and thus, when his toil is over, receives
-the crown of victory, and &ldquo;enters into the joy of his
-Lord.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page271"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-271</span>SERMON XV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE WORD OF THE LORD PRECIOUS.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">1 <span
-class="smcap">Sam</span>. iii. 1.</p>
-<p><i>The word of the Lord was precious in those days</i>;
-<i>there was no open vision</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">From</span> Moses to Samuel, a period of
-several hundred years, there was no prophet regularly appointed;
-particular revelations were made to individuals, and occasional
-messages from heaven were publicly delivered to the people; but
-there was no acknowledged prophet, to whom they might at all
-times resort, to know the mind and will of God; or, as it is
-described in the text, &ldquo;there was no open
-vision.&rdquo;&nbsp; The natural consequence was, that such
-intimations of the divine will, as were then given, made a deeper
-impression; <a name="page272"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-272</span>they were more highly valued and more eagerly sought
-for, than when the gift of prophecy, in after ages, became more
-common.&nbsp; When the word of God abounded, it was received with
-indifference; when rarely vouchsafed, it was intently
-desired.</p>
-<p>Such is perpetually, and on all occasions, the perverseness of
-man: blessings of every description are estimated, not according
-to their excellence, but their rarity; not according to the ease,
-but the difficulty, with which they are to be obtained.&nbsp; And
-further, when in possession of a blessing, we are often utterly
-insensible of its value; we abuse it in thoughtless excess, and
-are ready to squander it away; but the moment it is departed, we
-discover our blindness and folly; and would give, perhaps, all we
-have, to bring the treasure back again.&nbsp; Meat and drink and
-raiment, the air we breathe, the sun and the shower, excite no
-spirit of gratitude, and by many are scarcely received and
-remembered as blessings; but in the <a name="page273"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 273</span>days of famine and of pestilence,
-amidst the warfare and desolation of raging elements, these
-benefits and mercies are painfully acknowledged, and ardently
-desired.&nbsp; Again: the advantages of civil and religious
-liberty make little impression upon the hearts of those, by whom
-they are fully and uninterruptedly enjoyed: it is under the iron
-arm of intolerance and oppression; it is in the dungeon and the
-mine, that the excellency of these privileges is learned.&nbsp;
-And thus it is of domestic happiness and comfort: the value of
-home is frequently not appreciated, until it is forsaken and
-lost; the worth of a friend, even of the nearest relative, is
-sometimes but lightly considered, till he &ldquo;goes hence and
-is no more seen.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>These observations are also illustrative of the feelings and
-conduct of men, in regard to their spiritual privileges and
-blessings.&nbsp; While the light of divine revelation is shining
-upon their dwellings, pointing out to them the way of salvation,
-and opening the prospect of a glorious immortality, <a
-name="page274"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 274</span>they shut
-their eyes, and turn away into the fatal paths of sin and misery,
-to the darkness of eternal death; but when their opportunities
-are lost, when &ldquo;the evil days are come upon them,&rdquo;
-and there is no instructor or counsellor or comforter to be
-found, they perceive the preciousness of the time and the
-talents, which have been heedlessly thrown away; and would give
-the world, if they possessed it, for what they were once
-unwilling to make the smallest sacrifice.</p>
-<p>We are apt to express a wonder at the obstinate indifference
-of the people of Israel to their religious advantages and
-instructions; we are astonished, that they could forget their
-miraculous deliverances by the hand of Moses, and the manifold
-revelations vouchsafed through him for their knowledge and
-guidance; and that almost every divine communication to them, in
-after ages, should have been but the forerunner of guilt and
-apostacy: yet in truth, the history of Israel is but too faithful
-a picture of the people of God in other <a
-name="page275"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 275</span>times and
-other countries; by no means excluding our own.&nbsp; The word of
-God has not been accounted precious, in proportion to the extent
-to which it has been diffused; the Bible has not been, in too
-many instances, the most highly prized, where it has been most
-widely circulated; nor have the ministers of the gospel been
-always most attentively and devoutly heard, where they have
-increased and multiplied.&nbsp; Before the age of printing, when
-the copies of the sacred word were comparatively few, the
-Christian, who was so happy as to possess one, commonly regarded
-it as a treasure; or if he could obtain a part only, by the
-labours of the pen, even a gospel or an epistle, it was
-considered as a &ldquo;pearl of great price.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
-afterwards, in the days of ignorance and persecution, when the
-sacred scriptures were withheld from the people by a blind and
-bigotted priesthood, the thirst for divine knowledge, for these
-streams of life and salvation, was inconceivably great; men
-sought them and treasured them at <a name="page276"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 276</span>the peril of their lives.&nbsp; In
-these dark days, and long after, the public preachers of the word
-were few; and people flocked from distant quarters to hear the
-good tidings proclaimed.&nbsp; Having no regular supply of
-spiritual food, they sought it out with earnestness where they
-might; &ldquo;the word of the Lord was precious in those
-days;&rdquo; and &ldquo;beautiful upon the mountains were the
-feet of Him,&rdquo; who came to &ldquo;lighten their
-darkness,&rdquo; and to deliver the message of salvation to their
-souls.</p>
-<p>How widely different from this is the case in our day.&nbsp;
-Copies of the Holy Scriptures are multiplied beyond all
-calculation: not a village, scarcely a dwelling, where they are
-not, or may not be procured: and, instead of any persecuting
-power, forbidding the use of them, every possible encouragement
-is afforded, and every means devised by which they may be
-adequately understood.&nbsp; And such, under the divine blessing,
-has been the success of those means, that the greater <a
-name="page277"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 277</span>portion,
-even of the poorest in this favoured land, are able to discover
-for themselves the light of life; to apply it for their guidance
-and comfort and eternal salvation.</p>
-<p>And with respect to the preaching of the gospel, though it is
-not yet sufficient for the demand of our extended population,
-still it may be truly described as general throughout the
-land.&nbsp; Although, for &ldquo;the plenteous harvest, the
-labourers are too few,&rdquo; still are they every where
-abroad.&nbsp; And if it be objected, that &ldquo;the word of
-truth is not always rightly divided,&rdquo; yet are there
-portions of it uniformly read, in every christian assembly, on
-the Lord&rsquo;s day; and in our own incomparable Liturgy, no
-inconsiderable part of the divine word, of its saving doctrines
-and duties, is actually embodied.</p>
-<p>So much for our holy congratulation, for the honour and glory
-of our land, for the rich abundance of spiritual privileges and
-blessings, which, under the favour of almighty goodness, we have
-the happiness <a name="page278"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-278</span>to enjoy.&nbsp; It were well, if the sequel of our
-subject afforded equal ground for rejoicing; that it equally
-redounded to our honour.&nbsp; But here there is a dark cloud
-resting, which casts over the scene a melancholy gloom.&nbsp; The
-value set upon the word of God, its preciousness in the heart of
-man, is not proportioned to the frequency and the fulness of its
-communication.&nbsp; It is in almost every dwelling, but not in
-every dwelling esteemed and loved; not devoutly treasured, not
-eagerly and diligently read, as it used to be in the days of
-scarcity.&nbsp; How many who possess it, perhaps superbly
-ornamented, in a variety of forms, and with goodly
-interpretations, seldom open it; seldom in comparison with its
-high and everlasting importance, for their enlightenment and
-edification: possibly it may be read on the Lord&rsquo;s day as a
-cold customary exercise, and by vast numbers not even on the
-Lord&rsquo;s day; they are positively unmindful of the sacred
-treasure, unconscious that it is so much as in their <a
-name="page279"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-279</span>possession.&nbsp; No change of heart, no lively faith,
-no spiritual strength is derived from its exalted doctrines; no
-purification of the affections from its means of grace; no
-regulation of the life and character from its perfect law of
-righteousness.&nbsp; How should there be, when it is laid by,
-idly, carelessly, and contemptuously.</p>
-<p>The Bible is grievously neglected both by rich and poor.&nbsp;
-The rich too seldom spare any of their abundant leisure, in
-storing their minds with the riches of heavenly wisdom; other
-books, of worldly interest or amusement, absorb almost their
-whole attention; an unimproving, nay injurious publication, the
-foolish dream of fiction, will be seized and read with avidity,
-whilst the oracles of eternal truth are treated with an
-indifference, that borders on disdain.&nbsp; The poor, it is
-true, have but little leisure; sufficient however, if that little
-were diligently used, to enable them to acquire a considerable
-knowledge of their Bible; but the great multitude of them seek
-their <a name="page280"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-280</span>refreshment from other sources; from the pollutions of
-earthly pleasure.&nbsp; We might have expected better things:
-having fewer worldly possessions and comforts, it might be
-thought, that the poor would gladly supply such deficiency by the
-attainment of spiritual blessings; by raising their hopes and
-affections to the imperishable treasures of a brighter world to
-come: but it is too often found otherwise: the enjoyments of
-earth, however unsatisfactory and even debasing, are preferred to
-the abundant consolations and happiness of the gospel.</p>
-<p>Thank God, there are many bright exceptions to these remarks,
-both amongst the rich and the poor; the number is great, and we
-hope increasing, of those to whom &ldquo;the word of the Lord has
-been precious;&rdquo; who have &ldquo;received it with
-gladness;&rdquo; who have &ldquo;believed with the heart unto
-righteousness;&rdquo; who &ldquo;have seen the salvation of their
-God.&rdquo;&nbsp; But still, when we cast our eyes upon the vast
-and reckless multitude, we are ready to <a
-name="page281"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 281</span>weep over
-it and to say, O that ye would know, even ye in this your day,
-the things that belong unto your peace; before they be hid for
-ever from your eyes.</p>
-<p>From this lamentable neglect of the word of God, we may
-readily account for the want of religious principle, for the
-decay of religious character, for the overspreading of corruption
-and vice, so notorious in the christian world.&nbsp; The
-astonishing circulation of the Bible through this country, of
-late years, might have reasonably led us to hope for a signal
-diminution of irreligion and crime.&nbsp; And God forbid, we
-should be of the number of those who maintain, that <i>no</i>
-such advantage has been derived from this dissemination of the
-word of life.&nbsp; But even the most sanguine person will not
-contend, that this holy exertion, this spiritual culture has
-produced a corresponding fruit: thousands of those, who have free
-access to the Bible, are lying, if not in utter darkness, at
-least in the shadow of death.&nbsp; And what is the cause?&nbsp;
-The <a name="page282"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-282</span>scriptures are not valued in proportion to their
-extended circulation; they are not read with humble reverential
-attention, as the holy word of God; not understood or desired, as
-the fountain of light and life; not sought as a means of
-spiritual reformation and righteousness: and therefore, we may
-expect a greater prevalence of iniquity; as a judgment of the
-just and offended God, for so flagrant an abuse of the knowledge
-of salvation.</p>
-<p>And thus with regard to the preaching of His word: where is
-that vehement desire, that deep interest, that holy concern to
-profit withal, which was observable in the days when preachers
-were few?&nbsp; We do not say, that it is utterly extinguished;
-but certainly not proportioned to the opportunities
-vouchsafed.&nbsp; How many in this our place and neighbourhood,
-refuse to travel, even the shortest distance, to hear the gospel;
-and of those who professedly go to hear it, not a few are led by
-mere curiosity or custom.&nbsp; How do we stand condemned by many
-a less <a name="page283"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-283</span>favoured people!&nbsp; There are indeed lands, at this
-day, still thirsting for the knowledge of their God and Saviour;
-lands, to which it has but just been carried, where it is only
-beginning to be understood; and <i>there</i> the people will
-instantly repair at the very sound of the good tidings, and wait
-with eagerness upon the footsteps of the missionary, who bears in
-his hand the sacred treasure; but <i>here</i>, where the
-messengers are in every place, where the ministers of
-reconciliation abound, here are awful numbers, who never enter
-the house of God, for the single purpose of hearing His word: the
-gift is continually offered, without trouble or risk,
-&ldquo;without money or price;&rdquo; and, therefore, it would
-seem, perversely despised.</p>
-<p>Similar remarks may be made, concerning all those divine
-ordinances and means of grace, with which this privileged land
-has been so richly provided.&nbsp; The public worship of Almighty
-God, the holy sacraments of our Church, the instruction afforded
-to her children, the means of <a name="page284"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 284</span>private devotion and godly
-advancement, all these are pressed upon the notice and acceptance
-of all; it is not enough to say, that we are invited; we are
-<i>urged</i> to the participation of these abundant blessings;
-yet how often are we urged in vain.&nbsp; At this moment, in some
-of our countries or dependencies abroad, where Churches are
-sparingly scattered, and the visits of ministers are few and long
-between, these divine ordinances are coveted with a painful
-anxiety, and no opportunity is ever lost: here, in the mother
-country, is the fountain of blessings, and the &ldquo;streams are
-ever flowing withal;&rdquo; but thousands esteem not these waters
-of life, and many never care to taste them.</p>
-<p>It is impossible, that the truth of these observations can be
-denied; and to every sincere and serious Christian the subject
-must afford a painful reflection.&nbsp; And well does it become
-us all, each in our several vocations, to exert our utmost power
-for the abatement of so crying and alarming an evil.&nbsp; Many
-of us, I trust, are <a name="page285"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 285</span>gratefully sensible of the goodness
-and love of God, in having so liberally bestowed upon our land
-the blessings of the word of life; grateful from the experience
-of its inestimable benefit to our own souls: let each then in his
-station, and according to his influence and ability, recommend
-the word to those around him; and assist in waking a slumbering
-people to a sense of the glorious opportunities awaiting
-them.&nbsp; Many, from their education and rank, have it in their
-power to contribute largely to the success of this glorious
-cause, to become instruments of righteousness and salvation to
-their lost fellow-creatures: and the poorest may do much in this
-blessed work; they may train their families in the study of the
-Bible, may lead them to adore the God of mercy and of truth, and
-to save their souls alive; considerable also is the impression,
-which, by prudence and friendly care, they might make upon their
-poor neighbours; bringing them to join together in happy union,
-for the perusal of that word, which is their <a
-name="page286"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 286</span>common
-interest and hope; which would elevate them above the troubles of
-a stormy world, would lead them to &ldquo;lighten one
-another&rsquo;s burdens,&rdquo; and to &ldquo;go on their way
-together rejoicing.&rdquo;&nbsp; And, to say the least, every one
-has the power to recommend the holy scriptures by the light of
-his own example; by shewing, on all occasions, his love for the
-Saviour&rsquo;s marvellous goodness; by duly reverencing and
-reading the word of truth; and manifesting the blessedness
-thereof, in the decided change of his own heart and temper, in
-his own character and life.&nbsp; And all such recommendations,
-let me add, the Lord is demanding at our hands, in return for His
-unspeakable mercy.</p>
-<p>My brethren, let us suppose, that it should please God, for
-the heedlessness of this nation, to deprive us of the privilege
-and blessing of the Bible; and to declare, that the neglected
-ministry of His word should be continued no longer: we should
-undoubtedly regard this as the direst calamity, which could
-possibly befal us; <a name="page287"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-287</span>we should immediately and cheerfully consent to any
-sacrifice, by which so dreadful a token of divine wrath might be
-averted.&nbsp; Then let us be consistent; and whilst we do enjoy
-this invaluable favour of heaven, let it be cherished and
-improved.&nbsp; Let the gospel, instead of being less precious to
-us, on account of its universal publication, and its facility of
-attainment, be therefore prized the more; and while we adore the
-Lord of mercy for diffusing this heavenly benefit through our
-dear and native land, let the treasure be laid up in our own
-bosom: what is intended for the good of all, is intended for the
-good of each: to bless God for giving the gospel to our country,
-and to undervalue or neglect it ourselves, is folly and
-hypocrisy; but too many individuals, amounting indeed to a large
-portion of our christian community, are guilty of this folly, and
-thus exposing the land to judgment, thus endangering &ldquo;the
-ark of God.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All of <i>us</i>, my brethren, do I trust feel <a
-name="page288"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 288</span>thankful to
-our God and Saviour, who hath honoured us, unworthy as we are,
-with the revelation of His word, and hath &ldquo;brought life and
-immortality to light:&rdquo; whatever others then may do, let our
-sense of the gracious gift be undeniably and duly shewn: let us
-daily have recourse to this holy word, as &ldquo;the lamp of our
-feet and the light of our paths:&rdquo; be it our constant prayer
-for the spirit of God to open our eyes that we may understand,
-and our hearts that we may reverence, the wonders of His holy
-law; that it may be the object and study of our lives, to walk in
-all those means of grace, which it holds forth for our redemption
-from sin and death; for our safe passage through this transitory
-world of trial, to an eternal world of happiness and glory beyond
-the grave.&nbsp; If we hear and read and mark and learn, in the
-spirit of devotion and prayer, we shall continually find new
-treasures of mercy opening to our view; new and unlooked-for
-stores of knowledge; new affections and dispositions; new hopes
-and prospects, <a name="page289"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-289</span>in the promises of the blessed Jesus: the word will be
-a blessing to us through life and even to our journey&rsquo;s
-end; a sure guide amid the dangers of prosperity, a powerful
-support in the day of trouble, an inconceivable comfort when we
-die.&nbsp; But if we prize it not in life, how can we expect
-consolation from it in death?&nbsp; On the contrary, our spirits
-will be weighed down by the grievous remembrance of inexcusable
-neglect.&nbsp; Be wise in time; lay up in store the good
-foundation: the word, having been all along precious, will be
-increasing in value to the last; even until it leads us to the
-&ldquo;open vision&rdquo; of eternal day.</p>
-<h2><a name="page290"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-290</span>SERMON XVI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">DISTINCTIONS TO BE MADE ON THE DAY OF
-JUDGMENT.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Matt</span>. xxiv. 40.</p>
-<p><i>The one shall be taken and the other left</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the chapter before us, our
-blessed Lord is describing to His disciples various
-circumstances, which should attend the destruction of Jerusalem;
-an event, which has been generally regarded by the christian
-Church, as representative of the proceedings of that more awful
-day, when Christ shall appear at last to judge the universal
-world, &ldquo;in righteousness and truth;&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;render unto every man according unto his works.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Many false teachers had arisen, even in those early days of
-the gospel, pretending to set forth the signs of Christ&rsquo;s
-<a name="page291"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 291</span>coming
-to take vengeance on His enemies; and therefore the disciples had
-requested of their Master some certain information on this
-momentous topic: they &ldquo;came unto Him privately, saying,
-Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall be the sign
-of Thy coming and of the end of the world?&nbsp; And Jesus
-answered and said unto them, Take heed that no man deceive you:
-For many shall come in My name, saying, I am Christ, and shall
-deceive many.&nbsp; And ye shall hear of wars, and rumours of
-wars: see that ye be not troubled: for all these things must come
-to pass, but the end is not yet.&nbsp; For nation shall rise
-against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be
-famines and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places.&nbsp;
-All these are the beginning of sorrows.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation291"></a><a href="#footnote291"
-class="citation">[291]</a></p>
-<p>Our Lord proceeds to detail a great variety of other
-circumstances which should occur, some of them belonging to <a
-name="page292"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 292</span>the
-desolations of Judea, some to the future judgment alone, and some
-to both these events; of which latter kind is the description
-connected with the text: &ldquo;There shall be two in the field;
-the one shall be taken and the other left.&nbsp; Two women shall
-be grinding at the mill; the one shall be taken and the other
-left:&rdquo; that is, though destruction shall fall upon the
-Jewish nation at large, for their rebellion against God, their
-resistance to the clear evidence of the gospel, their shedding of
-the blood of His beloved Son, yet shall not all be equally
-involved in the same calamity and perdition.&nbsp; Divine
-providence will then make a distinction between those, who have
-obstinately rejected and maliciously persecuted the Saviour and
-His holy religion, and those, whose hearts have been opened to
-the reception &ldquo;of the truth as it is in Jesus;&rdquo; who,
-being convinced and converted, have become His faithful
-followers.</p>
-<p>And though the whole race be so intermingled, one amongst
-another, by the <a name="page293"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-293</span>various offices and duties and relations of life, that
-to the eye of man there may be no distinguishable difference
-amongst them; yet the all-seeing God, who &ldquo;is a discerner
-of the thoughts of the heart,&rdquo; will not be misguided by any
-outward appearances; will perceive a very manifest difference in
-characters seemingly alike: will infallibly know whom to punish
-and whom to spare.&nbsp; As in the overthrow of Sodom and
-Gomorrah, He singled out, and selected for preservation, one
-righteous person, (and for his sake, a portion of his family
-also,) so, in the storm of vengeance about to fall upon the
