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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63764 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63764)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Divine Mercy: or the temporal advantages of
-the Sabbath, by George Bryan
-
-
-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: Divine Mercy: or the temporal advantages of the Sabbath
-
-
-Author: George Bryan
-
-
-
-Release Date: November 14, 2020 [eBook #63764]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DIVINE MERCY: OR THE TEMPORAL
-ADVANTAGES OF THE SABBATH***
-
-
-Transcribed from the 1849 Partridge and Oakey edition by David Price.
-
- [Picture: Decorative cover from pamphlet]
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- Chelsea Working-Man’s Sabbath Essay.
-
-
- ~~~~~~
-
- DIVINE MERCY;
-
- OR, THE
-
- TEMPORAL ADVANTAGES OF THE SABBATH.
-
- INTERSPERSED WITH
- EXPOSTULATORY REMARKS.
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- BY GEORGE BRYAN,
- ONE OF THE LATE COMPETITORS FOR THE SABBATH ESSAY PRIZES.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “’Tis not in artful measures, in the chime
- And idle tinkling of a minstrel’s lyre,
- To charm His ear, whose eye is on the heart;
- Whose frown can disappoint the proudest strain,
- Whose approbation prosper even mine!”—COWPER.
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON:
- PARTRIDGE AND OAKEY, PATERNOSTER ROW;
- W. F. RAMSAY, BROMPTON ROW, BROMPTON;
- J. L. POUTER, SLOANE STREET; AND D. ROBERTSON, GLASGOW.
-
- 1849
-
- * * * * *
-
- CHELSEA.
- PRINTED BY T. WILSHER, MANOR STREET.
-
-
-
-
-TO THE
-RIGHT HON. THE EARL OF HARROWBY,
-_&c. &c. &c._
-
-
-MY LORD,
-
-Towards the termination of the year 1847, J. Henderson, Esq., of Park,
-near Glasgow, a gentleman distinguished for his piety and universal
-benevolence, offered prizes for the three best Essays on “the Temporal
-Advantages of the Sabbath, and the consequent necessity of preserving its
-rest from all the encroachments of unnecessary labour.” In the short
-space of three months 1045 Essays were forwarded by Working-Men to the
-Adjudicators. Some time afterwards, ten additional prizes were
-munificently given by His Royal Highness Prince Albert, in addition to
-many others which had been previously announced.
-
-One month had elapsed before I was informed of the original intention,
-and at that period the health of my wife was in a very precarious state,
-besides which I was myself labouring under great distress of mind.
-Notwithstanding these evident disadvantages, the subject being congenial
-to my feelings, I resolved on making an effort to express my individual
-views respecting the temporal value and importance of the Sabbath-day.
-
-Although unsuccessful in obtaining a prize, there were reasons which
-induced me to conclude that my Essay, in its original state, maintained a
-most favourable position amidst the host of its competitors. Since its
-return to me I have made several material amendments—which I deem it
-right to acknowledge in justice to the arduous duties of the
-Adjudicators. Several Inhabitants of Chelsea, who had perused my amended
-Essay, expressed a desire that it should be printed; and, having since
-received increased encouragement, I have been induced respectfully to
-submit it to the ordeal of Christian opinion. It is entirely my own
-composition, even to its final revision for the press.
-
-It may be necessary for me to inform your Lordship, in order to remove
-any doubts as to my being a working-man, that I was apprenticed to the
-late Messrs. Tilling and Hughes, Printers, then of Grosvenor Row,
-Pimlico; the latter gentleman was a son of the Rev. J. Hughes, M.A., one
-of the Founders of the British and Foreign Bible Society.
-
-Permit me, my Lord, to express now my heartfelt gratitude for the prompt
-and kind permission to dedicate the following feeble production to your
-Lordship. I am aware that it must be very imperfect, but I know that God
-can impart a blessing even to the most apparently futile means to promote
-His glory.
-
- I have the honor to be, my Lord,
-
- Your Lordship’s obliged and humble Servant,
- GEORGE BRYAN.
-
-6, _Little Camera Street_, _King’s Road_,
- _Chelsea_, _Oct._ 1849.
-
-
-
-
-DIVINE MERCY; _&c._
-
-
- “God blessed the seventh-day, and SANCTIFIED it.”—GEN. ii. 2.
-
- “Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it HOLY.”—EXODUS xx. 8.
-
- “If keeping holy the seventh-day were only an human institution, it
- would be the best method that could have been thought of for the
- polishing and civilization of mankind.”—ADDISON.
-
-Barren and debased must be that man who is insensible to the lovely
-character and genial influences of the Sabbath-day! It is a day on which
-the heart, if only susceptible of the ordinary feelings of conviction,
-must ever beat with the sweetest emotions of gratitude for the many
-blessings which it confers; for, in whatever condition we contemplate the
-varied members of society, whether individually or collectively, it is
-alike beneficial and indispensable. Hence the first dawn of the Sabbath
-beams with sympathy towards every human creature. To despise such an
-invaluable boon—by a wilful violation of the beneficent but absolute law
-of God—is to be utterly regardless of life in this world, and to exhibit
-no desire to participate hereafter in the blissful joys of heaven!
-
-But we have to consider more especially the temporal advantages to be
-derived from the Divine institution of the Sabbath. It having been
-stated, however, that the working classes were willing to be employed on
-this sacred day for the benefit of themselves and families, and that they
-were indifferent to the agitation of our question, a few preliminary
-remarks cannot be considered as irrelevant; but, on the contrary, may
-fairly be admitted as introductory or collateral arguments in support of
-our general proposition. We need not enter into any lengthened
-controversy to prove that the first statement is a mere subterfuge to
-evade the responsibility of Sabbath desecration, nor do we intend to
-refer to any speculative opinions as to the causes of the asserted
-declension, as implied in the second declaration. It will be sufficient
-to confine ourselves here, as we shall occasionally do throughout our
-observations, to undeniable facts—not offered in extenuation, but simply
-to account, if true, for such flagrant and sinful anomalies.
-
-During the last comparatively few years, in consequence of the vast
-increase in the population, and a more universal extension of knowledge,
-many great and salutary improvements have been adopted in this country.
-But notwithstanding this, and all the continued indications of
-progression, there is much over which the Christian must necessarily
-deplore. If the once quiet village has now become a populous town, and
-the busy town a mighty city, it must be admitted, that, while these
-changes are evidences of the magnitude of our trade, &c., they have also
-been accompanied by an immense amount of poverty, immorality, and
-irreligion. {7} It is true also that the swampy level has been elevated
-and magnificent buildings now occupy its place, still the streams of
-iniquity flow around them with almost irresistible rapidity. The
-blessings of education have likewise been very properly diffused—and it
-is to be hoped that they will be far more extended, and based on a
-recognition of Christian principles—yet who will deny that there is much
-in our literature, and more particularly in our minor publications, which
-subvert the minds of youth, and too often lead them ultimately to
-entertain sentiments averse to religion, and detrimental to the general
-interests of society? Utilitarianism is not always associated with
-Christianity. Again, the Beer Act Bill must ever be regarded as having
-had a very injurious tendency on the morals of the rural and suburban
-populations, while the costly edifices in our large towns and cities, for
-the retail sale of ardent spirits, which have been so unaccountably
-tolerated and sanctioned by the Legislature, have most direfully
-increased pauperism and crime. Lastly, the labour performed by a large
-portion of the working classes has either been oppressive or altogether
-inadequate to their necessities. Impelled by the current of trade on
-some days with an impetuosity unknown to former ages, and soon afterwards
-standing idle for many others on the bleak shore soliciting freight for
-their fragile vessels of industry—if not carried away by the boisterous
-waves of intemperance, or rendered incapacitated by previous merciless
-lengthened hours of labour—the natural sensibilities of many among them
-even to appreciate the temporal advantages of the Sabbath very often
-become chilled, and when that blest morn arrives they are frequently
-enduring the greatest possible privations, or else secretly if not openly
-working with an activity surpassing the legally appointed days for
-labour. Exposed to such temptations, or placed in such an uncertain
-condition, uninfluenced by the rays of heavenly light, they consent to
-the avaricious demands of their employers, fearful of dismissal from
-their ordinary toil as a consequence of their refusal, {8} and not
-unfrequently too become the deluded followers of men who are avowed
-disbelievers in the truths of Christianity—the blind adherents of what is
-falsely called Socialism! If, therefore, we have advanced in many
-respects, it is equally evident that stagnant and putrifying waters are
-still to be seen, in every direction, which emit a deadly influence over
-nearly the whole surface of the nation.
-
-It must be obvious then, avoiding all remarks of a political nature, that
-the present period is well-suited for the consideration of the temporal
-importance of the Sabbath. Without a _fixed_ Sabbath we should be
-reduced to a state of imbecility or else inflamed by unnatural
-excitement, and the greatest disorder would prevail throughout society,
-{9} which would render us unable to devise means to remove acknowledged
-evils, and to maintain those laws which are truly valuable and essential.
-The Sabbath affords a day for entire repose from all worldly cares, so
-that we may be in a better state, at other times, to devise such
-beneficial measures as cool deliberation might suggest. The following
-well-known lines, with the slight alteration of a word, may here be
-profitably applied:—
-
- “Would you then taste the tranquil scene?
- Be sure your SABBATHS are serene;
- Devoid of hate, devoid of strife,
- And free from all that poisons life.”
-
-Happy would it be for each of us if we possessed more of this necessary
-serenity of mind, and if all our efforts, whether in connection with
-politics, science, social improvement, or our daily pursuits, were
-conducted in strict accordance with the revealed will of God! The latter
-is an essential without which we can neither enjoy individual happiness
-or experience national mercies. Past and present events most painfully
-demonstrate that a country may abound with wealth; that it may be fertile
-in its productions and possess great resources, and that the
-philanthropist may gaze with delight on its many noble Institutions;
-still, if its inhabitants daringly attempt to abrogate the Divine law of
-the Sabbath, a dark cloud will assuredly be seen that will cast a fearful
-gloom over the most highly-favoured land. “There is none like unto thee,
-O Lord; thou art great, and thy name is great in might. Who would not
-fear thee, O King of Nations! for to thee doth it appertain: forasmuch as
-among all the wise men of the nations, and in all their kingdoms, there
-is none like unto thee.” Jer. x. 6, 7.
-
-We will now proceed more in order with our subject, and, in doing so, it
-is necessary we should remember that we intend to confine ourselves
-almost exclusively to “the temporal advantages of the Sabbath to the
-labouring classes, and the consequent necessity of preserving its rest
-from all the encroachments of unnecessary labour.” This mode of
-procedure is in agreement with the contemplated object, viz. to procure
-from the sons of toil themselves an evidence of the mercy and love of God
-in commanding one _special_ day in seven to be devoted for rest from
-labour. To contemplate and enforce the importance of the Sabbath, in a
-spiritual view, is a duty which is being continually discharged by the
-Ministers of religion.
-
-1. The Sabbath is indispensable, as a day of rest, both to body and
-mind; without it neither could be exerted with natural vigour.
-
-The BODY of man, although admirably adapted to perform the varied and
-arduous duties of life, is nevertheless compared in Scripture to the
-fading flower and the withering blade of grass. The material from which
-the Creator formed us, in his infinite wisdom, seems at once to convey an
-idea of its frailty and tendency to bend downwards, when overcome by
-excessive fatigue, to its separated component part. This is confirmed by
-experience, for we know that long continuous labour, without adequate
-rest, is certain to impair health, and to destroy the body before the
-allotted period for human existence. The usual hours for repose,
-excluding the Sabbath, are not sufficient to re-invigorate nature. We
-need not only to rest on our beds at night, but it is necessary that we
-should rest at suitable short intervals for an entire day. In thus
-reasoning, however, let it not be considered as encouraging slothfulness
-or inactivity in business. Honest labour is an essential duty, the
-proper discharge of which is incumbent on us as members of the community,
-in order that we may supply our absolute necessities and procure the
-conveniences and comforts of life, by doing which we promote the general
-happiness of mankind. Religion and reason equally enforce it. But
-slothfulness, or habitual idleness, is not justly attributable to the
-working classes. True, the number of those who are addicted to
-intemperance is very great, and it may be said of such that they are
-indolent men; yet, taking another view of them, they are the most
-slavish—and they endure more bodily and mental fatigue than any others of
-the human race—
-
- “Labour dire it is, and weary woe;”
-
-but our remarks have reference only to the excessive labour of the
-steady, industrious, and persevering man.
-
-This leads us to notice the close connection between the LATE HOUR SYSTEM
-and SABBATH DESECRATION—a system which has been justly denounced as
-“reducing man to a state little short of slavery.” When God divided “the
-light from darkness,” there can be no doubt that one of His merciful
-objects was to give us an opportunity to obtain suitable repose. Indeed,
-this is quite evident from many passages of Scripture which we might
-quote. We will merely select one single sentence from the Psalms, to
-shew that night work is contrary to the general tenor of the Word of
-God—“Man goeth forth unto his work, and to his labour, _until the
-evening_.” Here we see a clear and defined limitation to the hours of
-labour. To this it may be replied that the altered state of society
-renders it necessary that men should toil much longer now than in more
-primitive days. We are perfectly aware that there may be occasional
-periods, under peculiar circumstances, when this suggestion might be
-considered conclusive. It is not, however, to the _occasional_ or
-_accidental_ infringement on an extra hour or two that we object—it is to
-the _system_ of compelling men, almost habitually, to labour far beyond
-the period which DIVINE MERCY has evidently intended. Is not this the
-course pursued in many of our workshops and in various retail trades? It
-is a well-known fact, as regards the former, that it is a common practice
-for the same men who have been toiling all the day to continue their
-labour until a very late hour, if not throughout the whole night, and not
-unfrequently during the entire Sabbath-day! What must be the melancholy
-condition of the men and boys employed in such places? The Sabbath is
-awfully desecrated; the doctrines and precepts of religion are rendered
-nugatory; public morals are totally disregarded; and the bodies and souls
-of youth and age are alike sacrificed as victims to the idol of the
-world—WEALTH! Let us now refer to the indisputable testimony of Dr.
-James COPLAND, who may be considered as one of the most eminent
-physicians of the present day, in reference to the latter class:—“It is
-well-known to medical men that the labour in shops, which extends to
-fourteen or fifteen hours a day, is the most fruitful source of disease
-which is furnished in the Metropolis. We are sure to see induced more or
-less slowly those insidious diseases which undermine the constitution,
-and which perpetuate themselves to the third or fourth generation. I
-believe that no less than three-fourths of the diseases to which human
-life is liable in the Metropolis actually arise from this cause.” What
-an awful subject does this afford for the serious consideration of
-masters, parents, and especially the Christian community! Nor is the
-magnitude of this source of sickness, sorrow, and death, attested and
-deplored alone by the Medical Profession.
-
-Lord John RUSSELL says, “It is, I think, one of the greatest evils of
-this country that toil has become so excessive, that all considerations
-of health—all attention to intellectual improvement, and even all that
-time which ought to be devoted to spiritual worship—is lost in that
-excess of labour which the people of this country are compelled to
-undergo.” Lord ASHLEY, in commending the efforts of “The Metropolitan
-Early-Closing Association,” {14} likewise most justly asserts, that “the
-struggle which is taking place at the present time is neither more nor
-less than a great conflict between materialism and spirituality. It is a
-struggle between things temporal and things eternal—it is a struggle
-between the creation of wealth and the objects for which wealth should be
-created.”
-
-But let us briefly reflect on the melancholy statement made by Dr.
-Copland, and we shall see that late hours of business inevitably destroy
-the sacred character of the Sabbath, and cause many to spend it in some
-of those modes of desecration for which the facilities are now so
-numerous and so seductive. The Writer of this Essay has two sons who
-have been brought up to respectable retail trades; the youngest was
-compelled, some short time since, to attend a shop from seven in the
-morning until eleven at night, and on Saturday it extended frequently to
-one, making it nearly two o’clock before he could possibly retire to
-rest. When he came home, on the Sabbath, instead of being enabled to
-attend a Church or Chapel, it became absolutely necessary that he should
-again obtain additional sleep during the greater part of the day, thus
-completely depriving him of the opportunity to be present in the
-sanctuary of God. This youth formerly attended the Park Chapel Sabbath
-School, at Chelsea, and the conviction naturally is that to this
-iniquitous and baneful cause may be attributed much of the demoralization
-which is so painfully apparent in many of those who have been similarly
-instructed.
-
-The present century has unquestionably presented some of the most
-mournful and singular anomalies which it is possible to conceive. We
-have seen the rich Indian Proprietor expending large sums of money in
-this country for general charitable purposes, and devoting his most
-powerful energies to obtain justice for every British subject, while, at
-the same time, the winds that howled around him, as he softly reposed on
-his luxurious couch, echoed an appeal from his more distant fellow-man to
-be emancipated from the chains of slavery! Nor has the conduct of _some_
-employers towards their workmen been less paradoxical, although the
-nature of their oppression has been of a widely different character.
-They seem not to understand that there are relative essentials, secondary
-only to the payment of wages, which it is their duty to encourage and not
-to oppose. As we shall, however, have occasion to refer to such
-instances, as we proceed, it is unnecessary now to dilate on them. It
-will be seen that the inconsistencies to which we allude are subversive
-to the best interests of masters, and are still more injurious to those
-they employ—they excite more debasing desires, which unfit them for
-labour, and they snap asunder the link of confidence and kindly feeling
-which ought ever to unite them. Alas! how many seem to consider the poor
-labouring man almost as a mere machine, without a frame susceptible of
-fatigue, destitute of the least intelligence, and without a soul to be
-saved!
-
-It appears quite unnecessary further to prove that the seventh-day is
-absolutely requisite for bodily rest, even were the hours for labour
-limited universally to a just and natural period. Ask the poor factory
-children, the domestic servant, the apprentice boy, the mechanic, the men
-who work in pits and mines, the ill-paid but industrious needlewomen, the
-tradesman and the shopman, the merchant, the man of literature and
-science, the senator—nay, ask our august and beloved QUEEN and her ROYAL
-CONSORT—each will readily acknowledge the vast utility of the Sabbath as
-an indispensable means to maintain their bodily strength.
-
- “Rest! without thee what strength can long survive,
- What spirit keep the flame of Hope alive?”—BLOOMFIELD.
