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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63763 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63763)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Prospects of the Church of England, by
-Charles John Vaughan
-
-
-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: Prospects of the Church of England
- a sermon
-
-
-Author: Charles John Vaughan
-
-
-
-Release Date: November 14, 2020 [eBook #63763]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROSPECTS OF THE CHURCH OF
-ENGLAND***
-
-
-Transcribed from the 1868 Bell and Daldy edition by David Price.
-
-
-
-
-
- _PROSPECTS OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND_.
-
-
- A SERMON
-
- PREACHED IN THE
-
- PARISH CHURCH OF DONCASTER,
-
- ON SUNDAY EVENING, AUGUST 30, 1868,
-
- ON THE OCCASION OF THE FIRST OFFERTORY IN
- LIEU OF A CHURCH-RATE.
-
- * * * * *
-
- BY
-
- C. J. VAUGHAN, D.D.
-
- VICAR OF DONCASTER.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Published by Request_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON:
- BELL AND DALDY, YORK STREET,
- COVENT GARDEN.
- 1868.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-THIS Sermon was preached in the common course of the Sunday Services, and
-without any idea of its being noticed beyond the circle of its hearers.
-As, however, the interest of the subject, far more, certainly, than
-anything in its treatment, has called some attention to the Sermon since
-its delivery, I have thought it right to comply with the request of some
-respected members of the Congregation, and commit it to the chances of
-publication. In so doing, I have made no attempt to supply its many
-deficiencies, nor have I even removed from its opening sentences an
-allusion to other Sermons of which it formed the continuation.
-
-DONCASTER,
- _September_ 4, 1868.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-A SERMON.
-
-
- Why repair ye not the breaches of the house?
-
- 2 _Kings_ xii. 7.
-
-THE House is the Temple. We have travelled, therefore, from the north to
-the south of Palestine, from the capital of Israel to the capital of
-Judah. As soon as the two great prophets, Elijah and Elisha, are no
-more, the interest of the story centres no longer in the kingdom of the
-ten tribes: it reverts to the stock of David, and finds its latest gleam
-of beauty and glory in the national reformations and personal pieties of
-Hezekiah and Josiah.
-
-Elisha is not yet dead: but he has ceased to occupy the sacred page after
-the anointing of Jehu, until he appears once more, and finally, in the
-striking incidents of his death-bed and his grave.
-
-Meanwhile that Baal-worship which Jehu has extirpated in the north, has
-found refuge in the southern realm, under the fostering patronage of a
-daughter of the house of Ahab. Jehoram, son of Jehoshaphat, had married
-a second Jezebel, in the person of her daughter Athaliah. Jehoram
-reigned eight years, and was succeeded by his son Ahaziah, who perished,
-as we read last Sunday, with his uncle Jehoram, son of Ahab, king of
-Israel, under the hand of the avenging Jehu, the scourge of God.
-
-Then Athaliah, seeing that her son was dead, determined to reign for
-herself. She was one of those masculine spirits, one of those heroines
-of pride and crime, who can brook no puny, infant sovereigns; she could
-not live to be ruled by a grandchild; and so she took the decisive step
-of _destroying all the seed royal_, after which, it is said, _Athaliah_,
-late the queen-mother, _did reign over the land_.
-
-But it is seldom, on this earth—which is still God’s, however much, at
-certain times, the devil may claim it for his own—it is seldom, I say,
-that crime is quite prosperous, quite thorough: something is forgotten in
-every murder, which rises at last into a testimony; and some one, some
-little babe perhaps, is overlooked in every massacre; there is a sister,
-it may be, or an aunt—as it was here—whose heart yearns over that little
-cradle, and who contrives to rescue its unconscious occupant to be the
-heir of the throne and the avenger of the family.
-
-Such was King Joash; rescued by his aunt Jehosheba from her own mother’s
-fury, and by her hidden, during six years of earliest childhood, in one
-of the chambers of the Temple—for she was the wife of Jehoiada, the High
-Priest.
-
-In his seventh year, there was a conspiracy, a revolution, and a
-coronation. The little King was _shown_ to the people in the
-temple-court, the crown was put upon him, the testimony (or book of the
-law) was given him, he was made and he was anointed, and all the people
-_clapped their hands_, _and said_, _God save the king_. And when the
-usurping grandmother, attracted by the tumult, came upon the scene, with
-the cry, _Treason_, _treason_! the High Priest _had her forth without the
-ranges_; she was allowed to pass unmolested through the crowd and through
-the guard, till she was outside the consecrated ground; and there she was
-slain.
-
-This was the curious, memorable entrance of the little King Joash upon a
-reign of forty years in Jerusalem. You can imagine how that scene must
-have printed itself on his memory. It must have given a strange, a
-solemn importance to the house of God, and all its belongings. The
-recollection of that sudden command, given by the High Priest, his uncle,
-preserver, and king-maker, _Have her forth without the ranges_, must have
-written upon his heart an indelible impression of the sacredness of that
-spot which could thus arrest revolution and make the most righteous doom
-impious. You will not wonder, therefore, if his young thoughts were
-first turned, as a Sovereign, to the wretched, the dilapidated state of
-the Temple itself. It appears that, on the one hand, there were long,
-careless arrears of temple income: people had grown indifferent to the
-payment of their most unquestionable dues to the Altar and the
-Priesthood: on the other hand, there was a positive as well as a negative
-defalcation; for on that sacred height of Mount Zion there had arisen,
-side by side with God’s Temple, a rival shrine of Baal; and the
-idolatress Athaliah, with her creatures, seems to have taken from the one
-to build the other: in short, the very foundation and wall-stones of the
-Holy House had been gradually pillaged and carted away, and the House
-itself stood a monument at once of modern shame and ancestral glory,
-needing the builder’s hand to restore it to decency and even to safety.
-
-As for the vessels of the House—all those costly priceless treasures with
-which the wealth and piety of king Solomon had filled it—they had gone,
-bit by bit, to buy off the annoyances of powerful neighbours: King
-Rehoboam, at the very outset of the schism, had given Shishak Solomon’s
-shields of gold, and replaced them with pitiful shameful shields of
-brass: it was too late, or too soon, to think of ornament—the present
-question was one entirely of use and substantial repair.
-
-It seems that even the efforts and injunctions of the young King were for
-many years ineffectual. In the twenty-third year of his reign the old
-breaches were still unrepaired. It is astonishing—men would not believe
-till they had tried it—how long it takes to re-awaken one slumbering
-conscience, or indeed to make one desired work of reparation, be it never
-so small—we see it ourselves at this moment in a side-chapel of this
-Church—a fact accomplished. And so King Joash, stung to the soul by the
-disappointment of his own good intentions, summons before him Jehoiada
-the Priest, his own uncle and benefactor, and expostulates with him and
-his brother-priests in the words of the text, _Why repair ye not the
-breaches of the House_?