-devoted city of Jerusalem, He would, in many signal instances,
-make the same merciful distinction.&nbsp; And the declaration,
-thus made, was calculated at once to comfort and encourage the
-faithful, and to alarm the conscience and check the presumption
-of the wicked.</p>
-<p>The intimation here afforded of the perfect knowledge and the
-just discrimination of the Almighty, in regard to His judgments
-<a name="page294"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 294</span>upon the
-Jewish people, applies with peculiar force and truth to His
-perfect dealings with all mankind, at the last great day.&nbsp;
-Although, when Jerusalem was destroyed, it is undoubtedly true,
-that the faithful disciples of Jesus were generally delivered,
-yet it cannot be supposed that, in so extensive an overthrow, all
-the Christians, and all their innocent children, without any
-exception escaped.&nbsp; But when Christ shall sit upon His
-throne of judgment, not one undeserved victim shall there be; and
-not one, who &ldquo;has sinned against the light,&rdquo; shall
-escape with impunity.&nbsp; All those inequalities, which are
-unavoidable in the present constitution of things, shall then be
-made right and recompensed.&nbsp; The murdered innocent shall be
-requited with a robe of glory; and the prosperous sinner be
-abased with scorn and infamy.</p>
-<p>How necessary, how indispensable, for the assertion and
-execution of divine justice, is the appointment of such a
-tribunal!&nbsp; How unequally are deserts distributed in <a
-name="page295"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 295</span>this
-probationary world!&mdash;very often in cases, of which we
-ourselves may form an adequate opinion.&nbsp; Not unfrequently do
-we observe the righteous, doomed to extreme poverty and
-affliction and suffering; and though they be most graciously
-comforted and supported under their several burdens, we can
-hardly imagine, that such alleviation is all the requital they
-are to receive: and in truth, what is the principal source of
-their comfort and support?&nbsp; Is it not the hope of a happy
-termination?&nbsp; Is it not the prospect of entering into an
-everlasting rest, of being for ever delivered from sorrow and
-pain, in the presence of their Saviour and their God?&nbsp; And
-can we believe, that this blessed expectation, vouchsafed as the
-solace of their woes, will end in disappointment and
-nothingness?&nbsp; Does it not point to a day, in which their
-bright hopes will be more than realized in the merciful sentence
-of their Judge; in their reception, at His hands and through His
-merits, of &ldquo;an eternal recompense of reward?&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page296"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 296</span>And
-thus, on the contrary, frequently do we see the unprincipled and
-the profligate enjoying the favour of the world, and rising to no
-inconsiderable eminence of earthly prosperity: their crosses and
-vexations and troubles no doubt they have, as the natural fruit
-of irreligion and vice; as the retributive chastisement of an
-offended God; &ldquo;sowing in corruption,&rdquo; they do
-certainly more or less reap in sorrow; but still, if there were
-no other state, their lot would be, comparatively at least, much
-happier than they deserve; and therefore <i>their</i> condition
-also leads us to expect, and fearfully does it betoken, a day of
-fuller retribution; when the infinite justice and truth of God
-will be finally and perfectly vindicated.</p>
-<p>Many cases, like these, of suffering virtue and prosperous
-vice, we are able clearly to discern: so broad are the lines, so
-prominent the features, that we can scarcely be mistaken: but
-perhaps there are many more cases, of which we can form no
-adequate opinion at all; neither <a name="page297"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 297</span>in any instance, could we pretend to
-award or ascertain the exact degree of merit due to any
-individual.&nbsp; When we speak of merit, we do not mean to
-intimate that any action, in itself, is deserving of reward; we
-regard works of righteousness, only as the fruit of faith in a
-crucified Redeemer.&nbsp; But this fruit is much more abundant,
-and much more excellent, in some than others; and sometimes, when
-it makes the fairest shew, the quality is inferior.&nbsp; By
-merit then, we here mean the faith and behaviour of a Christian;
-or, that behaviour by which the faith is manifested; that, to
-which God has freely promised a reward, for the sake of our great
-Redeemer.&nbsp; According to the faith, will the fruit be, both
-in quality and abundance; and according to the fruit will be the
-gracious reward; which reward He alone can determine and bestow,
-who discovers the secret springs of the character and conduct of
-every man living.</p>
-<p>The value of an action depends upon the spirit and principle,
-with which it is <a name="page298"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-298</span>performed; and of these things no one can perfectly
-judge, but the searcher of the heart.&nbsp; Even in the christian
-community, many words and deeds there are, obtaining applause
-from men, which will be condemned by the omniscient God, as
-having proceeded from unworthy motives, and being but the garb of
-hypocrisy; many persons there are, in whose respective demeanour
-we may be able to trace no very marked lines of difference, who
-yet differ most essentially, when measured by the scale of
-infinite truth and justice: all these secret distinctions will be
-clearly brought to light at the great inquiry on the
-judgment-day; every one will then appear in his true character;
-the veil of deception will be for ever torn aside; and of those,
-who seem alike to us in the present life, we shall find that one
-will be taken and another left; one taken to glory, and another
-left to shame and wretchedness and ruin.</p>
-<p>It may be useful to mention a few instances, in which we may
-be deceived <a name="page299"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-299</span>in our comparative estimate of men.&nbsp; Even with
-regard to the fundamental principles of religion, to a real
-belief in the truths of the Bible, to the essentials of a
-christian character, it is possible that we may form very
-mistaken opinions concerning many around us.&nbsp; It is true,
-that insincerity and deceit are commonly, sooner or later, in
-some degree detected; it is difficult to be always dissimulating,
-and acting a part; some evil fruit, some inconsistency does
-generally betray the hollowness of hypocritical pretensions:
-still however, it is not always so; and doubtless there are
-some,&mdash;out of the number of those persons, whom we are in
-the habit of considering as equally resting their hopes upon the
-true foundation, equally believing in Jesus Christ for pardon and
-salvation, equally zealous in the maintenance of His holy
-religion and attentive to the ordinances,&mdash;some there are,
-who differ materially from others, in the unerring judgment of
-God.&nbsp; They may repair to the same place of worship, perhaps
-<a name="page300"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 300</span>with the
-same degree of regularity, but with very different views and
-impressions: we can judge only of the outward appearance, of the
-posture of the body or the moving of the lips; it is for the Lord
-to look upon the posture of the soul and the offering of the
-heart.&nbsp; Many, no question, come to the House of God from
-very unworthy motives and for very unworthy purposes; and
-frequently they do not escape the observance of <i>man</i>; but
-<i>man</i> cannot penetrate into the case of every individual; to
-the eye of Jehovah alone are &ldquo;all things naked and
-open;&rdquo; He sees and judges, <i>who</i> come unto Him in
-humble faith; who approach His tabernacle is a pious frame and
-temper, with holy affections, with integrity of heart; who
-&ldquo;worship Him in spirit and in truth.&rdquo;&nbsp; My
-brethren, it is an awful consideration: but from the same Church,
-the same christian society, the same assembly of worshippers,
-&ldquo;one shall be taken and another left.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Again, with respect to a discharge of <a
-name="page301"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 301</span>the
-ordinary duties of life, there may be much real, though little
-seeming difference, in the characters of many, with whom we are
-daily acquainted.&nbsp; Punctuality and diligence, though always
-commendable and useful for the public good, may be, in as far as
-the person himself is concerned, of little value in the sight of
-God; our acceptableness with God, in this matter, depends upon
-the principle and the view and the spirit, with which the
-business of life is conducted: it may be carried on merely for
-the sake of self-interest; of gain, reputation, and pleasure;
-without any religious feeling or purpose whatever, without a
-single prayer offered up for heavenly assistance and blessing,
-without a word of thanksgiving or acknowledgment: or, on the
-other hand, we may proceed to our daily employments and pursuits,
-&ldquo;strong in the Lord and in the power of His might;&rdquo;
-imploring and depending upon His grace; &ldquo;doing whatever we
-do for His glory;&rdquo; active and diligent and faithful, from a
-sense of love and duty <a name="page302"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 302</span>to Him, for the sake of obeying the
-law of our blessed Redeemer, and thus bringing forth the fruit of
-faith unto perfection; &ldquo;living soberly, righteously and
-godly in this <i>present</i> world,&rdquo; <a
-name="citation302a"></a><a href="#footnote302a"
-class="citation">[302a]</a> with the continual hope and
-expectation of a glorious world to come.&nbsp; Now, whether
-industry be the work of religious principle, or whether it arise
-merely from selfish and earthly views, <i>we</i> are often unable
-to decide: but God knoweth all the thoughts of man; and therefore
-can assign, to every action and habit and pursuit, its true
-origin and its due reward; and many persons, it will be found at
-last, who have gone forth together unto their labour, who have
-been engaged in the same occupations, have toiled together as
-companions in life, will be separated when the day of full
-inquiry comes; the one, having &ldquo;sown unto the
-spirit,&rdquo; shall be <i>taken</i> to enjoy the fruit of life
-everlasting; the other, having &ldquo;sown unto the flesh,&rdquo;
-shall be <i>left</i> to &ldquo;reap corruption.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation302b"></a><a href="#footnote302b"
-class="citation">[302b]</a></p>
-<p><a name="page303"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-303</span>Similar observations will of course hold good, with
-regard to the practice of particular virtues.&nbsp; They,
-&ldquo;who give alms only to be seen of men;&rdquo; who dispense
-their bounty from any other principle, than that of love to their
-Saviour; for any other purpose, than to serve God and to benefit
-their fellow-creatures; they &ldquo;<i>have</i> their
-reward&rdquo; already&mdash;the only reward, which they are
-caring to seek&mdash;the applause, the good will, or the esteem
-of mankind: and they must not expect, on the latter day, the
-reward which they seek not; the approval of their sovereign Lord;
-the praises and blessings of christian charity.&nbsp; Again, they
-who exercise the virtues of honesty or sobriety, merely for the
-sake of worldly expedience or reputation, will likewise
-&ldquo;have their reward&rdquo; all the reward they are to
-expect, in this life.&nbsp; Christian faith and christian
-principle are the only foundations, upon which a Christian can
-surely and successfully build; they, who build upon them, will be
-taken to see the goodly fabric perfected in <a
-name="page304"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 304</span>heaven;
-whilst every work, which is raised upon &ldquo;other
-foundation,&rdquo; will be left to desolation and devouring
-fire.</p>
-<p>And even they, who have communed together, through their
-earthly pilgrimage, in the bonds of familiar intimacy; who have
-been united all their lives long, by the nearest and dearest ties
-of kindred; even they will be subject to the same discriminating
-judgment at the last.&nbsp; If they have been bound together in
-the holy bonds of the gospel, as well as of family affection; if
-they have been faithful brethren in the Lord, as well as in the
-flesh, &ldquo;walking with God as friends,&rdquo; it will be
-well; then, as they &ldquo;were lovely and pleasant in their
-lives, in their deaths they shall not be divided:&rdquo; <a
-name="citation304"></a><a href="#footnote304"
-class="citation">[304]</a> together shall they go to heaven, and
-be admitted to enjoy a more delightful communion with each other,
-in the happy paradise above.&nbsp; But if it be otherwise, if
-such friends be of opposite characters; the one
-&ldquo;carnally&rdquo; the other &ldquo;spiritually
-minded;&rdquo; <a name="page305"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-305</span>then, their ends must be opposite also;
-&ldquo;death&rdquo; is the portion of one, &ldquo;life and
-peace&rdquo; <a name="citation305a"></a><a href="#footnote305a"
-class="citation">[305a]</a> of the other: their union therefore
-must be dissolved.&nbsp; The world may regard all the members of
-a family, as nearly alike in character; but the difference may
-nevertheless be great; and the distinction, in another world,
-will be great also.&nbsp; The wicked parent shall see its
-innocent offspring no more; the pious father shall not deliver
-the undutiful child, nor the obedient child its rebellious
-father; <a name="citation305b"></a><a href="#footnote305b"
-class="citation">[305b]</a> each can save but his own soul.&nbsp;
-How feelingly and powerfully does this consideration appeal to
-christian families; admonishing them, to regard not the present
-only, but the everlasting welfare of each other; to &ldquo;edify
-one another&rdquo; in holiness and godly love; lest, after they
-have been so intimately connected together upon earth, while the
-one is taken to felicity and glory, the other be left to
-&ldquo;mourning, lamentation and woe.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page306"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 306</span>How
-are christian parents bound, to watch over the offspring they so
-tenderly love!&nbsp; Watch they do, with continual anxiety, for
-the temporal benefit of their children, for all that can minister
-to their comfort and honour and advancement in life: they rejoice
-in the joy of their children, and weep when their children weep:
-but O how infinitely more important is the provision for
-eternity: earthly ties will soon be broken; how important, that
-we should provide for a happy renewal of intercourse and love
-hereafter!&nbsp; Parting now, to meet no more, were enough to
-break the heart; but the bright prospect of a re-union in
-paradise consoles and reconciles; forbidding us &ldquo;to sorrow
-as those who have no hope.&rdquo;&nbsp; See then, ye christian
-parents, to the nurture and training of the &ldquo;olive branches
-round about your table;&rdquo; bestow, upon their spiritual
-well-being, an especial and exceeding care; that ye may behold
-them &ldquo;flourishing in the house of the Lord&rdquo; above:
-that, whether ye be taken from <a name="page307"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 307</span>them, or they from you, there may be
-comfort in the parting.&nbsp; See, all christian relatives and
-friends, by whatever name ye are endeared; see that ye live not
-in worldly, but heavenly affection: instructing, admonishing,
-animating one another in the profession of the true faith and the
-exercise of all godliness; that so your converse and communion
-may never be embittered by the fear of eternal separation.</p>
-<p>Lastly, let the truth, here declared by the infallible word of
-God, check the presumption of the careless and the wicked; and
-give comfort and encouragement to the faithful.&nbsp; The
-worldling may fancy, because no great distinction, between him
-and others, is made upon earth; because he perhaps can see no
-great reason for such distinction; that, therefore, he shall
-escape in the end; but in the day when &ldquo;God will judge the
-secrets of men by Jesus Christ,&rdquo; <a
-name="citation307"></a><a href="#footnote307"
-class="citation">[307]</a> when &ldquo;every one shall receive
-the things done in his body, according <a
-name="page308"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 308</span>to that he
-hath done, whether it be good or bad,&rdquo; <a
-name="citation308"></a><a href="#footnote308"
-class="citation">[308]</a> he will find, that an immeasurable
-distinction will be made between him &ldquo;that hath served God,
-and him that hath served him not;&rdquo; between him, whose heart
-has been given to his Creator and Redeemer, and sanctified by the
-Spirit of grace, and him, who has only made it his object to
-maintain a decent appearance in the world.&nbsp; If we do believe
-in the final judgment, if we believe in the perfect truth and
-justice of the Almighty, we must conclude, that this fearful
-difference will be made.&nbsp; And if it were so dreadful a
-calamity, to be left to fall in the tremendous overthrow of
-Jerusalem, what will it be, to be left an everlasting-prey to the
-tortures of Satan and of sin?</p>
-<p>But let the true believer, the righteous servant of God in
-Jesus Christ, take encouragement and comfort: there is no
-exercise of faith, no holy meditation, no fervent prayer, no
-religious deed, no pious intention or design, however secret from
-<a name="page309"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 309</span>the eyes
-of men, which can escape the notice of their heavenly Father:
-though justice is not, cannot be, done to their characters here;
-though sometimes the greatest injustice and injury and wrong; yet
-shall they be triumphantly and gloriously vindicated at the last:
-though they be on earth forsaken or oppressed, though they bear
-the burden of private affliction or public scorn, in a
-&ldquo;world which is not worthy of them,&rdquo; they shall be
-visited and acknowledged and received at the last; shall lift up
-their heads with honour and with joy, and be admitted into a
-kingdom, which is more than worthy of all their faith and all
-their constancy; the Redeemer has marked them for His own; He
-will single them out, on the last day, from the crowd of
-countless multitudes, as objects of his compassion and favour;
-will take them into the arms of His mercy, and so &ldquo;they
-shall be forever with the Lord.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation309"></a><a href="#footnote309"
-class="citation">[309]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="page310"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-310</span>SERMON XVII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">GOD MADE MAN UPRIGHT; MAN MAKES HIMSELF
-MISERABLE.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Eccles</span>. vii. 29.</p>
-<p><i>Lo</i>, <i>this only have I found</i>, <i>that God hath
-made man upright</i>, <i>but they have sought out many
-inventions</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> this remarkable book, Solomon
-discusses the various earthly means employed by the human race,
-for the attainment of happiness; and he decides upon the utter
-insufficiency of them all.&nbsp; Nor is he to be regarded as
-making the enquiry from mere matter of speculation, but as
-declaring to the world the result of his own experience, as well
-as the counsels of the Most High.&nbsp; Exalted to the very
-summit of worldly prosperity and greatness, and <a
-name="page311"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 311</span>learned in
-all the arts and sciences, he possessed advantages, in the
-pursuit of happiness, far beyond the common lot of mortality; if
-it were to be found upon earth, he would have been sure, in
-himself or some of his favoured dependents, to have made the
-discovery.&nbsp; But he declares, by many remarkable repetitions,
-his utter inability so to do; he gives up the matter as hopeless
-and impossible; &ldquo;all, (even the fairest and the best of
-human schemes,) is vanity and vexation of spirit;&rdquo;
-&ldquo;that which is crooked cannot be made straight, and that
-which is wanting cannot be numbered.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation311"></a><a href="#footnote311"
-class="citation">[311]</a></p>
-<p>And this conclusion corresponds with the experience of mankind
-in every age: happiness has always been their object;
-philosophers have laid down rules for its acquirement, and every
-variety of expedient has been tried; but all in vain; there is no
-permanent pleasure or satisfaction upon earth: independently of
-the crosses and vexations from without, by <a
-name="page312"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 312</span>which it is
-so continually disturbed, there is something in the constitution
-of man, in the present state of his mind and heart and
-affections, by which the attainment of happiness, from temporal
-means alone, is positively forbidden.</p>
-<p>The royal preacher, thus convinced of this truth, turns his
-thoughts to a solution of the case, and sums up his observations,
-on the conduct and condition of man, in the words of the
-text.&nbsp; Instead of arraigning, like some bold and impious
-cavillers of our day, the wisdom or goodness of the Creator in
-the introduction of evil into the world, he gives the true
-account of the matter; and lays the blame where alone it is due,
-upon the disobedience and degeneracy of man.&nbsp; And in so
-doing, he bears testimony to the truth of one of the most
-important communications made to us in the revealed word of
-God&mdash;the original innocence and the fall of our first
-parents.&nbsp; This fact has been daringly called in question by
-certain professed believers of divine revelation, by some who
-boast themselves <a name="page313"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-313</span>peculiarly entitled to the christian name.&nbsp;
-Anxious to exalt the moral excellency of human nature, and to
-disprove the doctrine and necessity of the atonement, through the
-prevailing efficacy of the Saviour&rsquo;s incarnation and
-sufferings, such vain disputers absolutely deny, in the very face
-of God&rsquo;s word, that any such total and dreadful change has
-ever taken place in the state of mankind; they contend, that our
-understandings and affections are now the same, as when we came
-originally from the hands of our Creator.&nbsp; It appears,
-however, that the <i>wisest</i> of men took a different view of
-this momentous subject; that he received the Mosaic account,
-recorded in the opening of the book of Genesis, according to its
-plain and natural interpretation; and he has delivered to us his
-judgment, by the inspiration of that Holy Spirit, under whose
-guidance it was impossible for him to err.</p>
-<p>Solomon introduces his declaration upon this point in a very
-awakening manner; in a manner frequent with the inspired <a
-name="page314"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 314</span>writers,
-when about to deliver a sentence of peculiar weight and
-importance; &ldquo;Lo, this only have I found;&rdquo; behold,
-attend to this truth; this is the result of my observations, this
-the &ldquo;conclusion of the whole matter,&rdquo; this the
-explanation of all the evil and unhappiness in the world, that
-&ldquo;God hath made man upright, but they have sought out many
-inventions;&rdquo; that man was created innocent by the wise and
-merciful Author of his being; formed for pure unalloyed
-enjoyment; and the marring and misery, which he experiences, are
-solely attributable to the change induced by his own apostacy and
-rebellion; to his seeking out ways and means of happiness,
-contrary to the will and appointment of his Creator.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;God saw every thing that He had made, and behold, it was
-very good;&rdquo; <a name="citation314"></a><a
-href="#footnote314" class="citation">[314]</a> and man, the lord
-of creation, was not less fitted than the objects around him, to
-answer the good and gracious purposes of heaven.&nbsp; So God
-&ldquo;created man in His own image; <a name="page315"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 315</span>in the image of God created He him;
-male and female created He them;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation315"></a><a href="#footnote315"
-class="citation">[315]</a> in the image of holiness, and
-therefore happy.</p>
-<p>How far man has fallen from this state of uprightness, is a
-question which has caused much difference and contention in the