-
-All nature is loud in its cries for rest. The powerful horse becomes
-weary, and treads instinctively into his stable, and the little birds are
-glad to rest on the slender branches of a tree. It is the universal
-requirement of all animated creatures.
-
-The MIND, if it is possible to consider it as distinct from the body,
-equally demands the preservation of the Sabbath. The entire separation
-of them, however, is impracticable. We all know that it is impossible to
-proceed advantageously with our daily employment if the mind is not
-intently fixed on the object of labour. When oppressed, by unremitting
-exertion, it is deprived of its influence, and cannot effectually govern
-the actions of the body. It would be, indeed, as absurd to suppose a man
-could perform his work, under such circumstances, as it would be for him
-to expect the corn to ripen without the genial influence of the rays of
-the sun. The supposition is not tenable. Whenever the mind appears to
-triumph over the body it is caused by violent excitement, passion, or
-powerful stimulants, which operate on the brain, the organ of the mind,
-so as to effect temporarily the mechanism of the body, as with those who
-resort to spirituous liquors, {18} after a hard day’s work, to deaden the
-depressive sensations produced by subsequent prostration of strength.
-But this instantaneous relief is only of short duration—it is, in fact,
-the brain and mind operating conjointly on the body in the same manner,
-only _at first_ in a less degree, as it does on the maniac! The ultimate
-effect of a stimulated brain is to corrode and weaken the mind, and, when
-this is the case, the brightness of its comprehension is at once
-darkened. We will endeavour to proceed a little further with this very
-important part of our subject, as drunkenness, by producing a temporary
-aberration of the mind, is one of the principal causes of the desecration
-of the Sabbath.
-
-The clouds are generally said to be formed of the vapours and moisture of
-the earth, and the body of man was created from the dust of the earth.
-There is here something like an analogy, viewing the body previous to
-life being imparted, which, although it may appear in some respects not
-quite parallel, we will admit to be so. The beauty of an evening cloud
-is caused by the reflection of the sun, which gives to it various bright
-hues and colours. Without such an agency it would impart no pleasure
-whatever to the eye of the beholder. The body of man, too, became
-appreciated only when it received vitality from the Creator. We here
-perceive two evident influences—a lesser and a much greater—the
-brilliancy of the rays of the sun on the otherwise darksome cloud, and
-the pure breath of the Almighty infused into worthless dust! Let the
-splendid sun withdraw, by the power of Omnipotence, and the cloud
-immediately loses its attraction—it is then simply the vapours and the
-moisture of the earth. Now, the mind—which may be considered as the
-intellectual luminary—gives value to the body, and excites likewise
-terrene attraction, in the same manner, although in a far more important
-sense. But if the mind is obscured, the capabilities of the body are
-deteriorated, while the cloud, notwithstanding the absence of its
-beauteous influence, retains its original ordained utility. Rain
-descends from it, which refreshes the inhabitants of the earth, and makes
-all nature smile. Man, when his body is greatly depressed, although the
-mind is partially operating on it, becomes an abject mass—of no benefit
-to his fellow-creatures. Still, let it not be forgotten, that the mind
-is the _expression_ of the soul, and that the soul will exist when all
-clouds and this earth shall have passed away for ever! How important is
-it, then, to preserve the mind, seeing that it governs the body, the
-actions of which, if not directed by the Spirit of God, decide the
-eternal destiny of the soul! What, we ask, can possibly more effectually
-maintain both body and mind in their primitive vigour—so as to enable us
-not only to discharge satisfactorily our relative duties in this world,
-but to share that sweet and eternal ‘rest which remaineth for the people
-of God’—than the strictest adherence to the Divine commandment, “Remember
-the Sabbath-day to keep it holy?”
-
-2. The Sabbath is necessary for the preservation of health, on account
-of the impurities of the atmosphere, arising from a variety of pernicious
-causes.
-
-The unwholesome impregnations of the atmosphere, in densely populated
-cities and towns, afford another reason for strictly enforcing the Divine
-law as regards working on the Sabbath. The great amount of mortality,
-attributable to this cause, has of late happily excited the most intense
-interest. It appears that many thousands of the labouring classes are
-annually consigned to the grave through inhaling obnoxious air. If we
-required proof of this fact we need only observe the pallid cheeks and
-sunken eyes of too many working-men—not those who are unemployed, and are
-in a destitute condition, but those who labour daily in places and
-situations where the refreshing breeze never scarcely penetrates. We may
-attribute much of this to the erection of Gas Works, Varnish and other
-Manufactories, which emit their abominable and destructive effluvia in
-the very centre of our large cities and towns. To the men employed in
-such places, and to the inhabitants who dwell around them, how peculiarly
-beneficial must be the return of the Sabbath! Again, fully admitting the
-undeniable fact that gas is an incalculable benefit, we know that to toil
-throughout six evenings in the week, and occasionally whole days at
-particular seasons of the year, in addition to the oppression arising
-from breath and the frequent want of proper ventilation, particularly
-where there are many men employed in the same room, too often terminates
-in Consumption, {21} or some other fatal disease. Gas is of great
-utility; but if, for illustration, the sun reflected equal intensity of
-heat _every day_ alike, it would not only destroy all vegetation but
-every human creature—withholding its influence at intervals, when it
-shines forth with meridian splendour, it makes the seed prosperous, the
-vine fruitful, and imparts cheerfulness to man. Thus it is as respects
-gas, the Sabbath is a grateful relief, and affords a highly necessary
-cessation to re-supply the waste of strength which is incurred by it.
-
-We might proceed to a very considerable length with this part of the
-division of our subject, but it really would appear superfluous. The
-following startling and melancholy facts must be considered conclusive.
-In a late Return of the Registrar-General, it is stated, that the average
-life of a gentleman in London is 43, while that of the artizan, &c., is
-but 22 years! The same official document informs us that the chances of
-dying among men above 35 years, in London, is to that in the country as
-three to two! With such statements before us, is it not a duty we owe to
-ourselves and families to maintain inviolably the Sabbath? It was
-ordained by the Creator in mercy to man, and shall we daringly reject and
-despise such a gracious boon?
-
-Some latitudinarian and impious persons have boldly asserted that the
-labouring classes have no desire for religious instruction—on what
-positive evidence this general accusation is made it is impossible to
-conceive—and that therefore the Sabbath may as well be considered as an
-ordinary day. This idea is as unjust as it is monstrous. Because the
-Sabbath is not by the majority esteemed as a sacred day, is that a
-sufficient reason why it should be desecrated by labour? Many do exhibit
-an utter indifference to its lovely character and genial influences, but
-are others in consequence to be deprived of its inestimable blessings,
-and are the great mass of the people tacitly to bow with submission at
-the shrine of infidelity? Because many descend into the dark abyss, are
-none to take their flight to heaven? It has been said, likewise, that
-many young men, not so utterly debased, make our foregoing argument a
-pretext for resorting to distant places where the Sabbath is most
-daringly profaned, and where maddening pleasure is the sole inducement,
-and that the occasional restriction of employment is of no importance.
-To admit the soundness of this expedient defence would be to destroy all
-religious and moral obligations. The _natural_ inclinations of youth are
-thoughtless and volatile, and it is the duty of the more reflecting
-portion of the community to check their vicious career, by pourtraying
-the inevitable fatal consequences which must ultimately attend them.
-Perhaps the following beautiful lines, which convey a just and stern
-reproof, may possibly attract the attention of some among the number:—
-
- “Thy thoughts are vagabond; all outward bound;
- ’Midst sands, and rocks, and storms, to cruise for pleasure;
-
- * * * * *
-
- Fancy and sense, from an infected shore,
- Thy cargo brings, and pestilence the prize.”—YOUNG.
-
-But, happily, there are multitudes of working-men and youths who “call
-the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord honourable,” and who look
-forward to its return, in order to enjoy its spiritual as well as
-temporal advantages, with almost more anxiety than the husbandman, in
-anticipation of his gains, to the produce of a bountiful harvest.
-Without a Sabbath man would become puerile, sickly, and spiritually dead.
-
-3. The Sabbath affords an opportunity to the labouring classes to attend
-to one of the greatest social duties—CLEANLINESS.
-
-If there is any truth in the preceding remarks, the necessity for keeping
-the body properly cleansed, and changing every seventh day our
-habiliments, is so palpable that any arguments to enforce either the one
-or the other would almost appear unnecessary. Let us reflect, however,
-for a short time on this part of our subject. The injurious properties
-mixed up in the materials used by many trades are of a nature that
-require more than customary slight ablutions to prevent them from
-penetrating into the system. When the working-man returns to his home,
-at night, he is generally so exhausted that he finds scarcely the least
-disposition to undergo the process of “a thorough good wash;” and, in
-truth, although in no respect regardless of becoming decency, or ignorant
-of the benefits which it would confer on his health, he rests satisfied,
-_for this once_, with a slight rince of the hands and face, if he does
-not yield to the suggestion that it may be dispensed with altogether—but
-“this once” has sometimes no defined period for termination, at least not
-until the Sabbath morning arrives. In such cases, considering the short
-time allotted for social and other purposes, and the great depression of
-body and mind, the evil is more the result of uncontrollable causes than
-of wilful disinclination to perform a salutary duty. There is, however,
-no palliation for an habitual daily deviation from a procedure which is
-so highly beneficial to health and comfort. But, observe this toil-worn
-labourer on the Sabbath, and then there will be seen a man whose general
-appearance denotes that he is fully sensible of the advantages to be
-derived from cleanliness. It is, nevertheless, much to be regretted that
-any portion of the working classes should be so much harassed, when in
-employment, as to render it justifiable that a considerable portion of
-the early part of the Sabbath should be devoted to such necessary
-purposes, in order thoroughly to purify themselves for another week.
-Still, in a temporal view, how salutary is the seventh-day to these
-individuals! There are others for whom we can offer no such excuse—who
-seem to place no value whatever on propriety of appearance, and who
-display no outward respect for a proper observance of the Sabbath. The
-characters to whom we here allude may be seen standing at the corners of
-our streets, or strolling along the public pathways, covered with the
-dirt of their weekly occupation on the Sabbath morning. These men
-altogether reject the implantation of wholesome and necessary duties.
-The orderly and cleanly apartment of an industrious wife affords them no
-delight. They can witness, unmoved by shame, their neighbours dressed in
-their best attire, and many of them repairing, with cheerful hearts, to
-the house of God. These latter partake even now in part of the eternal
-rest of heaven!
-
- “The Sabbath gathers to their common home.”
-
-But it may be truly said of the former that they have not yet learnt
-“what is their chief business upon earth, and what is the reckoning that
-awaits them at the Divine Tribunal.”
-
-Another class of working-men habituate themselves to a custom, in some
-trades more prevalent than in others, which is particularly censurable,
-and the impropriety of which deserves their most serious consideration.
-We refer to the practice of wearing an apron on the morning of the
-Sabbath. Surely the journeyman and the labourer behold the emblem of
-toil sufficiently during the six days without unnecessarily exposing it
-to public gaze on the Sabbath-day! It is a usage which is generally
-condemned. The worldling objects to the practice, because it does not
-harmonize with the fashions and gaieties of life; the moralist
-disapproves of it as not consonant with secular polity; but the Christian
-condemns it, from a pure and holy motive, as giving countenance to a
-breach of the law of God!
-
-Still, notwithstanding, how delightful it is to observe the universal
-appearance of cleanliness on the Sabbath-day! In whatever house we
-enter, with few exceptions, we see on this special day every thing in
-comparative order; the inmates neatly attired, and the furniture cleansed
-and placed in its proper position. If we look at the exterior of our
-dwellings, we see a public evidence of the value of female industry.
-Without a stated Sabbath this could not be the case. One family would
-select a different day to another, while the sloven, not being forced by
-general example, would certainly pay far less attention to the discharge
-of these salutary duties. Indeed, it is very doubtful, under such
-altered circumstances, whether contagious or other diseases would not
-depopulate, to a most awful extent, the inhabitants of our crowded cities
-and towns. Thus we again see the importance of the Sabbath, as regards
-cleanliness, both to individuals and the nation. {27}
-
-4. The Sabbath is essential for the preservation of SIGHT.
-
-Much as we are impressed with the wonderful construction of the various
-parts of the human frame, in respect to their applicability to perform
-the respective functions assigned to them, the eye unquestionably creates
-the greatest interest, on account of its vast utility, the Divine
-ingenuity of its mechanism, and its liability to receive injury from the
-slightest accidental cause. The sight is one of the most invaluable
-blessings. The rich who are deprived of the faculty of vision, although
-they may possess extensive domains in a country whose vallies are as
-Eschol, whose forests are as Carmel, and whose hills are as Lebanon,
-cannot enjoy the magnificence and beauty of the scenery which surrounds
-them; but they can listen with almost unalloyed pleasure to the melodious
-notes of the warbling bird, or to the sweet and powerful intonations of
-musical sounds, and their wealth supplies every other earthly luxury and
-enjoyment, which tends materially to lessen the otherwise severe
-poignancy of their deprivation. How widely different is the melancholy
-situation of the labouring man, when his eyes are impaired by weakness or
-disease, or when he is totally deprived of sight! At once he is reduced
-to abject poverty, and becomes either the recipient of private charity,
-or the inmate of a workhouse. The fine landscape, much as he too may
-desire to gaze on it, is to him of trifling or no consideration—it will
-not satisfy the hungry stomach, nor shelter the body from the midnight
-blast! Such is the mournful effect of the loss of sight to the labouring
-classes. How important is it, then, that they should avail themselves of
-every established right to abstain from work, in order that this
-susceptible and essential faculty may receive additional strength?
-
-We have previously shown that the prolonged hours of labour are
-incompatible with bodily health and mental vigour, and that the Sabbath
-is absolutely requisite to enable man to perform his accustomed
-employment—so it is with regard to the eye. The vision is affected by
-lengthened intensity of observation on any one particular object. It
-requires variety and relief, both of which the Creator has abundantly
-provided. The variegated flowers, the different shades of colour in
-minerals, the lofty trees and the little plants, the mountainous
-districts and the level plains, the brilliant and diversified hues that
-frequently decorate the heavens, all combine to testify that the eye
-cannot retain its perfection, if it is continually fixed on the same
-scene. The poor needlewomen, who sit the entire day, and sometimes do
-not cease from their tedious and spirit-subduing work until the light
-dawns on the following morning, afford a very striking exemplification of
-the great and unspeakable advantages of the Sabbath. What would be their
-sad condition—wretched and deplorable even as it is now—were it not that
-on the seventh day the eye was relieved of its monotonous and weary
-application? Alas! many of these pitiable females, even with this
-gracious opportunity to repair the injury inflicted by almost incessant
-toil, are often at an early age incapacitated, by defective vision, from
-pursuing their ill-paid occupations, and are then left destitute of their
-former scanty pittance to procure even sufficient sustenance to preserve
-life. Take, also, the men who work in pits and mines—where the
-glimmering lamp is the only source of light, and where all else around is
-chaotic darkness—how essential and benignant must be the Sabbath to them!
-Defective vision would completely prevent such men from pursuing their
-hazardous employment. Thus we once more prove the temporal advantages of
-the Sabbath to the labouring population.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having directed our attention to these four important divisions of our
-subject, we will now proceed to make some promiscuous observations in
-connection with them. Reckless competition, in order to acquire wealth
-at all hazards in an unusually short period—not the competition which
-emanates from a natural and laudable desire to increase trade by
-equitable and just efforts—and the secret influence of infidel
-impressions, may generally be considered as the two primary causes of
-“Sunday labour.” The plea of necessity cannot be admitted. We often
-hear it asserted, however, especially in reference to the periodical
-press, that there exists this ‘necessity,’ in order that the public may
-not be disappointed in receiving on a precise day their publications.
-But surely the page of classic lore, or the Magazine of Literature, Arts,
-and Sciences—the bright gems of civilization—need not the foul impress of
-Sabbath labour! A very little judicious extra arrangement would render
-it entirely unnecessary, and the same remark is applicable to every other
-description of work on the seventh-day. Is it not a most humiliating and
-distressing fact, that, on some of the most interesting and valuable
-literary and scientific productions of the present age, there are
-thousands employed on the Sabbath-day? It is impossible to contemplate
-the probable baneful effects, which are almost certain to be produced on
-the minds and bodies of those industrious young females who on that day
-fold and stitch the sheets, without apprehending the most fearful
-consequences, even as regards their temporal welfare. The statistics of
-Police Courts disclose many melancholy facts in corroboration of this
-almost general result. Now, will any reflecting practical man justify
-the word ‘necessity’ as applied to this description of Sabbath
-desecration? None whatever. Then there can be no vindication for an
-unnecessary act which is so injurious to morality, and which induces so
-frightfully to the commission of sin. It is quite clear, as regards the
-general performance of trade labour, that, if consistency of moral
-principle—we say nothing of religious conviction—was duly appreciated, a
-most cheerful negative would be given to all such propositions, the
-result of which would be far more satisfactory at the termination of the
-year.
-
-We must not pass over the sad condition of many of the journeyman
-tailors. Here is a trade where it may be truly said that ‘reckless
-competition has destroyed by want, or excessive labour, hundreds of its
-members,’ and has undoubtedly led them to disregard the Divine origin and
-temporal advantages of the Sabbath. We will prove our assertion. Many
-of the fashionable master tailors, as well as the large establishments
-which continually advertise cheap clothing, allow the work to be taken by
-the journeymen to their own lodgings, or some hired room for the purpose,
-where, according to one of their statements, “the families of those
-unfortunate men are in a great measure totally neglected, their wives
-become careless and void of all cleanliness, and often contaminated by
-the obscene language of the men, even while at work frequently during the
-Sunday.” If we look at the splendid shops of their employers on the
-Sabbath, we see every outward indication of a strict observance of it—but
-turn to the above demoralized neighbourhood, glance at the filthy garret,
-and what a wretched and revolting scene is exhibited! The heart sickens
-with disgust, pity is mingled with abhorrence. What can such masters
-offer in extenuation for such wilful neglect of the religious, moral, and
-social happiness of those they employ?