-
-And the result of it is, that, instead of leaving the money received for
-this purpose in the unaccountable hands of the Priests, they have a chest
-made, with a hole bored in the lid of it, and set beside the altar; and
-the Priests are to put all the money which they receive into this chest;
-and then they have a civil auditor, the King’s scribe, a sort of
-Secretary of State, to act with the High Priest in counting and applying
-the sums thus accumulated, and so it passes direct into the hands of the
-carpenters and builders, and the work is done.
-
-My brethren, you will all perceive why I chose this text this evening,
-when we are making our first collection, under altered circumstances, for
-the more substantial part of our annual expenditure upon this Church. It
-is true, this House of Prayer is not in all respects like Solomon’s
-Temple: I mean that, in Christian times, it is not the fabric, it is the
-Congregation, which is the Temple or House of God. Nevertheless, without
-a fabric a congregation is a rope of sand: there must be a place if there
-is to be a worship: and therefore the distinction, though true, may be
-overstrained; and I am not afraid to apply to this Church, the building I
-mean, the expostulation of King Joash with Jehoiada and the Priests, _Why
-repair ye not the breaches of the House_?
-
-I have not, indeed, one moment’s anxiety as to your response. You love
-_the place_, this place at least, _where God’s honour dwelleth_. I
-believe that your periodical offerings on this monthly occasion will be
-almost, or perhaps quite, equal to those which you make for any work of
-piety or charity: and I may remind you that there is an especial reason
-why your offerings should be large at the outset, inasmuch as already
-four months are gone by of the current year, and we have to supply in
-eight months the resources (as they hereafter will be) of twelve.
-
-But on this point I feel an entire security. You will never allow those
-who undertake the office of your Churchwardens to incur any
-responsibility but such as you cheerfully guarantee to them. I will
-rather take the opportunity of saying one word upon the more general
-question.
-
-We have never in this place—certainly not for many years past—laid a
-compulsory church-rate. We have always allowed those who would to refuse
-payment. Even when the law was clearly with us, we have never taken
-advantage of it. So far, we might, if we would, have regarded the new
-Act as confirming and stereotyping our own local custom.
-
-But there were these two differences. We could no longer carry with us
-the influence, the persuasion, of an unenforced compulsion. We could no
-longer say, as heretofore, He _that may command_, _entreats_. Henceforth
-it was lawful to refuse.
-
-Again, we could no longer extend our payments over the whole Town; and,
-with whatever abatements from caprice or principle, hope to enlist, in
-the work of reparation or maintenance, the sympathies of an entire
-population.
-
-It became necessary, therefore, that we should look to the Congregation
-alone; and, in one form or in another, ask those to support, who really
-love and use, this House of God.
-
-Hence our appeal to you this evening. And if on future occasions the
-appeal is commonly made to you in silence, without special enforcement
-from this place, yet let me hope that you will all register it in your
-minds as a just claim, and not suffer these periodical gatherings to lose
-their interest or to fail in their amount.
-
-_Why repair ye not the breaches of the House_? The subject expands
-itself before us, and we read the remonstrance as applying no longer to
-the fabric, but rather to these three larger and more sacred topics, the
-Congregation, the Church, the soul.
-
-1. That anxiety which we do not feel about the fabric, for we are sure
-that you will attend to it, we cannot stifle as regards the Congregation.
-
-For indeed it is this which makes the House. The building is only
-valuable, only significant, for the sake of the inmates. When it is
-asked of us, _Why repair ye not the bleaches of the House_? we may look
-up indeed at our broken pinnacles, our not watertight roof, our falling
-flowers, our patchwork pomegranates, and think that these too require
-attention or deserve reproach; but, after all, these are not the real
-things; these altogether make not the House; the House, the Temple, now,
-in these days of spirit and Gospel, is the community, the congregation,
-the living body within. How is it with this? Are there no breaches
-here, visible not to an eye of flesh, but to One who seeth in secret?
-
-For example, my brethren, is there not too great a disproportion here
-between the real and the nominal worshippers? Is it not lamentable, is
-it not even discreditable, that so many should be present at one Service
-once on the Lord’s Day, and so few at any other Service either on this
-Holy Day or on any other? that so many should come together here this
-evening to listen to music or preaching, so few to pray and to praise, so
-few to break the Holy Bread, or to drink the Sacred Wine? Is not this
-one of the _breaches of the House_, the spiritual house, which wants
-_repairing_ amongst us?
-
-2. But this carries me on to a somewhat wider field, which I have called
-not the Congregation, but the Church. And here, as is natural indeed in
-these eventful, these quickly moving times, my thoughts are upon our own
-Church, that communion which is the congregation of congregations; that
-communion which we have heretofore known as the Church of England by law
-established.
-
-So rapid has been the course of events in late years—I might single out
-the last ten, or the last five, or (quite by exception) the last year of
-all—that Church-people must prepare themselves, I feel sure, for a
-speedy, a scarcely gradual, demolition of all that has been distinctive,
-all that has been exceptionally advantageous, in their position. An
-eminent man and excellent Bishop, who was laid in his grave last Friday,
-was wont to say, _If I live ten years_, _I shall be the last Bishop of
-Peterborough_. It is more than probable that some of my younger hearers
-this evening may live not only to see what we call the Church of England
-thrown altogether upon voluntary offerings for its maintenance—in which
-case some of them may remember in old age the first collection made in
-the Parish Church of Doncaster for the repairs of its fabric and the
-expences of its services—but also to find it at least an open, perhaps a
-very doubtful, question, to whom shall belong the Churches themselves and
-the glebe-houses—whether indeed there shall be left to the old Church of
-England, as we still fondly call it, any vestige of that legal standing
-which has made her hitherto the calm shelter of her children, the
-admiring wonder of foreigners, and the mark of obloquy or envy (as the
-case might be) to thousands of her domestic enemies.
-
-I am far from regarding this prospect—be it far off or near—with unmixed
-alarm or dismay. I never believed that the Establishment, as such, was
-Christ’s Church in England, or that the withdrawal of the favour of the
-State would be the putting out in our communion of the Divine Shechinah.
-It is not so much for the Church that I fear: for I firmly believe
-Christ’s words, _Lo_, _I am with you alway_, and doubt not that the old,
-the everlasting benediction is able to repeat itself in many new, many
-diverse forms. I do fear something for the State, when it ceases to have
-a religion. I do fear something for the average tone of religion in our
-cottages and in our palaces, when there is no longer one form of worship
-which has upon it the stamp of pedigree and of custom; when it is an
-evenly balanced question with every man and with every family, _Whither
-shall I go this day for God’s worship_? _whither_, _or whether any
-whither_? I do fear that there will be more and more in many houses of a
-cold indifferent scepticism, a Christless education and a Godless life.