-christian world; some persons, from a desire of exalting the free
-grace of God, declare that the divine image in man was totally
-corrupted and lost by the fall; that there remains, in his
-unregenerate nature, no spirit or particle of excellency, no
-perception of what is good; that his nature is a mere chaos of
-disorder, a mass of decay, which is altogether incapable of
-producing any thing but &ldquo;confusion and every evil
-work.&rdquo;&nbsp; On the other hand, it is contended, that the
-wreck of man&rsquo;s nature was but partial; that there remains a
-considerable disposition to practice, as well as approve,
-&ldquo;whatsoever things are pure and honest and lovely and of
-good report;&rdquo; that man is still able, by his own judgment
-and strength, in many <a name="page316"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 316</span>things to please God and to serve
-Him.&nbsp; It does not fall within our purpose, on the present
-occasion, to attempt any accurate adjustment of this difference;
-but we may observe, that it is dangerous to insist upon either
-extreme.&nbsp; A belief, that man can will or do nothing, is apt
-to lead to a persuasion that he has nothing to will or do; that
-his salvation is a work totally independent of himself; a measure
-of grace absolutely forced upon him: and a belief, is that man
-able of himself to &ldquo;refuse the evil and to choose the
-good,&rdquo; that he &ldquo;knows how to walk and to please
-God,&rdquo; creates a spirit of self-righteousness, at once
-destructive of the sinner&rsquo;s hope; preventing his dependence
-upon the all-sufficiency of God, and subversive of the truth of
-the gospel.</p>
-<p>A faculty of discernment between good and evil, for the moral
-government of man, is evidently vouchsafed to his unrenewed
-nature; and a power, in dependence upon the divine teaching, to
-accept or reject the proposals of mercy and grace, does surely
-remain to us, or else the numberless <a name="page317"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 317</span>exhortations of God to the sinner
-appear to be of no benefit and no meaning: and who can reasonably
-suppose, that sinners would have been so frequently and severely
-condemned, for refusing that grace, which they were positively
-incapable of accepting.&nbsp; The language of our ninth Article
-on this point appears to be most temperate and unobjectionable:
-&ldquo;Man is very <i>far gone</i> from original righteousness,
-and is of his own nature inclined to evil, so that the flesh
-lusteth always contrary to the spirit.&rdquo;&nbsp; With this
-statement we may rest content.</p>
-<p>One of the many bitter fruits of the fall is, that man no
-longer seeks his happiness in God, where alone it can be found,
-but in ways of his own devising, in the crooked ways opened to
-his view and imagination by the destructive enemy of his soul; no
-longer in innocence and holiness and obedience, but in vicious
-inclinations and pursuits, &ldquo;in the lust of the flesh and
-the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation317"></a><a href="#footnote317"
-class="citation">[317]</a> <a name="page318"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 318</span>in those very principles and means,
-which brought &ldquo;death into the world and all our woe:&rdquo;
-it is no wonder, therefore, that happiness, from a search like
-this, should not be found.&nbsp; They, who search in this manner,
-are like the wicked spirit, &ldquo;walking through dry places,
-seeking rest and finding none;&rdquo; like the dove of Noah, in
-the overwhelming of the waters, roving about on weary wing, and
-finding no resting place for the sole of her foot.&nbsp; Nor is
-it possible for man to be blessed again with perfect peace, peace
-without any interruption or alloy, until he be altogether
-restored to &ldquo;the image of Him that created him:&rdquo; the
-nearer he approaches to that restoration, the more he will
-assuredly possess of true satisfaction and delight; but the
-blessing can never be complete, till the original defilement be
-utterly purged away, till his understanding is enlarged for a
-full knowledge of the good and great and glorious Creator; till
-he can be brought to love and serve Him without any mixture of
-infirmity; till he returns not only to <a
-name="page319"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 319</span>His favour,
-but into His immediate presence, in the second Eden, of eternal
-bliss.</p>
-<p>Still may man enjoy, even upon earth, no inconsiderable degree
-of peace and happiness.&nbsp; The promises and blessings of the
-gospel impart a &ldquo;joy and gladness&rdquo; to the believer,
-and fill him with comfort, which the world can neither give nor
-take away: the avoiding and abhorring of evil will prevent those
-painful reflections, which inhabit the mind of the reckless
-sinner: the life of faith in a merciful Saviour, the worship and
-service of God, the works of piety and love, the walk of
-uprightness and integrity, though accompanied with imperfections,
-and, therefore, with abatements of comfort, yet do infallibly
-produce a great tranquillity of soul, and unspeakable emotions of
-holy joy; the sincere Christian contemplates his present
-condition with happy, though humble persuasion of acceptance with
-his God; and looks forward with an animated exulting hope of the
-perfect consummation <a name="page320"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 320</span>of his felicity, in another and a
-better world.&nbsp; The trials and troubles of this life do
-indeed still continue; yet they have no power to harm, and
-therefore none to distress him; he &ldquo;casts his burden upon
-the Lord.&rdquo;&nbsp; But in the natural, unrenewed, unconverted
-world, there is no such redeeming principle, no qualification of
-evil, no pure sources of delight: let the votaries of earthly
-enjoyment seek it with what ardour and devotedness they may, it
-is a phantom which is ever eluding their grasp; flitting before
-their eyes in the shape of promises and visions, but never in
-substantial possession.</p>
-<p>It is indeed sadly instructive, to consider the numberless
-devices to which men are driven, in their search after happiness,
-when once they have forsaken the faith and fear of God; how busy
-they are in the invention of new scenes and pursuits; quitting
-one after another, as each deceives and fails; how they are
-wearing and wasting away the little span of life, in vain
-experiment and profitless enquiry.&nbsp; <a
-name="page321"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 321</span>How are the
-opulent contriving their multiplied means and opportunities of
-enjoyment, with all their splendour of establishment, and a train
-of dependents obedient to their will!&nbsp; And if we could form
-a judgment by outward appearances, we might be inclined to
-pronounce them happy: but under this beautiful veil, with all
-this pomp of circumstance, many a corroding care, many a
-mortified desire, many a bitter disappointment, lie constantly
-concealed.</p>
-<p>To envy the rich, as if they were the certain possessors of
-comfort and ease, is one of the greatest of all mistakes and
-follies; happiness must dwell in the mind and the heart; it must
-depend altogether upon the state of mind and heart; it is not to
-be purchased with money; money, we must grant, may be made to
-minister to it, but this must entirely depend upon the
-disposition, the spirit, the manner, in which it is used: the
-smallest pittance upon earth, possessed in the faith of the
-gospel, in the fear and love of God, produces <a
-name="page322"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 322</span>infinitely
-more enjoyment, than the countless treasures of those, who seek
-or spend or save them, with a view to themselves and this world
-alone.</p>
-<p>Some are revelling in the dreams of ambition; and imagine,
-that if they could attain a particular eminence, they should be
-happy: but the road is steep and slippery, toilsome and
-dangerous; and the summit, if ever they reach it, is not a land
-of repose, not the habitation of contentment and peace;
-&ldquo;seekest thou great things for thyself? seek them
-not.&rdquo; <a name="citation322"></a><a href="#footnote322"
-class="citation">[322]</a>&nbsp; Ambition is always dissatisfied;
-if not the most unclean, it is one of the most tormenting spirits
-in the bosom of man; and yet it is fondly and generally cherished
-both by rich and poor.&nbsp; Be humble; be moderate; be content;
-if thou wouldest be happy.</p>
-<p>In what are called the pleasurable scenes of life, it is
-unnecessary for me further to insist, how vainly we rove in quest
-of substantial delight: this indeed is a <a
-name="page323"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 323</span>truth still
-more level to the experience of us all; it is a path we have
-often trodden, but never I think with satisfaction.&nbsp; Witness
-the continual changing, the endless variety of amusements, which
-are found necessary in order to relieve satiety and disgust,
-necessary even when they are innocent; and in sinful pleasures,
-in lust and intemperance of every kind, it is needless to tell
-you, there can be no peace; health is impaired and the conscience
-is burdened; they are like a two-edged sword, cutting on both
-sides, destroying both body and soul.</p>
-<p>The force of these arguments may be made to appear from
-another consideration; for whatever delusions may be practised
-upon men, to induce them to reckon and build upon earth alone; to
-trust for happiness to their own inventions, to human schemes and
-devices; yet will they never, in their serious moments, contend
-for the wisdom of their choice; or say, that their expectations
-have been answered; they will never, when they <a
-name="page324"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 324</span>come to
-die, recommend to their friends, assembled round their bed, the
-course which they pursued, as a sure foundation of comfort in
-their lives, and peace in their latter end; the dying father will
-not recommend it to his children, nor the dying brother to his
-brethren.&nbsp; No: it will then be seen, either by the tears of
-bitter remorse or the agonies of unrepented guilt, that the way
-of the world was &ldquo;the broad way that leadeth unto
-destruction;&rdquo; that the soul can never find rest, till it
-returns to the forsaken paths of righteousness, to the lost image
-of its God.</p>
-<p>And thanks to the unspeakable mercy of God in Christ Jesus,
-the way of recovery is abundantly made known; the kingdom of
-heaven, with all its joys and treasures, is opened to every
-believer.&nbsp; Wisdom has come down from above, to tabernacle
-with sinful man; to lighten his darkness, and to rejoice his
-soul; and &ldquo;<i>her</i> ways are ways of pleasantness, and
-all her paths are peace&rdquo;&mdash;pleasantness and peace to
-those, who seek them with <a name="page325"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 325</span>their whole heart, implicitly and
-devotedly, as manifested in the gracious revelation of their
-God.</p>
-<p>But unhappily, in the way of religion also, in their professed
-walk of faith, men will be seeking out many inventions of their
-own, instead of submitting themselves, with simplicity and godly
-sincerity, to the gospel of Jesus Christ.&nbsp; They are seeking
-to accommodate His divine law to their corrupt inclinations and
-indulgences, to the maxims and fashions and interests of an
-ensnaring world: and thus they fail of the happiness, which they
-were led to expect.&nbsp; No wonder, that they find not the
-christian promises realised; that they fall short of the comfort,
-as they do of the obedience of faith.&nbsp; To the believing in
-our crucified Lord, with all the heart and soul; to &ldquo;the
-seeking first His kingdom and His righteousness;&rdquo; to the
-&ldquo;forsaking all and following Him;&rdquo; to &ldquo;the
-spirit of God dwelling in us, and mortifying the deeds of the
-body;&rdquo; to the sincere desire after holiness &ldquo;as He <a
-name="page326"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 326</span>is
-holy;&rdquo; to &ldquo;the fulfilling of the law of
-righteousness;&rdquo; to a living hope of &ldquo;the inheritance
-that fadeth not away&rdquo;&mdash;to these things, the promise of
-life is made; of joy and favour here, and eternal felicity
-hereafter; but if we, in dependence upon our own vain inventions,
-seek to be blessed in any other way; with a less entire belief,
-and a less holy profession, and a less devoted obedience, and a
-less exalted hope, we must not complain or wonder, if we lose our
-object and aim; &ldquo;Be not deceived, God is not mocked; for
-whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap; he that soweth
-unto the flesh, shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he that
-soweth unto the spirit, shall of the spirit reap life
-everlasting.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The merciful God, when He created man innocent and happy,
-graciously revealed to him the means, by which his innocence and
-happiness might be preserved; and shewed thereby, that they were
-inseparable, that the loss of the one would be the loss of the
-other.&nbsp; &ldquo;The <a name="page327"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 327</span>Lord God commanded the man, saying,
-Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat: but of the
-tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it;
-for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely
-die.&rdquo; <a name="citation327a"></a><a href="#footnote327a"
-class="citation">[327a]</a>&nbsp; And no sooner had Adam
-disobeyed, no sooner was his innocence forfeited, than his
-happiness was gone; he found to his sorrow, as he would not
-believe to his comfort, the truth of his Creator&rsquo;s word:
-and thus miserably ended the first covenant of God with man, the
-covenant of obedience and works.</p>
-<p>Under the covenant of grace, by the blessed and eternal Son of
-God, it is revealed to us, with equal clearness, how the lost
-happiness of man is to be recovered; &ldquo;the way we
-know:&rdquo; &ldquo;Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and thou
-shalt be saved;&rdquo; <a name="citation327b"></a><a
-href="#footnote327b" class="citation">[327b]</a> &ldquo;set your
-affections on things above, not on things on the earth:&rdquo; <a
-name="citation327c"></a><a href="#footnote327c"
-class="citation">[327c]</a> this is the way, call it by what name
-you please&mdash;a condition, or a means; it is the <a
-name="page328"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 328</span>only way:
-happiness, here or hereafter, is attainable in no other.&nbsp;
-For this, we have the assurance of that word, which we have seen,
-under the first covenant, awfully fulfilled; of that word, which
-can never fail.&nbsp; My brethren, I cannot doubt, that we are
-all of us convinced of this truth: then let us pray fervently and
-faithfully, that the conviction may live in our hearts; that we
-may, from this day forward, go to &ldquo;the fountain of living
-waters, and not hew out for ourselves broken cisterns, that hold
-no water;&rdquo; <a name="citation328a"></a><a
-href="#footnote328a" class="citation">[328a]</a> that we may
-renounce the vanity of all human inventions, and seek our
-happiness in God, and God alone.&nbsp; &ldquo;Be not conformed to
-this world; but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind;
-that ye may prove, what is that good and acceptable and perfect
-will of God:&rdquo; <a name="citation328b"></a><a
-href="#footnote328b" class="citation">[328b]</a> that ye may
-&ldquo;have your fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting
-life.&rdquo; <a name="citation328c"></a><a href="#footnote328c"
-class="citation">[328c]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="page329"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-329</span>SERMON XVIII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD REVEALED TO THEM THAT
-FEAR HIM.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Psalm</span> xxv. 14.</p>
-<p><i>The secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him</i>;
-<i>and He will shew them His covenant</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> secret of the Lord means, that
-which cannot be known unless the Lord reveal it; and the phrase
-here implies, an intimate knowledge of the divine perfections, of
-the dealings and dispensations of God; a holy and vital communion
-with Him; an entire trust in His providential care and
-government; together with that peace, which always dwells in the
-bosom of a true, penitent, pious believer.&nbsp; All this, <a
-name="page330"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 330</span>including,
-as it does, a full acquaintance with the doctrines and duties,
-the privileges and comforts of the life of faith, is called
-&ldquo;the secret of the Lord,&rdquo; because it is hidden from
-the natural man, and cannot possibly be comprehended or
-discovered without divine revelation.</p>
-<p>Such knowledge and such blessings are not the growth of earth;
-they are not the produce of the human intellect or the human
-heart; they must come by spiritual communication, from the
-fountain of wisdom and truth.&nbsp; When man was driven from the
-bright abode of paradise, his understanding was darkened; losing
-the favour, he lost the image of his Maker, and thus became
-naturally estranged from those holy thoughts and affections,
-which constitute his chief happiness and glory.&nbsp; Nor is it
-possible for him to recover this spiritual frame of mind, these
-heavenly views, this holy and happy acquaintance with God, unless
-the hand, by which the image was originally stamped, repair the
-<a name="page331"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 331</span>wretched
-ruin in which it now lies.&nbsp; Whoever would know the ways of
-God, must be taught of God; to all, who are not so taught, they
-are impenetrably secret.&nbsp; Thus spake the wisest of men;
-&ldquo;The Lord giveth wisdom, out of His mouth cometh knowledge
-and understanding.&nbsp; Then shalt thou understand righteousness
-and judgment and equity; yea, every good path.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation331a"></a><a href="#footnote331a"
-class="citation">[331a]</a>&nbsp; And thus the apostle,
-&ldquo;Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered
-into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them
-that love Him;&rdquo; <a name="citation331b"></a><a
-href="#footnote331b" class="citation">[331b]</a> that is, man, in
-his natural state, of ignorance and rebellion against God, cannot
-form a notion of the value of heavenly blessings; of the enlarged
-views, the sublimed affections, the sustaining comforts and joys,
-attainable by an inheritance of the divine promises, both here
-and hereafter.&nbsp; But, as the apostle proceeds, &ldquo;God
-hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit; for the Spirit
-searcheth all things, yea the deep things of God.&nbsp; For <a
-name="page332"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 332</span>what man
-knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of a man which is in
-him; even so the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of
-God;&rdquo; as we exercise our thoughts and judgment upon human
-matters, by the help of human reason, by the natural powers of
-the mind, so must we attain the knowledge of divine matters, by
-the aid of a divine spirit; by a holy illumination and guidance;
-not indeed by miraculous illapses, but still by the distinct and
-actual operation of heavenly grace, silently producing its
-effects upon the understanding and heart.</p>
-<p>The pride of man, the disputer of this world, does not submit
-to this proposition and teaching; perhaps commonly regards them
-in the light of enthusiasm; he has no notion, that there are any
-secrets in religion, which his own skill and judgment are not
-sufficient to reveal; he disbelieves every thing, which he cannot
-comprehend or feel; and affects to throw a shade of discredit and
-contempt upon all those religious sentiments and affections, to
-which <a name="page333"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 333</span>he
-is a stranger.&nbsp; There are not a few such persons in the
-christian world; who profess to believe all the doctrines of the
-Bible, and to know all that need or can be known, and yet never
-submit themselves to, scarcely can be said to pray for or desire,
-the aid and direction of Almighty God; who imagine, that their
-liberal education and their common sense entitle them to pass a
-full and adequate judgment upon all spiritual subjects; and to
-form a correct notion of all spiritual privileges and
-blessings.</p>
-<p>This is a dangerous and fatal error; a most unfounded
-presumption; a gross ignorance of the very element and nature of
-evangelical truth: such persons only judge of the word of God, of
-the ordinances and benefits of religion, as they would judge of
-any mere human history; of any worldly occurrence or advantage:
-they take, what they are pleased to call, a rational view of
-Christianity; but the only view, which deserves the name of
-rational, is, not that which appeals to <a
-name="page334"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 334</span>reason
-alone, but that which is according to truth; according to the
-acknowledged revelation of God&rsquo;s sovereign will.&nbsp; Let
-us again hear the apostle: &ldquo;Which things also we speak, not
-in the words which man&rsquo;s wisdom teacheth, but which the
-Holy Ghost teacheth.&mdash;But the natural man receiveth not the
-things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him,
-neither can he know them, because they are spiritually
-discerned.&rdquo; <a name="citation334"></a><a
-href="#footnote334" class="citation">[334]</a>&nbsp; The merely
-rational man, therefore, is a carnal man; not indeed an absolute
-stranger to the word of grace, but unenlightened by it; he has no
-true taste for holy and divine things; it is altogether
-impossible for him to appreciate their merits, or to know any
-thing of their practical effects.</p>
-<p>A familiar instance or two may serve to illustrate this
-truth.&nbsp; How can any man, who neglects the worship of God,
-pretend to decide upon its importance and utility?&nbsp; How can
-he presume to deny its comfortable and salutary influence <a
-name="page335"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 335</span>upon the
-soul, its powerful efficacy upon the character and life?&nbsp; It
-is a matter of experience; of which he therefore is unqualified
-to judge.&mdash;He that is a stranger to the grace of God in his
-heart, may despise those, that regard it and live by it, as
-fanatical persons, who are deluded by visionary ideas and
-groundless assurances: but he is only judging others by himself;
-and it would be marvellous indeed, if he, who is avowedly living
-without the influence of divine grace, should bear witness to the
-benefit and happiness which it confers.&mdash;What can the
-intemperate man know of the blessings of temperance?&nbsp;
-Nothing: except by the want of them.&mdash;What can the covetous
-man know of the pleasures of benevolence and
-liberality?&mdash;the licentious of the excellence of purity, or
-the ignorant of the treasures of wisdom?&mdash;Because the
-sinner, when overtaken by sickness or affliction, declares that
-he derives no comfort from religion, are we therefore to
-conclude, that religion <a name="page336"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 336</span>has no comforts at all?&nbsp; Could
-we think it probable, that the promises of the gospel would
-afford consolation to him, in an evil hour, when he had all along
-been an alien to their nature, when they had been unheeded or
-despised?</p>
-<p>It is quite clear, that the benefits and blessings of our holy
-religion, that the knowledge of God&rsquo;s word, the power of
-His Spirit, and the effects of His ordinances, must ever remain a
-secret to those, who have no intercourse with these things, and
-set their hearts against them.&nbsp; And whenever the Christian
-hears his conduct condemned, or his hopes undervalued, by such
-persons, he may treat them, not with proud disdain, but with a
-holy disregard: whatever their station in society may be,
-whatever their learning, whatever their reputation for judgment
-in worldly affairs, upon spiritual or scriptural matters their
-opinion is of no weight or worth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The secret of the Lord is with them that fear
-Him.&rdquo;&nbsp; The fear of the Lord, <a
-name="page337"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 337</span>in this
-passage, as in many others of Holy writ, denotes the sum and
-substance of religion; it implies a sincere faith and trust in
-God, an awful sense of His majesty, an humble and anxious enquiry