-
-In speaking to a very poor journeyman tailor, some short time since, he
-said it was not an unusual circumstance for him to be employed on the
-Sunday in making a suit of mourning—a very frequent but reprehensible
-practice which prevails amongst dress-makers, &c.—and that often they
-were the garments intended to be worn by those he esteemed as Christian
-individuals, who, if they had thought that such must have been the case,
-would most assuredly not have permitted it. The Christian community must
-be held responsible for much of this species of Sabbath labour. We do
-not expect the worldly-minded would forego any desired request, but the
-members of a Christian church—those who profess to love God—we have a
-right to conclude would delay for a short time, by making some temporary
-substitution, what otherwise must be considered as one of the last
-manifestations of mournful respect to a deceased friend or relative. It
-would be well if Ministers of religion would occasionally impress on
-their congregations the possibility of their becoming, through an
-inconsiderate desire to have their orders completed at a certain
-unreasonably short period, the unintentional instruments of sin in this
-way. In most cases the ‘necessity’ might be easily removed. Let the
-tradesman frankly state that Sabbath labour must be the consequence of
-compliance, and that the command of God is clear and imperative: “Six
-days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work. But the seventh day is the
-Sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work.” There
-can be no doubt that the effect of such a reply would be, as an especial
-mark of approbation for his pure and conscientious motives, the
-recommendation of many additional customers. But the truth is that many
-employers are apprehensive that they may disoblige their patrons, and to
-secure their support, as they think, they sacrifice the health and
-happiness of their workmen, and destroy any latent inclination to the
-formation of religious habits.
-
-Much of the discontent and bad feeling, which at present exists between
-working-men and their employers, might be removed if the Apostle’s
-injunction was more mutually respected:—“Look not every man on his own
-things, but every man also on the things of others.” Is this the
-principle manifested in the present day? We admit our many
-delinquencies, but are not many masters equally culpable? It has been
-already proved. If employers evince no sympathy for the steady and
-attentive workman—if they view him as a mere inanimate instrument to be
-used only as occasion requires, without the least knowledge of his social
-condition, and utterly regardless of his happiness, what otherwise can
-naturally be expected than that he should be indifferent to the promotion
-of their interests? The subject is a serious one, and it is to be hoped
-that these observations will tend to check a continuance of such
-unquestionable evils, and to create a more reciprocal feeling of
-good-will between them. The situation of the working population is at
-present most painful, and we unhesitatingly affirm that Sabbath
-desecration renders it still more so. Man in general, by strictly
-adhering to an observance of this sacred day, would possess not only
-great temporal advantages, but enjoy an inward peace the value of which
-the wealth of this world cannot purchase.
-
-It will be well here to remember that it is the _universal_ observance of
-the Sabbath which is commanded. The day was made for man—not for a
-portion of the human race—and it is consequently a general law, which, as
-regards at least public labour, {35} cannot be accommodated to suit the
-circumstances or peculiar dispositions of any class of individuals. This
-remark is extremely applicable to railway and other excursions on the
-Sabbath. We are fully aware that the above mode of reasoning is not
-congenial to the natural inclinations of man, and that some very
-apparently plausible objections are frequently urged to prove its
-fallacy. The only course, however, which the Christian can take to
-decide the question is by a direct reference to the Word of God. There
-is nothing contained in the Bible which is inimical to the welfare of
-mankind. The restraints which it imposes are in reality the most evident
-proofs of the love of God. Whatever He has commanded, we may rest
-assured is for the universal benefit of His creatures. The believer is
-experimentally acquainted with this fact, and he therefore considers a
-cheerful and strict obedience to the laws of God both a duty and a
-delight. Now, in reference to the great national and social importance
-of railways, it must be admitted that the most evident general beneficial
-proposition may be alloyed with objectionable considerations, the
-dismemberment of which is a positive duty. Such is the view which the
-Christian takes of railway and steam-boat excursions on the Sabbath. But
-it is said that they are indispensable for the preservation of the health
-of the labouring population. It is true that rational recreation and
-diversified scenes are essential to them, still, we must repeat the
-question, Why should the hours for labour be so protracted that the
-Sabbath must be almost exclusively devoted to temporal enjoyments? The
-poor man has no just right to work in this way until his strength is so
-completely exhausted that it becomes a ‘necessity’—in order to preserve
-his very existence—that he should violate the command of his merciful
-Creator. Is the Sabbath the only day when the labourer is to partake of
-the sweet fruits of his industry? Are all the endearments of life, the
-caresses of his children, and the comforts of the domestic circle, to be
-only enjoyed by him on the Sabbath? Is his little garden, should he
-happily possess one, to exhibit nothing but wild weeds throughout the
-year unless he cultivates it on the Sabbath? The evergreen and the
-beauteous flower would equally as well thrive in the soil that is
-attached to the humble abodes of the mechanic and labourer, provided they
-had time to attend to this elevating source of delight, {36} as they do
-in the ornamental parterres of the rich in this world. Again, we ask,
-why should every moral, intellectual, and social duty be reserved for
-performance on the Sabbath? Those who advance such false sympathy for
-the working classes are themselves supporting a system which perpetuates
-injustice and deprives the poor of true earthly happiness. Let the
-advocates of Sabbath railway and steam-boat excursions apply their minds
-more closely to the consideration of our social condition, and they will
-learn that the ‘necessity’ is to be solely attributed to the avaricious
-or thoughtless disposition of man, in despite of the intervention of a
-merciful Creator. The defence is a most wilful imputation on the wisdom
-and universal beneficence of God. A strict compliance with the Divine
-law, in any state of society, infuses peace and joy into the dwellings of
-the poor, and sheds a bright beam of hope across the rugged path they
-tread!
-
-We cannot avoid here referring to a reply, and to a certain extent a just
-one, which is almost invariably made whenever any remark is offered
-respecting the desecration of the Sabbath either by labour, railway and
-steam-boat excursions, or by journeys taken in vehicles. Not to do so
-would be partial and unjust. The reference is to the number of
-carriages, belonging to the wealthy, which are seen in the metropolis on
-that sacred day. It is easy to understand the motives which govern the
-fashionable _élite_, who exhibit their splendid equipages in our
-beautiful national Parks on the Sabbath, but it appears and is altogether
-contradictory when we see the more reflecting and domestic portion of the
-Nobility and Gentry pursuing the same gay and sinful practice, and thus
-setting a baneful example to those around them who occupy a more humble
-position in life. “_They_ have,” it is said, “six other days in the week
-when they can take their salutary ‘carriage-airings’—it is not so with
-the poor mechanic.” Nor can we pass unnoticed the number of carriages
-which are seen every Sabbath at the entrances to our Churches and
-Chapels—even while some faithful Minister of Christ is sounding the
-trumpet of alarm to impenitent sinners—with the servants waiting outside,
-unconscious of the awful warnings which are being uttered within those
-sacred edifices. Can it be said, in all such cases, that bodily
-infirmity, age, distance, or even the state of the weather, renders it
-necessary? Does it not more resemble the boisterous and imperious
-swellings of the reckless wave than the gentle flowings of the calm
-waters? While such inconsistencies prevail, the infidel will exult for a
-time over his supposed triumph, the ribaldist will continue to sneer at
-the efforts of Christians, and the more cautious worldling will not fail
-to advance it as a justification for Sabbath desecration.
-
-Let us now make a few consecutive observations on the religious, moral,
-and social divisions of our subject. At the commencement nearly of this
-Essay, we observed that it was the temporal advantages of the Sabbath to
-which our especial attention was to be directed; but true morality,
-social happiness, and even intellectual attainments, are all so closely
-blended with religion, or ought to be, that they cannot properly be
-separated. “It would be absurd,” says a popular author, “to treat first
-of the advantages of virtue, and next of those of justice or temperance,
-because the first head evidently comprehends the second.” So it would be
-if we were to attempt to exclude religion from the consideration of moral
-and social principles. Religion is the parent, and the others are the
-legitimate offspring. This has been most eloquently enforced by a writer
-well-known for his piety:—“Every thing which wants religion wants
-vitality. Philosophy without religion is crippled and impotent; poetry
-without religion has no heart-stirring powers; life without religion is a
-complex and unsatisfactory riddle: the very arts which address themselves
-to the senses, never proceed so far towards perfection as when employed
-on religious subjects.” May we not, then, fairly attribute the failure
-of many schemes, intended to improve the condition of the working
-population, to the entire absence of religious considerations? Such
-propositions may be congenial to the thoughtless multitude and the
-infidel, but they invariably terminate in disappointment—because the
-overruling providence of God is not acknowledged, nor are His daily
-mercies at all recognised.
-
-We will now first notice the origin of the Divine obligation for ceasing
-from labour on the Sabbath. It is not essential that we should here
-discuss the question respecting the Christian or Jewish observance of it,
-nor is it absolutely material whether it is designated the Lord’s-Day,
-the Sabbath, or Sunday, although the two former appear to be the most
-appropriate. {40} There can be no doubt, notwithstanding all that may be
-advanced to the contrary, that the Sabbath was instituted by God at the
-creation of the world. “The heavens and the earth were finished, and on
-the seventh-day God ended his work which he had made; and God blessed the
-seventh-day and SANCTIFIED it.” If there is any intelligible inference
-to be drawn from this simple narration, it must be plain that it was the
-Divine intention to separate one day from the other six for sacred and
-devotional purposes, and to afford man an opportunity to obtain repose
-from labour. God not only blessed this day, but he _sanctified_ it,
-thereby imparting to it a peculiar heavenly and hallowed influence. We
-will pass over any intermediate passage in the Old Testament which might
-be brought forward to prove our conclusion, and quote the positive
-command given by God on Mount Sinai—“_Remember_ the Sabbath-day to keep
-it HOLY.” Here is a plain and indisputable enforcement of the original
-obligation, laid on man, to preserve the Sabbath as a previously
-_sanctified_ day. The same injunction, in a variety of ways, is enforced
-throughout the entire Word of God. If, in the New Testament, it is not
-so explicitly commanded, there are abundant instances where Christ
-himself inculcated and respected a proper observance of the Sabbath. The
-early Christians universally considered it as a sacred day, and nearly
-all the ancient writers testify to its being a day set apart for at least
-outward recognition. Josephus asserts, “There is no city or nation,
-Greek or Barbarian, in which the custom of resting on the seventh-day is
-not preserved.” Philo Judæus declares, “It is a festival celebrated not
-only in one city, but throughout the whole world.” Justin Martyr also
-says, “We all meet together on Sunday (_diem Solis_), on which God having
-changed Darkness and Matter, created the world; and on this day Jesus
-Christ our Saviour arose from the dead.” This last record particularly
-confirms our previous assertion respecting the origin of the Sabbath.
-These questions now naturally arise:—Shall the present generation
-impiously attempt to disannul the primæval law of God, which all ages
-have formally respected? Is the power of wealth to bid defiance to the
-eternal law of God? Are the pleasures and luxuries of this world to be
-held in higher estimation than the undescribable joys of heaven? Is
-infidelity, in a word, to triumph over Christianity? The Writer must
-here pause and seriously reflect, and he entreats the reader to do so
-likewise, on the melancholy if not awful consequences that have befallen
-individuals, even in this world, who have wilfully violated the
-Sabbath-day. TRUTH MAY WHISPER DIVINE MERCY RESCUED THEE. * * * If we
-have done so in an humble and contrite spirit, we ought at once to
-exclaim, with the penitent Psalmist, “Have mercy upon me, O God,
-according to thy loving kindness; according unto the multitude of thy
-tender mercies blot out my transgressions.”
-
-The adoption of this course will assuredly lead to a great improvement in
-our present temporal condition. The testimony of Judge Hale, although so
-frequently adduced, seems to force itself on the memory:—“I have found,”
-said he, “that a due observing of the duty of the Lord’s-day hath ever
-joined to it a blessing upon the rest of my time; and the week that hath
-been so begun, hath been blessed and prosperous to me; and, on the other
-side, when I have been negligent of the duties of that day, the rest of
-the week hath been unsuccessful, and unhappy to my secular employments.”
-But what is the assurance and the promise contained in the Word of God?
-“Blessed is the man that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it.” Isaiah
-lvi. 2. “If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing thy
-pleasure on my holy day; and call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the
-Lord, honourable; and shalt honour him, _not doing thine own ways_, _nor
-finding thine own pleasure_, _nor speaking thine own words_; then shalt
-thou delight thyself in the Lord; and I will cause thee to ride upon the
-high places of the earth.” Isaiah lviii. 3. God will bless us in this
-world, and we shall enjoy hereafter an eternal Sabbath in the Celestial
-City, where we ‘shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; for the
-Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed us, and shall lead us
-unto living fountains of waters: and God shall wipe away all tears from
-our eyes.’ Rev. vii. 16, 17.
-
-These are, however, truths which but few seem to believe. No doubt the
-willing compliance of masters to make their men work on the Sabbath has
-created much scepticism. It conveys to the unenlightened mind an idea
-that religion is a mere speculative theory, and hence that day is treated
-with but little veneration, if not with perfect indifference. When such
-individuals are told, in justification, that “little differences about
-religion may occasionally be waived when business requires their
-attendance,” the effect must be, in a greater or less degree, to create a
-dislike for all subjects which have a religious reference. Do we not
-observe this in many working-men, who decry everything which relates to
-religion? Honesty and general morality they can clearly understand; but
-their souls are too barren and unproductive to appreciate the loveliness
-of those things which relate to another and a better world, and are
-consequently unable to discern the unsullied purity of the Divine
-character. Hence it is that we so frequently hear it asserted in the
-workshop that the Bible contains a strange admixture of virtuous
-principles and gross immorality. The best reply to such wicked and
-depraved assertions may be found in the words of a most distinguished
-Minister of the Church of Scotland, whose writings in defence of
-Christianity, together with the force and beauty of his compositions,
-have gained for him universal celebrity amongst Christians of every
-denomination:—“The Scripture is an exact portrait of man; if it shews the
-bright in his character, it also records the black; if it proclaims that
-which ennobles and exalts him, it discloses that which tends to depress
-and humble him. There is also, in the present day, what is thought
-delicacy of language, which was unknown even two or three centuries ago,
-and still more so when the Bible was written.” {44} To this we may add,
-that the Christian reads every sentence in the Word of God with the
-simplicity which denotes his profession, being too much influenced by the
-many precious promises which it contains to cavil about the expediency of
-accommodating the ancient custom of phraseology to suit that of modern
-times. It is the sceptic and the sensual who alone raise the objections.
-We may remark, as regards the Bible containing the details of the
-depravity of man, that they were placed there in order to warn us, and to
-remind us of the justice as well as the unbounded love of God. Let us
-illustrate our meaning by a reference to fading creation. How often do
-we view with ecstacy some lovely garden, admire its varied compartments,
-and gaze with pleasure on the choice flowers which adorn it, yet, at the
-same time, see many obtrusive blades of grass, or straggling weeds, which
-are intended to convey a silent but serious reproof to us? The scattered
-blades of grass, if united in close compact, would excite our admiration.
-Who can behold the simple but beauteous appearance of a lawn, or the
-grass that covers the distant hill, and not feel emotions of delight? It
-is their isolated and estranged position that creates our censure. Just
-so it is as regards the Bible. The sinner, while living apart from God,
-is compared to the weeds and stubble, and is threatened, unless he
-repents and believes in the Saviour, as ‘willing and able to save all
-that come unto Him,’ to be also condemned and to receive that awful
-sentence which awaits the impenitent. When pardoned, however, he is
-brought into close communion with God, and, being united, becomes a
-lovely plant in the garden of the Lord. If our hearts were more fixed on
-the entire purity of God, we should peruse the Scriptures with an
-emphatic earnestness which would elevate us far above sensual and infidel
-conclusions.
-
-The real character of many of the declaimers against the Bible is thus
-portrayed:—“In the middle classes, among the half-thinking,
-half-instructed young men, a sort of infidelity is not unfrequent, which,
-after deducting something for the influence of worse motives, is
-attributable to affectation more than to any other cause. It is a mere
-impertinence, and indicates a want of sense, or profligacy of manners.”
-{46} And, now, what says the late eloquent and pious Robert Hall?
-“Settle it in your minds, as a maxim never to be effaced or forgotten,
-that infidelity is an inhuman and bloody system, equally hostile to every
-human restraint and to every virtuous affection—that, leaving nothing
-above us to create awe, nor round us to waken tenderness, it wages war
-with heaven and earth; its first object is to dethrone God; its next to
-destroy man.” Would that these sentiments, so forcibly expressed, could
-be engraven on the hearts of the rising generation throughout the world!
-
-The greatest researchers after truth, and the most eminent philosophers,
-have borne witness to the exalted worth and power of the Holy Scriptures.
-“I thank God,” says Mr. Locke, “for the light of revelation, which sets
-my poor reason at rest, in many things that lay beyond the reach of its
-discovery.” Lord Bacon observes, “It was only by the light of Scripture,
-and the exercises of devotion, that I attained to that acquaintance with
-God, which I had sought for in vain amidst the hurry of secular affairs,
-or in the course of my philosophical pursuits.” And yet there are some
-men—possessing very extensive knowledge on nearly all other subjects—who
-impugn the truths of Christianity without anything like close and serious
-investigation. They possess a Bible, but, with the exception of a few
-abstract and familiar sentences, they are entirely ignorant of its
-contents. Is it surprising that such individuals merely consider the
-Sabbath as a day for cessation from labour, altogether irrespective of
-its being first sanctified by God, and afterwards enjoined to be kept as
-an holy day? Such persons are naturally, when interest or desire prompts
-them, willing either to labour or to seek worldly pleasure on the
-Sabbath.
-
-We have made the above somewhat lengthened remarks because the entire
-question of Sabbath desecration, after all, rests on a firm belief in the
-Scriptures. The Divine commandment is contained therein, and if the
-Bible is rejected, or believed only in part, our main argument must fail
-to produce conviction; but, if implicit credence is given to it, then, we
-assert, the law of God is absolute and universal.