-I do fear that more and more may reach old age ignorant of a Saviour, and
-go to their graves without any sure and certain hope of a resurrection to
-eternal life.
-
-For the Church itself I fear not. In so far as the Church of England (so
-called) has had Christ in her and God with her, she is indestructible and
-immortal. In so far as she has trusted in outward advantage, and
-suffered herself, in her priests or in her people, to become sluggish,
-lukewarm, contemptuous, or persecuting—in so far let a change into
-adversity—God grant it—reform her. The great question for all of us, in
-our several stations, more especially in the days which are now coming,
-or almost come, upon our Church, must be this one of the text, _Why
-repair ye not the breaches of the House_?
-
-Let the Priests of the Temple ask it—ask it of themselves—Are they
-trusting at all in the advantages of an Establishment, and negligent, in
-the same degree, of that personal industry, of that individual
-self-sacrifice, which alone can justify their endowment, maintain their
-honour, or do their work? If the Established Church of England, as such,
-be swept away, then, along with it, will go all idle, inconsistent,
-scandalous Ministers: those who are to serve at God’s Altar afterwards
-must be only such as are respected by their people: let it not have to be
-said that England would gain as much as she loses by ceasing to have an
-endowed, an established Ministry, inasmuch as, quite as often as not, the
-Parish Minister was an indolent, an unworthy, or an inefficient man!
-This is the way in which the Priests must set themselves to repair the
-Temple-breaches.
-
-Then for the People. To what end does a Church exist amongst us? To
-what purpose this costly, this almost magnificent apparatus of vestment
-and ritual, of Cathedral Church and elaborate minstrelsy? Does it mean
-anything, or nothing? If it represents to the country, in symbol and
-form, the wants of man’s soul, and the absolute necessity of a Divine
-communion, then prove it by the using! Do not talk of the duty of the
-State, of the rights of the Church, of Apostolical Succession and an
-authorized Ministry—and never use any! When the Church of England
-ceases, with our will or without it, to be an established, privileged, or
-favoured Church at all; then, how many of you will be found to come
-forward in its maintenance? How many of you will worship here, when
-there is no longer any traditional or conventional propriety in doing so?
-How many will accept their position, in reference to man, as only one out
-of fifty or a hundred denominations—treat with all respect and charity
-others who follow not with them—and yet, for themselves, become but the
-more earnest and devout Churchmen, in proportion as State aid and legal
-endowment become things of the past—things, it may be, of remote and
-almost forgotten history?
-
-And, meanwhile, let me ask this of the Churchmen here assembled this
-evening, Are we half as liberal—I ask it advisedly—in giving for the
-maintenance of our Church, as are many bodies of Nonconformists in their
-offerings for theirs? You know that we are not. Let us look about us in
-this matter. Let us rise to the emergency. Show that you value your
-Church, by giving bountifully in her behalf. If the Church is what you
-profess it to be, surely it is worth something, something even of
-self-sacrifice, to maintain it in its efficiency. You know that there
-are many amongst us to whom the Church costs nothing. On one pretext and
-another, they evade all her burdens. They grudge the very rents of their
-sittings; and if those rents were exchanged to-morrow (as I would they
-were) for Offertories, still they would give nothing. My brethren, these
-things ought not so to be. By this grudging, this ungenerous spirit, we
-are drawing down upon ourselves, as a judgment, the sentence of
-disestablishment and disendowment. Be it not so amongst us! Count no
-money better spent than that which is given for the repairing of the
-breaches of this House; meaning now by the House, not only or chiefly the
-fabric, but rather the purpose for which the fabric stands—the
-edification and salvation of human souls. Above all, see that you
-rightly, earnestly, industriously use the means of grace herein afforded
-you. What would not they give, who are gone from us this last week by
-disease or accident, unrepentant, unredeemed, for one such feast of love
-as was accepted this morning by but six and twenty souls—for one such
-opportunity as we have enjoyed this evening of drawing nigh to the Throne
-of Grace through our one Divine Lord?
-
-3. Thus, then, we pass naturally, in conclusion, to that House, or
-Temple of God, which is of all the most intimate, the most sacred, the
-most inaccessible; yet in which, if anywhere, the true fire burns of an
-acceptable sacrifice—the real altar is built of lively, living, devoted
-stones. That House is the soul; and it, too, has its _breaches_. Yes,
-we know it. That Temple—which ought to _lie four-square_, which ought to
-have everything in its place, which ought to be gleaming with the fire of
-the Holy Ghost, and adorned with the precious stones of a meek and quiet
-and pure and Godward spirit—that Temple, of which the light ought to be
-shining through into the life, and making every act and word and thought
-gracious and beneficent and God-recalling—that Temple is all jagged and
-disordered and spotted and sin-stained—that Temple lets its altar-fire go
-out every half-hour, and suffers _a darkness that may be felt_ to settle
-down upon its chambers—making unbelievers at last say, _If that be
-faith_, _give me reason_; _if that be piety_, _give me conscience_; _if
-that indeed be religion_, _let me know only the heathen’s revelation_—_of
-good sense_, _good nature_, _and an elevated self-love_!
-
-_Why repair ye not the breaches of the House_?
-
-Do we answer, _I cannot_? It is a reproach, it is a calumny, upon the
-Gospel of Divine grace. That is the very revelation of the Gospel—_God
-giveth more grace_: more, as we need more; more, as we ask more; more, as
-we look and wait and make room for more. I _cannot_? No; but God can.
-_Ask_, _and ye shall have_.
-
-Or do we answer, _I need not_? _I am well enough as I am_—_God is very
-merciful_—_He knows our frame_, _and whatever deficiencies He sees in
-me_, _Christ will make them up_? Alas! it is too often the evangelical
-reply—if not with the lips, then in the heart! Christ died to make sin
-less sinful, to make sin less dangerous, by substituting a figment of
-justification for a reality of holiness, watchfulness, and self-control!
-Thus even the Blessed Lord Himself is made _a minister of sin_, and man
-turns the very table of his blessing into a new occasion of falling!
-
-Or do we answer, finally, _I will not_? _I love the breaches of my
-soul’s house_; _I do not wish that the gusts of passion should be fenced
-out_; _I do not wish that there should be no crack or cranny through
-which I may peep out on the world’s vanities_, _nor any secret neglected
-postern through which some delicious delirious lust may creep in to
-intoxicate me_? Oh! worst of all, most hopeless, this last answer—the
-answer of many consciences, will they but speak, in this great
-Congregation; the answer which not only virtually denies, but wilfully
-refuses, the Gospel; which makes the Cross an offence, and Christ to have
-died in vain!