-after the knowledge of His will, with a holy determination of
-obedience.&nbsp; And, in addressing these words to a christian
-congregation, we may understand them as implying that fear and
-service of God, which proceed from a vital belief in the whole of
-His revealed law, in the gospel of His ever blessed Son, our
-supreme Lawgiver and King; as implying moreover an entire
-concurrence in all the measures ordained for our salvation.&nbsp;
-The fear of God, though common to all believers under every
-divine dispensation, will vary in its operation and extent,
-according to the nature and fulness of their dispensation; it
-will lead them to believe and love and obey, according to their
-knowledge, to their opportunities and means of grace, and
-therefore the believer in the gospel shews the working of this <a
-name="page338"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 338</span>holy
-principle in the full bearing of evangelical fruit.</p>
-<p>All who so believe and live, shall have the secret of the Lord
-abundantly revealed; &ldquo;He that hath My commandments, and
-keepeth them, he it is that loveth Me; and he that loveth Me
-shall be loved of My Father; and I will love him and will
-manifest Myself unto him.&nbsp; The Comforter, which is the Holy
-Ghost, whom the Father will send in My name, He shall teach you
-all things.&rdquo; <a name="citation338"></a><a
-href="#footnote338" class="citation">[338]</a>&nbsp; The humble
-disciples of Christ are blest in all their researches after
-divine truth and knowledge: when they contemplate the perfections
-of the Godhead, their capacities are enlarged, their affections
-devoutly engaged, their hearts disposed to profit withal.&nbsp; A
-deep sense of the majesty and power of Jehovah leads them to
-reverence Him; a sense of His justice leads them to walk
-uprightly; of His omnipresence, to live holily; of His goodness,
-to serve Him with gratitude and love.&nbsp; Whilst the cold
-philosopher, <a name="page339"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-339</span>whilst the worldly-minded and the sinner view these
-great subjects only with a theoretical eye, without any moral or
-religious improvement, the spiritual believer is powerfully moved
-and affected; and walks in the light of truth every day and
-hour.</p>
-<p>In their devotional exercises, the faithful servants of the
-Lord are peculiarly blessed; are made sensible of His presence
-and His power.&nbsp; When they pour forth their prayers and
-praises at the throne of grace; when they thus hold a nearer
-communion with their reconciled God, a heavenly tranquillity and
-delight are spread over their souls; they know and feel their
-connexion with &ldquo;the Father of spirits,&rdquo; and they rise
-from their devotion with an humble confidence, that the tribute
-of their heart has been accepted; that their fervent
-supplications will be answered, in God&rsquo;s appointed time and
-way, through the merits and intercession of a merciful
-Redeemer.&nbsp; To these inspiring hopes and persuasions the
-impenitent sinner is an <a name="page340"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 340</span>utter stranger: if he prays at all,
-it is but the outward service of the lips; there can be nothing
-of the spiritual principle of devotion, and therefore nothing of
-its fruit.</p>
-<p>Again: when the humble pious believer sits down to the study
-of the Bible, with a pure desire to discover and perform the holy
-will of God; to be nourished with the bread of life; and to draw,
-from the fountain of truth, the waters of eternal salvation; the
-grace of the Holy Spirit is with him, to remove the veil from his
-corrupt heart, and thus to open and enlarge his understanding: by
-this means he perceives &ldquo;the wondrous things&rdquo; of the
-divine law, and applies them for his own personal edification and
-comfort.&nbsp; The true import of the doctrines, there contained,
-is progressively unfolded to his view; and the full bearing, of
-every precept and rule of life, is pressed with increasing force
-and authority upon his heart.&nbsp; He admires and reverences the
-holy book; he loves <a name="page341"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 341</span>all that it contains; his soul is
-rapt in the contemplation of the stupendous mystery of goodness
-and godliness; it elevates his prospects and affections above
-this lower world; he has &ldquo;tasted the good word of God, and
-the powers of the world to come;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation341"></a><a href="#footnote341"
-class="citation">[341]</a> he beholds, with the eye of faith, his
-inheritance in the skies; and this his heavenly view brightens as
-he advances.</p>
-<p>Every sincere Christian can bear witless, that his
-acquaintance with the word of life is continually improving; that
-in every page, and almost in every passage, he is perpetually
-discovering fresh truth and beauty, fresh obligations and
-delights.&nbsp; Of all this, the carnal-minded and the sinner are
-profoundly ignorant; to them the Bible is comparatively a dead
-letter: they see little of its harmony or its excellency; and
-where they do see, it has no lively or permanent effect upon
-their heart; no more, than any other book, of history, or
-morality, or amusement.</p>
-<p><a name="page342"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 342</span>The
-righteous are not free from suffering and pain, from trials and
-afflictions; but then they enjoy, under every visitation, a
-source of comfort and satisfaction, which the thoughtless
-votaries of this world cannot possibly experience.&nbsp; There
-dwelleth, in their hearts and minds, the peace of God; and that
-must ever be the gift of God, which He will never bestow upon His
-enemies; the peace of God, which fills them with a holy calm, and
-reconciles them to every thing.&nbsp; In seasons of trouble, the
-triumphs of the gospel are especially manifested; and the
-&ldquo;secret of the Lord&rdquo; especially revealed.&nbsp; The
-soul is in a more impressible condition; more ready to learn of
-Him, who &ldquo;was meek and lowly of heart;&rdquo; and therefore
-more capable of the enjoyment of His promised rest.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be
-comforted.&rdquo; <a name="citation342"></a><a
-href="#footnote342" class="citation">[342]</a></p>
-<p>The sensual and the proud are disappointed and mortified and
-rebellious under <a name="page343"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-343</span>the various troubles of life; the Christian receives
-them in a different spirit, as tokens of his heavenly
-Father&rsquo;s love; and tokens of love he finds them to
-be.&nbsp; They, who &ldquo;walk by sight,&rdquo; are ever
-complaining of hardships and inequalities in the world; they who
-&ldquo;walk by faith,&rdquo; can perceive in them all the
-sovereign and gracious hand of the Almighty, who &ldquo;doeth all
-things well.&rdquo;&nbsp; They, who live upon the favour of the
-world, must always be rendered unhappy by its frowns; but the
-Christian lives above it, and cares little for any opposition or
-evil report: he is fortified and comforted by a secret power, and
-protected by an invisible arm: and this power shall continue with
-him, if he continue faithful, even unto the end.&nbsp; When his
-journey through the wilderness is about to terminate, when he has
-arrived at the borders of the flood, and is entering upon the
-shores of the heavenly Canaan, when nature sinks and the soul is
-departing, then does the Lord reveal himself, in a manner not to
-be seen and not <a name="page344"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-344</span>to be told: there is a hidden energy, a light within, a
-sustaining spirit, a mysterious and merciful communion with the
-Lord of life and death.&nbsp; This indeed is an awful secret, and
-one which the guilty can never know; which none can know, who do
-not, with all their heart and soul, embrace the promises of
-salvation revealed to them in the gospel: the foretaste of
-heavenly rest, like the rest itself, remaineth only for the
-people of God.&nbsp; They who have so feared and loved the Lord,
-as to have served Him with a good conscience and with integrity;
-they who have so believed and trusted in their Saviour, as to
-have followed whithersoever He led, as to have sacrificed every
-unholy gratification and pursuit, for the love of His name and
-for the &ldquo;one thing needful,&rdquo; they shall find, in
-their latter moments, a peace known only to themselves, a joy
-with which no &ldquo;stranger can intermeddle.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
-Lord will effectually &ldquo;shew them His covenant:&rdquo; they
-were made by baptism &ldquo;members of Christ and children <a
-name="page345"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 345</span>of
-God,&rdquo; and became thereby entitled, through the free mercy
-of God in Jesus Christ, to an &ldquo;inheritance in the kingdom
-of heaven;&rdquo; having abided in that covenant, and walked
-faithfully therein, they will never doubt, but God will assuredly
-perform His part; and He will give them a full insight into the
-blessings, which He has covenanted to bestow; they have all along
-entertained a lively apprehension of the nature and principles of
-this holy covenant, and of their own correspondent obligations;
-its holy promises and its gracious rewards have been through life
-the solace of their souls; and it continues, yea increases, to
-the last; not indeed enjoyed in perfection here below, but
-enjoyed as the earnest and pledge of the fulness of their eternal
-felicity.</p>
-<p>In this manner, my brethren, &ldquo;acquaint yourselves with
-God,&rdquo; and come to the true knowledge of His perfections and
-His ways, and live in the animating ennobling hope of a brighter
-manifestation of His glory hereafter&mdash;in this manner, by <a
-name="page346"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 346</span>a spirit of
-humble, faithful, entire dependence upon Him, through the mercy
-of Jesus Christ; by fervent importunate prayer for the
-illumination and aid of the Holy Ghost; by &ldquo;seeking first
-the kingdom of God and His righteousness by loving Him with all
-the heart and soul,&rdquo; and &ldquo;walking in His fear all the
-day long.&rdquo;&nbsp; Thus are we to be taught of God, thus only
-can we acquire a capability and disposition to be taught; thus
-growing in grace, we grow in wisdom, in holy experience, in happy
-communion with our Lord and Saviour.</p>
-<p>Receive this instruction, &ldquo;high and low, rich and poor,
-one with another;&rdquo; it is equally necessary for all.&nbsp;
-Unless this spiritual lesson be learnt, the stores of human
-science, the treasures of human wisdom, are vain and worthless;
-they can impart no knowledge, no true and saving knowledge, of
-the ways and dealings of the Most High; they cannot bring the
-sinner to his Maker: on the contrary, they prevent and hinder
-him, by ministering a <a name="page347"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 347</span>spirit of pride and
-self-sufficiency.&nbsp; If thou wouldest know God, fear Him, and
-be taught of His Spirit and His word; this is His own appointed
-means, and there is no other.&nbsp; And ye poor, unlearned as ye
-may be, seek the Lord in this way, and ye shall assuredly find
-Him: His secret shall be with you; and He will graciously teach
-you more, than you can attain from all the world besides; more
-than the wisest can learn in any other way.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The way of the wicked is as darkness; they know not at
-what they stumble: but the path of the just is as the shining
-light, that shineth more and more unto the perfect day.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation347"></a><a href="#footnote347"
-class="citation">[347]</a>&nbsp; The Lord revealeth Himself unto
-the righteous, day by day; they grow in wisdom, as in years: the
-nearer they approach to the completion of their hopes, to the end
-of their earthly pilgrimage, to their heavenly and eternal
-kingdom, the clearer will be their knowledge, and the more
-delightful their anticipations; even until that day, when the <a
-name="page348"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 348</span>veil of the
-flesh shall be utterly removed, when they shall &ldquo;see their
-God face to face, and know even as also they are known.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation348"></a><a href="#footnote348"
-class="citation">[348]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="page349"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-349</span>SERMON XIX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">RESIST THE BEGINNINGS OF EVIL
-TEMPTATION.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Proverbs</span> iv. 14, 15.</p>
-<p><i>Enter not into the path of the wicked</i>, <i>and go not in
-the way of evil men</i>.&nbsp; <i>Avoid it</i>, <i>pass not by
-it</i>, <i>turn from it and pass away</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is one of those short,
-comprehensive, moral directions, with which the holy Scriptures
-abound, for our safe conduct in life; directions, that are seldom
-attended to with the earnestness, which their importance
-demands.&nbsp; Studied such words should be, with devout
-meditation and the spirit of prayer; imprinted on the memory,
-fixed in the heart.&nbsp; We <a name="page350"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 350</span>are apt to trust too much to
-generalities in religion; we do not sufficiently concern
-ourselves with its individual precepts and practical
-admonitions.&nbsp; And I wish now to enlarge upon this point,
-before we enter into a consideration of the text; hoping that it
-may induce you, by God&rsquo;s help, &ldquo;to take heed how ye
-hear&rdquo; such lessons of instruction.</p>
-<p>For the attainment of a religious character, and the means of
-walking holily and uprightly in our course through life,
-doubtless the main thing is, to establish sound principles in the
-heart; and without such principles all the rules and helps in the
-world will prove of little avail; never to be depended upon in
-the hour of temptation and trial.&nbsp; Accordingly we find, in
-the word of God, these mainsprings of action continually insisted
-on, as of the highest necessity to be settled in the soul.&nbsp;
-A true, a right faith is inculcated, as the great foundation of
-all spiritual obedience; a vital faith in God, as our Creator,
-Redeemer, and Sanctifier; <a name="page351"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 351</span>a faith in His revealed word, in all
-the great doctrines of life and salvation there propounded to
-fallen man; a faith in the necessity of obeying all the
-commandments therein delivered for the formation of our character
-and the regulation of our lives; a faith in the world to come,
-after the death of the body; a world depending, for happiness or
-misery, upon our choice and conduct here.&nbsp; The love of God
-and the fear of God are also laid down as most powerful
-principles of thought and action; as spreading an influence over
-the whole of our behaviour.</p>
-<p>Still however, the establishment of these first principles is
-not of itself sufficient for the complete direction and
-government of our lives.&nbsp; So manifold and various are the
-temptations to which we are exposed; so numerous the trials we
-are called to bear, that particular instructions and commands are
-also needful for us, in order that we may be prepared to meet the
-different circumstances which are perpetually arising, in order
-that we may be <a name="page352"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-352</span>taught how to reduce our principles to practice; and to
-apply the declaration of God&rsquo;s will to our ordinary
-intercourse and experience with the world.</p>
-<p>For this purpose, we find the old scriptures every where
-abounding with rules, for the performance of every duty, and the
-avoidance of every sin: for the immediate service and worship of
-God, for the discharge of every honest and honourable obligation
-we owe to our neighbour; for the correction of all those evil
-affections and passions, to which the corrupt heart of man is so
-lamentably prone.&nbsp; Nor in the new testament, where the
-foundation of faith is more clearly and broadly laid down, are
-such rules less frequent, or less urgently enforced.&nbsp; We
-might indeed expect, what actually is the case, that as a clearer
-and fuller revelation, that as a higher principle and view, would
-require a more holy and perfect observance, a greater purity and
-integrity and blamelessness of character, therefore the several
-duties demanded of us, in our <a name="page353"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 353</span>walk with God, would be laid down
-and marked with the greater accuracy.&nbsp; Accordingly we do
-find, for this purpose, &ldquo;line upon line and precept upon
-precept&rdquo; repeated and urged with the greater fulness and
-particularity; that we may not, by any unholiness or deficiency
-in our conduct, disgrace that more glorious revelation, with
-which we have been favoured as believers in the gospel of Jesus
-Christ.&nbsp; Look at His own blessed discourses, especially His
-sermon on the mount; look at the epistles, which His servants,
-inspired by the Holy Ghost, have left for our guidance and
-government; and see what full instructions they contain, for our
-duty to God and our duty to man.&nbsp; It is wonderful, for how
-many cases they provide; for how many instances in our daily
-experience; how they teach us, on the one hand, the practice of
-every virtue, shew all the bearings of it and the steps that lead
-to it; how they caution us, on the other, against every besetting
-sin; how they point out the <a name="page354"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 354</span>manner, in which it gains an
-influence over us, and cut it up by the root.</p>
-<p>I have embraced the present opportunity of enlarging on this
-point, with a view of awakening your attention to, and inducing
-you to study and treasure up, the various scriptural rules for
-holy living: I have done this, because many suppose, that the
-fixing of a good principle&mdash;of faith, for instance,&mdash;is
-all that is requisite; if it were so, why should so many rules
-have been given in that holy book, in which there can be nothing
-unnecessary or superfluous?&nbsp; God, who knows the heart and
-all the ways of man, knew how wise and needful it was, to deliver
-express admonitions and exhortations to each individual duty;
-that our faith might not be vague and unprofitable, but abounding
-in fruit, in the fruit of holiness unto everlasting life.</p>
-<p>But it is time now to turn to the text, which furnishes us
-with one of the most important cautions for our safe and
-christian government.&nbsp; It might be thought, <a
-name="page355"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 355</span>that every
-true believer in that blessed Redeemer, who came &ldquo;to
-cleanse him from all unrighteousness,&rdquo; would have such a
-horror of sin, as effectually to secure him from its dominion; as
-to prevent us from the necessity of admonishing him against its
-fascination and its power; but such unhappily is far from being
-the case.&nbsp; Many, who make a considerable profession of the
-gospel, are betrayed into grievous inconsistencies; many, who set
-out with promising hopes and good resolutions, are led astray and
-overcome; many, for want of attending to the warning given in the
-text, for want of narrowly watching the beginnings of evil.&nbsp;
-Feeling a sincere and decided abhorrence of the grosser sins,
-they expose themselves without fear to slighter temptations;
-should they be, in some small matter, inveigled and led into the
-path of error, it is expected that they shall instantly perceive
-their danger; that they shall repent and be forgiven, and be more
-guarded and resolute for the time to come.</p>
-<p><a name="page356"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 356</span>But
-they have not formed a proper estimate of the seducing nature of
-sin; they know not how the power of the tempter increases with
-every success: instead of their being alarmed and disgusted with
-the first commission, they become, from the corruption of their
-nature, the more captivated and seduced: it is easier for the
-enemy to draw them on to the second step, than it was to persuade
-them to the first; their conscience becomes more easily silenced
-and reconciled; they begin to think, that the strictness, for
-which they once contended, is not so requisite; they become
-accustomed to evil; make excuses for it; take delight in it; are
-flattered with the empty praises and congratulations of their new
-companions; and proceed by degrees to abandoned and ruinous
-lengths.&nbsp; The fact is, that they have been all the while
-provoking the Spirit of the Lord to desert them: He was grieved
-at their very first departure, from the path of innocence and
-integrity; it shewed a carelessness of the ways of God; it
-argued, <a name="page357"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-357</span>that His fear and His love were declining in their
-heart: with every renewed commission of evil, the Spirit was more
-and more quenched, till at length He left them to themselves;
-weak, helpless, incapable of resistance; in the dominion of the
-enemy, slaves of sin.</p>
-<p>What I am here describing, has been the miserable experience
-of thousands of unwatchful and irresolute Christians; who have
-fallen into the snare, yea at last into the ruinous abyss of
-evil, from which they have never afterwards escaped, because they
-were too &ldquo;wise in their own conceits&rdquo; and too
-confident in their own strength, to take a warning against the
-peril of yielding to the first temptation; because they ventured
-into the borders of forbidden ground, and were insensibly led on
-to the fatal lengths, which they once held in abomination.</p>
-<p>How many a youth have we known, trained from his earliest
-infancy in the holy principles of the gospel, the hope and the
-promise of his anxious parents, <a name="page358"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 358</span>the joy of his family and friends,
-yet, from incautiously listening, on some unsuspected occasion,
-to the advice of an evil counsellor, and induced to make
-experiment of some unhallowed pleasure, thereby shaken in his
-integrity and thrown off his bias; prevailed upon to repeat the
-pressing indulgence; thence to proceed to others; till, in the
-end, the character has been totally changed,&mdash;marred,
-corrupted, ruined.&nbsp; It seemed but a little matter that first
-courted his consent; what, though sinful pleasures did surround
-him in his new scene and his new company, he, poor innocent
-youth, had no intention of joining in them; was determined to
-stand aloof.&nbsp; For a while he did so; and maintained the
-pious and virtuous and christian habits, in which he had been
-trained; the habits of prayer, and holy reading, and holy
-meditation, and uprightness of conduct: but he began to give way,
-to &ldquo;fall from the stedfastness of his faith in
-Christ;&rdquo; <a name="citation358"></a><a href="#footnote358"
-class="citation">[358]</a> one religious observance after <a
-name="page359"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 359</span>another was
-broken in upon; one scruple after another overcome; till at last
-he was stripped of every portion of the garment of righteousness,
-and left &ldquo;miserable and poor and naked,&rdquo; with nothing
-to hide his wretchedness and shame; the dishonour of his father,
-the grief of his mother&rsquo;s heart; disowned by his family,
-disowned by his God: a misery to himself; dying the death of a
-sinner.&nbsp; And whence came all this load of misery upon
-him?&mdash;on account of his first unguarded yielding.</p>
-<p>This representation has been but too frequently verified: yet
-not to the young only has such heedlessness proved a snare and
-destruction.&nbsp; We may see its consequences ravaging around us
-almost every day; in persons of every age and condition.&nbsp;
-How many a sabbath-breaker has contracted his dreadful habit from
-a very small beginning of neglect?&nbsp; At the first he was
-tempted very occasionally to absent himself from the House of his
-God; to indulge now and then, extremely seldom, <a
-name="page360"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 360</span>in worldly
-pleasure; or to engage, in a thoughtless hour, in the dispatch of
-worldly business; but his affection and reverence for the holy
-day by degrees grow colder, and the temptations became stronger:
-the Lord&rsquo;s House was, in a great measure, forsaken; the
-Lord&rsquo;s day became his day of dissolute pleasure; or his day