-
-In order to confine our observations within a limited space, although our
-subject is as prolific as it is important, we must now shortly bring them
-to a conclusion. The effect of an abrogation of the Divine law of the
-Sabbath would be most fatal, as we have already proved, to religion,
-morals, the advancement of intellectual knowledge, and even the existence
-of man. Who can depict the horrid condition of the poor factory children
-if they were deprived of a Sabbath? Why, our manufactories—wherein are
-produced some of the richest fruits which emanate from refined taste and
-from rapid progression in the arts and sciences—would then become
-national nurseries for prostitution and general profligacy, or else the
-infected receptacles of emaciation and disease! Such a supposition may
-be ridiculed by the tolerants of infidelity, and even the pure and tender
-feelings of sympathy may suggest a doubt as to the possibility of such an
-awful event, but the same iniquitous motive that lately consigned
-children to twelve and fourteen hours labour each day—until the voice of
-Christian humanity declared it should no longer be tolerated—is equally
-likely, if not resisted, to deprive this infantine section of the
-community of the spiritual and temporal blessings of the Sabbath.
-Besides, it is just in proportion as we permit the rest of the
-seventh-day to be taken away from the adult, that we weaken the barrier
-that protects youth from its encroachments. But we may extend these
-considerations to the children of the entire population. Were it not for
-this blest day they would be reduced—in civilized England, with the lull
-and benign beams of Gospel light shining now in every city, town, and
-village—to as low a state of degradation and barbarism as the
-unenlightened savage. The latter are totally uninstructed, (what a
-powerful incentive is this fact for increased Missionary exertion!) and
-they therefore roam about in the wildness of their natural state. In
-this country crime is progressive. The boy who is a pickpocket to-day
-may become a burglar to-morrow; the youth who purloins from his master’s
-till not unfrequently commits afterwards a more daring offence; and the
-once little innocent girl, who was permitted to roam in the streets,
-becomes too often the future companion of thieves, and herself branded
-with infamy. It was as remedial measures that Sabbath and Ragged Schools
-were established; yet, with all these and other Christian efforts, the
-number of juvenile offenders has immensely increased. What would be the
-condition of children, and more advanced youth, were it not for the
-instruction afforded to them on the Sabbath? Every species of crime
-would be considerably augmented, and life and property still more
-endangered.
-
-How appropriately might we here dwell on the value and importance of
-Sabbath Schools! They would afford almost an endless theme for the most
-consolatory and sublime considerations. But our space will not allow us
-to enumerate the many temporal advantages which such institutions confer
-on society, and man can never pourtray the heavenly bliss of the myriads
-of once otherwise neglected children, who, having been first taught in
-these Schools to lisp their Saviour’s praise, are now singing continually
-“the song of the Lamb” in the kingdom of their God!
-
- “On harps of gold they praise His name,
- His face they always view;
- Then let us followers be of them,
- That we may praise Him too!”
-
-It is impossible adequately to estimate the temporal advantages of the
-Sabbath. The opportunity which it affords for parental and social
-intercourse is most important. The industrious classes have scarcely any
-time, unless it is on that day, to discharge their responsible duties,
-and consequently their children are exposed to every species of
-depravity. It is true that a Christian mother is daily with her
-children, and, possessing perhaps a greater natural warmth of affection,
-is more likely to be a blessing to them than the father; still, how very
-desirable is it that the latter, particularly as they advance in years,
-should exercise a judicious superintending control, and thus strive to
-maintain the discipline, and carry out the instructions, which have been
-so anxiously and affectionately imbued by the mother during the six days?
-Deprive us of our Sabbath, and fatherly influence is as unproductive as
-the soil of the desert! We lose one of our greatest privileges—the
-natural right to assist in the formation of the religious, moral, and
-intellectual characters of our offspring.
-
-Again, as respects the adult population, has the preaching of God’s Word,
-and the congregating of all grades in society on the Sabbath, no effect
-on the mass of the people? Does it not, leaving out of consideration the
-eternal results, create deeds of charity which impart temporal relief to
-the poor? The Sabbath is the peculiar day when the streams of
-benevolence flow rapidly through the land. It is principally by the
-contributions then given that our humane and benevolent Institutions are
-sustained.
-
-We might also prove that civil governments rise or fall in proportion as
-the people venerate and observe the Sabbath, but it is assuredly
-unnecessary. If it is an institution of paramount importance to a
-family, it must be equally so to a nation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Working-Men! the subject which we have been discussing demands your most
-calm and serious consideration. If we tacitly permit the Sabbath to be
-wrested from us, even in part or whole, we give up the most invaluable
-right which we possess—a right which the Almighty Creator conferred on
-man when He first gave him existence, and which no earthly power can
-justly take from us. Shall we then bear the yoke of continuous labour
-around our necks? The Sabbath is a fixed and indispensable day of rest,
-and we should therefore manifest a decided determination to resist all
-encroachments on it. Let us remember that by working on this sacred day
-we destroy the universality of it, which is the essence and beauty of the
-Sabbath. When we are so requested to labour, let us respectfully but
-resolutely decline it. Considerate employers will respect our motives;
-and, in order fully to prove that we are sincere, we should evince a full
-sense of the value of our right by a constant and assiduous attention to
-our respective duties. May the dawn of a happier day be not far distant,
-when the dark clouds which now cast such a fearful gloom over our country
-shall be dispersed, and when both masters and men shall unitedly resolve
-to obey the law of GOD—“REMEMBER THE SABBATH-DAY TO KEEP IT HOLY!”
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE END.
-
- * * * * *
-
- CHELSEA:
- PRINTED BY T. WILSHER, MANOR STREET.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES.
-
-
-{7} “The progress of bricks and mortar and of inclosures has sadly
-restricted the spaces on which the English peasantry could take healthful
-exercise. Respectable people keep away from these crowded spots. The
-influence of their example is lost, and in its place is substituted the
-influence of the idle, the dissolute, and the depraved.”—_Moral Economy
-of Large Towns_, _by_ Dr. W. C. TAYLOR.
-
-{8} The Writer was, some years ago, addressed in the following manner:
-“It is monstrous, you have no right to let _your religious opinions_
-interfere with business in this way.”
-
-{9} In the French revolutionary mania, in 1800, “the year was divided
-into twelve equal months, of thirty days each, completing the year by the
-ingenious invention of five complemental days. The month was divided
-into three decades, or weeks each of ten days, by which the days of rest
-were reduced to three in each month, which were substituted for the four
-Sundays. * * * * In some towns, workshops and warehouses were closed (on
-the regular Sunday), in others they were closed upon the Decadi (or tenth
-day); nay, frequently, in the same town, in the same street, THE CONTRAST
-PRESENTED THE SPECTACLE OF A MISCHIEVOUS DIVERSITY IN THE IDEAS AND IN
-THE MORALS OF THE PEOPLE.”—_Thier’s History of the Consulate and the
-Empire_.
-
-{14} There are some very excellent little Tracts published by this
-Association on the above subject, which can be procured by application to
-J. Lilwall, Esq., the Secretary, 32; Ludgate Hill.
-
-{18} Although the Writer was at no period of his life “a dram-drinker,”
-he has nevertheless suffered severely from occasional intemperance, and
-he would therefore most earnestly commend the consideration of this
-subject to the labouring classes.
-
-{21} “Of the 45,000 deaths occurring every year in the Metropolis, about
-5,600 arises from this fatal disease; and upwards of 11,000 persons,
-being about one in 170 of the entire population of the metropolis, and
-more than one per cent. of the adults, are constantly wasting away under
-the attacks of this lingering malady. Of these 11,000 cases, about
-three-fourths occur in males, of whom a large proportion are working-men,
-unable to provide for themselves and families. Many—very many—of these
-poor sufferers are the acknowledged victims of unventilated workshops,
-ill-constructed dwellings, vitiated atmosphere, long hours of work, and
-the want of open places for exercise and recreation.” There are 81
-Patients at present in the Hospital, and the number prescribed for daily,
-as Out-Patients, is at the rate of 36,000 in the year!—_Report of the
-Hospital for Consumption_, _and Diseases of the Chest_, _at Brompton_,
-1849.
-
-The Writer of this Essay cannot refrain from making a most earnest appeal
-in behalf of this truly Christian Institution. Gratitude prompts him to
-the discharge of this duty, and he trusts that his humble position in
-life will not weaken the effort to promote the interests of a Charity to
-which himself, three sons, and seven daughters, are so greatly indebted.
-During the period in which he was engaged in the composition of this
-Essay, and for nearly 18 months previous, his wife was receiving the most
-kind, attentive, and skilful treatment from the Physicians of this
-Hospital, who considered her case as almost beyond medical relief. She
-is now in a much improved state of health. Surely this simple statement
-will be deemed as sufficient evidence of the value of this Institution.
-It depends principally on the amount of its Annual Subscriptions for
-support, and it would be a source of great pleasure to the Writer, if it
-should be found that, through the publication of his feeble Essay, only
-ONE Benefactor had been added to the list of its Patrons!
-
-{27} It is very pleasing to observe that many thousands of the working
-classes avail themselves of those admirable places for the preservation
-of health and happiness, the Public Baths, which have been some time now
-established. We may also notice the laudable efforts recently made to
-encourage Open-Air Bathing in the Serpentine. A very interesting and
-important pamphlet on this subject has been lately written by Thomas
-Embling, Esq. It really appears essential that every Bather, and
-especially youth, should peruse a copy of this invaluable
-treatise.—_Published by_ W. F. RAMSAY, 11, _Brompton Row_, _Brompton_.
-
-{35} “The Divine law prohibits civil labour, or work in the way of trade
-on the Sabbath, but acts of mercy are acceptable to God on any day. We
-have several instances of this recorded in the New Testament, in
-reference to Christ and his disciples.”—Dr. S. SMITH’S _Dissertations on
-the Bible_, 1737.
-
-{36} “The flowers of a garden—those silent preachers to which Christ
-himself referred his disciples as eloquent witnesses of the bounty of
-Providence—speak lessons of loveliness to the soul, and give an immediate
-check to gross vice and foul pollution. We too often forget the
-humanizing and moral effects of a garden.”—Dr. W. C. TAYLOR.
-
-{40} The Writer, since the completion of his Essay, has perused the
-First Volume of _The Apocalypse Interpreted in the Light of the Day of
-the Lord_, by the Rev. JAMES KELLY, M.A., Minister of St. Peter’s
-Episcopal Chapel, Queen’s Square, St. James’s Park, from the Preface to
-which he has gleaned the following particulars:—‘The word _Sunday_ is a
-very ancient Heathen appellation, the days of the week having been called
-by them after the names of the planets. The first day was denominated
-_the day of the Sun_, or _the Lord Sun_. All the Oriental nations gave
-the Sun the title of Lord. No doubt the early Christians elevated its
-application. For this ennobling of the common term, they considered that
-provision had been made by God himself, in the setting forth of Christ as
-_the Sun of righteousness_. Malachi iv. By most of the early Fathers,
-and from their time onwards, the term Lord’s-Day has been used to
-designate the Christian Sabbath.’ The Writer of this Essay, therefore,
-humbly submits that Christians should now call the seventh-day either the
-Lord’s-Day or the Sabbath-Day. In the present times this “ennobling of
-the common term” seems peculiarly necessary. The above Work explains
-many hitherto apparently mystical passages in the Revelations, and a
-perusal of it, in a right spirit, will supply arguments which will at
-once silence the sceptic, and, at the same time, confirm the reader in
-his belief that there is nothing contained in the Holy Scriptures, which
-shall not be made manifest to those who seek to be enlightened by the
-Spirit of God. It is published by Messrs. NISBET and Co., London.
-
-{44} The reader is entreated to read “Is Christianity from God?” and
-also “God in History,” by the Rev. JOHN CUMMING, D.D.
-
-{46} History of the Transmission of Ancient Books to Modern Times, by
-JAMES TAYLOR.
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Divine Mercy: or the temporal advantages of
-the Sabbath, by George Bryan
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-Title: Divine Mercy: or the temporal advantages of the Sabbath
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-Author: George Bryan
-
-
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-Release Date: November 14, 2020 [eBook #63764]
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-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DIVINE MERCY: OR THE TEMPORAL
-ADVANTAGES OF THE SABBATH***
-</pre>
-<p>Transcribed from the 1849 Partridge and Oakey edition by David
-Price.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">
-<a href="images/coverb.jpg">
-<img alt=
-"Decorative cover from pamphlet"
-title=
-"Decorative cover from pamphlet"
- src="images/covers.jpg" />
-</a></p>
-<h1><span class="GutSmall">THE</span><br />
-Chelsea Working-Man&rsquo;s Sabbath Essay.</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center">~~~~~~</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><b>DIVINE MERCY;</b></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">OR,
-THE</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">TEMPORAL ADVANTAGES OF THE
-SABBATH.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">INTERSPERSED
-WITH</span><br />
-EXPOSTULATORY REMARKS.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">BY GEORGE BRYAN,<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">ONE OF THE LATE COMPETITORS FOR THE
-SABBATH ESSAY PRIZES.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis not in artful measures, in the
-chime<br />
-And idle tinkling of a minstrel&rsquo;s lyre,<br />
-To charm His ear, whose eye is on the heart;<br />
-Whose frown can disappoint the proudest strain,<br />
-Whose approbation prosper even mine!&rdquo;&mdash;<span
-class="smcap">Cowper</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">LONDON:</span><br />
-PARTRIDGE AND OAKEY, PATERNOSTER ROW;<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">W. F. RAMSAY, BROMPTON ROW,
-BROMPTON;</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">J. L. POUTER, SLOANE STREET; AND D.