-
-May it please God, by some one of His thousand, His myriad agencies, to
-make us feel! to bring us to our knees in hearty repentance before Him;
-and then, even as it is written, _humbling ourselves_ first _under His
-mighty hand_, at last to _exalt us in due time_!
-
-
-
-
-_RECENT WORKS BY DR. C. J. VAUGHAN_.
-
-
-THE CHURCH OF THE FIRST DAYS. Lectures on the Acts of the Apostles. I.
-THE CHURCH OF JERUSALEM, SECOND EDITION. II. THE CHURCH OF THE
-GENTILES. SECOND EDITION. III. THE CHURCH OF THE WORLD. SECOND
-EDITION. Fcap. 8vo, cloth, price 4_s._ 6_d._ each.
-
-LECTURES ON THE REVELATION OF ST. JOHN. SECOND EDITION. Two Vols. crown
-8vo, price 15_s._
-
-WORDS FROM THE GOSPELS. Sermons preached in the Parish Church of
-Doncaster. NEW EDITION. Fcap. 8vo, price 4_s._ 6_d._
-
-NOTES FOR LECTURES ON CONFIRMATION. With suitable Prayers. SIXTH
-EDITION. 1_s._ 6_d._
-
-LECTURES ON THE EPISTLE TO THE PHILIPPIANS. SECOND EDITION. Price 7_s._
-6_d._
-
-EPIPHANY, LENT, AND EASTER. A Selection of Expository Sermons. THIRD
-EDITION, REVISED. Crown 8vo, 10_s._ 6_d._
-
-TWELVE DISCOURSES on Subjects connected with the Liturgy and Worship of
-the Church of England. Price 6_s._
-
-THE BOOK AND THE LIFE: and other Sermons preached before the University
-of Cambridge. NEW EDITION. Fcap. 8vo, 4_s._ 6_d._
-
-MEMORIALS OF HARROW SUNDAYS. A Selection of Sermons preached in Harrow
-School Chapel. With a View of the Chapel. FOURTH EDITION. Crown 8vo,
-10_s._ 6_d._
-
-ST. PAUL’S EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. The Greek Text, with English Notes.
-THIRD EDITION. (In the Press.) Crown 8vo, 5_s._
-
-LESSONS OF LIFE AND GODLINESS. A Selection of Sermons preached in the
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-
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Prospects of the Church of England, by
-Charles John Vaughan
-
-
-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: Prospects of the Church of England
- a sermon
-
-
-Author: Charles John Vaughan
-
-
-
-Release Date: November 14, 2020 [eBook #63763]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROSPECTS OF THE CHURCH OF
-ENGLAND***
-</pre>
-<p>Transcribed from the 1868 Bell and Daldy edition by David
-Price.</p>
-<h1><span class="GutSmall"><i>PROSPECTS OF THE CHURCH OF
-ENGLAND</i></span>.</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center"><b>A SERMON</b></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">PREACHED IN
-THE</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">PARISH CHURCH OF DONCASTER,</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">ON SUNDAY
-EVENING, AUGUST 30, 1868,</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">ON THE
-OCCASION OF THE FIRST OFFERTORY IN</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">LIEU OF A CHURCH-RATE.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">BY</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">C. J. VAUGHAN, D.D.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">VICAR OF
-DONCASTER.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><i>Published by Request</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:<br />
-BELL AND DALDY, YORK STREET,<br />
-COVENT GARDEN.<br />
-1868.</p>
-<h2><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-3</span>PREFACE.</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">This</span> Sermon was preached in the
-common course of the Sunday Services, and without any idea of its
-being noticed beyond the circle of its hearers.&nbsp; As,
-however, the interest of the subject, far more, certainly, than
-anything in its treatment, has called some attention to the
-Sermon since its delivery, I have thought it right to comply with
-the request of some respected members of the Congregation, and
-commit it to the chances of publication.&nbsp; In so doing, I
-have made no attempt to supply its many deficiencies, nor have I
-even removed from its opening sentences an allusion to other
-Sermons of which it formed the continuation.</p>
-<p><span class="smcap">Doncaster</span>,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>September</i>
-4, 1868.</p>
-<p><a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 4</span></p>
-<h2><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>A
-SERMON.</h2>
-<blockquote><p>Why repair ye not the breaches of the house?</p>
-<p style="text-align: right">2 <i>Kings</i> xii. 7.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> House is the Temple.&nbsp; We
-have travelled, therefore, from the north to the south of
-Palestine, from the capital of Israel to the capital of
-Judah.&nbsp; As soon as the two great prophets, Elijah and
-Elisha, are no more, the interest of the story centres no longer
-in the kingdom of the ten tribes: it reverts to the stock of
-David, and finds its latest gleam of beauty and glory in the
-national reformations and personal pieties of Hezekiah and
-Josiah.</p>
-<p>Elisha is not yet dead: but he has ceased to occupy the sacred
-page after the anointing of Jehu, until he appears once more, and
-finally, in the striking incidents of his death-bed and his
-grave.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile that Baal-worship which Jehu has extirpated in the
-north, has found refuge in the <a name="page6"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 6</span>southern realm, under the fostering
-patronage of a daughter of the house of Ahab.&nbsp; Jehoram, son
-of Jehoshaphat, had married a second Jezebel, in the person of
-her daughter Athaliah.&nbsp; Jehoram reigned eight years, and was
-succeeded by his son Ahaziah, who perished, as we read last
-Sunday, with his uncle Jehoram, son of Ahab, king of Israel,
-under the hand of the avenging Jehu, the scourge of God.</p>
-<p>Then Athaliah, seeing that her son was dead, determined to
-reign for herself.&nbsp; She was one of those masculine spirits,
-one of those heroines of pride and crime, who can brook no puny,
-infant sovereigns; she could not live to be ruled by a
-grandchild; and so she took the decisive step of <i>destroying
-all the seed royal</i>, after which, it is said, <i>Athaliah</i>,
-late the queen-mother, <i>did reign over the land</i>.</p>
-<p>But it is seldom, on this earth&mdash;which is still
-God&rsquo;s, however much, at certain times, the devil may claim
-it for his own&mdash;it is seldom, I say, that crime is quite
-prosperous, quite thorough: something is forgotten in every
-murder, which rises at last into a testimony; and some one, some
-little <a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 7</span>babe
-perhaps, is overlooked in every massacre; there is a sister, it
-may be, or an aunt&mdash;as it was here&mdash;whose heart yearns
-over that little cradle, and who contrives to rescue its
-unconscious occupant to be the heir of the throne and the avenger
-of the family.</p>
-<p>Such was King Joash; rescued by his aunt Jehosheba from her
-own mother&rsquo;s fury, and by her hidden, during six years of