-of business and accounts, as best suited his condition; and hence
-followed, as it must of necessity, the total decay of religious
-principle and religious character.</p>
-<p>Thus it is also, in a remarkable degree, with the vice of
-intemperance; no man proceeds to its abominable and fatal
-extremities all at once: but no man, whatever his principles may
-have been, is secure from its horrible influence, if he is once
-tempted habitually to depart from the holy rules of sobriety;
-however seldom the habit may be at first indulged.&nbsp; It is
-indeed especially true of this awful vice, that if the enemy once
-gains a footing in the heart, he seldom leaves it, till the heart
-is his own.</p>
-<p><a name="page361"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 361</span>Thus
-it is, once again, with evil company of every description; it is
-ensnaring beyond all suspicion, and beyond all calculation:
-wicked or worldly companions infuse their venom, into the mind
-and the bosom, gradually and insensibly: even if they have no
-intention so to do, as in truth they too often have, their very
-presence and conversation and habits are so corrupting, that it
-is impossible for any one, who is familiarly acquainted with
-them, to escape the contagion; in fact, whoever seeks, or whoever
-tolerates such company, has a lurking disposition to evil, though
-it may be unperceived and unsuspected by himself.&nbsp; Flee from
-every approach to this treacherous and dangerous ground, as you
-would &ldquo;flee from the wrath to come.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>From this statement, which indeed is but imperfect and feeble
-in comparison with the magnitude of the evil, against which I am
-seeking to warn you, my hearers; from this you may be better
-prepared, by God&rsquo;s grace, to receive and <a
-name="page362"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 362</span>value and
-apply the important admonition of the text: you will observe how
-particularly, how urgently, with what repetition, what varied
-forms of expression, the wise man delivers his charge; so
-delivers it the more, because he speaks feelingly, from
-dear-bought experience; because he himself had been lamentably
-ensnared, for want of attending to it in his own case.</p>
-<p>Let us hearken to the counsel of this inspired and experienced
-guide: he says, &ldquo;Enter not into the path of the
-wicked;&rdquo; never be prevailed upon to set your foot on this
-forbidden ground; &ldquo;go not in the way of evil men,&rdquo;
-trust not yourself in their company or in any of their goings:
-further he says, &ldquo;Avoid it,&rdquo; avoid this ensnaring
-way; be at pains to keep clear of it; use your utmost
-watchfulness to discover it; go in another direction, in the way
-of the upright and holy.&nbsp; And, as if this caution were
-insufficient for his purpose, he adds, &ldquo;Pass not by
-it;&rdquo; suffer not yourself even to approach it, to look <a
-name="page363"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 363</span>upon it;
-lest you be beguiled by its false charms, and unwarily led to
-desire them.&nbsp; Not willing yet to cease from admonishing, in
-order to make a yet deeper impression, he concludes, &ldquo;Turn
-from it and pass away;&rdquo; the instant you perceive it, turn
-round with the dread of danger; as you would if you discovered
-yourself on the edge of a precipice, in fear of falling headlong;
-turn at once, and pass decidedly and quickly away.</p>
-<p>In obedience to these rules, my brethren, consists our great
-security, under the guidance of infinite wisdom and the support
-of almighty power: the grace of God is ever ready to be bestowed,
-ever at hand to &ldquo;preserve us from falling;&rdquo; but God
-expects and requires us, in the use of this grace, to employ
-every means of prudence, and to strive with a holy and unbending
-resolution: this grace is afforded for the very purpose, that we
-may so watch and work; and if we do not thus improve it, with
-circumspection and diligence, it will be withdrawn.&nbsp; Never
-so <a name="page364"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 364</span>much
-as listen to any sinful proposal, to any doubtful invitation;
-stay not to reason upon it at all; turn away with holy jealousy;
-never suffer the eye to dwell upon a forbidden object, to dwell
-even for a moment; through the eye it may find a passage to the
-heart, and inflame it with unlawful and hurtful desire: resist at
-once; the first victory is the easiest, as well as the
-surest.&nbsp; Say to the temptation, as your Lord said to the
-tempter, &ldquo;get thee hence, Satan;&rdquo; &ldquo;flee from
-him and he will flee from you&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;escape for thy
-life.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And here I must add an observation upon the means, by which we
-may be enabled to follow this momentous advice of the wisest of
-men.&nbsp; We must &ldquo;watch and pray, that we enter not into
-temptation;&rdquo; <a name="citation364"></a><a
-href="#footnote364" class="citation">[364]</a> we must go forth
-into the world in the spirit of watchfulness and prayer; praying,
-not only that we may have the grace to watch, but also when the
-trial actually arises, when we are watching.&nbsp; In the
-presence of temptation, <a name="page365"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 365</span>or if we do but perceive or suspect
-that it is coming, let the soul be lifted up to the &ldquo;Lord
-of all power and might;&rdquo; let the language of the heart, if
-not of the lips, be poured forth in pious aspiration to God; if
-it be but a word, a wish, or a thought, it will be clothed with
-strength, and minister a stedfastness to the mind and
-heart.&nbsp; We are thus animated by the assurance of divine
-support, and fixed in our holy determination of resistance to all
-evil.&nbsp; Much depends, for safety and success, upon this
-habitual spirit of devotion; it is our buckler and shield in
-every moment of conflict; without it, we are standing, in the
-feebleness of nature, before the mighty enemy of our souls; ready
-to &ldquo;be taken captive by him at his will.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation365a"></a><a href="#footnote365a"
-class="citation">[365a]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Be ye therefore sober
-(that is, be serious) and watch unto prayer;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation365b"></a><a href="#footnote365b"
-class="citation">[365b]</a> and thus &ldquo;go forth conquering
-and to conquer.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page366"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-366</span>SERMON XX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE LOVE OF CHRIST FOR THOSE WHO DO THE
-WILL OF GOD.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Mark</span> iii. 35.</p>
-<p><i>Whosoever shall do the will of God</i>, <i>the same is my
-brother and my sister and mother</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">From</span> this, and one or two other
-passages in the gospels, it has been sometimes imagined, that our
-blessed Lord set no value on the common relationships, the
-natural ties, the tender endearments of life; and that He
-intended to teach His disciples, by His own example, to neglect
-such considerations altogether; as if all Christians had an equal
-claim upon our affection; as if the spiritual brotherhood <a
-name="page367"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 367</span>were the
-only object worthy of our regard; as if parents and brothers and
-sisters were merely upon a footing with the rest of
-mankind.&nbsp; This notion is entirely erroneous; it is a
-mistaken conclusion from the words and conduct of our Lord.</p>
-<p>His own example, on several occasions, has afforded a sanction
-to the feelings of private friendship, as well as of family
-affection.&nbsp; How deeply was He moved at the death of
-Lazarus!&nbsp; &ldquo;Jesus wept, then said the Jews, behold how
-He loved him!&rdquo; <a name="citation367a"></a><a
-href="#footnote367a" class="citation">[367a]</a> And of our
-Lord&rsquo;s disciples we read, that there was one, treated with
-peculiar tenderness and regard; one, &ldquo;who leaned on His
-bosom;&rdquo; <a name="citation367b"></a><a href="#footnote367b"
-class="citation">[367b]</a> one, distinguished by the high and
-honourable name of the &ldquo;beloved disciple.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
-this disciple, the evangelist St. John, has drawn one of the most
-striking pictures of an affectionate family, ever represented to
-the eye and the heart of man: &ldquo;There stood by the cross of
-Jesus, His mother, and <a name="page368"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 368</span>His mother&rsquo;s sister, Mary the
-wife of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene.&nbsp; When Jesus therefore
-saw His mother, and the disciple standing by whom He loved, He
-saith unto His mother, Woman, behold thy son!&nbsp; Then saith He
-to the disciple, Behold thy mother!&nbsp; And from that hour that
-disciple took her unto his own home.&rdquo;&nbsp; Jesus not only
-loved and protected His mother through life, but was solicitous
-to provide for her future well-being, even amidst the agonies of
-the cross; commending her to His dearest personal friend; and by
-way of effectually securing <i>his</i> regard and <i>her</i>
-confidence, He calls John the son, and Mary the mother: Behave to
-each other as mother and son; and it is all I can ask or
-require.&nbsp; This must be admitted as a proof, that Jesus felt
-most tenderly and peculiarly for His nearest earthly relation:
-and it shews, that those passages, which have been supposed to
-favour a contrary opinion, have been wrongly interpreted.</p>
-<p><a name="page369"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 369</span>Let
-us now consider the circumstances which led to the declaration in
-the text.&nbsp; It appears, that the earnestness and perseverance
-of Jesus in teaching the people, notwithstanding the opposition
-of the Pharisees, had given disquietude to His friends and
-brethren, that is, to His near relations, some of whom did not
-believe in Him.&nbsp; They seem to have desired Him to forbear
-and discontinue His ministry at that particular time, supposing
-that He had exceeded the bounds of prudence; and it further
-appears, that they had induced Mary, His mother, to concur in
-this improper design; which conveyed a reflection upon His
-wisdom, and the perfection of His character.&nbsp; They came,
-therefore, when He was teaching the people; and, not being able
-to approach Him for the multitude, they sent to speak with
-Him.&nbsp; But Jesus, aware of their intention, answered by
-enquiring, who His mother and brethren were; thereby intimating,
-that they had no right to interfere on such an occasion, nor had
-any authority over <a name="page370"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-370</span>Him in respect of His important work; that His
-spiritual affection to His disciples, in the advancement of their
-eternal interests, was greater than any natural affection, which
-He bore to His relations, in a mere earthly point of view; that
-His love to men&rsquo;s souls had the greatest consideration and
-weight with Him; that even His mother was nearer to Him as a true
-believer, than on account of her natural relationship; and that
-His brethren would derive no advantage or favour from Him, if
-they were not also believers.</p>
-<p>Jesus then proceeded to declare, that His true disciples, even
-though they had no connexion with Him by the natural tie of
-blood, would be regarded in the light of relations; would be the
-objects of His sincere affection and esteem; &ldquo;He looked
-round on them which sat about Him, and said, Behold My mother and
-My brethren, for whosoever shall do the will of God, the same is
-My brother and My sister and mother.&rdquo;&nbsp; We cannot but
-observe, that <a name="page371"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-371</span>these words are addressed, not merely to the disciples
-of that day, but to every individual Christian throughout the
-world; <i>whosoever</i>, of any age or nation, should do the will
-of His heavenly Father, by hearing, believing, obeying His
-revealed word, by embracing the gospel of salvation, he would, in
-life, in death, in judgment, and for ever, be honoured and
-blessed; even as the brother, sister, or mother of Him, who is
-the Lord of all, and the King of glory.</p>
-<p>How encouraging, how delightful an assurance, to be persuaded,
-that in all our difficulties and troubles, in all our
-bereavements and desertions and afflictions, through this vale of
-tears, we have a friend, a relation, at the right hand of God,
-the omnipotent Redeemer; who is advanced, after His earthly
-humiliation, to the throne above, for the very purpose of
-&ldquo;receiving gifts for men;&rdquo; and of distributing them
-for the relief and assistance of all His loving and faithful
-brethren.&nbsp; How fortunate do the needy children of men esteem
-<a name="page372"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-372</span>themselves, if they have a kind relative or friend in a
-high quarter; one possessed of honour and wealth and power.&nbsp;
-They feel themselves ennobled by the connexion; and are raised
-above the fear and apprehension of want, by a confidence in his
-influence and generosity.&nbsp; But what are the highest and
-greatest of earthly relatives, in comparison with the glorious
-everlasting Son of God; with Him who &ldquo;hath put all our
-enemies under His feet;&rdquo; with the &ldquo;high and holy one
-that inhabited eternity?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Earthly friends may and do fail, often when they are most
-needed; an untoward occurrence, a groundless displeasure arises;
-and all our expectations from them are suddenly swept away.&nbsp;
-But with Jesus &ldquo;there is no variableness, neither shadow of
-turning:&rdquo; He searches our hearts; and as long as they are
-really and stedfastly united with Him, no casualties, no outward
-appearances can estrange us from His favour.&nbsp; Earthly
-friends die, one after another; and often at a time, when they <a
-name="page373"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 373</span>are become
-most dear and most necessary to us; but Jesus liveth for
-evermore; and the union, we form with Him, is in no danger of
-being severed by any change of time or circumstance; but goes on
-progressively and perpetually increasing.&nbsp; The very
-disasters, which often tend to disunite us from our earthly
-friends and brethren, serve but to bind us the more closely to
-the Saviour; in adversity, in poverty, in contempt, in
-persecution, we find Him the nearer and dearer; always most ready
-to succour us, when most wanted and desired: always ready, and
-always able.&nbsp; So that, if the whole world were to fail us,
-His abiding favour would more than counterbalance all the evils
-of our lot.&nbsp; &ldquo;When even my father or my mother
-forsaketh me, the Lord taketh me up;&rdquo; <a
-name="citation373"></a><a href="#footnote373"
-class="citation">[373]</a> He is in the stead of parents, in the
-stead of all: &ldquo;the Father of the fatherless, and the God of
-the widow;&rdquo; the Lord of consolation, and the Lord of
-love.&nbsp; The upholding of His Spirit will sustain our
-infirmities; <a name="page374"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-374</span>one beam of His gracious mercy will cheer all the
-darkness, which the world casteth over our souls.</p>
-<p>The disciples of Jesus experience His friendly comfort every
-day and hour: even if there were no other world than this, they
-feel themselves abundantly blessed in their connexion with Him,
-by His present affection and grace; but there <i>is</i> another
-world; where their joy and love will be continued, and their
-union with Him perfected in glory.&nbsp; He is called, in
-gracious condescension, &ldquo;the first-born among many
-brethren;&rdquo; <a name="citation374a"></a><a
-href="#footnote374a" class="citation">[374a]</a> He has suffered
-and died and triumphed and risen again, risen &ldquo;as the first
-fruits of them that sleep;&rdquo; <a name="citation374b"></a><a
-href="#footnote374b" class="citation">[374b]</a> and His
-brethren, &ldquo;who endure unto the end,&rdquo; shall also rise
-from the sleep of death, and &ldquo;see Him as He is, and be like
-Him:&rdquo; <a name="citation374c"></a><a href="#footnote374c"
-class="citation">[374c]</a> they shall &ldquo;be the children of
-God, being the children of the resurrection.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation374d"></a><a href="#footnote374d"
-class="citation">[374d]</a></p>
-<p>And &ldquo;do not our hearts burn within <a
-name="page375"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 375</span>us&rdquo;
-at the representation of this blessedness?&nbsp; Do we not desire
-the honour, the privilege, the advantage, the excellency of being
-thus united, in a bond of holy endearment, to the glorious Son of
-God, to the Saviour of our souls?&nbsp; Undoubtedly we do: unless
-our understandings be so darkened and our affections so depraved
-and debased, that we are incapable of choosing between good and
-evil, that we &ldquo;put darkness for light and light for
-darkness.&rdquo;&nbsp; There cannot be one amongst us, who does
-not profess to set a value upon the favour and friendship of his
-Lord; upon the relationship which, as christians, we are
-graciously permitted to bear to Him.&nbsp; Not one of us would go
-to rest, content and happy, with the prospect of being deprived
-of this distinguished and heavenly blessing.&nbsp; Let us know
-and remember then, that our relationship to Him is not like that
-of earthly families, a mere name which we have inherited from
-infancy; and which will necessarily continue without our care or
-concern.&nbsp; We <a name="page376"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-376</span>became related to Him by our baptismal covenant; but
-there must be something more than baptism; something more is
-required than a mere profession, than an outward belonging to His
-visible church, in order to our being acknowledged as His
-brethren.&nbsp; Brethren by name all of us are; nay, we have been
-spiritually admitted into holy connexion with Him: but Jesus
-regards those only, as accepted members of His family, who
-believe in Him with all their heart and soul; who look to Him,
-with a single, entire, and constant dependence, for life and
-salvation; those, who &ldquo;are daily renewed in the spirit of
-their minds;&rdquo; and desire and strive to bring all their
-affections into a righteous subjection to Him and His holy law;
-those, in a word, &ldquo;who do the will of God.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We cannot sufficiently reprobate the practice of those
-persons, who boastfully claim the Saviour as their
-&ldquo;familiar friend,&rdquo; without an abiding concern and a
-strenuous endeavour to walk as He walked, <a
-name="page377"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 377</span>in all the
-ways of spiritual and moral integrity.&nbsp; Consider, I pray
-you, His own clear text on this point: &ldquo;If ye love Me, keep
-My commandments:&rdquo; <a name="citation377"></a><a
-href="#footnote377" class="citation">[377]</a> there can be no
-other evidence of our saving interest in the Lord, but that which
-He Himself has established.&nbsp; His true disciples and brethren
-must bear His image; and not the marred, corrupted, hideous
-likeness of the author of sin and death.&nbsp; This it is, to be
-spiritually and effectually incorporated into the family of Jesus
-Christ; thus is our relationship to be proved and cherished: he
-that walketh as a brother and a friend, will be owned as such;
-he, that faileth so to walk, will be disowned and cast away,
-whatever his pretensions: &ldquo;better had it been for that man
-if he had never been born;&rdquo; better still, if he had never
-been born &ldquo;of water and the spirit;&rdquo; if he had never
-&ldquo;named the name of Christ.&rdquo;&nbsp; Let us then
-faithfully remember, not only the joys and privileges of the
-brethren of our Lord, but <a name="page378"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 378</span>the means also, which are absolutely
-necessary for the proof and establishment of this holy title; the
-conditions, the evidences, and the duties of so high and happy a
-state.</p>
-<p>And from our Lord&rsquo;s example in the instance before us,
-we may gather several particulars for our instruction in life: He
-gave His relations to understand, that it was not so much the
-natural tie which He valued, as the spiritual; not, as we have
-already explained, that He was devoid of natural affection, but
-that the spiritual bond was of so much higher importance in His
-esteem.&nbsp; In applying this principle for our adoption and
-regulation, certainly great allowance must be made, and sound
-discretion used; allowance for our mutual infirmities; and
-discretion, for the sake of preserving domestic harmony and
-peace.&nbsp; Far be it from us, to disclaim and renounce every
-one of our family, who liveth not as a faithful follower of
-Christ; he has a natural hold upon us, which must not be harshly
-or hastily broken.</p>
-<p><a name="page379"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-379</span>Independently of a universal feeling of benevolence for
-all mankind; it is evidently the will of God, that the different
-members of each family should be especially attached together,
-for the sake of promoting each other&rsquo;s interest and
-comfort; and thus of contributing to the good of society at
-large; to the increase of the general stock of happiness, and the
-diminution of evil.</p>
-<p>And this, the design of a merciful Providence, which is
-manifest to our common reason and our common feelings, is
-abundantly verified and enforced by the holy word of God.&nbsp;
-The fifth commandment in the law distinctly recognizes and
-requires the exercise of domestic affection; and it is repeatedly
-confirmed, under the gospel covenant, by the pen of an inspired
-apostle.&nbsp; That apostle has farther declared, that &ldquo;if
-any provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own
-house, he hath denied the faith, and is worse than an
-infidel.&rdquo; <a name="citation379"></a><a href="#footnote379"
-class="citation">[379]</a>&nbsp; And the sense <a
-name="page380"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 380</span>of this
-precept may be properly extended, to sanction and command all
-those peculiar offices, of kindness and countenance and support,
-which the members of a family can perform for each other.&nbsp;
-Under ordinary circumstances therefore, if there be no opposing
-necessity, the natural tie is to be respected by the Christian,
-and bound upon his conscience and his heart.</p>
-<p>Nor is such a connexion to be dissolved, but in cases of
-extremity; for this among other reasons, that there is always a
-hope, of the recreant and abandoned becoming, by the mercy of
-God, at length reclaimed and converted; and of this great
-blessing the pious relative may be made an instrument, by his
-fervent prayer, his affectionate counsel, and the constant
-influence of his good example.</p>
-<p>But all this hinders us not from looking, with a very
-different eye, upon the spiritual and the worldly relation; upon
-the good and the evil; though both may be objects of our kind
-personal offices, the nature and degree of our affection may <a
-name="page381"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 381</span>vary most
-exceedingly.&nbsp; Our love for the truly christian relative has
-a fervour, a purity, a delight, which nothing but the mutual
-working and spirit of religion can possibly generate: the
-happiness proceeds from that sacred, heavenly source, from which
-both of us draw our principles and hopes; from the consciousness
-of our common interest in the great Redeemer, and our common
-relationship to Him: we are both &ldquo;members of Christ and
-children of God;&rdquo; inheritors of a better kingdom; to which
-we are journeying together, and of which we love to be
-discoursing; it is a bond of union, which nothing can separate;
-not distance, not death: for this is the great consideration, the
-great enhancement of our joy and comfort, that the love which we
-are bearing for one another, in the kingdom of grace, shall be
-renewed and matured in the kingdom of glory.&nbsp; And unless
-there be this principle of attachment between relations, this
-common faith and hope, this exercise of piety and godliness, this
-interchange of holy affection, <a name="page382"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 382</span>all other attachments, however
-requisite for this world, are but time-serving and poor: death