-ROBERTSON, GLASGOW.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">1849</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><a name="page2"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 2</span><span
-class="GutSmall">CHELSEA.</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PRINTED BY T. WILSHER, MANOR
-STREET.</span></p>
-<h2><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 3</span><span
-class="GutSmall">TO THE</span><br />
-RIGHT HON. THE EARL OF HARROWBY,<br />
-<i>&amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</i></h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">My Lord</span>,</p>
-<p>Towards the termination of the year 1847, J. Henderson, Esq.,
-of Park, near Glasgow, a gentleman distinguished for his piety
-and universal benevolence, offered prizes for the three best
-Essays on &ldquo;the Temporal Advantages of the Sabbath, and the
-consequent necessity of preserving its rest from all the
-encroachments of unnecessary labour.&rdquo;&nbsp; In the short
-space of three months 1045 Essays were forwarded by Working-Men
-to the Adjudicators.&nbsp; Some time afterwards, ten additional
-prizes were munificently given by His Royal Highness Prince
-Albert, in addition to many others which had been previously
-announced.</p>
-<p>One month had elapsed before I was informed of the original
-intention, and at that period the health of my wife was in a very
-precarious state, besides which I was myself labouring under
-great distress of mind.&nbsp; Notwithstanding these evident
-disadvantages, the subject being congenial to my feelings, I
-resolved on making an effort to express my individual views
-respecting the temporal value and importance of the
-Sabbath-day.</p>
-<p>Although unsuccessful in obtaining a prize, there were reasons
-which induced me to conclude that my Essay, in <a
-name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 4</span>its original
-state, maintained a most favourable position amidst the host of
-its competitors.&nbsp; Since its return to me I have made several
-material amendments&mdash;which I deem it right to acknowledge in
-justice to the arduous duties of the Adjudicators.&nbsp; Several
-Inhabitants of Chelsea, who had perused my amended Essay,
-expressed a desire that it should be printed; and, having since
-received increased encouragement, I have been induced
-respectfully to submit it to the ordeal of Christian
-opinion.&nbsp; It is entirely my own composition, even to its
-final revision for the press.</p>
-<p>It may be necessary for me to inform your Lordship, in order
-to remove any doubts as to my being a working-man, that I was
-apprenticed to the late Messrs. Tilling and Hughes, Printers,
-then of Grosvenor Row, Pimlico; the latter gentleman was a son of
-the Rev. J. Hughes, M.A., one of the Founders of the British and
-Foreign Bible Society.</p>
-<p>Permit me, my Lord, to express now my heartfelt gratitude for
-the prompt and kind permission to dedicate the following feeble
-production to your Lordship.&nbsp; I am aware that it must be
-very imperfect, but I know that God can impart a blessing even to
-the most apparently futile means to promote His glory.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">I have the honor to be, my
-Lord,</p>
-<p style="text-align: right">Your Lordship&rsquo;s obliged and
-humble Servant,<br />
-GEORGE BRYAN.</p>
-<p>6, <i>Little Camera Street</i>, <i>King&rsquo;s Road</i>,<br
-/>
-
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Chelsea</i>, <i>Oct.</i> 1849.</p>
-<h2><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>DIVINE
-MERCY; <i>&amp;c.</i></h2>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;God blessed the seventh-day, and <span
-class="GutSmall">SANCTIFIED</span> it.&rdquo;&mdash;<span
-class="smcap">Gen</span>. ii. 2.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it <span
-class="smcap">Holy</span>.&rdquo;&mdash;<span
-class="smcap">Exodus</span> xx. 8.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If keeping holy the seventh-day were only an human
-institution, it would be the best method that could have been
-thought of for the polishing and civilization of
-mankind.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Addison</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Barren and debased must be that man who is insensible to the
-lovely character and genial influences of the Sabbath-day!&nbsp;
-It is a day on which the heart, if only susceptible of the
-ordinary feelings of conviction, must ever beat with the sweetest
-emotions of gratitude for the many blessings which it confers;
-for, in whatever condition we contemplate the varied members of
-society, whether individually or collectively, it is alike
-beneficial and indispensable.&nbsp; Hence the first dawn of the
-Sabbath beams with sympathy towards every human creature.&nbsp;
-To despise such an invaluable boon&mdash;by a wilful violation of
-the beneficent but absolute law of God&mdash;is to be utterly
-regardless of life in this world, and to exhibit no desire to
-participate hereafter in the blissful joys of heaven!</p>
-<p><a name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>But we
-have to consider more especially the temporal advantages to be
-derived from the Divine institution of the Sabbath.&nbsp; It
-having been stated, however, that the working classes were
-willing to be employed on this sacred day for the benefit of
-themselves and families, and that they were indifferent to the
-agitation of our question, a few preliminary remarks cannot be
-considered as irrelevant; but, on the contrary, may fairly be
-admitted as introductory or collateral arguments in support of
-our general proposition.&nbsp; We need not enter into any
-lengthened controversy to prove that the first statement is a
-mere subterfuge to evade the responsibility of Sabbath
-desecration, nor do we intend to refer to any speculative
-opinions as to the causes of the asserted declension, as implied
-in the second declaration.&nbsp; It will be sufficient to confine
-ourselves here, as we shall occasionally do throughout our
-observations, to undeniable facts&mdash;not offered in
-extenuation, but simply to account, if true, for such flagrant
-and sinful anomalies.</p>
-<p>During the last comparatively few years, in consequence of the
-vast increase in the population, and a more universal extension
-of knowledge, many great and salutary improvements have been
-adopted in this country.&nbsp; But notwithstanding this, and all
-the continued indications of progression, there is much over
-which the Christian must necessarily deplore.&nbsp; If the once
-quiet village has now become a populous town, and the busy town a
-mighty city, it must be admitted, that, while <a
-name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 7</span>these changes
-are evidences of the magnitude of our trade, &amp;c., they have
-also been accompanied by an immense amount of poverty,
-immorality, and irreligion. <a name="citation7"></a><a
-href="#footnote7" class="citation">[7]</a>&nbsp; It is true also
-that the swampy level has been elevated and magnificent buildings
-now occupy its place, still the streams of iniquity flow around
-them with almost irresistible rapidity.&nbsp; The blessings of
-education have likewise been very properly diffused&mdash;and it
-is to be hoped that they will be far more extended, and based on
-a recognition of Christian principles&mdash;yet who will deny
-that there is much in our literature, and more particularly in
-our minor publications, which subvert the minds of youth, and too
-often lead them ultimately to entertain sentiments averse to
-religion, and detrimental to the general interests of
-society?&nbsp; Utilitarianism is not always associated with
-Christianity.&nbsp; Again, the Beer Act Bill must ever be
-regarded as having had a very injurious tendency on the morals of
-the rural and suburban populations, while the costly edifices in
-our large towns and cities, for the retail sale of ardent
-spirits, which have been so unaccountably tolerated and
-sanctioned by the Legislature, have most direfully increased
-pauperism and crime.&nbsp; Lastly, the labour performed by a
-large portion of the working classes <a name="page8"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 8</span>has either been oppressive or
-altogether inadequate to their necessities.&nbsp; Impelled by the
-current of trade on some days with an impetuosity unknown to
-former ages, and soon afterwards standing idle for many others on
-the bleak shore soliciting freight for their fragile vessels of
-industry&mdash;if not carried away by the boisterous waves of
-intemperance, or rendered incapacitated by previous merciless
-lengthened hours of labour&mdash;the natural sensibilities of
-many among them even to appreciate the temporal advantages of the
-Sabbath very often become chilled, and when that blest morn
-arrives they are frequently enduring the greatest possible
-privations, or else secretly if not openly working with an
-activity surpassing the legally appointed days for labour.&nbsp;
-Exposed to such temptations, or placed in such an uncertain
-condition, uninfluenced by the rays of heavenly light, they
-consent to the avaricious demands of their employers, fearful of
-dismissal from their ordinary toil as a consequence of their
-refusal, <a name="citation8"></a><a href="#footnote8"
-class="citation">[8]</a> and not unfrequently too become the
-deluded followers of men who are avowed disbelievers in the
-truths of Christianity&mdash;the blind adherents of what is
-falsely called Socialism!&nbsp; If, therefore, we have advanced
-in many respects, it is equally evident that stagnant and
-putrifying waters are still to be seen, in every direction, which
-emit a deadly influence over nearly the whole surface of the
-nation.</p>
-<p><a name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>It must
-be obvious then, avoiding all remarks of a political nature, that
-the present period is well-suited for the consideration of the
-temporal importance of the Sabbath.&nbsp; Without a <i>fixed</i>
-Sabbath we should be reduced to a state of imbecility or else
-inflamed by unnatural excitement, and the greatest disorder would
-prevail throughout society, <a name="citation9"></a><a
-href="#footnote9" class="citation">[9]</a> which would render us
-unable to devise means to remove acknowledged evils, and to
-maintain those laws which are truly valuable and essential.&nbsp;
-The Sabbath affords a day for entire repose from all worldly
-cares, so that we may be in a better state, at other times, to
-devise such beneficial measures as cool deliberation might
-suggest.&nbsp; The following well-known lines, with the slight
-alteration of a word, may here be profitably applied:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Would you then taste the tranquil scene?<br
-/>
-Be sure your <span class="smcap">Sabbaths</span> are serene;<br
-/>
-Devoid of hate, devoid of strife,<br />
-And free from all that poisons life.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Happy would it be for each of us if we possessed more of this
-necessary serenity of mind, and <a name="page10"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 10</span>if all our efforts, whether in
-connection with politics, science, social improvement, or our
-daily pursuits, were conducted in strict accordance with the
-revealed will of God!&nbsp; The latter is an essential without
-which we can neither enjoy individual happiness or experience
-national mercies.&nbsp; Past and present events most painfully
-demonstrate that a country may abound with wealth; that it may be
-fertile in its productions and possess great resources, and that
-the philanthropist may gaze with delight on its many noble
-Institutions; still, if its inhabitants daringly attempt to
-abrogate the Divine law of the Sabbath, a dark cloud will
-assuredly be seen that will cast a fearful gloom over the most
-highly-favoured land.&nbsp; &ldquo;There is none like unto thee,
-O Lord; thou art great, and thy name is great in might.&nbsp; Who
-would not fear thee, O King of Nations! for to thee doth it
-appertain: forasmuch as among all the wise men of the nations,
-and in all their kingdoms, there is none like unto
-thee.&rdquo;&nbsp; Jer. x. 6, 7.</p>
-<p>We will now proceed more in order with our subject, and, in
-doing so, it is necessary we should remember that we intend to
-confine ourselves almost exclusively to &ldquo;the temporal
-advantages of the Sabbath to the labouring classes, and the
-consequent necessity of preserving its rest from all the
-encroachments of unnecessary labour.&rdquo;&nbsp; This mode of
-procedure is in agreement with the contemplated object, viz. to
-procure from the sons of toil themselves an evidence of the mercy
-and love of God in commanding one <i>special</i> day in seven to
-<a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>be devoted
-for rest from labour.&nbsp; To contemplate and enforce the
-importance of the Sabbath, in a spiritual view, is a duty which
-is being continually discharged by the Ministers of religion.</p>
-<p>1.&nbsp; The Sabbath is indispensable, as a day of rest, both
-to body and mind; without it neither could be exerted with
-natural vigour.</p>
-<p>The <span class="GutSmall">BODY</span> of man, although
-admirably adapted to perform the varied and arduous duties of
-life, is nevertheless compared in Scripture to the fading flower
-and the withering blade of grass.&nbsp; The material from which
-the Creator formed us, in his infinite wisdom, seems at once to
-convey an idea of its frailty and tendency to bend downwards,
-when overcome by excessive fatigue, to its separated component
-part.&nbsp; This is confirmed by experience, for we know that
-long continuous labour, without adequate rest, is certain to
-impair health, and to destroy the body before the allotted period
-for human existence.&nbsp; The usual hours for repose, excluding
-the Sabbath, are not sufficient to re-invigorate nature.&nbsp; We
-need not only to rest on our beds at night, but it is necessary
-that we should rest at suitable short intervals for an entire
-day.&nbsp; In thus reasoning, however, let it not be considered
-as encouraging slothfulness or inactivity in business.&nbsp;
-Honest labour is an essential duty, the proper discharge of which
-is incumbent on us as members of the community, in order that we
-may supply our absolute necessities and procure the conveniences
-and comforts of life, by doing which <a name="page12"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 12</span>we promote the general happiness of
-mankind.&nbsp; Religion and reason equally enforce it.&nbsp; But
-slothfulness, or habitual idleness, is not justly attributable to
-the working classes.&nbsp; True, the number of those who are
-addicted to intemperance is very great, and it may be said of
-such that they are indolent men; yet, taking another view of
-them, they are the most slavish&mdash;and they endure more bodily
-and mental fatigue than any others of the human race&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;Labour dire it
-is, and weary woe;&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>but our remarks have reference only to the excessive labour of
-the steady, industrious, and persevering man.</p>
-<p>This leads us to notice the close connection between the <span
-class="GutSmall">LATE HOUR SYSTEM</span> and <span
-class="smcap">Sabbath desecration</span>&mdash;a system which has
-been justly denounced as &ldquo;reducing man to a state little
-short of slavery.&rdquo;&nbsp; When God divided &ldquo;the light
-from darkness,&rdquo; there can be no doubt that one of His
-merciful objects was to give us an opportunity to obtain suitable
-repose.&nbsp; Indeed, this is quite evident from many passages of
-Scripture which we might quote.&nbsp; We will merely select one
-single sentence from the Psalms, to shew that night work is
-contrary to the general tenor of the Word of God&mdash;&ldquo;Man
-goeth forth unto his work, and to his labour, <i>until the
-evening</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Here we see a clear and defined
-limitation to the hours of labour.&nbsp; To this it may be
-replied that the altered state of society renders it necessary
-that men <a name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-13</span>should toil much longer now than in more primitive
-days.&nbsp; We are perfectly aware that there may be occasional
-periods, under peculiar circumstances, when this suggestion might
-be considered conclusive.&nbsp; It is not, however, to the
-<i>occasional</i> or <i>accidental</i> infringement on an extra
-hour or two that we object&mdash;it is to the <i>system</i> of
-compelling men, almost habitually, to labour far beyond the
-period which <span class="smcap">Divine Mercy</span> has
-evidently intended.&nbsp; Is not this the course pursued in many
-of our workshops and in various retail trades?&nbsp; It is a
-well-known fact, as regards the former, that it is a common
-practice for the same men who have been toiling all the day to
-continue their labour until a very late hour, if not throughout
-the whole night, and not unfrequently during the entire
-Sabbath-day!&nbsp; What must be the melancholy condition of the
-men and boys employed in such places?&nbsp; The Sabbath is
-awfully desecrated; the doctrines and precepts of religion are
-rendered nugatory; public morals are totally disregarded; and the
-bodies and souls of youth and age are alike sacrificed as victims
-to the idol of the world&mdash;<span
-class="GutSmall">WEALTH</span>!&nbsp; Let us now refer to the
-indisputable testimony of Dr. James <span
-class="smcap">Copland</span>, who may be considered as one of the
-most eminent physicians of the present day, in reference to the
-latter class:&mdash;&ldquo;It is well-known to medical men that
-the labour in shops, which extends to fourteen or fifteen hours a
-day, is the most fruitful source of disease which is furnished in
-the Metropolis.&nbsp; We are sure to see induced more or less
-slowly <a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-14</span>those insidious diseases which undermine the
-constitution, and which perpetuate themselves to the third or
-fourth generation.&nbsp; I believe that no less than
-three-fourths of the diseases to which human life is liable in
-the Metropolis actually arise from this cause.&rdquo;&nbsp; What
-an awful subject does this afford for the serious consideration
-of masters, parents, and especially the Christian
-community!&nbsp; Nor is the magnitude of this source of sickness,
-sorrow, and death, attested and deplored alone by the Medical
-Profession.</p>
-<p>Lord John <span class="smcap">Russell</span> says, &ldquo;It
-is, I think, one of the greatest evils of this country that toil
-has become so excessive, that all considerations of
-health&mdash;all attention to intellectual improvement, and even
-all that time which ought to be devoted to spiritual
-worship&mdash;is lost in that excess of labour which the people
-of this country are compelled to undergo.&rdquo;&nbsp; Lord <span
-class="smcap">Ashley</span>, in commending the efforts of
-&ldquo;The Metropolitan Early-Closing Association,&rdquo; <a
-name="citation14"></a><a href="#footnote14"
-class="citation">[14]</a> likewise most justly asserts, that
-&ldquo;the struggle which is taking place at the present time is
-neither more nor less than a great conflict between materialism
-and spirituality.&nbsp; It is a struggle between things temporal
-and things eternal&mdash;it is a struggle between the creation of
-wealth and the objects for which wealth should be
-created.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But let us briefly reflect on the melancholy <a
-name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>statement
-made by Dr. Copland, and we shall see that late hours of business
-inevitably destroy the sacred character of the Sabbath, and cause
-many to spend it in some of those modes of desecration for which
-the facilities are now so numerous and so seductive.&nbsp; The
-Writer of this Essay has two sons who have been brought up to
-respectable retail trades; the youngest was compelled, some short
-time since, to attend a shop from seven in the morning until
-eleven at night, and on Saturday it extended frequently to one,
-making it nearly two o&rsquo;clock before he could possibly
-retire to rest.&nbsp; When he came home, on the Sabbath, instead
-of being enabled to attend a Church or Chapel, it became
-absolutely necessary that he should again obtain additional sleep
-during the greater part of the day, thus completely depriving him
-of the opportunity to be present in the sanctuary of God.&nbsp;
-This youth formerly attended the Park Chapel Sabbath School, at
-Chelsea, and the conviction naturally is that to this iniquitous
-and baneful cause may be attributed much of the demoralization
-which is so painfully apparent in many of those who have been
-similarly instructed.</p>
-<p>The present century has unquestionably presented some of the
-most mournful and singular anomalies which it is possible to
-conceive.&nbsp; We have seen the rich Indian Proprietor expending
-large sums of money in this country for general charitable
-purposes, and devoting his most powerful energies to obtain
-justice for every British subject, while, at the same time, the
-winds that howled <a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-16</span>around him, as he softly reposed on his luxurious couch,
-echoed an appeal from his more distant fellow-man to be
-emancipated from the chains of slavery!&nbsp; Nor has the conduct
-of <i>some</i> employers towards their workmen been less
-paradoxical, although the nature of their oppression has been of
-a widely different character.&nbsp; They seem not to understand
-that there are relative essentials, secondary only to the payment
-of wages, which it is their duty to encourage and not to
-oppose.&nbsp; As we shall, however, have occasion to refer to
-such instances, as we proceed, it is unnecessary now to dilate on
-them.&nbsp; It will be seen that the inconsistencies to which we
-allude are subversive to the best interests of masters, and are
-still more injurious to those they employ&mdash;they excite more
-debasing desires, which unfit them for labour, and they snap
-asunder the link of confidence and kindly feeling which ought
-ever to unite them.&nbsp; Alas! how many seem to consider the
-poor labouring man almost as a mere machine, without a frame
-susceptible of fatigue, destitute of the least intelligence, and
-without a soul to be saved!</p>
-<p>It appears quite unnecessary further to prove that the
-seventh-day is absolutely requisite for bodily rest, even were
-the hours for labour limited universally to a just and natural
-period.&nbsp; Ask the poor factory children, the domestic
-servant, the apprentice boy, the mechanic, the men who work in
-pits and mines, the ill-paid but industrious needlewomen, the
-tradesman and the shopman, the merchant, the man of literature
-and science, <a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-17</span>the senator&mdash;nay, ask our august and beloved <span
-class="smcap">Queen</span> and her <span class="smcap">Royal
-Consort</span>&mdash;each will readily acknowledge the vast
-utility of the Sabbath as an indispensable means to maintain
-their bodily strength.</p>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Rest! without thee what strength can long
-survive,<br />
-What spirit keep the flame of Hope alive?&rdquo;&mdash;<span
-class="smcap">Bloomfield</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>All nature is loud in its cries for rest.&nbsp; The powerful
-horse becomes weary, and treads instinctively into his stable,
-and the little birds are glad to rest on the slender branches of
-a tree.&nbsp; It is the universal requirement of all animated