-earliest childhood, in one of the chambers of the
-Temple&mdash;for she was the wife of Jehoiada, the High
-Priest.</p>
-<p>In his seventh year, there was a conspiracy, a revolution, and
-a coronation.&nbsp; The little King was <i>shown</i> to the
-people in the temple-court, the crown was put upon him, the
-testimony (or book of the law) was given him, he was made and he
-was anointed, and all the people <i>clapped their hands</i>,
-<i>and said</i>, <i>God save the king</i>.&nbsp; And when the
-usurping grandmother, attracted by the tumult, came upon the
-scene, with the cry, <i>Treason</i>, <i>treason</i>! the High
-Priest <i>had her forth without the ranges</i>; she was allowed
-to pass unmolested through the crowd and through the guard, till
-she was outside the consecrated ground; and there she was
-slain.</p>
-<p><a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>This was
-the curious, memorable entrance of the little King Joash upon a
-reign of forty years in Jerusalem.&nbsp; You can imagine how that
-scene must have printed itself on his memory.&nbsp; It must have
-given a strange, a solemn importance to the house of God, and all
-its belongings.&nbsp; The recollection of that sudden command,
-given by the High Priest, his uncle, preserver, and king-maker,
-<i>Have her forth without the ranges</i>, must have written upon
-his heart an indelible impression of the sacredness of that spot
-which could thus arrest revolution and make the most righteous
-doom impious.&nbsp; You will not wonder, therefore, if his young
-thoughts were first turned, as a Sovereign, to the wretched, the
-dilapidated state of the Temple itself.&nbsp; It appears that, on
-the one hand, there were long, careless arrears of temple income:
-people had grown indifferent to the payment of their most
-unquestionable dues to the Altar and the Priesthood: on the other
-hand, there was a positive as well as a negative defalcation; for
-on that sacred height of Mount Zion there had arisen, side by
-side with God&rsquo;s Temple, a rival shrine of Baal; and the
-idolatress Athaliah, with her creatures, seems to <a
-name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>have taken from
-the one to build the other: in short, the very foundation and
-wall-stones of the Holy House had been gradually pillaged and
-carted away, and the House itself stood a monument at once of
-modern shame and ancestral glory, needing the builder&rsquo;s
-hand to restore it to decency and even to safety.</p>
-<p>As for the vessels of the House&mdash;all those costly
-priceless treasures with which the wealth and piety of king
-Solomon had filled it&mdash;they had gone, bit by bit, to buy off
-the annoyances of powerful neighbours: King Rehoboam, at the very
-outset of the schism, had given Shishak Solomon&rsquo;s shields
-of gold, and replaced them with pitiful shameful shields of
-brass: it was too late, or too soon, to think of
-ornament&mdash;the present question was one entirely of use and
-substantial repair.</p>
-<p>It seems that even the efforts and injunctions of the young
-King were for many years ineffectual.&nbsp; In the twenty-third
-year of his reign the old breaches were still unrepaired.&nbsp;
-It is astonishing&mdash;men would not believe till they had tried
-it&mdash;how long it takes to re-awaken one slumbering
-conscience, or indeed to make one desired work of reparation, <a
-name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>be it never
-so small&mdash;we see it ourselves at this moment in a
-side-chapel of this Church&mdash;a fact accomplished.&nbsp; And
-so King Joash, stung to the soul by the disappointment of his own
-good intentions, summons before him Jehoiada the Priest, his own
-uncle and benefactor, and expostulates with him and his
-brother-priests in the words of the text, <i>Why repair ye not
-the breaches of the House</i>?</p>
-<p>And the result of it is, that, instead of leaving the money
-received for this purpose in the unaccountable hands of the
-Priests, they have a chest made, with a hole bored in the lid of
-it, and set beside the altar; and the Priests are to put all the
-money which they receive into this chest; and then they have a
-civil auditor, the King&rsquo;s scribe, a sort of Secretary of
-State, to act with the High Priest in counting and applying the
-sums thus accumulated, and so it passes direct into the hands of
-the carpenters and builders, and the work is done.</p>
-<p>My brethren, you will all perceive why I chose this text this
-evening, when we are making our first collection, under altered
-circumstances, for the more substantial part of our annual
-expenditure <a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-11</span>upon this Church.&nbsp; It is true, this House of Prayer
-is not in all respects like Solomon&rsquo;s Temple: I mean that,
-in Christian times, it is not the fabric, it is the Congregation,
-which is the Temple or House of God.&nbsp; Nevertheless, without
-a fabric a congregation is a rope of sand: there must be a place
-if there is to be a worship: and therefore the distinction,
-though true, may be overstrained; and I am not afraid to apply to
-this Church, the building I mean, the expostulation of King Joash
-with Jehoiada and the Priests, <i>Why repair ye not the breaches
-of the House</i>?</p>
-<p>I have not, indeed, one moment&rsquo;s anxiety as to your
-response.&nbsp; You love <i>the place</i>, this place at least,
-<i>where God&rsquo;s honour dwelleth</i>.&nbsp; I believe that
-your periodical offerings on this monthly occasion will be
-almost, or perhaps quite, equal to those which you make for any
-work of piety or charity: and I may remind you that there is an
-especial reason why your offerings should be large at the outset,
-inasmuch as already four months are gone by of the current year,
-and we have to supply in eight months the resources (as they
-hereafter will be) of twelve.</p>
-<p><a name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>But on
-this point I feel an entire security.&nbsp; You will never allow
-those who undertake the office of your Churchwardens to incur any
-responsibility but such as you cheerfully guarantee to
-them.&nbsp; I will rather take the opportunity of saying one word
-upon the more general question.</p>
-<p>We have never in this place&mdash;certainly not for many years
-past&mdash;laid a compulsory church-rate.&nbsp; We have always
-allowed those who would to refuse payment.&nbsp; Even when the
-law was clearly with us, we have never taken advantage of
-it.&nbsp; So far, we might, if we would, have regarded the new
-Act as confirming and stereotyping our own local custom.</p>
-<p>But there were these two differences.&nbsp; We could no longer
-carry with us the influence, the persuasion, of an unenforced
-compulsion.&nbsp; We could no longer say, as heretofore, He
-<i>that may command</i>, <i>entreats</i>.&nbsp; Henceforth it was
-lawful to refuse.</p>
-<p>Again, we could no longer extend our payments over the whole