-will be the dreadful extinction.&nbsp; But when the natural
-affection is thus combined with the spiritual, and draws its
-nourishment from it, they produce together a happiness, which
-none but such relations can know.</p>
-<p>And further, we are taught by this example of Christ, that
-every sincere believer, with whom we are made acquainted, with
-whom we have intercourse, is to be treated as a brother; whatever
-be his situation in life, he is an object of affection far more
-noble and delightful, than any human tie can possibly produce;
-and is entitled to our best and most benevolent services.&nbsp;
-We may not be familiarly associated; we may not dwell with him as
-with an earthly relative; there may be a distance of rank between
-us; but we love and honour him, for the Lord&rsquo;s sake and his
-own sake, as one of God&rsquo;s redeemed people, with whom we
-hope to dwell in love for ever; and therefore our soul delighteth
-<a name="page383"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-383</span>&ldquo;to communicate with him and to do him
-good.&rdquo;&nbsp; Pity that there is not, in the christian
-world, more of this spirit of the blessed Jesus; more friendly
-sympathy and brotherly interchange; more regard for one another,
-as members of the same holy family; the rich for the rich, the
-poor for the poor, the rich and poor for each other.&nbsp; Far
-different would be our condition in this world, if all were thus
-regarding, thus feeling for, thus helping one another.&nbsp; Why
-is it not so?&nbsp; For the want of a true christian faith and
-principle.&nbsp; If the tree were good, the fruit would be thus
-beautiful.</p>
-<p>My brethren, allow me affectionately to recommend this subject
-to your private and most serious consideration; to your daily
-prayers; as a subject, in which your own interest in the Saviour
-is deeply involved; as a subject, intimately connected with all
-your best promises and hopes, in this life and the life to
-come.&nbsp; And may the God of love shed His spirit abroad
-amongst us, and &ldquo;pour into our hearts <a
-name="page384"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 384</span>this most
-excellent gift of charity, the very bond of peace and of all
-virtues.&rdquo;&nbsp; Has Jesus, our common Lord and Master, our
-heavenly and eternal King, declared, of every faithful disciple,
-that &ldquo;the same is to Him, as a brother and sister and
-mother?&rdquo;&nbsp; Then remember His example, and remember His
-words, &ldquo;<i>as</i> I have loved you, that ye love one
-another:&rdquo; remember them, or you will be forgotten by Him:
-&ldquo;love the brotherhood,&rdquo; or you do not belong to
-Christ; your profession is hypocrisy.&nbsp; &ldquo;Walk in love,
-as Christ hath loved you;&rdquo; let it be your daily walk: the
-reward is great, in every point of view; great upon earth, in
-present comfort and peace and honour; greater on the latter day,
-in the approving declaration of your Lord; &ldquo;Inasmuch as ye
-have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have
-done it unto Me:&rdquo; <a name="citation384"></a><a
-href="#footnote384" class="citation">[384]</a> greatest in
-heaven, where we shall be made &ldquo;perfect in love;&rdquo; in
-the love of God, and of the holy angels, and all His redeemed
-people, for ever and ever.</p>
-<h2><a name="page385"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-385</span>SERMON XXI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">ON SEEKING OUT THE WORKS OF THE LORD AND
-PRAISING HIM.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Psalm</span> cxi. 1. 2.</p>
-<p><i>I will give thanks unto the Lord with my whole heart</i>;
-<i>in the assembly of the upright and in the
-congregation</i>.</p>
-<p><i>The works of the Lord are great</i>, <i>sought out of all
-them that have pleasure therein</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">One</span> of the greatest hindrances to
-the Christian life, in the true believer, is his perpetual
-intermixture with the world, his constant occupation with the
-business of his daily calling, with earthly pleasures and
-pursuits.&nbsp; The world, in its very nature, in the spirit
-which it breathes, in the <a name="page386"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 386</span>cares which it engenders, in the
-temptations which it spreads, stands in opposition to the gospel,
-to the Christian&rsquo;s walk with God; it unfits his mind for
-spiritual contemplation; it gives him a disrelish for holy
-delights; it calls aside his thoughts from God, from heaven, and
-from heavenly things; and makes him forget his obligation to, and
-dependence upon, the merciful and over-ruling providence of the
-Most High.</p>
-<p>And yet it is undoubtedly our duty to live in the world; to
-partake, in a certain degree, of its pleasures, as well as of its
-labours and cares.&nbsp; It is the will and decree of God, that
-mankind should provide &ldquo;by the sweat of their brow&rdquo;
-for their subsistence and well-being in life: integrity and
-industry in the exercise of our calling are among the appointed
-means, by which we must &ldquo;Work out our
-salvation.&rdquo;&nbsp; Since therefore we are obliged to mix
-with the world, our great object should be, to guard against its
-engrossing and corrupting influence; to retain all our <a
-name="page387"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 387</span>possessions
-in a spirit of humble and constant reliance upon the sovereign
-power and disposal of the Almighty; to be lifting up our hearts,
-in the course of our daily employment, above all secular
-concerns, to the author of our being, to the giver of our talents
-and our time, to the judge of all our actions.&nbsp; And besides,
-some portion of each day must be distinctly set apart for holy
-reading, meditation, and prayer.&nbsp; Without such rules and
-observances, the christian principle cannot possibly be
-maintained; faith and zeal will grow cold, the communion with God
-be gradually impaired, the affections estranged, and the
-obedience destroyed.</p>
-<p>These remarks may serve to introduce an exposition of the 2nd
-verse of the text.&nbsp; &ldquo;The works of the Lord are
-great:&rdquo; yet great as they are, they cannot be understood
-nor perceived by those, who are absorbed in earthly ideas and
-pursuits.&nbsp; The attention will thus be entirely drawn off
-from a contemplation of the works of Jehovah; and the mind will
-entirely rest <a name="page388"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-388</span>upon its own labours and objects.&nbsp; To our own hand
-and our own arm, to our own skill and enterprise, to our own
-advantage and honour, we shall refer all the transactions of
-life, and all the success and enjoyment with which we are
-blessed.&nbsp; The dealings of our heavenly Father, both with
-ourselves and with the world around us, will be utterly
-overlooked; and however we may believe, as a speculative truth,
-that His &ldquo;providence orders and governs all things both in
-heaven and earth,&rdquo; we shall be in no way improved or
-affected by that belief; in fact, we shall have no real or
-practical persuasion of His providential government: we shall be
-blind to His manifold mercies vouchsafed to ourselves, to our
-brethren, and to the Church at large.</p>
-<p>The works of the Lord must be &ldquo;sought out;&rdquo; that
-is, they must be mindfully and diligently observed, in order to
-their being adequately understood; nay, if we would know any
-thing of their vastness or their excellency.&nbsp; We must be
-continually <a name="page389"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-389</span>looking beyond human motives, human exertions, human
-experience, if we would in any measure, comprehend or perceive
-the merciful interpositions and dealings of God.&nbsp; We must be
-in the constant habit of connecting the ordinary operations and
-occurrences of life with a higher power, with the counsel and
-government of heaven; a gracious promise is given, that
-&ldquo;all things shall work together for good to them that love
-God;&rdquo; and we must be always endeavouring to trace this
-working, and observe the striking manner in which this effect is
-produced.&nbsp; We shall thus be able to perceive, how
-continually our merciful Father is watching over us, is crowning
-our honest designs and labours with success, and is bringing good
-even out of evil itself.&nbsp; We shall perceive, how wonderfully
-He directs us to the most suitable means of accomplishing our
-laudable purposes: how He over-rules those events, over which we
-had no controul, for our benefit and prosperity; how He raises up
-to us friends and fellow-workers, <a name="page390"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 390</span>when we least expected them; and
-provides us comforters, where we looked for none; how, in the
-season of danger, of which we are not even aware, He spreads over
-us the shield of safety, and we come forth unhurt; how He compels
-the designs, even of our enemies themselves, to minister in the
-end to our advantage; how, in the various calamities and sorrows,
-privations and disappointments, sicknesses and pains, which He
-does permit to befal us, He brings us consolation under them, and
-makes us to see and acknowledge, that what we lamented as a
-grievance, is turned into a signal blessing.&nbsp; And whenever,
-in any of our concerns or experiences, we fail to trace the mercy
-of God, it is, for the most part, because we do not sufficiently
-seek it out; because we are resting in our own short-sighted
-views; because we are &ldquo;walking by sight and not by
-faith,&rdquo; in &ldquo;the flesh and not in the spirit;&rdquo;
-desiring benefit in our own ways, and not humbly discerning the
-ways of the Lord; impatient under <a name="page391"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 391</span>the means, and not considering the
-end; looking at the earthly instrument and agent, and forgetting
-the prime Mover of all.</p>
-<p>What I am seeking to recommend to you is this, not a mere
-principle or matter of belief, but the importance of a constant,
-daily observance of the events and transactions of life, in
-reference to the almighty power and goodness of God.&nbsp; It is
-a point not attended to, even by many sincere Christians, as it
-ought to be; as to the generality, day after day passes by,
-without any such reference at all.&nbsp; Every thing proceeds, in
-their notion and view, from their own will and work, from the
-good or evil working of others; and they are affected
-accordingly; rejoicing or complaining, elevated or cast
-down.&nbsp; They have no consideration of the great Ruler and
-Preserver; they might almost be said to &ldquo;live without God
-in the world;&rdquo; it amounts, at least, to a practical
-disowning of His providence.</p>
-<p>But I must repeat, that even from many <a
-name="page392"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 392</span>sincere
-Christians this great influential doctrine does not receive all
-the attention, which its importance demands.&nbsp; They are
-convinced, that &ldquo;the works of the Lord are great;&rdquo;
-that His mighty operations are continually manifested, in the
-moral and spiritual government of mankind; but they do not
-sufficiently carry this conviction into their own daily walk in
-life.&nbsp; Far would we be from implying, that such reflections
-ought, in any way, to interfere with our circumspection or
-diligence in worldly concerns; or that we are familiarly to mix
-up religious observations with ordinary business or pleasure; but
-we should have a mind and heart ever open to perceive the
-gracious interpositions and visitations of heaven; we should be
-alive to every providential deliverance from accident or danger,
-both in ourselves and others: to the vouchsafement of every
-blessing, both temporal and spiritual.&nbsp; And they, who are
-thus disposed and ready, will find many opportunities drawing
-them to God: many <a name="page393"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-393</span>circumstances and events, which they once regarded
-somewhat in the light of chance, they will then clearly ascribe
-to the sure, though silent working of that invisible power, by
-which every thing in the universe is governed and sustained.</p>
-<p>But the works of the Lord are &ldquo;sought out&rdquo; by
-those only, &ldquo;who have pleasure therein:&rdquo; and this
-will explain to us the true cause, why such lamentable numbers of
-professed believers seldom or never seek them out at all.&nbsp;
-They have no <i>pleasure</i> in their thoughts upon the Almighty:
-they love Him not, serve Him not with a devoted and delighted
-heart; their conscience is uneasy and self-condemning, and
-therefore they reluctantly turn their thoughts to their great
-Sovereign and Judge; it is rather a pain than a pleasure to them,
-so to do.&nbsp; &ldquo;Loving the world and the things of the
-world,&rdquo; they have no taste for spiritual enjoyment of any
-kind: in extraordinary emergencies, when the interference of an
-over-ruling power is irresistibly thrust upon their notice, <a
-name="page394"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 394</span>they do not
-refuse to join with their brethren in acknowledging the fact: but
-as for searching out His ways and dealings in their daily
-experience, they are decidedly disinclined and averse to it; the
-injunction of such a practice is repugnant to their views and
-feelings and desires.</p>
-<p>Nor can any, but the pious and faithful servant of God, find
-delight in this holy and profitable exercise: and the longer he
-lives, the more clearly he perceives the hand of the Almighty in
-every thing; in discomfiting the evil and blessing the good: he
-sees and admires the wonders of grace, as well as the wonders of
-providence, vouchsafed to others as well as himself; to the
-Church in all ages.&nbsp; He reads, in the word of truth, of the
-signal manner, in which the Lord has delivered His people from
-the foundation of the world; not only by the miraculous
-interposition of His omnipotent arm; but also in the ordinary
-course of His dealings with them.&nbsp; How merciful <a
-name="page395"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 395</span>and
-manifold have been His ways of enlightening them when in
-ignorance, and converting them when in sin.&nbsp; How pitifully
-and patiently has He borne, not only with their infirmities, but
-with their guilt and rebellion; and graciously reclaimed them
-from the path of error and ruin, by the mercies of His chastising
-rod.&nbsp; Nor do the defeat and destruction of wicked men afford
-less decisive proof, than the deliverance of the righteous, of
-the greatness of the Lord&rsquo;s works: the whole history of the
-Church shews Him to have been great in justice, as in mercy: and,
-we may add, in truth also.&nbsp; Often indeed have the promises
-of divine favour, and the denunciations of vengeance, been
-fulfilled in the most unexpected and marvellous manner; by
-instruments apparently altogether unequal to the momentous object
-designed.&nbsp; But &ldquo;the Lord worked for His people; and
-there is no restraint to the Lord to save by many or by
-few.&rdquo; <a name="citation395"></a><a href="#footnote395"
-class="citation">[395]</a></p>
-<p><a name="page396"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 396</span>And
-amongst his friends and brethren in the Lord, the christian also
-beholds many satisfactory and encouraging instances of the
-working of heavenly power: he sees them advancing in their
-spiritual course, steadier in principle, and improved in
-character, &ldquo;growing in grace and in the knowledge of our
-Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.&rdquo;&nbsp; And wherever he
-observes the increase of true religion, there he also finds, to
-his heart&rsquo;s delight, a correspondent increase of
-contentment and happiness; the power of the gospel is manifest
-before him, in the altered characters and lives of men; and in
-all this, he perceives and admires the gracious operations of a
-merciful God.</p>
-<p>But the christian is best acquainted with himself; studies the
-most narrowly his own conduct, and life; he judges indeed, with
-deep humility, of the manifestation of divine power in his
-behalf, sincerely conscious of his undeservings; still he can
-truly bear witness that in his own case, his own experience also,
-the works of the <a name="page397"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-397</span>Lord have been great.&nbsp; Though still far, in spirit
-and in character, from what he ought to be and would be; he finds
-himself continually gaining the mastery over his evil affections
-and habits, and drawing nearer to God; perpetually advancing in
-holiness, as in knowledge; more &ldquo;hungering and thirsting
-after righteousness, and more filled;&rdquo; taking more delight
-in spiritual ordinances, and shewing the fruit of them in his
-life and conversation.&nbsp; And when he considers his own sinful
-nature, and the powerful enemies opposed to him, he cannot but
-ascribe this change in his heart, this improvement in his
-conduct, to the mighty workings of heavenly grace.&nbsp; Unworthy
-as he is of God&rsquo;s favour, he does find a well-spring of
-comfort established in his soul; comfort at all times, especially
-in the hour of tribulation; either he is provided with the means
-of deliverance, or the tribulation itself is converted into a
-blessing.&nbsp; He is also made in many ways, the instrument of
-benefit to others, to his family or friends; and every door <a
-name="page398"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 398</span>of
-usefulness that is opened to him, he gratefully acknowledges to
-be opened of the Lord.&nbsp; In all the good he receives or does,
-and all the evil he escapes or prevents, he traces the power and
-mercy of his God; &ldquo;not unto me, O Lord, not unto me, but
-unto Thy name be the glory and the praise.&rdquo;&nbsp; Thus he
-imitates the conduct of the Psalmist, recorded in the text;
-&ldquo;I will give thanks unto the Lord with my whole
-heart:&rdquo; it is not a formal service, not a partial tribute,
-not a reluctant offering: all the powers of his understanding and
-all the affections of his soul are employed in magnifying the
-majesty and loving-kindness of the &ldquo;author and giver of
-every good gift.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>And the grateful Christian imitates the Psalmist yet farther;
-he does not hide the sense of God&rsquo;s goodness within his own
-bosom; nor confine the mention of it to the narrow boundary of
-his closet; but declares it openly as opportunity serves; first
-of all &ldquo;in the assembly of the upright,&rdquo; or,
-according to the better <a name="page399"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 399</span>version of the Prayer Book,
-&ldquo;secretly among the faithful;&rdquo; in the company of his
-family and his religious friends.&nbsp; When he has experienced
-or observed the peculiar mercies of his almighty and merciful
-Father, he delights to speak of them; though with humility, yet
-with fervour and joy.&nbsp; Such is the natural disposition of
-man, when he feels deeply the obligation of benefits conferred:
-if an earthly friend has enriched or favoured him, he thankfully
-makes mention of the kindness: and shall he do less for the
-abundant, the infinite goodness of his God?&nbsp; Shall he not
-rejoice to proclaim it in the very overflowing of his heart?</p>
-<p>There are persons, who would draw a line of distinction
-between the two cases; and say, that our obligations to God
-should be felt only, and our obligations to man should be both
-felt and proclaimed.&nbsp; It is probable, that such
-observations, however sincerely made, generally proceed from the
-want of spirituality of heart: there is an aversion to the
-introduction of <a name="page400"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-400</span>religious topics, however sober or seasonable.&nbsp;
-That they are often indiscreetly introduced, often in a spirit of
-self-righteousness, and fanatical pretension, we cannot deny: but
-the abuse of any holy exercise is not to prevent us from the
-use.&nbsp; Look at the recorded lives of any pious Christians, of
-those who are held up to us as patterns of righteousness, whom in
-fact we profess to admire; and see how ready and forward they
-were, on all occasions, to speak of the manifold works which God
-had wrought for them, of the kindness which they had experienced
-at His hands.&nbsp; The Psalms are full of such expressions and
-resolutions: the text is a decided instance: let it have its
-effect upon us: let every one who has been favoured of the Lord,
-delight to be &ldquo;talking of His doings:&rdquo; not
-intrusively, not boastingly, as if he were a special favourite of
-heaven; as if he would make it appear, that the Lord were kinder
-to him than to others: but with simplicity and singleness of
-mind.&nbsp; The true believer abhors the two extremes, <a
-name="page401"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 401</span>of
-spiritual pride on the one hand; and of cold-hearted
-insensibility on the other.&nbsp; He feels himself all
-undeserving of the bounty of the Lord, and is astonished that it
-should be so bestowed upon <i>him</i>, who is &ldquo;not worthy
-to gather up the crumbs under his master&rsquo;s table;&rdquo;
-but the bounty <i>is</i> bestowed, and he cannot let it pass
-unnoticed or undeclared.</p>
-<p>Again, the Psalmist says, &ldquo;in the assembly of the
-upright and in the congregation.&rdquo;&nbsp; He vows, that not
-only in the company of his faithful friends, but also in the
-great congregation, in the holy temple, the power and mercy of
-Jehovah shall be publicly proclaimed. <a
-name="citation401"></a><a href="#footnote401"
-class="citation">[401]</a>&nbsp; Not that any particular acts, of
-providence or grace, could be there mentioned by name; but that
-the thankfulness, which he feels <a name="page402"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 402</span>for them, would put new life and
-energy into his praises, in the House of God.&nbsp; And this also
-we shall do well to imitate; this we shall assuredly imitate, if
-we have the true spirit of faith and piety.&nbsp; At all times,
-the sincere worshipper has so powerful a sense of the divine
-goodness in his heart, as to preserve him, in his public
-thanksgivings, from indifference and languor; but there are
-times, when he is visited with peculiar favour, with signal
-deliverances and blessings; and the remembrance of them will
-inspire him, when he next visits the temple of the Lord, with
-more than ordinary ardour; &ldquo;out of the abundance of the
-heart, the mouth speaketh;&rdquo; and as his love and gratitude
-rise, his tribute of praise will ascend, in a loftier strain, to
-the fountain of mercy, to the throne of grace.</p>
-<p>And God will hear him, and accept the free-will offering; he
-will return from worship in a holier frame, and with a more
-heavenly temper; the incense which he has been wafting to the
-skies, will leave <a name="page403"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-403</span>a fragrance behind, and spread to his character; and he
-will be rendered meet, through the grace and intercession of his
-Redeemer, for further manifestations of divine love.&nbsp; And O
-still better fruit, still happier effects of his devout
-thanksgiving! he will be preparing his soul for more exalted
-praises in the world to come, amid the countless multitude of
-worshippers, in the courts of the Lamb; where the holy-angels and
-the glorified saints shall rejoice together, in seeking out and
-recounting the surpassing love of God to His church and people,
-to His universal creation in all ages.&nbsp; Exulting in the
-light divine, and sharing together the blessedness of the
-Saviour&rsquo;s triumph, praise shall be their constant
-employment; and the vaults of heaven shall eternally echo with
-this their joyful theme, &ldquo;Great and marvellous are Thy
-works.&nbsp; Lord God Almighty; just and true are Thy ways, Thou
-King of Saints.&rdquo; <a name="citation403"></a><a
-href="#footnote403" class="citation">[403]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="page404"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-404</span>SERMON XXII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">DILIGENCE AND PERSEVERANCE IN THE
-CHRISTIAN RACE.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Philipp</span>. iii. 13, 14.</p>
-<p><i>Brethren</i>, <i>I count not myself to have
-apprehended</i>; <i>but this one thing I do</i>, <i>forgetting
-those things which are behind</i>, <i>and reaching forth unto
-those things which are before</i>, <i>I press toward the mark for
-the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">From</span> what St. Paul had said in a
-few verses before, he feared, lest he should have seemed to make