-creatures.</p>
-<p>The <span class="GutSmall">MIND</span>, if it is possible to
-consider it as distinct from the body, equally demands the
-preservation of the Sabbath.&nbsp; The entire separation of them,
-however, is impracticable.&nbsp; We all know that it is
-impossible to proceed advantageously with our daily employment if
-the mind is not intently fixed on the object of labour.&nbsp;
-When oppressed, by unremitting exertion, it is deprived of its
-influence, and cannot effectually govern the actions of the
-body.&nbsp; It would be, indeed, as absurd to suppose a man could
-perform his work, under such circumstances, as it would be for
-him to expect the corn to ripen without the genial influence of
-the rays of the sun.&nbsp; The supposition is not tenable.&nbsp;
-Whenever the mind appears to triumph over the body it is caused
-by violent excitement, passion, or powerful stimulants, which
-operate on the brain, the organ of the mind, so as to effect
-temporarily the mechanism of the <a name="page18"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 18</span>body, as with those who resort to
-spirituous liquors, <a name="citation18"></a><a
-href="#footnote18" class="citation">[18]</a> after a hard
-day&rsquo;s work, to deaden the depressive sensations produced by
-subsequent prostration of strength.&nbsp; But this instantaneous
-relief is only of short duration&mdash;it is, in fact, the brain
-and mind operating conjointly on the body in the same manner,
-only <i>at first</i> in a less degree, as it does on the
-maniac!&nbsp; The ultimate effect of a stimulated brain is to
-corrode and weaken the mind, and, when this is the case, the
-brightness of its comprehension is at once darkened.&nbsp; We
-will endeavour to proceed a little further with this very
-important part of our subject, as drunkenness, by producing a
-temporary aberration of the mind, is one of the principal causes
-of the desecration of the Sabbath.</p>
-<p>The clouds are generally said to be formed of the vapours and
-moisture of the earth, and the body of man was created from the
-dust of the earth.&nbsp; There is here something like an analogy,
-viewing the body previous to life being imparted, which, although
-it may appear in some respects not quite parallel, we will admit
-to be so.&nbsp; The beauty of an evening cloud is caused by the
-reflection of the sun, which gives to it various bright hues and
-colours.&nbsp; Without such an agency it would impart no pleasure
-whatever to the eye of the beholder.&nbsp; The body of man, too,
-became appreciated only <a name="page19"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 19</span>when it received vitality from the
-Creator.&nbsp; We here perceive two evident influences&mdash;a
-lesser and a much greater&mdash;the brilliancy of the rays of the
-sun on the otherwise darksome cloud, and the pure breath of the
-Almighty infused into worthless dust!&nbsp; Let the splendid sun
-withdraw, by the power of Omnipotence, and the cloud immediately
-loses its attraction&mdash;it is then simply the vapours and the
-moisture of the earth.&nbsp; Now, the mind&mdash;which may be
-considered as the intellectual luminary&mdash;gives value to the
-body, and excites likewise terrene attraction, in the same
-manner, although in a far more important sense.&nbsp; But if the
-mind is obscured, the capabilities of the body are deteriorated,
-while the cloud, notwithstanding the absence of its beauteous
-influence, retains its original ordained utility.&nbsp; Rain
-descends from it, which refreshes the inhabitants of the earth,
-and makes all nature smile.&nbsp; Man, when his body is greatly
-depressed, although the mind is partially operating on it,
-becomes an abject mass&mdash;of no benefit to his
-fellow-creatures.&nbsp; Still, let it not be forgotten, that the
-mind is the <i>expression</i> of the soul, and that the soul will
-exist when all clouds and this earth shall have passed away for
-ever!&nbsp; How important is it, then, to preserve the mind,
-seeing that it governs the body, the actions of which, if not
-directed by the Spirit of God, decide the eternal destiny of the
-soul!&nbsp; What, we ask, can possibly more effectually maintain
-both body and mind in their primitive vigour&mdash;so as to
-enable us not only to discharge satisfactorily our relative <a
-name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>duties in
-this world, but to share that sweet and eternal &lsquo;rest which
-remaineth for the people of God&rsquo;&mdash;than the strictest
-adherence to the Divine commandment, &ldquo;Remember the
-Sabbath-day to keep it holy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>2.&nbsp; The Sabbath is necessary for the preservation of
-health, on account of the impurities of the atmosphere, arising
-from a variety of pernicious causes.</p>
-<p>The unwholesome impregnations of the atmosphere, in densely
-populated cities and towns, afford another reason for strictly
-enforcing the Divine law as regards working on the Sabbath.&nbsp;
-The great amount of mortality, attributable to this cause, has of
-late happily excited the most intense interest.&nbsp; It appears
-that many thousands of the labouring classes are annually
-consigned to the grave through inhaling obnoxious air.&nbsp; If
-we required proof of this fact we need only observe the pallid
-cheeks and sunken eyes of too many working-men&mdash;not those
-who are unemployed, and are in a destitute condition, but those
-who labour daily in places and situations where the refreshing
-breeze never scarcely penetrates.&nbsp; We may attribute much of
-this to the erection of Gas Works, Varnish and other
-Manufactories, which emit their abominable and destructive
-effluvia in the very centre of our large cities and towns.&nbsp;
-To the men employed in such places, and to the inhabitants who
-dwell around them, how peculiarly beneficial must be the return
-of the Sabbath!&nbsp; Again, fully admitting the undeniable fact
-that gas is an incalculable <a name="page21"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 21</span>benefit, we know that to toil
-throughout six evenings in the week, and occasionally whole days
-at particular seasons of the year, in addition to the oppression
-arising from breath and the frequent want of proper ventilation,
-particularly where there are many men employed in the same room,
-too often terminates in Consumption, <a name="citation21"></a><a
-href="#footnote21" class="citation">[21]</a> or some other fatal
-disease.&nbsp; Gas is of great utility; but if, for <a
-name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 22</span>illustration,
-the sun reflected equal intensity of heat <i>every day</i> alike,
-it would not only destroy all vegetation but every human
-creature&mdash;withholding its influence at intervals, when it
-shines forth with meridian splendour, it makes the seed
-prosperous, the vine fruitful, and imparts cheerfulness to
-man.&nbsp; Thus it is as respects gas, the Sabbath is a grateful
-relief, and affords a highly necessary cessation to re-supply the
-waste of strength which is incurred by it.</p>
-<p>We might proceed to a very considerable length with this part
-of the division of our subject, but it really would appear
-superfluous.&nbsp; The following startling and melancholy facts
-must be considered conclusive.&nbsp; In a late Return of the
-Registrar-General, it is stated, that the average life of a
-gentleman in London is 43, while that of the artizan, &amp;c., is
-but 22 years!&nbsp; The same official document informs us that
-the chances of dying among men above 35 years, in London, is to
-that in the country as three to two!&nbsp; With such statements
-before us, is it not a duty we owe to ourselves and families to
-maintain inviolably the Sabbath?&nbsp; It was ordained by the
-Creator in mercy to man, and shall we daringly reject and despise
-such a gracious boon?</p>
-<p>Some latitudinarian and impious persons have boldly asserted
-that the labouring classes have no desire for religious
-instruction&mdash;on what positive evidence this general
-accusation is made it is impossible to conceive&mdash;and that
-therefore the Sabbath may as well be considered as an ordinary <a
-name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>day.&nbsp;
-This idea is as unjust as it is monstrous.&nbsp; Because the
-Sabbath is not by the majority esteemed as a sacred day, is that
-a sufficient reason why it should be desecrated by labour?&nbsp;
-Many do exhibit an utter indifference to its lovely character and
-genial influences, but are others in consequence to be deprived
-of its inestimable blessings, and are the great mass of the
-people tacitly to bow with submission at the shrine of
-infidelity?&nbsp; Because many descend into the dark abyss, are
-none to take their flight to heaven?&nbsp; It has been said,
-likewise, that many young men, not so utterly debased, make our
-foregoing argument a pretext for resorting to distant places
-where the Sabbath is most daringly profaned, and where maddening
-pleasure is the sole inducement, and that the occasional
-restriction of employment is of no importance.&nbsp; To admit the
-soundness of this expedient defence would be to destroy all
-religious and moral obligations.&nbsp; The <i>natural</i>
-inclinations of youth are thoughtless and volatile, and it is the
-duty of the more reflecting portion of the community to check
-their vicious career, by pourtraying the inevitable fatal
-consequences which must ultimately attend them.&nbsp; Perhaps the
-following beautiful lines, which convey a just and stern reproof,
-may possibly attract the attention of some among the
-number:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Thy thoughts are vagabond; all outward
-bound;<br />
-&rsquo;Midst sands, and rocks, and storms, to cruise for
-pleasure;</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
-<p>Fancy and sense, from an infected shore,<br />
-Thy cargo brings, and pestilence the prize.&rdquo;&mdash;<span
-class="smcap">Young</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><a name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 24</span>But,
-happily, there are multitudes of working-men and youths who
-&ldquo;call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord
-honourable,&rdquo; and who look forward to its return, in order
-to enjoy its spiritual as well as temporal advantages, with
-almost more anxiety than the husbandman, in anticipation of his
-gains, to the produce of a bountiful harvest.&nbsp; Without a
-Sabbath man would become puerile, sickly, and spiritually
-dead.</p>
-<p>3.&nbsp; The Sabbath affords an opportunity to the labouring
-classes to attend to one of the greatest social
-duties&mdash;<span class="GutSmall">CLEANLINESS</span>.</p>
-<p>If there is any truth in the preceding remarks, the necessity
-for keeping the body properly cleansed, and changing every
-seventh day our habiliments, is so palpable that any arguments to
-enforce either the one or the other would almost appear
-unnecessary.&nbsp; Let us reflect, however, for a short time on
-this part of our subject.&nbsp; The injurious properties mixed up
-in the materials used by many trades are of a nature that require
-more than customary slight ablutions to prevent them from
-penetrating into the system.&nbsp; When the working-man returns
-to his home, at night, he is generally so exhausted that he finds
-scarcely the least disposition to undergo the process of &ldquo;a
-thorough good wash;&rdquo; and, in truth, although in no respect
-regardless of becoming decency, or ignorant of the benefits which
-it would confer on his health, he rests satisfied, <i>for this
-once</i>, with a slight rince of the hands and face, if he does
-not yield to the suggestion that it may be dispensed with <a
-name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-25</span>altogether&mdash;but &ldquo;this once&rdquo; has
-sometimes no defined period for termination, at least not until
-the Sabbath morning arrives.&nbsp; In such cases, considering the
-short time allotted for social and other purposes, and the great
-depression of body and mind, the evil is more the result of
-uncontrollable causes than of wilful disinclination to perform a
-salutary duty.&nbsp; There is, however, no palliation for an
-habitual daily deviation from a procedure which is so highly
-beneficial to health and comfort.&nbsp; But, observe this
-toil-worn labourer on the Sabbath, and then there will be seen a
-man whose general appearance denotes that he is fully sensible of
-the advantages to be derived from cleanliness.&nbsp; It is,
-nevertheless, much to be regretted that any portion of the
-working classes should be so much harassed, when in employment,
-as to render it justifiable that a considerable portion of the
-early part of the Sabbath should be devoted to such necessary
-purposes, in order thoroughly to purify themselves for another
-week.&nbsp; Still, in a temporal view, how salutary is the
-seventh-day to these individuals!&nbsp; There are others for whom
-we can offer no such excuse&mdash;who seem to place no value
-whatever on propriety of appearance, and who display no outward
-respect for a proper observance of the Sabbath.&nbsp; The
-characters to whom we here allude may be seen standing at the
-corners of our streets, or strolling along the public pathways,
-covered with the dirt of their weekly occupation on the Sabbath
-morning.&nbsp; These men altogether reject the implantation of <a
-name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 26</span>wholesome and
-necessary duties.&nbsp; The orderly and cleanly apartment of an
-industrious wife affords them no delight.&nbsp; They can witness,
-unmoved by shame, their neighbours dressed in their best attire,
-and many of them repairing, with cheerful hearts, to the house of
-God.&nbsp; These latter partake even now in part of the eternal
-rest of heaven!</p>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;The Sabbath
-gathers to their common home.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>But it may be truly said of the former that they have not yet
-learnt &ldquo;what is their chief business upon earth, and what
-is the reckoning that awaits them at the Divine
-Tribunal.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Another class of working-men habituate themselves to a custom,
-in some trades more prevalent than in others, which is
-particularly censurable, and the impropriety of which deserves
-their most serious consideration.&nbsp; We refer to the practice
-of wearing an apron on the morning of the Sabbath.&nbsp; Surely
-the journeyman and the labourer behold the emblem of toil
-sufficiently during the six days without unnecessarily exposing
-it to public gaze on the Sabbath-day!&nbsp; It is a usage which
-is generally condemned.&nbsp; The worldling objects to the
-practice, because it does not harmonize with the fashions and
-gaieties of life; the moralist disapproves of it as not consonant
-with secular polity; but the Christian condemns it, from a pure
-and holy motive, as giving countenance to a breach of the law of
-God!</p>
-<p>Still, notwithstanding, how delightful it is to observe the
-universal appearance of cleanliness <a name="page27"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 27</span>on the Sabbath-day!&nbsp; In whatever
-house we enter, with few exceptions, we see on this special day
-every thing in comparative order; the inmates neatly attired, and
-the furniture cleansed and placed in its proper position.&nbsp;
-If we look at the exterior of our dwellings, we see a public
-evidence of the value of female industry.&nbsp; Without a stated
-Sabbath this could not be the case.&nbsp; One family would select
-a different day to another, while the sloven, not being forced by
-general example, would certainly pay far less attention to the
-discharge of these salutary duties.&nbsp; Indeed, it is very
-doubtful, under such altered circumstances, whether contagious or
-other diseases would not depopulate, to a most awful extent, the
-inhabitants of our crowded cities and towns.&nbsp; Thus we again
-see the importance of the Sabbath, as regards cleanliness, both
-to individuals and the nation. <a name="citation27"></a><a
-href="#footnote27" class="citation">[27]</a></p>
-<p>4.&nbsp; The Sabbath is essential for the preservation of
-<span class="GutSmall">SIGHT</span>.</p>
-<p>Much as we are impressed with the wonderful construction of
-the various parts of the human frame, in respect to their
-applicability to perform the respective functions assigned to
-them, the eye <a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-28</span>unquestionably creates the greatest interest, on account
-of its vast utility, the Divine ingenuity of its mechanism, and
-its liability to receive injury from the slightest accidental
-cause.&nbsp; The sight is one of the most invaluable
-blessings.&nbsp; The rich who are deprived of the faculty of
-vision, although they may possess extensive domains in a country
-whose vallies are as Eschol, whose forests are as Carmel, and
-whose hills are as Lebanon, cannot enjoy the magnificence and
-beauty of the scenery which surrounds them; but they can listen
-with almost unalloyed pleasure to the melodious notes of the
-warbling bird, or to the sweet and powerful intonations of
-musical sounds, and their wealth supplies every other earthly
-luxury and enjoyment, which tends materially to lessen the
-otherwise severe poignancy of their deprivation.&nbsp; How widely
-different is the melancholy situation of the labouring man, when
-his eyes are impaired by weakness or disease, or when he is
-totally deprived of sight!&nbsp; At once he is reduced to abject
-poverty, and becomes either the recipient of private charity, or
-the inmate of a workhouse.&nbsp; The fine landscape, much as he
-too may desire to gaze on it, is to him of trifling or no
-consideration&mdash;it will not satisfy the hungry stomach, nor
-shelter the body from the midnight blast!&nbsp; Such is the
-mournful effect of the loss of sight to the labouring
-classes.&nbsp; How important is it, then, that they should avail
-themselves of every established right to abstain from work, in
-order that this susceptible and essential faculty may receive
-additional strength?</p>
-<p><a name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>We have
-previously shown that the prolonged hours of labour are
-incompatible with bodily health and mental vigour, and that the
-Sabbath is absolutely requisite to enable man to perform his
-accustomed employment&mdash;so it is with regard to the
-eye.&nbsp; The vision is affected by lengthened intensity of
-observation on any one particular object.&nbsp; It requires
-variety and relief, both of which the Creator has abundantly
-provided.&nbsp; The variegated flowers, the different shades of
-colour in minerals, the lofty trees and the little plants, the
-mountainous districts and the level plains, the brilliant and
-diversified hues that frequently decorate the heavens, all
-combine to testify that the eye cannot retain its perfection, if
-it is continually fixed on the same scene.&nbsp; The poor
-needlewomen, who sit the entire day, and sometimes do not cease
-from their tedious and spirit-subduing work until the light dawns
-on the following morning, afford a very striking exemplification
-of the great and unspeakable advantages of the Sabbath.&nbsp;
-What would be their sad condition&mdash;wretched and deplorable
-even as it is now&mdash;were it not that on the seventh day the
-eye was relieved of its monotonous and weary application?&nbsp;
-Alas! many of these pitiable females, even with this gracious
-opportunity to repair the injury inflicted by almost incessant
-toil, are often at an early age incapacitated, by defective
-vision, from pursuing their ill-paid occupations, and are then
-left destitute of their former scanty pittance to procure even
-sufficient sustenance to preserve life.&nbsp; Take, also, the men
-who work in <a name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-30</span>pits and mines&mdash;where the glimmering lamp is the
-only source of light, and where all else around is chaotic
-darkness&mdash;how essential and benignant must be the Sabbath to
-them!&nbsp; Defective vision would completely prevent such men
-from pursuing their hazardous employment.&nbsp; Thus we once more
-prove the temporal advantages of the Sabbath to the labouring
-population.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p>Having directed our attention to these four important
-divisions of our subject, we will now proceed to make some
-promiscuous observations in connection with them.&nbsp; Reckless
-competition, in order to acquire wealth at all hazards in an
-unusually short period&mdash;not the competition which emanates
-from a natural and laudable desire to increase trade by equitable
-and just efforts&mdash;and the secret influence of infidel
-impressions, may generally be considered as the two primary
-causes of &ldquo;Sunday labour.&rdquo;&nbsp; The plea of
-necessity cannot be admitted.&nbsp; We often hear it asserted,
-however, especially in reference to the periodical press, that
-there exists this &lsquo;necessity,&rsquo; in order that the
-public may not be disappointed in receiving on a precise day
-their publications.&nbsp; But surely the page of classic lore, or
-the Magazine of Literature, Arts, and Sciences&mdash;the bright
-gems of civilization&mdash;need not the foul impress of Sabbath
-labour!&nbsp; A very little judicious extra arrangement would
-render it entirely unnecessary, and the same remark is applicable
-to every other description of work on the seventh-day.&nbsp; Is
-it not <a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>a
-most humiliating and distressing fact, that, on some of the most
-interesting and valuable literary and scientific productions of
-the present age, there are thousands employed on the
-Sabbath-day?&nbsp; It is impossible to contemplate the probable
-baneful effects, which are almost certain to be produced on the
-minds and bodies of those industrious young females who on that
-day fold and stitch the sheets, without apprehending the most
-fearful consequences, even as regards their temporal
-welfare.&nbsp; The statistics of Police Courts disclose many
-melancholy facts in corroboration of this almost general
-result.&nbsp; Now, will any reflecting practical man justify the
-word &lsquo;necessity&rsquo; as applied to this description of
-Sabbath desecration?&nbsp; None whatever.&nbsp; Then there can be
-no vindication for an unnecessary act which is so injurious to
-morality, and which induces so frightfully to the commission of
-sin.&nbsp; It is quite clear, as regards the general performance
-of trade labour, that, if consistency of moral principle&mdash;we
-say nothing of religious conviction&mdash;was duly appreciated, a
-most cheerful negative would be given to all such propositions,
-the result of which would be far more satisfactory at the
-termination of the year.</p>
-<p>We must not pass over the sad condition of many of the
-journeyman tailors.&nbsp; Here is a trade where it may be truly
-said that &lsquo;reckless competition has destroyed by want, or
-excessive labour, hundreds of its members,&rsquo; and has
-undoubtedly led them to disregard the Divine origin and temporal
-advantages of the Sabbath.&nbsp; We will <a
-name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>prove our
-assertion.&nbsp; Many of the fashionable master tailors, as well
-as the large establishments which continually advertise cheap
-clothing, allow the work to be taken by the journeymen to their
-own lodgings, or some hired room for the purpose, where,
-according to one of their statements, &ldquo;the families of
-those unfortunate men are in a great measure totally neglected,
-their wives become careless and void of all cleanliness, and