-Town; and, with whatever abatements from caprice or principle,
-hope to enlist, in the work of reparation or maintenance, the
-sympathies of an entire population.</p>
-<p>It became necessary, therefore, that we should <a
-name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>look to the
-Congregation alone; and, in one form or in another, ask those to
-support, who really love and use, this House of God.</p>
-<p>Hence our appeal to you this evening.&nbsp; And if on future
-occasions the appeal is commonly made to you in silence, without
-special enforcement from this place, yet let me hope that you
-will all register it in your minds as a just claim, and not
-suffer these periodical gatherings to lose their interest or to
-fail in their amount.</p>
-<p><i>Why repair ye not the breaches of the House</i>?&nbsp; The
-subject expands itself before us, and we read the remonstrance as
-applying no longer to the fabric, but rather to these three
-larger and more sacred topics, the Congregation, the Church, the
-soul.</p>
-<p>1.&nbsp; That anxiety which we do not feel about the fabric,
-for we are sure that you will attend to it, we cannot stifle as
-regards the Congregation.</p>
-<p>For indeed it is this which makes the House.&nbsp; The
-building is only valuable, only significant, for the sake of the
-inmates.&nbsp; When it is asked of us, <i>Why repair ye not the
-bleaches of the House</i>? we may look up indeed at our broken
-pinnacles, <a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-14</span>our not watertight roof, our falling flowers, our
-patchwork pomegranates, and think that these too require
-attention or deserve reproach; but, after all, these are not the
-real things; these altogether make not the House; the House, the
-Temple, now, in these days of spirit and Gospel, is the
-community, the congregation, the living body within.&nbsp; How is
-it with this?&nbsp; Are there no breaches here, visible not to an
-eye of flesh, but to One who seeth in secret?</p>
-<p>For example, my brethren, is there not too great a
-disproportion here between the real and the nominal
-worshippers?&nbsp; Is it not lamentable, is it not even
-discreditable, that so many should be present at one Service once
-on the Lord&rsquo;s Day, and so few at any other Service either
-on this Holy Day or on any other? that so many should come
-together here this evening to listen to music or preaching, so
-few to pray and to praise, so few to break the Holy Bread, or to
-drink the Sacred Wine?&nbsp; Is not this one of the <i>breaches
-of the House</i>, the spiritual house, which wants
-<i>repairing</i> amongst us?</p>
-<p>2.&nbsp; But this carries me on to a somewhat wider <a
-name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>field, which
-I have called not the Congregation, but the Church.&nbsp; And
-here, as is natural indeed in these eventful, these quickly
-moving times, my thoughts are upon our own Church, that communion
-which is the congregation of congregations; that communion which
-we have heretofore known as the Church of England by law
-established.</p>
-<p>So rapid has been the course of events in late years&mdash;I
-might single out the last ten, or the last five, or (quite by
-exception) the last year of all&mdash;that Church-people must
-prepare themselves, I feel sure, for a speedy, a scarcely
-gradual, demolition of all that has been distinctive, all that
-has been exceptionally advantageous, in their position.&nbsp; An
-eminent man and excellent Bishop, who was laid in his grave last
-Friday, was wont to say, <i>If I live ten years</i>, <i>I shall
-be the last Bishop of Peterborough</i>.&nbsp; It is more than
-probable that some of my younger hearers this evening may live
-not only to see what we call the Church of England thrown
-altogether upon voluntary offerings for its maintenance&mdash;in
-which case some of them may remember in old age the first
-collection made in the Parish Church of Doncaster for the repairs
-of its fabric and <a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-16</span>the expences of its services&mdash;but also to find it
-at least an open, perhaps a very doubtful, question, to whom
-shall belong the Churches themselves and the
-glebe-houses&mdash;whether indeed there shall be left to the old
-Church of England, as we still fondly call it, any vestige of
-that legal standing which has made her hitherto the calm shelter
-of her children, the admiring wonder of foreigners, and the mark
-of obloquy or envy (as the case might be) to thousands of her
-domestic enemies.</p>
-<p>I am far from regarding this prospect&mdash;be it far off or
-near&mdash;with unmixed alarm or dismay.&nbsp; I never believed
-that the Establishment, as such, was Christ&rsquo;s Church in
-England, or that the withdrawal of the favour of the State would
-be the putting out in our communion of the Divine
-Shechinah.&nbsp; It is not so much for the Church that I fear:
-for I firmly believe Christ&rsquo;s words, <i>Lo</i>, <i>I am
-with you alway</i>, and doubt not that the old, the everlasting
-benediction is able to repeat itself in many new, many diverse
-forms.&nbsp; I do fear something for the State, when it ceases to
-have a religion.&nbsp; I do fear something for the average tone
-of religion in our cottages and in our palaces, when there is no
-longer <a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>one
-form of worship which has upon it the stamp of pedigree and of
-custom; when it is an evenly balanced question with every man and
-with every family, <i>Whither shall I go this day for God&rsquo;s
-worship</i>? <i>whither</i>, <i>or whether any whither</i>?&nbsp;
-I do fear that there will be more and more in many houses of a
-cold indifferent scepticism, a Christless education and a Godless
-life.&nbsp; I do fear that more and more may reach old age
-ignorant of a Saviour, and go to their graves without any sure
-and certain hope of a resurrection to eternal life.</p>
-<p>For the Church itself I fear not.&nbsp; In so far as the
-Church of England (so called) has had Christ in her and God with
-her, she is indestructible and immortal.&nbsp; In so far as she
-has trusted in outward advantage, and suffered herself, in her
-priests or in her people, to become sluggish, lukewarm,
-contemptuous, or persecuting&mdash;in so far let a change into
-adversity&mdash;God grant it&mdash;reform her.&nbsp; The great
-question for all of us, in our several stations, more especially
-in the days which are now coming, or almost come, upon our
-Church, must be this one of the text, <i>Why repair ye not the
-breaches of the House</i>?</p>
-<p><a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>Let the
-Priests of the Temple ask it&mdash;ask it of themselves&mdash;Are
-they trusting at all in the advantages of an Establishment, and
-negligent, in the same degree, of that personal industry, of that
-individual self-sacrifice, which alone can justify their