-himself sure of salvation, without the necessity of any further
-anxiety or labour; as if he might rest quietly satisfied with his
-present views and attainments; and had nothing to do, but <a
-name="page405"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 405</span>to wait for
-the certain result.&nbsp; And truly, if such confidence and
-relaxation could ever have been justified, it must have been in
-the case of this apostle; witness the sacrifices which he had
-made for the gospel; his unswerving and invincible faith; his
-holiness of character; his unparallelled labours; and the many
-signal marks of divine blessing, with which he had been
-distinguished.</p>
-<p>But still, he was far from presuming in this way; and the
-resolution which he expresses in the text, and the account which
-he gives of his own spirit and conduct, may furnish us with a
-very suitable lesson, and teach us the absolute necessity of
-continued watchfulness and diligence and perseverance unto the
-end; may teach us, that we are not, as the prophet Ezekiel
-expresses it, to &ldquo;<i>trust</i> in our own
-righteousness;&rdquo; <a name="citation405"></a><a
-href="#footnote405" class="citation">[405]</a> in any principles
-we have formed, any views we have entertained, any holiness we
-have acquired, any experiences with which we have been blessed;
-<a name="page406"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 406</span>and thus
-grow heedless and secure: but, that the further we advance, the
-more we must be convinced of the need of exertion; the more we
-shall find to do, and the more we shall be enabled to do: who
-loiters, loses; loses the advantage of the ground he has gone
-over; loses the means of a victorious and successful
-accomplishment.</p>
-<p>It will be improving, to those, who listen with humble and
-teachable hearts, who spiritually receive the word of God as the
-teaching of the Spirit of God, if we repeat a considerable
-portion of the important passage connected with the text; let us
-begin then with the 7th verse.&nbsp; &ldquo;What things were gain
-to me, those I counted loss for Christ, yea doubtless, and I
-count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of
-Christ Jesus my Lord; for whom I have suffered the loss of all
-things, (all earthly things) and do count them but dung, (as mere
-refuse and worthlessness) that I may win Christ and be found in
-Him, not having mine own righteousness, which <a
-name="page407"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 407</span>is of the
-law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the
-righteousness which is of God by faith: That I may know Him and
-the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His
-sufferings, being made conformable to His death, (by dying to sin
-that I may live to God;) if by any means I might attain to the
-resurrection of the dead,&rdquo; (to that perfect felicity, to
-which the saints are admitted at the resurrection.)&nbsp; From
-these words, it might have appeared to some, as if the apostle
-had expected his great object to be already accomplished; as if
-he had arrived at a state of faith and holiness, by which he had
-actually secured this felicity, independently of any further
-vigilance or labour: and therefore he immediately adds, by way of
-caution and correction: &ldquo;Not as though I had already
-attained, either were already perfect; but I follow after, (keep
-following after the object before me,) if that I may apprehend
-<i>that</i>, (may lay hold of <i>that</i> prize,) for which also
-I am apprehended of Christ Jesus;&rdquo; (for which He, <a
-name="page408"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 408</span>as it were,
-has graciously laid hold of me, arresting me in my course of
-blindness and obstinacy, as a malignant persecutor of Him and His
-gospel.)&nbsp; Then follows the text; &ldquo;Brethren, I count
-not myself to have apprehended;&rdquo; I reckon not upon the
-prize as actually won; however high and fervent my hope, however
-undoubted my assurance of ultimate success, I cannot be careless,
-I must not diminish my anxiety or activity; my hope can only be
-sustained in proportion to my vigour in the contest; success must
-depend upon my unbending resolution and unabating constancy: the
-victory is not gained in the middle of the course, and cannot be
-gained till it is finished.</p>
-<p>Many of us, no doubt, are aware, that the apostles, as well as
-our blessed Lord, were in the habit of drawing their observations
-and modes of instruction from the common transactions of daily
-life; from the circumstances, by which they were surrounded; from
-the manners and customs of the people, amongst whom they <a
-name="page409"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-409</span>sojourned.&nbsp; Thus, when our Lord called Peter and
-Andrew, who were fishermen, to be His disciples, He said,
-&ldquo;Follow me and I will make you fishers of men.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-And St. Paul, on the occasion before us, alludes to certain games
-or sports, generally celebrated, and highly esteemed by the
-people, whom he was addressing.&nbsp; One of these games was the
-foot-race, in which a number of competitors contended together
-for the prize; and, in the result of which, they and their
-friends were deeply interested.&nbsp; Severe was the previous
-training, which it was necessary for them to undergo; and great
-and persevering the exertion necessary, in order to gain the
-prize.&nbsp; It would readily occur to their minds, that if the
-racer, who was out-stripping his opponents, were so to please
-himself by the advantage he had gained, by thinking of the ground
-he had successfully gone over, as to relinquish his efforts, as
-to stop and look back upon his wonderful feats, and indolently
-enjoy his satisfaction, that, by such folly he would soon lose
-his superiority, <a name="page410"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-410</span>that his past endeavours would have been to little or
-no purpose; it would be perfectly manifest to them, that nothing
-could ensure his success, but the continuance of that activity,
-which had placed him foremost in the trial.</p>
-<p>Agreeably to this view and this figure, the apostle took his
-resolution, and formed his principle and conduct in the christian
-race.&nbsp; &ldquo;This one thing I do;&rdquo; this is the
-unswerving purpose of my soul, this the plan and object by which
-my whole course is constantly regulated; &ldquo;forgetting those
-things which are behind, and reaching forth, (stretching out and
-forward all the faculties of my body and soul) to those things
-which are before, I press toward the mark.&rdquo;&nbsp; Great and
-successful as his attainments already were, he did not dwell upon
-them with a complacence and security, which should induce him to
-relax; on the contrary, he forgot them, in the comparison and
-prospect of the exertions which yet remained.</p>
-<p><a name="page411"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 411</span>And
-how much less reason have we, my brethren, to be satisfied with
-our past character, with any thing that we have already
-achieved.&nbsp; Woe to me! (may many of us say,) how large a
-portion of my time has been consumed in indifference and
-trifling! how long was it before I earnestly set out in the race
-at all! and even after it was begun, I proceeded carelessly and
-supinely, as if the prize had not been worth contending
-for.&nbsp; How idly and insufficiently did I prepare for the
-contest; expecting to gain the victory without a sacrifice or a
-struggle! yea, and perhaps the best of us may look rather with
-shame than satisfaction upon our christian attainments: how much
-further might we have advanced, than we have done, if we had
-commenced the good work in earlier life, or been more diligent:
-how much more enlightened might our minds have now been, had we
-more fervently sought, and more implicitly yielded to, the
-teaching of the Spirit of God; had we been more frequently and
-earnestly <a name="page412"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-412</span>&ldquo;searching the scriptures,&rdquo; more devout in
-meditation and more constant in prayer: how much more purified
-our hearts, and &ldquo;cleansed from all unrighteousness,&rdquo;
-by a more sincere and unqualified subjection to the divine will;
-how much higher our affections elevated, had they been more
-conversant with heaven; how much more firmly and blamelessly our
-feet have been fixed in the way of God&rsquo;s commandments, in
-all the blessed ordinances of the gospel, in the narrow path of
-life eternal, had we been more zealously and faithfully walking
-with God.&nbsp; Nearer should we have been drawn to Him, in
-holier and happier communion, had we not been so long, and so
-often, cold and remiss.</p>
-<p>No, my brethren, we have no reason to be dwelling, with such
-delight and confidence, upon the progress we have already made,
-as to feel ourselves privileged to be content.&nbsp; In no case,
-would this be considered the evidence of a true christian
-principle or view; in no case, <a name="page413"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 413</span>would it be the means of safety; nor
-even consistent with the hope of salvation; no, not even in an
-apostle; much less in us, whose faith is so weak, whose knowledge
-so moderate, whose resolutions so wavering, whose attainments so
-comparatively poor.&nbsp; On the contrary, we should sorrow over
-our past failings; be deeply affected on considering how far we
-have come short of what was required of us; and heartily desire
-and pray, that the grievous remembrance may stimulate us to fresh
-endeavours, with a &ldquo;new heart and a new spirit;&rdquo; that
-so we may be &ldquo;reaching forth to those things which are
-before.&rdquo;&nbsp; All that we have well done, and all that we
-have left undone, should have, for this purpose, the same effect;
-experiencing the blessed consequences of our holy labour, on the
-one hand, we should be animated and encouraged to persevere in
-the conflict, that we may gather thereby additional comfort and
-success; and sensible of our deficiencies, on the other hand, in
-a work of such inconceivable <a name="page414"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 414</span>and everlasting importance, we
-should be anxious to repair our neglect; and thankful for our
-opportunity of &ldquo;redeeming the time,&rdquo; and making
-further advances.</p>
-<p>Thank God, whatever our negligence may have been, all is not
-lost; the course is yet before us, and we may go onward in the
-spirit and strength of the Lord; the prize is yet before us, and
-it may be won.&nbsp; But it requires a full purpose of heart, a
-fixed determination, an undaunted courage, a strenuous exercise
-of every faculty and every nerve: all that we are, and have, must
-be devoted to the securing of the one great object.&nbsp; All the
-talents of reason, with which our Creator has endued us; all the
-energy of grace, with which our souls are supplied, must
-incessantly be brought to bear upon our high and holy
-calling.&nbsp; We must be daily and hourly proceeding; no
-lingering, longing looks upon the world we are leaving behind us;
-no loitering amid its vanities and follies; no backsliding to its
-sinful pleasures and <a name="page415"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 415</span>pursuits; no declining from the
-strict line of duty, as if it were become wearisome, as if it
-were not fully believed to be right or requisite: &ldquo;the just
-shall live by faith, but if any man draw back, my soul shall have
-no pleasure in him.&nbsp; But we are not of them who draw back
-unto perdition; but of them who believe to the saving of the
-soul.&rdquo; <a name="citation415"></a><a href="#footnote415"
-class="citation">[415]</a></p>
-<p>St. Paul says, &ldquo;I press toward the mark;&rdquo; alluding
-to the mark, or line, drawn across the end of the course, to shew
-where it terminated.&nbsp; The end of our course is death; that
-is the mark, to which we must constantly press; never, till we
-reach it, can our striving be over, can the victory be
-gained.&nbsp; If we perceive ourselves languishing or weary, if
-the enemy of our souls would tempt us, as he undoubtedly will do,
-to indolence or repose, let us instantly pray to our Almighty
-Father, for a double portion of His Holy Spirit, and he will
-enable us to renew our vigour, and maintain our
-stedfastness.&nbsp; <a name="page416"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 416</span>Yea, though the race be so
-protracted, that our limbs may be growing feeble with age, and
-our vital energies decaying, still we shall be inspirited with a
-courage and strength, that will be found abundantly sufficient;
-and as we near the end, our hopes will rise, and our prospect
-will brighten; the weakness of nature will be assisted and
-compensated by a merciful increase of faith; and we shall press
-onward, through the latter part of the trial, with holier
-confidence and fuller expectation.</p>
-<p>And all this, &ldquo;for the prize of our high calling in
-Christ Jesus.&rdquo;&nbsp; What was it, that led the people of
-former days, to enter into the list, and engage in the
-race?&nbsp; Why were they content to undergo such previous
-hardships and privations, in order to qualify them for the
-task?&nbsp; Why did they exert themselves in the contest, so
-laboriously and painfully, as if willing to sacrifice their lives
-in the struggle?&nbsp; It was for a little crown of withering
-leaves; for the honour of their countrymen&rsquo;s applause; <a
-name="page417"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 417</span>and the
-approval of their families and friends.&nbsp; How then do they
-put to shame the negligent and indifferent christian; him that
-refuses to train and labour for the conflict of life, for the
-cause of salvation!&nbsp; What is our prize? what are our
-objects? &ldquo;an incorruptible crown,&rdquo; a &ldquo;crown of
-glory that fadeth not away;&rdquo; an eternal inheritance in the
-heavens; the approbation of all good men; the welcome acclaim of
-a &ldquo;multitude of angels which no man can number;&rdquo; the
-approval, the everlasting reward of the Judge of our christian
-race.&nbsp; Are not these objects worthy of our supreme
-regard?&nbsp; Is not this worth contending for?&nbsp; Does it not
-demand all our attention, all our anxiety, all our watchfulness
-and diligence and labour?&nbsp; Should not our whole soul be
-devoted thereto?&nbsp; Ought it not to be, comparatively
-speaking, the sole purpose, for which we care to live and hope to
-die?</p>
-<p>Especially when we consider the consequences of our failure,
-in this great enterprise and work.&nbsp; He that lost the <a
-name="page418"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 418</span>earthly
-race, lost little; perhaps it was somewhat of an honour for him
-to have contended at all: but he, who loses the christian race,
-loses every thing; loses his own soul, his precious immortal
-soul; defeat will be ruin, eternal misery and perdition.&nbsp; He
-that lost the earthly prize on one occasion, might run for
-another on a future day: but when once the spiritual race is run,
-when we have arrived at the mark, at the goal, at the gate of
-death, no further trial will then be vouchsafed; there will never
-be another opportunity.&nbsp; Anxiously perhaps we may desire it;
-and resolve, as we find ourselves approaching to the border of
-eternity, that if we could be permitted to continue our race for
-a little season, we would &ldquo;use all diligence&rdquo; for a
-successful termination; to gain the great prize we appear to be
-losing: but the desire will be vain.&nbsp; We knew the nature of
-the prize before; we knew what was necessary in order to gain it;
-we declined and refused; we chose the broad and easy way of
-idleness and sin: the <a name="page419"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 419</span>night will be come, and there will
-be no more working.</p>
-<p>O that before, that long before this time shall come, all our
-hearts may be thoroughly fixed upon the high calling of our God;
-upon that blessed revelation of the gospel, which calls us to
-life and immortality.&nbsp; O that the heart of every hearer may
-be fixed this day, so as never to be diverted from the holy and
-heavenly purpose; so as to be filled with a zeal and ardour, that
-shall never be extinguished; with invincible courage, and
-irremovable confidence; so that we may never &ldquo;be weary of
-well-doing,&rdquo; but persevere unto the end.</p>
-<p>The Saviour, on His lofty throne, calls us by <i>His word</i>,
-which announces the glorious prize and the conditions of the
-race; by <i>His spirit</i>, &ldquo;which is striving with
-us;&rdquo; by His <i>heralds</i> and <i>messengers</i>, warning,
-animating, exhorting, persuading; He promises strength for the
-contest and victory in the end, to all who will engage in the
-great cause, with earnestness <a name="page420"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 420</span>and sincerity.&nbsp; Awake, arise,
-we have nothing to fear: &ldquo;the Lord is with us; who shall be
-against us?&rdquo; who shall let or hinder?&nbsp; Listen, listen
-to the invitation and the promise!&nbsp; Take them for your
-government and your comfort; &ldquo;so run as to obtain;&rdquo;
-so, that on arriving at the end of the christian course, you may
-be calmly delighted to behold, with the eye of faith the crown of
-victory and of glory, ready to be placed upon your head.&nbsp;
-Often indeed are we permitted to behold the evident superiority
-of grace, at the latter hour; the peculiar accordance of divine
-mercy and strength, triumphing over the weakness of expiring
-nature: many pious Christians have then openly exhibited the most
-undoubted and convincing tokens of heavenly assurance and
-support; their Lord thus manifestly affording them an
-anticipation of their &ldquo;crown of rejoicing,&rdquo; and
-cheering them before their dissolution.</p>
-<p>At this awful hour, there may be, and doubtless are,
-differences of spiritual experience <a name="page421"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 421</span>in different individuals: but
-whatever, when we are ceasing to labour, be the foretaste of that
-rest, &ldquo;which remaineth for the people of God;&rdquo;
-whatever, when we are setting our foot upon the goal, be the
-outward and visible sign of approaching glory; sure we may be, if
-faithful unto death, that we shall soon enter upon that rest and
-that glory; but a small moment is remaining: the prize is ready
-at our departure: heaven will rejoice over us; the spirits of
-just men made perfect, (many whose names we have honoured, some
-whom we have seen and loved) will rejoice over us; and <i>we</i>
-shall rejoice with them for ever.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">FINIS.</p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">J. GARDNER,
-PRINTER, BOLTON.</span></p>
-<h2>FOOTNOTES.</h2>
-<p><a name="footnotevii"></a><a href="#citationvii"
-class="footnote">[vii]</a>&nbsp; These Sermons, though written
-for particular Sundays, are most of them generally applicable;
-indeed all of them, with very slight alterations or
-omissions.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote4"></a><a href="#citation4"
-class="footnote">[4]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah, ix. 2.&nbsp; Matt. iv.
-16.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote5"></a><a href="#citation5"
-class="footnote">[5]</a>&nbsp; Eph. iv. 18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote7"></a><a href="#citation7"
-class="footnote">[7]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. i, 26&ndash;29.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote8"></a><a href="#citation8"
-class="footnote">[8]</a>&nbsp; Isai. xxvi. 19.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote9a"></a><a href="#citation9a"
-class="footnote">[9a]</a>&nbsp; Isai lii. 1&ndash;3.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote9b"></a><a href="#citation9b"
-class="footnote">[9b]</a>&nbsp; Isai. lx. 1&ndash;3.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote10"></a><a href="#citation10"
-class="footnote">[10]</a>&nbsp; Matt. ii. 1.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote12"></a><a href="#citation12"
-class="footnote">[12]</a>&nbsp; Matt. vi. 23.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote13"></a><a href="#citation13"
-class="footnote">[13]</a>&nbsp; 2 Cor. v. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote18"></a><a href="#citation18"
-class="footnote">[18]</a>&nbsp; John i. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote19"></a><a href="#citation19"
-class="footnote">[19]</a>&nbsp; Col. iii. 3.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote21"></a><a href="#citation21"
-class="footnote">[21]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. ii. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote23"></a><a href="#citation23"
-class="footnote">[23]</a>&nbsp; Eph. iii. 5&ndash;9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote26a"></a><a href="#citation26a"
-class="footnote">[26a]</a>&nbsp; John xvii. 5.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote26b"></a><a href="#citation26b"
-class="footnote">[26b]</a>&nbsp; Philipp. ii. 7.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote26c"></a><a href="#citation26c"
-class="footnote">[26c]</a>&nbsp; John i. 1. 14.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote29a"></a><a href="#citation29a"
-class="footnote">[29a]</a>&nbsp; 1 Tim. iii. 16.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote29b"></a><a href="#citation29b"
-class="footnote">[29b]</a>&nbsp; Rom. v. 8.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote29c"></a><a href="#citation29c"
-class="footnote">[29c]</a>&nbsp; 1 Pet. iii. 18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote32"></a><a href="#citation32"
-class="footnote">[32]</a>&nbsp; Prov. iii. 17.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote34a"></a><a href="#citation34a"
-class="footnote">[34a]</a>&nbsp; Matt. xxv. 34.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote34b"></a><a href="#citation34b"
-class="footnote">[34b]</a>&nbsp; 2 Pet. iii. 13.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote36"></a><a href="#citation36"
-class="footnote">[36]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp; Col. i. 12&ndash;20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote39"></a><a href="#citation39"
-class="footnote">[39]</a>&nbsp; Acts xv. 18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote43a"></a><a href="#citation43a"
-class="footnote">[43a]</a>&nbsp; Gen. vi. 3.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote43b"></a><a href="#citation43b"
-class="footnote">[43b]</a>&nbsp; 1 Pet. iii. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote50a"></a><a href="#citation50a"
-class="footnote">[50a]</a>&nbsp; Acts ix. 6.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote50b"></a><a href="#citation50b"
-class="footnote">[50b]</a>&nbsp; 1 Sam. iii. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote53a"></a><a href="#citation53a"
-class="footnote">[53a]</a>&nbsp; Matt. xxiv. 37&ndash;39.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote53b"></a><a href="#citation53b"
-class="footnote">[53b]</a>&nbsp; 2 Pet. iii. 5&ndash;7.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote54a"></a><a href="#citation54a"
-class="footnote">[54a]</a>&nbsp; 2 Pet. iii. 13, 14.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote54b"></a><a href="#citation54b"
-class="footnote">[54b]</a>&nbsp; 1 Thess. iv. 17.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote55"></a><a href="#citation55"
-class="footnote">[55]</a>&nbsp; Eph. iv. 30.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote57"></a><a href="#citation57"
-class="footnote">[57]</a>&nbsp; Heb. xi. 7.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote59"></a><a href="#citation59"
-class="footnote">[59]</a>&nbsp; Heb. vii. 26.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote60a"></a><a href="#citation60a"
-class="footnote">[60a]</a>&nbsp; Gen. vi. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote60b"></a><a href="#citation60b"
-class="footnote">[60b]</a>&nbsp; Psal. xvi. 8.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote60c"></a><a href="#citation60c"
-class="footnote">[60c]</a>&nbsp; Psal. cxix. 105.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote62a"></a><a href="#citation62a"
-class="footnote">[62a]</a>&nbsp; Gen. vi. 17, 18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote62b"></a><a href="#citation62b"
-class="footnote">[62b]</a>&nbsp; Gen. ix. 9&ndash;11.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote63"></a><a href="#citation63"
-class="footnote">[63]</a>&nbsp; Wells&rsquo;s Paraphr. on Gen.