-often contaminated by the obscene language of the men, even while
-at work frequently during the Sunday.&rdquo;&nbsp; If we look at
-the splendid shops of their employers on the Sabbath, we see
-every outward indication of a strict observance of it&mdash;but
-turn to the above demoralized neighbourhood, glance at the filthy
-garret, and what a wretched and revolting scene is
-exhibited!&nbsp; The heart sickens with disgust, pity is mingled
-with abhorrence.&nbsp; What can such masters offer in extenuation
-for such wilful neglect of the religious, moral, and social
-happiness of those they employ?</p>
-<p>In speaking to a very poor journeyman tailor, some short time
-since, he said it was not an unusual circumstance for him to be
-employed on the Sunday in making a suit of mourning&mdash;a very
-frequent but reprehensible practice which prevails amongst
-dress-makers, &amp;c.&mdash;and that often they were the garments
-intended to be worn by those he esteemed as Christian
-individuals, who, if they had thought that such must have been
-the case, would most assuredly not have permitted it.&nbsp; The
-Christian community must be held responsible for <a
-name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 33</span>much of this
-species of Sabbath labour.&nbsp; We do not expect the
-worldly-minded would forego any desired request, but the members
-of a Christian church&mdash;those who profess to love
-God&mdash;we have a right to conclude would delay for a short
-time, by making some temporary substitution, what otherwise must
-be considered as one of the last manifestations of mournful
-respect to a deceased friend or relative.&nbsp; It would be well
-if Ministers of religion would occasionally impress on their
-congregations the possibility of their becoming, through an
-inconsiderate desire to have their orders completed at a certain
-unreasonably short period, the unintentional instruments of sin
-in this way.&nbsp; In most cases the &lsquo;necessity&rsquo;
-might be easily removed.&nbsp; Let the tradesman frankly state
-that Sabbath labour must be the consequence of compliance, and
-that the command of God is clear and imperative: &ldquo;Six days
-shalt thou labour, and do all thy work.&nbsp; But the seventh day
-is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any
-work.&rdquo;&nbsp; There can be no doubt that the effect of such
-a reply would be, as an especial mark of approbation for his pure
-and conscientious motives, the recommendation of many additional
-customers.&nbsp; But the truth is that many employers are
-apprehensive that they may disoblige their patrons, and to secure
-their support, as they think, they sacrifice the health and
-happiness of their workmen, and destroy any latent inclination to
-the formation of religious habits.</p>
-<p>Much of the discontent and bad feeling, which <a
-name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 34</span>at present
-exists between working-men and their employers, might be removed
-if the Apostle&rsquo;s injunction was more mutually
-respected:&mdash;&ldquo;Look not every man on his own things, but
-every man also on the things of others.&rdquo;&nbsp; Is this the
-principle manifested in the present day?&nbsp; We admit our many
-delinquencies, but are not many masters equally culpable?&nbsp;
-It has been already proved.&nbsp; If employers evince no sympathy
-for the steady and attentive workman&mdash;if they view him as a
-mere inanimate instrument to be used only as occasion requires,
-without the least knowledge of his social condition, and utterly
-regardless of his happiness, what otherwise can naturally be
-expected than that he should be indifferent to the promotion of
-their interests?&nbsp; The subject is a serious one, and it is to
-be hoped that these observations will tend to check a continuance
-of such unquestionable evils, and to create a more reciprocal
-feeling of good-will between them.&nbsp; The situation of the
-working population is at present most painful, and we
-unhesitatingly affirm that Sabbath desecration renders it still
-more so.&nbsp; Man in general, by strictly adhering to an
-observance of this sacred day, would possess not only great
-temporal advantages, but enjoy an inward peace the value of which
-the wealth of this world cannot purchase.</p>
-<p>It will be well here to remember that it is the
-<i>universal</i> observance of the Sabbath which is
-commanded.&nbsp; The day was made for man&mdash;not for a portion
-of the human race&mdash;and it is consequently a general law,
-which, as regards at least public <a name="page35"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 35</span>labour, <a name="citation35"></a><a
-href="#footnote35" class="citation">[35]</a> cannot be
-accommodated to suit the circumstances or peculiar dispositions
-of any class of individuals.&nbsp; This remark is extremely
-applicable to railway and other excursions on the Sabbath.&nbsp;
-We are fully aware that the above mode of reasoning is not
-congenial to the natural inclinations of man, and that some very
-apparently plausible objections are frequently urged to prove its
-fallacy.&nbsp; The only course, however, which the Christian can
-take to decide the question is by a direct reference to the Word
-of God.&nbsp; There is nothing contained in the Bible which is
-inimical to the welfare of mankind.&nbsp; The restraints which it
-imposes are in reality the most evident proofs of the love of
-God.&nbsp; Whatever He has commanded, we may rest assured is for
-the universal benefit of His creatures.&nbsp; The believer is
-experimentally acquainted with this fact, and he therefore
-considers a cheerful and strict obedience to the laws of God both
-a duty and a delight.&nbsp; Now, in reference to the great
-national and social importance of railways, it must be admitted
-that the most evident general beneficial proposition may be
-alloyed with objectionable considerations, the dismemberment of
-which is a positive duty.&nbsp; Such is the view which the
-Christian takes of railway and steam-boat excursions on the <a
-name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-36</span>Sabbath.&nbsp; But it is said that they are
-indispensable for the preservation of the health of the labouring
-population.&nbsp; It is true that rational recreation and
-diversified scenes are essential to them, still, we must repeat
-the question, Why should the hours for labour be so protracted
-that the Sabbath must be almost exclusively devoted to temporal
-enjoyments?&nbsp; The poor man has no just right to work in this
-way until his strength is so completely exhausted that it becomes
-a &lsquo;necessity&rsquo;&mdash;in order to preserve his very
-existence&mdash;that he should violate the command of his
-merciful Creator.&nbsp; Is the Sabbath the only day when the
-labourer is to partake of the sweet fruits of his industry?&nbsp;
-Are all the endearments of life, the caresses of his children,
-and the comforts of the domestic circle, to be only enjoyed by
-him on the Sabbath?&nbsp; Is his little garden, should he happily
-possess one, to exhibit nothing but wild weeds throughout the
-year unless he cultivates it on the Sabbath?&nbsp; The evergreen
-and the beauteous flower would equally as well thrive in the soil
-that is attached to the humble abodes of the mechanic and
-labourer, provided they had time to attend to this elevating
-source of delight, <a name="citation36"></a><a href="#footnote36"
-class="citation">[36]</a> as they do in the ornamental parterres
-of the rich in this world.&nbsp; Again, we ask, why should every
-moral, intellectual, and social <a name="page37"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 37</span>duty be reserved for performance on
-the Sabbath?&nbsp; Those who advance such false sympathy for the
-working classes are themselves supporting a system which
-perpetuates injustice and deprives the poor of true earthly
-happiness.&nbsp; Let the advocates of Sabbath railway and
-steam-boat excursions apply their minds more closely to the
-consideration of our social condition, and they will learn that
-the &lsquo;necessity&rsquo; is to be solely attributed to the
-avaricious or thoughtless disposition of man, in despite of the
-intervention of a merciful Creator.&nbsp; The defence is a most
-wilful imputation on the wisdom and universal beneficence of
-God.&nbsp; A strict compliance with the Divine law, in any state
-of society, infuses peace and joy into the dwellings of the poor,
-and sheds a bright beam of hope across the rugged path they
-tread!</p>
-<p>We cannot avoid here referring to a reply, and to a certain
-extent a just one, which is almost invariably made whenever any
-remark is offered respecting the desecration of the Sabbath
-either by labour, railway and steam-boat excursions, or by
-journeys taken in vehicles.&nbsp; Not to do so would be partial
-and unjust.&nbsp; The reference is to the number of carriages,
-belonging to the wealthy, which are seen in the metropolis on
-that sacred day.&nbsp; It is easy to understand the motives which
-govern the fashionable <i>&eacute;lite</i>, who exhibit their
-splendid equipages in our beautiful national Parks on the
-Sabbath, but it appears and is altogether contradictory when we
-see the more reflecting and domestic portion of the Nobility and
-Gentry <a name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-38</span>pursuing the same gay and sinful practice, and thus
-setting a baneful example to those around them who occupy a more
-humble position in life.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>They</i> have,&rdquo; it
-is said, &ldquo;six other days in the week when they can take
-their salutary &lsquo;carriage-airings&rsquo;&mdash;it is not so
-with the poor mechanic.&rdquo;&nbsp; Nor can we pass unnoticed
-the number of carriages which are seen every Sabbath at the
-entrances to our Churches and Chapels&mdash;even while some
-faithful Minister of Christ is sounding the trumpet of alarm to
-impenitent sinners&mdash;with the servants waiting outside,
-unconscious of the awful warnings which are being uttered within
-those sacred edifices.&nbsp; Can it be said, in all such cases,
-that bodily infirmity, age, distance, or even the state of the
-weather, renders it necessary?&nbsp; Does it not more resemble
-the boisterous and imperious swellings of the reckless wave than
-the gentle flowings of the calm waters?&nbsp; While such
-inconsistencies prevail, the infidel will exult for a time over
-his supposed triumph, the ribaldist will continue to sneer at the
-efforts of Christians, and the more cautious worldling will not
-fail to advance it as a justification for Sabbath
-desecration.</p>
-<p>Let us now make a few consecutive observations on the
-religious, moral, and social divisions of our subject.&nbsp; At
-the commencement nearly of this Essay, we observed that it was
-the temporal advantages of the Sabbath to which our especial
-attention was to be directed; but true morality, social
-happiness, and even intellectual attainments, are all so closely
-blended with religion, or ought <a name="page39"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 39</span>to be, that they cannot properly be
-separated.&nbsp; &ldquo;It would be absurd,&rdquo; says a popular
-author, &ldquo;to treat first of the advantages of virtue, and
-next of those of justice or temperance, because the first head
-evidently comprehends the second.&rdquo;&nbsp; So it would be if
-we were to attempt to exclude religion from the consideration of
-moral and social principles.&nbsp; Religion is the parent, and
-the others are the legitimate offspring.&nbsp; This has been most
-eloquently enforced by a writer well-known for his
-piety:&mdash;&ldquo;Every thing which wants religion wants
-vitality.&nbsp; Philosophy without religion is crippled and
-impotent; poetry without religion has no heart-stirring powers;
-life without religion is a complex and unsatisfactory riddle: the
-very arts which address themselves to the senses, never proceed
-so far towards perfection as when employed on religious
-subjects.&rdquo;&nbsp; May we not, then, fairly attribute the
-failure of many schemes, intended to improve the condition of the
-working population, to the entire absence of religious
-considerations?&nbsp; Such propositions may be congenial to the
-thoughtless multitude and the infidel, but they invariably
-terminate in disappointment&mdash;because the overruling
-providence of God is not acknowledged, nor are His daily mercies
-at all recognised.</p>
-<p>We will now first notice the origin of the Divine obligation
-for ceasing from labour on the Sabbath.&nbsp; It is not essential
-that we should here discuss the question respecting the Christian
-or Jewish observance of it, nor is it absolutely material <a
-name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>whether it is
-designated the Lord&rsquo;s-Day, the Sabbath, or Sunday, although
-the two former appear to be the most appropriate. <a
-name="citation40"></a><a href="#footnote40"
-class="citation">[40]</a>&nbsp; There can be no doubt,
-notwithstanding all that may be advanced to the contrary, that
-the Sabbath was instituted by God at the creation of the
-world.&nbsp; &ldquo;The heavens and the earth were finished, and
-on the seventh-day God ended his work which he had made; and God
-blessed the seventh-day and <span
-class="GutSmall">SANCTIFIED</span> it.&rdquo;&nbsp; If there is
-any intelligible inference to be drawn from this simple
-narration, it must be plain that it was the Divine intention <a
-name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>to separate
-one day from the other six for sacred and devotional purposes,
-and to afford man an opportunity to obtain repose from
-labour.&nbsp; God not only blessed this day, but he
-<i>sanctified</i> it, thereby imparting to it a peculiar heavenly
-and hallowed influence.&nbsp; We will pass over any intermediate
-passage in the Old Testament which might be brought forward to
-prove our conclusion, and quote the positive command given by God
-on Mount Sinai&mdash;&ldquo;<i>Remember</i> the Sabbath-day to
-keep it <span class="GutSmall">HOLY</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Here is
-a plain and indisputable enforcement of the original obligation,
-laid on man, to preserve the Sabbath as a previously
-<i>sanctified</i> day.&nbsp; The same injunction, in a variety of
-ways, is enforced throughout the entire Word of God.&nbsp; If, in
-the New Testament, it is not so explicitly commanded, there are
-abundant instances where Christ himself inculcated and respected
-a proper observance of the Sabbath.&nbsp; The early Christians
-universally considered it as a sacred day, and nearly all the
-ancient writers testify to its being a day set apart for at least
-outward recognition.&nbsp; Josephus asserts, &ldquo;There is no
-city or nation, Greek or Barbarian, in which the custom of
-resting on the seventh-day is not preserved.&rdquo;&nbsp; Philo
-Jud&aelig;us declares, &ldquo;It is a festival celebrated not
-only in one city, but throughout the whole world.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Justin Martyr also says, &ldquo;We all meet together on Sunday
-(<i>diem Solis</i>), on which God having changed Darkness and
-Matter, created the world; and on this day Jesus Christ our
-Saviour arose from the dead.&rdquo;&nbsp; This last record
-particularly <a name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-42</span>confirms our previous assertion respecting the origin of
-the Sabbath.&nbsp; These questions now naturally
-arise:&mdash;Shall the present generation impiously attempt to
-disannul the prim&aelig;val law of God, which all ages have
-formally respected?&nbsp; Is the power of wealth to bid defiance
-to the eternal law of God?&nbsp; Are the pleasures and luxuries
-of this world to be held in higher estimation than the
-undescribable joys of heaven?&nbsp; Is infidelity, in a word, to
-triumph over Christianity?&nbsp; The Writer must here pause and
-seriously reflect, and he entreats the reader to do so likewise,
-on the melancholy if not awful consequences that have befallen
-individuals, even in this world, who have wilfully violated the
-Sabbath-day.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Truth may whisper Divine
-Mercy rescued thee</span>. * * * If we have done so in an humble
-and contrite spirit, we ought at once to exclaim, with the
-penitent Psalmist, &ldquo;Have mercy upon me, O God, according to
-thy loving kindness; according unto the multitude of thy tender
-mercies blot out my transgressions.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The adoption of this course will assuredly lead to a great
-improvement in our present temporal condition.&nbsp; The
-testimony of Judge Hale, although so frequently adduced, seems to
-force itself on the memory:&mdash;&ldquo;I have found,&rdquo;
-said he, &ldquo;that a due observing of the duty of the
-Lord&rsquo;s-day hath ever joined to it a blessing upon the rest
-of my time; and the week that hath been so begun, hath been
-blessed and prosperous to me; and, on the other side, when I have
-been negligent of the duties <a name="page43"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 43</span>of that day, the rest of the week
-hath been unsuccessful, and unhappy to my secular
-employments.&rdquo;&nbsp; But what is the assurance and the
-promise contained in the Word of God?&nbsp; &ldquo;Blessed is the
-man that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Isaiah lvi. 2.&nbsp; &ldquo;If thou turn away thy foot from the
-Sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my holy day; and call the
-Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honourable; and shalt
-honour him, <i>not doing thine own ways</i>, <i>nor finding thine
-own pleasure</i>, <i>nor speaking thine own words</i>; then shalt
-thou delight thyself in the Lord; and I will cause thee to ride
-upon the high places of the earth.&rdquo;&nbsp; Isaiah lviii.
-3.&nbsp; God will bless us in this world, and we shall enjoy
-hereafter an eternal Sabbath in the Celestial City, where we
-&lsquo;shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; for the
-Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed us, and shall
-lead us unto living fountains of waters: and God shall wipe away
-all tears from our eyes.&rsquo;&nbsp; Rev. vii. 16, 17.</p>
-<p>These are, however, truths which but few seem to
-believe.&nbsp; No doubt the willing compliance of masters to make
-their men work on the Sabbath has created much scepticism.&nbsp;
-It conveys to the unenlightened mind an idea that religion is a
-mere speculative theory, and hence that day is treated with but
-little veneration, if not with perfect indifference.&nbsp; When
-such individuals are told, in justification, that &ldquo;little
-differences about religion may occasionally be waived when
-business requires their attendance,&rdquo; the effect must be, in
-a greater <a name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-44</span>or less degree, to create a dislike for all subjects
-which have a religious reference.&nbsp; Do we not observe this in
-many working-men, who decry everything which relates to
-religion?&nbsp; Honesty and general morality they can clearly
-understand; but their souls are too barren and unproductive to
-appreciate the loveliness of those things which relate to another
-and a better world, and are consequently unable to discern the
-unsullied purity of the Divine character.&nbsp; Hence it is that
-we so frequently hear it asserted in the workshop that the Bible
-contains a strange admixture of virtuous principles and gross
-immorality.&nbsp; The best reply to such wicked and depraved
-assertions may be found in the words of a most distinguished
-Minister of the Church of Scotland, whose writings in defence of
-Christianity, together with the force and beauty of his
-compositions, have gained for him universal celebrity amongst
-Christians of every denomination:&mdash;&ldquo;The Scripture is
-an exact portrait of man; if it shews the bright in his
-character, it also records the black; if it proclaims that which
-ennobles and exalts him, it discloses that which tends to depress
-and humble him.&nbsp; There is also, in the present day, what is
-thought delicacy of language, which was unknown even two or three
-centuries ago, and still more so when the Bible was
-written.&rdquo; <a name="citation44"></a><a href="#footnote44"
-class="citation">[44]</a>&nbsp; To this we may add, that the
-Christian reads every sentence in the Word of God with the
-simplicity which denotes <a name="page45"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 45</span>his profession, being too much
-influenced by the many precious promises which it contains to
-cavil about the expediency of accommodating the ancient custom of
-phraseology to suit that of modern times.&nbsp; It is the sceptic
-and the sensual who alone raise the objections.&nbsp; We may
-remark, as regards the Bible containing the details of the
-depravity of man, that they were placed there in order to warn
-us, and to remind us of the justice as well as the unbounded love
-of God.&nbsp; Let us illustrate our meaning by a reference to
-fading creation.&nbsp; How often do we view with ecstacy some
-lovely garden, admire its varied compartments, and gaze with
-pleasure on the choice flowers which adorn it, yet, at the same
-time, see many obtrusive blades of grass, or straggling weeds,
-which are intended to convey a silent but serious reproof to
-us?&nbsp; The scattered blades of grass, if united in close
-compact, would excite our admiration.&nbsp; Who can behold the
-simple but beauteous appearance of a lawn, or the grass that
-covers the distant hill, and not feel emotions of delight?&nbsp;
-It is their isolated and estranged position that creates our
-censure.&nbsp; Just so it is as regards the Bible.&nbsp; The
-sinner, while living apart from God, is compared to the weeds and
-stubble, and is threatened, unless he repents and believes in the
-Saviour, as &lsquo;willing and able to save all that come unto
-Him,&rsquo; to be also condemned and to receive that awful
-sentence which awaits the impenitent.&nbsp; When pardoned,
-however, he is brought into close communion with God, and, being
-united, becomes a lovely plant in the <a name="page46"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 46</span>garden of the Lord.&nbsp; If our
-hearts were more fixed on the entire purity of God, we should
-peruse the Scriptures with an emphatic earnestness which would
-elevate us far above sensual and infidel conclusions.</p>
-<p>The real character of many of the declaimers against the Bible
-is thus portrayed:&mdash;&ldquo;In the middle classes, among the
-half-thinking, half-instructed young men, a sort of infidelity is
-not unfrequent, which, after deducting something for the
-influence of worse motives, is attributable to affectation more
-than to any other cause.&nbsp; It is a mere impertinence, and
-indicates a want of sense, or profligacy of manners.&rdquo; <a
-name="citation46"></a><a href="#footnote46"
-class="citation">[46]</a>&nbsp; And, now, what says the late
-eloquent and pious Robert Hall?&nbsp; &ldquo;Settle it in your
-minds, as a maxim never to be effaced or forgotten, that
-infidelity is an inhuman and bloody system, equally hostile to
-every human restraint and to every virtuous affection&mdash;that,
-leaving nothing above us to create awe, nor round us to waken
-tenderness, it wages war with heaven and earth; its first object
-is to dethrone God; its next to destroy man.&rdquo;&nbsp; Would
-that these sentiments, so forcibly expressed, could be engraven
-on the hearts of the rising generation throughout the world!</p>
-<p>The greatest researchers after truth, and the most eminent
-philosophers, have borne witness to the exalted worth and power
-of the Holy Scriptures.&nbsp; &ldquo;I thank God,&rdquo; says Mr.