-endowment, maintain their honour, or do their work?&nbsp; If the
-Established Church of England, as such, be swept away, then,
-along with it, will go all idle, inconsistent, scandalous
-Ministers: those who are to serve at God&rsquo;s Altar afterwards
-must be only such as are respected by their people: let it not
-have to be said that England would gain as much as she loses by
-ceasing to have an endowed, an established Ministry, inasmuch as,
-quite as often as not, the Parish Minister was an indolent, an
-unworthy, or an inefficient man!&nbsp; This is the way in which
-the Priests must set themselves to repair the
-Temple-breaches.</p>
-<p>Then for the People.&nbsp; To what end does a Church exist
-amongst us?&nbsp; To what purpose this costly, this almost
-magnificent apparatus of vestment and ritual, of Cathedral Church
-and elaborate minstrelsy?&nbsp; Does it mean anything, or
-nothing?&nbsp; If it represents to the country, in symbol and
-form, the wants of man&rsquo;s <a name="page19"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 19</span>soul, and the absolute necessity of a
-Divine communion, then prove it by the using!&nbsp; Do not talk
-of the duty of the State, of the rights of the Church, of
-Apostolical Succession and an authorized Ministry&mdash;and never
-use any!&nbsp; When the Church of England ceases, with our will
-or without it, to be an established, privileged, or favoured
-Church at all; then, how many of you will be found to come
-forward in its maintenance?&nbsp; How many of you will worship
-here, when there is no longer any traditional or conventional
-propriety in doing so?&nbsp; How many will accept their position,
-in reference to man, as only one out of fifty or a hundred
-denominations&mdash;treat with all respect and charity others who
-follow not with them&mdash;and yet, for themselves, become but
-the more earnest and devout Churchmen, in proportion as State aid
-and legal endowment become things of the past&mdash;things, it
-may be, of remote and almost forgotten history?</p>
-<p>And, meanwhile, let me ask this of the Churchmen here
-assembled this evening, Are we half as liberal&mdash;I ask it
-advisedly&mdash;in giving for the maintenance of our Church, as
-are many bodies of Nonconformists in their offerings for
-theirs?&nbsp; You <a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-20</span>know that we are not.&nbsp; Let us look about us in this
-matter.&nbsp; Let us rise to the emergency.&nbsp; Show that you
-value your Church, by giving bountifully in her behalf.&nbsp; If
-the Church is what you profess it to be, surely it is worth
-something, something even of self-sacrifice, to maintain it in
-its efficiency.&nbsp; You know that there are many amongst us to
-whom the Church costs nothing.&nbsp; On one pretext and another,
-they evade all her burdens.&nbsp; They grudge the very rents of
-their sittings; and if those rents were exchanged to-morrow (as I
-would they were) for Offertories, still they would give
-nothing.&nbsp; My brethren, these things ought not so to
-be.&nbsp; By this grudging, this ungenerous spirit, we are
-drawing down upon ourselves, as a judgment, the sentence of
-disestablishment and disendowment.&nbsp; Be it not so amongst
-us!&nbsp; Count no money better spent than that which is given
-for the repairing of the breaches of this House; meaning now by
-the House, not only or chiefly the fabric, but rather the purpose
-for which the fabric stands&mdash;the edification and salvation
-of human souls.&nbsp; Above all, see that you rightly, earnestly,
-industriously use the means of grace herein afforded you.&nbsp;
-What would not they <a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-21</span>give, who are gone from us this last week by disease or
-accident, unrepentant, unredeemed, for one such feast of love as
-was accepted this morning by but six and twenty souls&mdash;for
-one such opportunity as we have enjoyed this evening of drawing
-nigh to the Throne of Grace through our one Divine Lord?</p>
-<p>3.&nbsp; Thus, then, we pass naturally, in conclusion, to that
-House, or Temple of God, which is of all the most intimate, the
-most sacred, the most inaccessible; yet in which, if anywhere,
-the true fire burns of an acceptable sacrifice&mdash;the real
-altar is built of lively, living, devoted stones.&nbsp; That
-House is the soul; and it, too, has its <i>breaches</i>.&nbsp;
-Yes, we know it.&nbsp; That Temple&mdash;which ought to <i>lie
-four-square</i>, which ought to have everything in its place,
-which ought to be gleaming with the fire of the Holy Ghost, and
-adorned with the precious stones of a meek and quiet and pure and
-Godward spirit&mdash;that Temple, of which the light ought to be
-shining through into the life, and making every act and word and
-thought gracious and beneficent and God-recalling&mdash;that
-Temple is all jagged and disordered and spotted and
-sin-stained&mdash;that Temple lets its altar-fire go out every
-half-hour, and suffers <a name="page22"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 22</span><i>a darkness that may be felt</i> to
-settle down upon its chambers&mdash;making unbelievers at last
-say, <i>If that be faith</i>, <i>give me reason</i>; <i>if that
-be piety</i>, <i>give me conscience</i>; <i>if that indeed be
-religion</i>, <i>let me know only the heathen&rsquo;s
-revelation</i>&mdash;<i>of good sense</i>, <i>good nature</i>,
-<i>and an elevated self-love</i>!</p>
-<p><i>Why repair ye not the breaches of the House</i>?</p>
-<p>Do we answer, <i>I cannot</i>?&nbsp; It is a reproach, it is a
-calumny, upon the Gospel of Divine grace.&nbsp; That is the very
-revelation of the Gospel&mdash;<i>God giveth more grace</i>:
-more, as we need more; more, as we ask more; more, as we look and
-wait and make room for more.&nbsp; I <i>cannot</i>?&nbsp; No; but
-God can.&nbsp; <i>Ask</i>, <i>and ye shall have</i>.</p>
-<p>Or do we answer, <i>I need not</i>?&nbsp; <i>I am well enough
-as I am</i>&mdash;<i>God is very merciful</i>&mdash;<i>He knows
-our frame</i>, <i>and whatever deficiencies He sees in me</i>,
-<i>Christ will make them up</i>?&nbsp; Alas! it is too often the
-evangelical reply&mdash;if not with the lips, then in the
-heart!&nbsp; Christ died to make sin less sinful, to make sin
-less dangerous, by substituting a figment of justification for a
-reality of holiness, watchfulness, and self-control!&nbsp; Thus
-even the Blessed Lord Himself is made <i>a minister of sin</i>,
-and man turns the very <a name="page23"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 23</span>table of his blessing into a new
-occasion of falling!</p>
-<p>Or do we answer, finally, <i>I will not</i>?&nbsp; <i>I love
-the breaches of my soul&rsquo;s house</i>; <i>I do not wish that
-the gusts of passion should be fenced out</i>; <i>I do not wish
-that there should be no crack or cranny through which I may peep
-out on the world&rsquo;s vanities</i>, <i>nor any secret
-neglected postern through which some delicious delirious lust may