-vi. 18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote65"></a><a href="#citation65"
-class="footnote">[65]</a>&nbsp; Gen. vii, viii.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote69"></a><a href="#citation69"
-class="footnote">[69]</a>&nbsp; Gen. viii. 13&ndash;21.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote71"></a><a href="#citation71"
-class="footnote">[71]</a>&nbsp; Ps. ciii. 1&ndash;4.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote73"></a><a href="#citation73"
-class="footnote">[73]</a>&nbsp; Psal. lxxxix. 37.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote75"></a><a href="#citation75"
-class="footnote">[75]</a>&nbsp; Rev. iv. 1&ndash;3.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote78"></a><a href="#citation78"
-class="footnote">[78]</a>&nbsp; Gen. xxxix. 1&ndash;4.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote80"></a><a href="#citation80"
-class="footnote">[80]</a>&nbsp; Gen. xxxix. 8.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote89a"></a><a href="#citation89a"
-class="footnote">[89a]</a>&nbsp; The season of Lent.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote89b"></a><a href="#citation89b"
-class="footnote">[89b]</a>&nbsp; Ps. cxxxix. 24.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote90a"></a><a href="#citation90a"
-class="footnote">[90a]</a>&nbsp; Heb. xii. 1.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote90b"></a><a href="#citation90b"
-class="footnote">[90b]</a>&nbsp; Rom. ii. 4.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote92"></a><a href="#citation92"
-class="footnote">[92]</a>&nbsp; Eph. vi. 10&ndash;13.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote96"></a><a href="#citation96"
-class="footnote">[96]</a>&nbsp; Luke xxiv. 15, 16.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote101"></a><a href="#citation101"
-class="footnote">[101]</a>&nbsp; Luke xxiv. 18&ndash;21.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote102"></a><a href="#citation102"
-class="footnote">[102]</a>&nbsp; Luke xxiv. 25, 26.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote103a"></a><a href="#citation103a"
-class="footnote">[103a]</a>&nbsp; Matt. xvi. 16.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote103b"></a><a href="#citation103b"
-class="footnote">[103b]</a>&nbsp; Luke xxiv. 27.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote104a"></a><a href="#citation104a"
-class="footnote">[104a]</a>&nbsp; Luke xxiv. 28, 29.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote104b"></a><a href="#citation104b"
-class="footnote">[104b]</a>&nbsp; Deut. vi. 7.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote105a"></a><a href="#citation105a"
-class="footnote">[105a]</a>&nbsp; Ps. xvi. 8.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote105b"></a><a href="#citation105b"
-class="footnote">[105b]</a>&nbsp; Matt. xvii. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote105c"></a><a href="#citation105c"
-class="footnote">[105c]</a>&nbsp; Luke xxiv. 30, 31.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote107"></a><a href="#citation107"
-class="footnote">[107]</a>&nbsp; Psal. cxix. 18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote108"></a><a href="#citation108"
-class="footnote">[108]</a>&nbsp; Phil. iii. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote113a"></a><a href="#citation113a"
-class="footnote">[113a]</a>&nbsp; Psal. lxiii. 1.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote113b"></a><a href="#citation113b"
-class="footnote">[113b]</a>&nbsp; Eph. iii. 18, 19.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote117a"></a><a href="#citation117a"
-class="footnote">[117a]</a>&nbsp; John ix. 4.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote117b"></a><a href="#citation117b"
-class="footnote">[117b]</a>&nbsp; Micah vi. 8.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote125"></a><a href="#citation125"
-class="footnote">[125]</a>&nbsp; Art. x.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote130a"></a><a href="#citation130a"
-class="footnote">[130a]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah lv. 6.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote130b"></a><a href="#citation130b"
-class="footnote">[130b]</a>&nbsp; Prov. i. 26.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote132"></a><a href="#citation132"
-class="footnote">[132]</a>&nbsp; Heb. iii. 15.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote136"></a><a href="#citation136"
-class="footnote">[136]</a>&nbsp; Psal. lxxiii. 25.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote137"></a><a href="#citation137"
-class="footnote">[137]</a>&nbsp; Second Sunday after Trinity.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote138a"></a><a href="#citation138a"
-class="footnote">[138a]</a>&nbsp; Psal. cxi. 10.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote138b"></a><a href="#citation138b"
-class="footnote">[138b]</a>&nbsp; Psal. lxxxv. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote138c"></a><a href="#citation138c"
-class="footnote">[138c]</a>&nbsp; Malach. iv. 2.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote138d"></a><a href="#citation138d"
-class="footnote">[138d]</a>&nbsp; Acts x. 35.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote138e"></a><a href="#citation138e"
-class="footnote">[138e]</a>&nbsp; Luke i. 50.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote139"></a><a href="#citation139"
-class="footnote">[139]</a>&nbsp; Psalm viii. 4.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote144"></a><a href="#citation144"
-class="footnote">[144]</a>&nbsp; Lev. xix. 2.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote145"></a><a href="#citation145"
-class="footnote">[145]</a>&nbsp; 1 Peter i. 15.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote148"></a><a href="#citation148"
-class="footnote">[148]</a>&nbsp; Rom. viii. 35&ndash;39.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote149a"></a><a href="#citation149a"
-class="footnote">[149a]</a>&nbsp; Heb. x. 22.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote149b"></a><a href="#citation149b"
-class="footnote">[149b]</a>&nbsp; Heb. vi. 11.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote150a"></a><a href="#citation150a"
-class="footnote">[150a]</a>&nbsp; Tit. ii. 4.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote150b"></a><a href="#citation150b"
-class="footnote">[150b]</a>&nbsp; Col. i. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote152"></a><a href="#citation152"
-class="footnote">[152]</a>&nbsp; 1 John iii. 2.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote158"></a><a href="#citation158"
-class="footnote">[158]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah xlv. 9, lxiv. 8.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote161a"></a><a href="#citation161a"
-class="footnote">[161a]</a>&nbsp; 1 Sam. ii. 6&ndash;9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote161b"></a><a href="#citation161b"
-class="footnote">[161b]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah lvi. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote161c"></a><a href="#citation161c"
-class="footnote">[161c]</a>&nbsp; Prov. xxiii. 5.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote168"></a><a href="#citation168"
-class="footnote">[168]</a>&nbsp; Psal. xxx. 5.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote169"></a><a href="#citation169"
-class="footnote">[169]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah liv. 7, 8.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote171"></a><a href="#citation171"
-class="footnote">[171]</a>&nbsp; Psal. exxvi. 5.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote174"></a><a href="#citation174"
-class="footnote">[174]</a>&nbsp; 2 Sam. xii. 1&ndash;5.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote177"></a><a href="#citation177"
-class="footnote">[177]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah v. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote178"></a><a href="#citation178"
-class="footnote">[178]</a>&nbsp; 1 Sam. xiii. 14; Acts xiii.
-22.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote179"></a><a href="#citation179"
-class="footnote">[179]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. ix. 27.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote181a"></a><a href="#citation181a"
-class="footnote">[181a]</a>&nbsp; Jeremiah xvii. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote181b"></a><a href="#citation181b"
-class="footnote">[181b]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. x. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote183"></a><a href="#citation183"
-class="footnote">[183]</a>&nbsp; Rom. vi. 1, 2.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote185"></a><a href="#citation185"
-class="footnote">[185]</a>&nbsp; 2 Pet. iii. 18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote188"></a><a href="#citation188"
-class="footnote">[188]</a>&nbsp; Lament. v. 21.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote192a"></a><a href="#citation192a"
-class="footnote">[192a]</a> Isaiah lxvi. 24.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote192b"></a><a href="#citation192b"
-class="footnote">[192b]</a>&nbsp; Dan. xii. 2.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote193a"></a><a href="#citation193a"
-class="footnote">[193a]</a>&nbsp; Jer. v.2; Is. vi. 10.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote193b"></a><a href="#citation193b"
-class="footnote">[193b]</a>&nbsp; Prov. viii. 36.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote193c"></a><a href="#citation193c"
-class="footnote">[193c]</a>&nbsp; Prov. xiv. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote194a"></a><a href="#citation194a"
-class="footnote">[194a]</a>&nbsp; Rom. viii. 13.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote194b"></a><a href="#citation194b"
-class="footnote">[194b]</a>&nbsp; Rev. ii. 11. xx. 14.&nbsp; Pol.
-Syn. in loco.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote195"></a><a href="#citation195"
-class="footnote">[195]</a>&nbsp; Ezek. xviii. 20&ndash;23.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote197"></a><a href="#citation197"
-class="footnote">[197]</a>&nbsp; Ezek. xviii. 21, 22.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote198a"></a><a href="#citation198a"
-class="footnote">[198a]</a>&nbsp; Heb. xi. 6.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote198b"></a><a href="#citation198b"
-class="footnote">[198b]</a>&nbsp; Habbak. ii. 4; Rom. i. 17; Gal.
-iii. 18; Heb. x. 38.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote199"></a><a href="#citation199"
-class="footnote">[199]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah i. 18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote200a"></a><a href="#citation200a"
-class="footnote">[200a]</a>&nbsp; 1 John ii. 1.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote200b"></a><a href="#citation200b"
-class="footnote">[200b]</a>&nbsp; 1 John i. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote200c"></a><a href="#citation200c"
-class="footnote">[200c]</a>&nbsp; 2 Pet. iii. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote200d"></a><a href="#citation200d"
-class="footnote">[200d]</a>&nbsp; John vi. 37.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote202"></a><a href="#citation202"
-class="footnote">[202]</a>&nbsp; Eph. v. 14.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote204"></a><a href="#citation204"
-class="footnote">[204]</a>&nbsp; Ezek. xviii. 24.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote205a"></a><a href="#citation205a"
-class="footnote">[205a]</a>&nbsp; Luke xi. 24&ndash;26.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote205b"></a><a href="#citation205b"
-class="footnote">[205b]</a>&nbsp; Heb. vi. 4.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote206a"></a><a href="#citation206a"
-class="footnote">[206a]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. x. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote206b"></a><a href="#citation206b"
-class="footnote">[206b]</a>&nbsp; 2 Pet. i. 10.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote206c"></a><a href="#citation206c"
-class="footnote">[206c]</a>&nbsp; Heb. x. 38.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote207a"></a><a href="#citation207a"
-class="footnote">[207a]</a>&nbsp; Rom. viii. 37.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote207b"></a><a href="#citation207b"
-class="footnote">[207b]</a>&nbsp; Rom. ix. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote207c"></a><a href="#citation207c"
-class="footnote">[207c]</a>&nbsp; Gen. xviii. 25.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote207d"></a><a href="#citation207d"
-class="footnote">[207d]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah xlv. 22.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote208a"></a><a href="#citation208a"
-class="footnote">[208a]</a>&nbsp; Rom. viii. 32.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote208b"></a><a href="#citation208b"
-class="footnote">[208b]</a>&nbsp; Tit. ii. 11.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote208c"></a><a href="#citation208c"
-class="footnote">[208c]</a>&nbsp; 1 John i. 7.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote208d"></a><a href="#citation208d"
-class="footnote">[208d]</a>&nbsp; Psalm lviii. 11.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote211"></a><a href="#citation211"
-class="footnote">[211]</a>&nbsp; Col. iii. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote213a"></a><a href="#citation213a"
-class="footnote">[213a]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah l. 10.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote213b"></a><a href="#citation213b"
-class="footnote">[213b]</a>&nbsp; Ezek. xxxiii. 11.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote214a"></a><a href="#citation214a"
-class="footnote">[214a]</a>&nbsp; Ezek. xi. 19, 20; xxxvi.
-26.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote214b"></a><a href="#citation214b"
-class="footnote">[214b]</a>&nbsp; Ezek. xviii. 31.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote214c"></a><a href="#citation214c"
-class="footnote">[214c]</a>&nbsp; Lev. xix, 2; Numb. xvi. 5; Heb.
-xii. 14.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote218"></a><a href="#citation218"
-class="footnote">[218]</a>&nbsp; John vi. 27.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote220"></a><a href="#citation220"
-class="footnote">[220]</a>&nbsp; Phil. ii. 12, 13.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote226a"></a><a href="#citation226a"
-class="footnote">[226a]</a>&nbsp; Luke i. 6.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote226b"></a><a href="#citation226b"
-class="footnote">[226b]</a>&nbsp; Tit. ii. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote227a"></a><a href="#citation227a"
-class="footnote">[227a]</a>&nbsp; Gen. ii. 7.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote227b"></a><a href="#citation227b"
-class="footnote">[227b]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. xii. 11.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote229a"></a><a href="#citation229a"
-class="footnote">[229a]</a>&nbsp; 2 Cor. v. 17.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote229b"></a><a href="#citation229b"
-class="footnote">[229b]</a>&nbsp; Rom. xii. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote229c"></a><a href="#citation229c"
-class="footnote">[229c]</a>&nbsp; Acts xxvi. 18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote231"></a><a href="#citation231"
-class="footnote">[231]</a>&nbsp; Prov. ix. 16.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote232a"></a><a href="#citation232a"
-class="footnote">[232a]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah xxv. 6.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote232b"></a><a href="#citation232b"
-class="footnote">[232b]</a>&nbsp; Luke xxii. 29, 30.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote233a"></a><a href="#citation233a"
-class="footnote">[233a]</a>&nbsp; Matt. iii. 8&ndash;10.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote233b"></a><a href="#citation233b"
-class="footnote">[233b]</a>&nbsp; Heb. iii. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote234a"></a><a href="#citation234a"
-class="footnote">[234a]</a>&nbsp; 2 Cor. iv. 4.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote234b"></a><a href="#citation234b"
-class="footnote">[234b]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah xliv. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote234c"></a><a href="#citation234c"
-class="footnote">[234c]</a>&nbsp; John iii. 19.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote236"></a><a href="#citation236"
-class="footnote">[236]</a>&nbsp; Joel ii. 28, 29; Acts ii. 17,
-18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote242a"></a><a href="#citation242a"
-class="footnote">[242a]</a>&nbsp; Acts iv. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote242b"></a><a href="#citation242b"
-class="footnote">[242b]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. iii. 11.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote243a"></a><a href="#citation243a"
-class="footnote">[243a]</a>&nbsp; Isaiah lv. 1&ndash;7.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote243b"></a><a href="#citation243b"
-class="footnote">[243b]</a>&nbsp; Zechar. xiii. 1.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote251a"></a><a href="#citation251a"
-class="footnote">[251a]</a>&nbsp; Rev. xxi. 23.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote251b"></a><a href="#citation251b"
-class="footnote">[251b]</a>&nbsp; Psalm xvi. 11.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote260"></a><a href="#citation260"
-class="footnote">[260]</a>&nbsp; 2 Cor. iii. 5.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote262"></a><a href="#citation262"
-class="footnote">[262]</a>&nbsp; Eph. iv. 1.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote265"></a><a href="#citation265"
-class="footnote">[265]</a>&nbsp; James ii. 10.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote267"></a><a href="#citation267"
-class="footnote">[267]</a>&nbsp; Matt. xiii. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote269"></a><a href="#citation269"
-class="footnote">[269]</a>&nbsp; 2 Pet. iii. 18.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote291"></a><a href="#citation291"
-class="footnote">[291]</a>&nbsp; Matt. xxiv. 3&ndash;8.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote302a"></a><a href="#citation302a"
-class="footnote">[302a]</a>&nbsp; Tit. ii. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote302b"></a><a href="#citation302b"
-class="footnote">[302b]</a>&nbsp; Gal. vi. 8</p>
-<p><a name="footnote304"></a><a href="#citation304"
-class="footnote">[304]</a>&nbsp; 2 Sam. 1. 23.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote305a"></a><a href="#citation305a"
-class="footnote">[305a]</a>&nbsp; Rom. viii. 6.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote305b"></a><a href="#citation305b"
-class="footnote">[305b]</a>&nbsp; Ezek. xviii. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote307"></a><a href="#citation307"
-class="footnote">[307]</a>&nbsp; Rom. ii. 16.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote308"></a><a href="#citation308"
-class="footnote">[308]</a>&nbsp; 2 Cor. v. 10.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote309"></a><a href="#citation309"
-class="footnote">[309]</a>&nbsp; Thess. iv. 17.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote311"></a><a href="#citation311"
-class="footnote">[311]</a>&nbsp; Eccl. i. 14, 15.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote314"></a><a href="#citation314"
-class="footnote">[314]</a>&nbsp; Gen. i. 31.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote315"></a><a href="#citation315"
-class="footnote">[315]</a>&nbsp; Gen. i. 27.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote317"></a><a href="#citation317"
-class="footnote">[317]</a>&nbsp; 1 John ii. 16.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote322"></a><a href="#citation322"
-class="footnote">[322]</a>&nbsp; Jer. xlv. 5.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote327a"></a><a href="#citation327a"
-class="footnote">[327a]</a>&nbsp; Gen. ii. 16, 17</p>
-<p><a name="footnote327b"></a><a href="#citation327b"
-class="footnote">[327b]</a>&nbsp; Acts xvi. 31.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote327c"></a><a href="#citation327c"
-class="footnote">[327c]</a>&nbsp; Col. iii. 2.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote328a"></a><a href="#citation328a"
-class="footnote">[328a]</a>&nbsp; Jer. ii. 13.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote328b"></a><a href="#citation328b"
-class="footnote">[328b]</a>&nbsp; Rom. xii. 2.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote328c"></a><a href="#citation328c"
-class="footnote">[328c]</a>&nbsp; Rom. vi. 22.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote331a"></a><a href="#citation331a"
-class="footnote">[331a]</a>&nbsp; Prov. ii. 6. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote331b"></a><a href="#citation331b"
-class="footnote">[331b]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. ii. 9.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote334"></a><a href="#citation334"
-class="footnote">[334]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. ii. 13, 14.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote338"></a><a href="#citation338"
-class="footnote">[338]</a>&nbsp; John xiv. 21&ndash;26.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote341"></a><a href="#citation341"
-class="footnote">[341]</a>&nbsp; Heb. vi. 5.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote342"></a><a href="#citation342"
-class="footnote">[342]</a>&nbsp; Matt. v. 4.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote347"></a><a href="#citation347"
-class="footnote">[347]</a>&nbsp; Prov. iv. 18, 19.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote348"></a><a href="#citation348"
-class="footnote">[348]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. xiii. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote358"></a><a href="#citation358"
-class="footnote">[358]</a>&nbsp; Col. ii. 5.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote364"></a><a href="#citation364"
-class="footnote">[364]</a>&nbsp; Matt. xxvi. 41.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote365a"></a><a href="#citation365a"
-class="footnote">[365a]</a>&nbsp; 2 Tim. ii. 26.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote365b"></a><a href="#citation365b"
-class="footnote">[365b]</a>&nbsp; 1 Pet. iv. 7.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote367a"></a><a href="#citation367a"
-class="footnote">[367a]</a>&nbsp; John 11. 35, 36.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote367b"></a><a href="#citation367b"
-class="footnote">[367b]</a>&nbsp; John xiii. 23; xxi. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote373"></a><a href="#citation373"
-class="footnote">[373]</a>&nbsp; Psal. xxviii. 10.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote374a"></a><a href="#citation374a"
-class="footnote">[374a]</a>&nbsp; Rom. viii. 29.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote374b"></a><a href="#citation374b"
-class="footnote">[374b]</a>&nbsp; 1 Cor. xv. 20.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote374c"></a><a href="#citation374c"
-class="footnote">[374c]</a>&nbsp; 1 Joh. iii. 12.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote374d"></a><a href="#citation374d"
-class="footnote">[374d]</a>&nbsp; Luke xx. 36.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote377"></a><a href="#citation377"
-class="footnote">[377]</a>&nbsp; John xiv. 15&ndash;21.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote379"></a><a href="#citation379"
-class="footnote">[379]</a>&nbsp; 1 Tim. v. 8.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote384"></a><a href="#citation384"
-class="footnote">[384]</a>&nbsp; Matt. xxv. 40.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote395"></a><a href="#citation395"
-class="footnote">[395]</a>&nbsp; 1 Sam. xiv. 6.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote401"></a><a href="#citation401"
-class="footnote">[401]</a>&nbsp; I will make my thankful
-acknowledgments to the Lord, not only with my lips, or with some
-slight affections of my mind, but with all my heart and soul; and
-that not only in the private society of those good men, whom I am
-more intimately acquainted withal, but in the public congregation
-of all His people.&mdash;<i>Bishop Patrick</i>.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote403"></a><a href="#citation403"
-class="footnote">[403]</a>&nbsp; Rev. xv. 3.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote405"></a><a href="#citation405"
-class="footnote">[405]</a>&nbsp; Ezek. xxxiii. 13.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote415"></a><a href="#citation415"
-class="footnote">[415]</a>&nbsp; Heb. x. 38, 39.</p>
-<pre>
-
-
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