-Locke, &ldquo;for the light of revelation, which sets my poor
-reason at rest, in <a name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-47</span>many things that lay beyond the reach of its
-discovery.&rdquo;&nbsp; Lord Bacon observes, &ldquo;It was only
-by the light of Scripture, and the exercises of devotion, that I
-attained to that acquaintance with God, which I had sought for in
-vain amidst the hurry of secular affairs, or in the course of my
-philosophical pursuits.&rdquo;&nbsp; And yet there are some
-men&mdash;possessing very extensive knowledge on nearly all other
-subjects&mdash;who impugn the truths of Christianity without
-anything like close and serious investigation.&nbsp; They possess
-a Bible, but, with the exception of a few abstract and familiar
-sentences, they are entirely ignorant of its contents.&nbsp; Is
-it surprising that such individuals merely consider the Sabbath
-as a day for cessation from labour, altogether irrespective of
-its being first sanctified by God, and afterwards enjoined to be
-kept as an holy day?&nbsp; Such persons are naturally, when
-interest or desire prompts them, willing either to labour or to
-seek worldly pleasure on the Sabbath.</p>
-<p>We have made the above somewhat lengthened remarks because the
-entire question of Sabbath desecration, after all, rests on a
-firm belief in the Scriptures.&nbsp; The Divine commandment is
-contained therein, and if the Bible is rejected, or believed only
-in part, our main argument must fail to produce conviction; but,
-if implicit credence is given to it, then, we assert, the law of
-God is absolute and universal.</p>
-<p>In order to confine our observations within a limited space,
-although our subject is as prolific <a name="page48"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 48</span>as it is important, we must now
-shortly bring them to a conclusion.&nbsp; The effect of an
-abrogation of the Divine law of the Sabbath would be most fatal,
-as we have already proved, to religion, morals, the advancement
-of intellectual knowledge, and even the existence of man.&nbsp;
-Who can depict the horrid condition of the poor factory children
-if they were deprived of a Sabbath?&nbsp; Why, our
-manufactories&mdash;wherein are produced some of the richest
-fruits which emanate from refined taste and from rapid
-progression in the arts and sciences&mdash;would then become
-national nurseries for prostitution and general profligacy, or
-else the infected receptacles of emaciation and disease!&nbsp;
-Such a supposition may be ridiculed by the tolerants of
-infidelity, and even the pure and tender feelings of sympathy may
-suggest a doubt as to the possibility of such an awful event, but
-the same iniquitous motive that lately consigned children to
-twelve and fourteen hours labour each day&mdash;until the voice
-of Christian humanity declared it should no longer be
-tolerated&mdash;is equally likely, if not resisted, to deprive
-this infantine section of the community of the spiritual and
-temporal blessings of the Sabbath.&nbsp; Besides, it is just in
-proportion as we permit the rest of the seventh-day to be taken
-away from the adult, that we weaken the barrier that protects
-youth from its encroachments.&nbsp; But we may extend these
-considerations to the children of the entire population.&nbsp;
-Were it not for this blest day they would be reduced&mdash;in
-civilized England, with the lull and benign beams of Gospel light
-shining <a name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-49</span>now in every city, town, and village&mdash;to as low a
-state of degradation and barbarism as the unenlightened
-savage.&nbsp; The latter are totally uninstructed, (what a
-powerful incentive is this fact for increased Missionary
-exertion!) and they therefore roam about in the wildness of their
-natural state.&nbsp; In this country crime is progressive.&nbsp;
-The boy who is a pickpocket to-day may become a burglar
-to-morrow; the youth who purloins from his master&rsquo;s till
-not unfrequently commits afterwards a more daring offence; and
-the once little innocent girl, who was permitted to roam in the
-streets, becomes too often the future companion of thieves, and
-herself branded with infamy.&nbsp; It was as remedial measures
-that Sabbath and Ragged Schools were established; yet, with all
-these and other Christian efforts, the number of juvenile
-offenders has immensely increased.&nbsp; What would be the
-condition of children, and more advanced youth, were it not for
-the instruction afforded to them on the Sabbath?&nbsp; Every
-species of crime would be considerably augmented, and life and
-property still more endangered.</p>
-<p>How appropriately might we here dwell on the value and
-importance of Sabbath Schools!&nbsp; They would afford almost an
-endless theme for the most consolatory and sublime
-considerations.&nbsp; But our space will not allow us to
-enumerate the many temporal advantages which such institutions
-confer on society, and man can never pourtray the heavenly bliss
-of the myriads of once otherwise neglected children, who, having
-been first taught <a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-50</span>in these Schools to lisp their Saviour&rsquo;s praise,
-are now singing continually &ldquo;the song of the Lamb&rdquo; in
-the kingdom of their God!</p>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;On harps of gold they praise His name,<br
-/>
-&nbsp;&nbsp; His face they always view;<br />
-Then let us followers be of them,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; That we may praise Him too!&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>It is impossible adequately to estimate the temporal
-advantages of the Sabbath.&nbsp; The opportunity which it affords
-for parental and social intercourse is most important.&nbsp; The
-industrious classes have scarcely any time, unless it is on that
-day, to discharge their responsible duties, and consequently
-their children are exposed to every species of depravity.&nbsp;
-It is true that a Christian mother is daily with her children,
-and, possessing perhaps a greater natural warmth of affection, is
-more likely to be a blessing to them than the father; still, how
-very desirable is it that the latter, particularly as they
-advance in years, should exercise a judicious superintending
-control, and thus strive to maintain the discipline, and carry
-out the instructions, which have been so anxiously and
-affectionately imbued by the mother during the six days?&nbsp;
-Deprive us of our Sabbath, and fatherly influence is as
-unproductive as the soil of the desert!&nbsp; We lose one of our
-greatest privileges&mdash;the natural right to assist in the
-formation of the religious, moral, and intellectual characters of
-our offspring.</p>
-<p>Again, as respects the adult population, has the preaching of
-God&rsquo;s Word, and the congregating of <a
-name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>all grades in
-society on the Sabbath, no effect on the mass of the
-people?&nbsp; Does it not, leaving out of consideration the
-eternal results, create deeds of charity which impart temporal
-relief to the poor?&nbsp; The Sabbath is the peculiar day when
-the streams of benevolence flow rapidly through the land.&nbsp;
-It is principally by the contributions then given that our humane
-and benevolent Institutions are sustained.</p>
-<p>We might also prove that civil governments rise or fall in
-proportion as the people venerate and observe the Sabbath, but it
-is assuredly unnecessary.&nbsp; If it is an institution of
-paramount importance to a family, it must be equally so to a
-nation.</p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p>Working-Men! the subject which we have been discussing demands
-your most calm and serious consideration.&nbsp; If we tacitly
-permit the Sabbath to be wrested from us, even in part or whole,
-we give up the most invaluable right which we possess&mdash;a
-right which the Almighty Creator conferred on man when He first
-gave him existence, and which no earthly power can justly take
-from us.&nbsp; Shall we then bear the yoke of continuous labour
-around our necks?&nbsp; The Sabbath is a fixed and indispensable
-day of rest, and we should therefore manifest a decided
-determination to resist all encroachments on it.&nbsp; Let us
-remember that by working on this sacred day we destroy the <a
-name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>universality
-of it, which is the essence and beauty of the Sabbath.&nbsp; When
-we are so requested to labour, let us respectfully but resolutely
-decline it.&nbsp; Considerate employers will respect our motives;
-and, in order fully to prove that we are sincere, we should
-evince a full sense of the value of our right by a constant and
-assiduous attention to our respective duties.&nbsp; May the dawn
-of a happier day be not far distant, when the dark clouds which
-now cast such a fearful gloom over our country shall be
-dispersed, and when both masters and men shall unitedly resolve
-to obey the law of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>&mdash;&ldquo;<span
-class="smcap">Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it
-Holy</span>!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">THE
-END.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">CHELSEA:</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PRINTED BY T. WILSHER, MANOR
-STREET.</span></p>
-<h2>FOOTNOTES.</h2>
-<p><a name="footnote7"></a><a href="#citation7"
-class="footnote">[7]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;The progress of bricks and
-mortar and of inclosures has sadly restricted the spaces on which
-the English peasantry could take healthful exercise.&nbsp;
-Respectable people keep away from these crowded spots.&nbsp; The
-influence of their example is lost, and in its place is
-substituted the influence of the idle, the dissolute, and the
-depraved.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Moral Economy of Large Towns</i>,
-<i>by</i> Dr. W. C. <span class="smcap">Taylor</span>.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote8"></a><a href="#citation8"
-class="footnote">[8]</a>&nbsp; The Writer was, some years ago,
-addressed in the following manner: &ldquo;It is monstrous, you
-have no right to let <i>your religious opinions</i> interfere
-with business in this way.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="footnote9"></a><a href="#citation9"
-class="footnote">[9]</a>&nbsp; In the French revolutionary mania,
-in 1800, &ldquo;the year was divided into twelve equal months, of
-thirty days each, completing the year by the ingenious invention
-of five complemental days.&nbsp; The month was divided into three
-decades, or weeks each of ten days, by which the days of rest
-were reduced to three in each month, which were substituted for
-the four Sundays. * * * * In some towns, workshops and warehouses
-were closed (on the regular Sunday), in others they were closed
-upon the Decadi (or tenth day); nay, frequently, in the same
-town, in the same street, <span class="GutSmall">THE CONTRAST
-PRESENTED THE SPECTACLE OF A MISCHIEVOUS DIVERSITY IN THE IDEAS
-AND IN THE MORALS OF THE
-PEOPLE</span>.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Thier&rsquo;s History of the
-Consulate and the Empire</i>.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote14"></a><a href="#citation14"
-class="footnote">[14]</a>&nbsp; There are some very excellent
-little Tracts published by this Association on the above subject,
-which can be procured by application to J. Lilwall, Esq., the
-Secretary, 32; Ludgate Hill.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote18"></a><a href="#citation18"
-class="footnote">[18]</a>&nbsp; Although the Writer was at no
-period of his life &ldquo;a dram-drinker,&rdquo; he has
-nevertheless suffered severely from occasional intemperance, and
-he would therefore most earnestly commend the consideration of
-this subject to the labouring classes.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote21"></a><a href="#citation21"
-class="footnote">[21]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Of the 45,000 deaths
-occurring every year in the Metropolis, about 5,600 arises from
-this fatal disease; and upwards of 11,000 persons, being about
-one in 170 of the entire population of the metropolis, and more
-than one per cent. of the adults, are constantly wasting away
-under the attacks of this lingering malady.&nbsp; Of these 11,000
-cases, about three-fourths occur in males, of whom a large
-proportion are working-men, unable to provide for themselves and
-families.&nbsp; Many&mdash;very many&mdash;of these poor
-sufferers are the acknowledged victims of unventilated workshops,
-ill-constructed dwellings, vitiated atmosphere, long hours of
-work, and the want of open places for exercise and
-recreation.&rdquo;&nbsp; There are 81 Patients at present in the
-Hospital, and the number prescribed for daily, as Out-Patients,
-is at the rate of 36,000 in the year!&mdash;<i>Report of the
-Hospital for Consumption</i>, <i>and Diseases of the Chest</i>,
-<i>at Brompton</i>, 1849.</p>
-<p>The Writer of this Essay cannot refrain from making a most
-earnest appeal in behalf of this truly Christian
-Institution.&nbsp; Gratitude prompts him to the discharge of this
-duty, and he trusts that his humble position in life will not
-weaken the effort to promote the interests of a Charity to which
-himself, three sons, and seven daughters, are so greatly
-indebted.&nbsp; During the period in which he was engaged in the
-composition of this Essay, and for nearly 18 months previous, his
-wife was receiving the most kind, attentive, and skilful
-treatment from the Physicians of this Hospital, who considered
-her case as almost beyond medical relief.&nbsp; She is now in a
-much improved state of health.&nbsp; Surely this simple statement
-will be deemed as sufficient evidence of the value of this
-Institution.&nbsp; It depends principally on the amount of its
-Annual Subscriptions for support, and it would be a source of
-great pleasure to the Writer, if it should be found that, through
-the publication of his feeble Essay, only <span
-class="GutSmall">ONE</span> Benefactor had been added to the list
-of its Patrons!</p>
-<p><a name="footnote27"></a><a href="#citation27"
-class="footnote">[27]</a>&nbsp; It is very pleasing to observe
-that many thousands of the working classes avail themselves of
-those admirable places for the preservation of health and
-happiness, the Public Baths, which have been some time now
-established.&nbsp; We may also notice the laudable efforts
-recently made to encourage Open-Air Bathing in the
-Serpentine.&nbsp; A very interesting and important pamphlet on
-this subject has been lately written by Thomas Embling,
-Esq.&nbsp; It really appears essential that every Bather, and
-especially youth, should peruse a copy of this invaluable
-treatise.&mdash;<i>Published by</i> W. F. <span
-class="smcap">Ramsay</span>, 11, <i>Brompton Row</i>,
-<i>Brompton</i>.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote35"></a><a href="#citation35"
-class="footnote">[35]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;The Divine law prohibits
-civil labour, or work in the way of trade on the Sabbath, but
-acts of mercy are acceptable to God on any day.&nbsp; We have
-several instances of this recorded in the New Testament, in
-reference to Christ and his disciples.&rdquo;&mdash;Dr. S. <span
-class="smcap">Smith&rsquo;s</span> <i>Dissertations on the
-Bible</i>, 1737.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote36"></a><a href="#citation36"
-class="footnote">[36]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;The flowers of a
-garden&mdash;those silent preachers to which Christ himself
-referred his disciples as eloquent witnesses of the bounty of
-Providence&mdash;speak lessons of loveliness to the soul, and
-give an immediate check to gross vice and foul pollution.&nbsp;
-We too often forget the humanizing and moral effects of a
-garden.&rdquo;&mdash;Dr. W. C. <span
-class="smcap">Taylor</span>.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote40"></a><a href="#citation40"
-class="footnote">[40]</a>&nbsp; The Writer, since the completion
-of his Essay, has perused the First Volume of <i>The Apocalypse
-Interpreted in the Light of the Day of the Lord</i>, by the Rev.
-<span class="smcap">James Kelly</span>, M.A., Minister of St.
-Peter&rsquo;s Episcopal Chapel, Queen&rsquo;s Square, St.
-James&rsquo;s Park, from the Preface to which he has gleaned the
-following particulars:&mdash;&lsquo;The word <i>Sunday</i> is a
-very ancient Heathen appellation, the days of the week having
-been called by them after the names of the planets.&nbsp; The
-first day was denominated <i>the day of the Sun</i>, or <i>the
-Lord Sun</i>.&nbsp; All the Oriental nations gave the Sun the
-title of Lord.&nbsp; No doubt the early Christians elevated its
-application.&nbsp; For this ennobling of the common term, they
-considered that provision had been made by God himself, in the
-setting forth of Christ as <i>the Sun of righteousness</i>.&nbsp;
-Malachi iv.&nbsp; By most of the early Fathers, and from their
-time onwards, the term Lord&rsquo;s-Day has been used to
-designate the Christian Sabbath.&rsquo;&nbsp; The Writer of this
-Essay, therefore, humbly submits that Christians should now call
-the seventh-day either the Lord&rsquo;s-Day or the
-Sabbath-Day.&nbsp; In the present times this &ldquo;ennobling of
-the common term&rdquo; seems peculiarly necessary.&nbsp; The
-above Work explains many hitherto apparently mystical passages in
-the Revelations, and a perusal of it, in a right spirit, will
-supply arguments which will at once silence the sceptic, and, at
-the same time, confirm the reader in his belief that there is
-nothing contained in the Holy Scriptures, which shall not be made
-manifest to those who seek to be enlightened by the Spirit of
-God.&nbsp; It is published by Messrs. <span
-class="smcap">Nisbet</span> and Co., London.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote44"></a><a href="#citation44"
-class="footnote">[44]</a>&nbsp; The reader is entreated to read
-&ldquo;Is Christianity from God?&rdquo; and also &ldquo;God in
-History,&rdquo; by the Rev. <span class="smcap">John
-Cumming</span>, D.D.</p>
-<p><a name="footnote46"></a><a href="#citation46"
-class="footnote">[46]</a>&nbsp; History of the Transmission of
-Ancient Books to Modern Times, by <span class="smcap">James
-Taylor</span>.</p>
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DIVINE MERCY: OR THE TEMPORAL
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