-creep in to intoxicate me</i>?&nbsp; Oh! worst of all, most
-hopeless, this last answer&mdash;the answer of many consciences,
-will they but speak, in this great Congregation; the answer which
-not only virtually denies, but wilfully refuses, the Gospel;
-which makes the Cross an offence, and Christ to have died in
-vain!</p>
-<p>May it please God, by some one of His thousand, His myriad
-agencies, to make us feel! to bring us to our knees in hearty
-repentance before Him; and then, even as it is written,
-<i>humbling ourselves</i> first <i>under His mighty hand</i>, at
-last to <i>exalt us in due time</i>!</p>
-<h2><a name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-25</span><i>RECENT WORKS BY DR. C. J. VAUGHAN</i>.</h2>
-<p>THE CHURCH OF THE FIRST DAYS.&nbsp; Lectures on the Acts of
-the Apostles.&nbsp; I.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The Church of
-Jerusalem</span>, <span class="GutSmall">SECOND
-EDITION</span>.&nbsp; II.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The Church of
-the Gentiles</span>.&nbsp; <span class="GutSmall">SECOND
-EDITION</span>.&nbsp; III.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">The Church
-of the World</span>.&nbsp; <span class="GutSmall">SECOND
-EDITION</span>.&nbsp; Fcap. 8vo, cloth, price 4<i>s.</i>
-6<i>d.</i> each.</p>
-<p>LECTURES ON THE REVELATION OF ST. JOHN.&nbsp; <span
-class="GutSmall">SECOND EDITION</span>.&nbsp; Two Vols. crown
-8vo, price 15<i>s.</i></p>
-<p>WORDS FROM THE GOSPELS.&nbsp; Sermons preached in the Parish
-Church of Doncaster.&nbsp; <span class="GutSmall">NEW
-EDITION</span>.&nbsp; Fcap. 8vo, price 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>NOTES FOR LECTURES ON CONFIRMATION.&nbsp; With suitable
-Prayers.&nbsp; <span class="GutSmall">SIXTH EDITION</span>.&nbsp;
-1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>LECTURES ON THE EPISTLE TO THE PHILIPPIANS.&nbsp; <span
-class="GutSmall">SECOND EDITION</span>.&nbsp; Price 7<i>s.</i>
-6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>EPIPHANY, LENT, AND EASTER.&nbsp; A Selection of Expository
-Sermons. <span class="GutSmall">THIRD EDITION</span>, <span
-class="GutSmall">REVISED</span>.&nbsp; Crown 8vo, 10<i>s.</i>
-6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>TWELVE DISCOURSES on Subjects connected with the Liturgy and
-Worship of the Church of England.&nbsp; Price 6<i>s.</i></p>
-<p><a name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 26</span>THE
-BOOK AND THE LIFE: and other Sermons preached before the
-University of Cambridge.&nbsp; <span class="GutSmall">NEW
-EDITION</span>.&nbsp; Fcap. 8vo, 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>MEMORIALS OF HARROW SUNDAYS.&nbsp; A Selection of Sermons
-preached in Harrow School Chapel.&nbsp; With a View of the
-Chapel.&nbsp; <span class="GutSmall">FOURTH EDITION</span>.&nbsp;
-Crown 8vo, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>ST. PAUL&rsquo;S EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.&nbsp; The Greek Text,
-with English Notes.&nbsp; <span class="GutSmall">THIRD
-EDITION</span>.&nbsp; (In the Press.)&nbsp; Crown 8vo,
-5<i>s.</i></p>
-<p>LESSONS OF LIFE AND GODLINESS.&nbsp; A Selection of Sermons
-preached in the Parish Church of Doncaster.&nbsp; <span
-class="GutSmall">THIRD EDITION</span>.&nbsp; Fcap. 8vo,
-4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>THE EPISTLES OF ST. PAUL FOR ENGLISH READERS.&nbsp; Part I.
-containing <i>The First Epistle to the Thessalonians</i>.&nbsp;
-8vo, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>LIFE&rsquo;S WORK AND GOD&rsquo;S DISCIPLINE.&nbsp; Three
-Sermons preached before the University of Cambridge in April and
-May, 1865.&nbsp; <span class="GutSmall">SECOND
-EDITION</span>.&nbsp; Fcap. 8vo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>THE WHOLESOME WORDS OF JESUS CHRIST.&nbsp; Four Sermons
-preached before the University of Cambridge in November,
-1866.&nbsp; Fcap. 8vo, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<h3><a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>SINGLE
-SERMONS, &amp;c.</h3>
-<p>THE JOY OF SUCCESS CORRECTED BY THE JOY OF SAFETY.&nbsp; An
-Ordination Sermon.&nbsp; 1860.</p>
-<p>THE MOURNING OF THE LAND AND THE MOURNING OF ITS
-FAMILIES.&nbsp; On the Death of the Prince Consort.&nbsp;
-1861.&nbsp; <span class="GutSmall">THIRD EDITION</span>.</p>
-<p>THE THREE TABERNACLES.&nbsp; On the Opening of St.
-Peter&rsquo;s School Chapel, York.&nbsp; 1862.</p>
-<p>QUIETNESS AND CONFIDENCE THE STRENGTH OF THE CHURCH.&nbsp; On
-the Consecration of Trinity Church, Handsworth.&nbsp; 1864.&nbsp;
-1<i>s.</i></p>
-<p>SON, THOU ART EVER WITH ME.&nbsp; In the Chapel of the
-Magdalen Hospital.&nbsp; 1864.&nbsp; 1<i>s.</i></p>
-<p>FREE AND OPEN WORSHIP IN THE PARISH CHURCHES OF ENGLAND.&nbsp;
-<span class="GutSmall">SECOND EDITION</span>.&nbsp; Fcap.
-8vo.&nbsp; 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>MUSIC IN CHURCHES.&nbsp; At a Festival of a Church Choral
-Association.&nbsp; Fcap. 8vo.&nbsp; 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>THE HAND AND THE SCROLL.&nbsp; On the Sudden Death of the
-Mayor of Doncaster.&nbsp; 1867.&nbsp; 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>THE REVISED CODE OF THE COMMITTEE OF COUNCIL ON EDUCATION
-DISPASSIONATELY CONSIDERED.&nbsp; 1862.&nbsp; <span
-class="GutSmall">THIRD EDITION</span>.</p>
-<p><a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-28</span>RUBRICAL MODIFICATION NOT LITURGICAL CHANGE.&nbsp; A Few
-Words on the Burial Service.&nbsp; 1864.&nbsp; 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p>RAYS OF SUNLIGHT FOR DARK DAYS.&nbsp; A Book of Select
-Readings for the Suffering.&nbsp; With a Preface by C. J. <span
-class="smcap">Vaughan</span>, D.D.&nbsp; <span
-class="GutSmall">NEW EDITION</span>.&nbsp; 18mo. cloth extra,
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>&nbsp; Morocco, Old Style, 9<i>s.</i></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Macmillan and
-Co</span>., London and Cambridge.</p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p>PLAIN WORDS ON CHRISTIAN LIVING.&nbsp; Small 8vo.&nbsp;
-4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>CHRIST THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD.&nbsp; Small 8vo.&nbsp;
-4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>CHARACTERISTICS OF CHRIST&rsquo;S TEACHING.&nbsp; Small
-8vo.&nbsp; 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-<p>VOICES OF THE PROPHETS ON FAITH, PRAYER, AND HUMAN LIFE.&nbsp;
-Small 8vo.&nbsp; 4<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Alexander
-Strahan</span>, 56, Ludgate Hill, London.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapmediumline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">CHISWICK
-PRESS:&mdash;PRINTED BY WHITTINGHAM AND WILKINS,</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE.</span></p>
-<pre>
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