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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67036 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67036)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Plain Sermons preached at Archbishop
-Tenison's Chapel, Regent Street, by James Galloway Cowan
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Plain Sermons preached at Archbishop Tenison's Chapel, Regent Street
- Second Series
-
-
-Author: James Galloway Cowan
-
-
-
-Release Date: December 29, 2021 [eBook #67036]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLAIN SERMONS PREACHED AT
-ARCHBISHOP TENISON'S CHAPEL, REGENT STREET***
-
-
-Transcribed from the 1860 William Skeffington edition by David Price.
-Many thanks to the British Library for making their copy available.
-
-
-
-
-
- PLAIN SERMONS
-
-
- PREACHED AT
-
- ARCHBISHOP TENISON’S CHAPEL,
-
- REGENT STREET.
-
- * * * * *
-
- BY
-
- JAMES GALLOWAY COWAN,
-
- MINISTER.
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- Second Series.
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON:
-
- WILLIAM SKEFFINGTON, 163, PICCADILLY
-
- 1860.
-
-
-
-
-_BY THE SAME AUTHOR_—_FIRST SERIES_.
-
-
- Plain Sermons, preached at Archbishop Tenison’s Chapel, Regent Street.
- Fcap. cloth, price 3s. 6d.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
- PAGE
- SERMON I.
- DEPENDENCE UPON GOD.
-
- Philippians, iv., 5, 6.
-The Lord is at hand. Be careful for nothing; but in 1
-everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let
-your requests be made known unto GOD
- SERMON II.
- JUDGMENT HERE AND HEREAFTER.
-
- Malachi, ii., 17.
-Where is the God of Judgment? 16
- SERMON III.
- THE WORLDLING REPROVED.
-
- St. James, iv., 13, 14, 15.
-Go to now, ye that say, To-day or to-morrow we will go into 32
-such a city, and continue there a year, and buy and sell,
-and get gain: Whereas ye know not what shall be on the
-morrow. For what is your life? It is even a vapour, that
-appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away. For
-that ye ought to say, If the LORD will, we shall live, and
-do this, or that.
- SERMON IV.
- THE UNKNOWN GOD.
-
- Acts, xvii., 22, 23.
-Ye men of Athens, I perceive that in all things ye are too 48
-superstitious. For as I passed by, and beheld your
-devotions, I found an altar with this inscription, TO THE
-UNKNOWN GOD. Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, Him
-declare I unto you.
- SERMON V.
- FAITH AND ITS BLESSEDNESS.
-
- St. John, xx., 29.
-Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: 66
-blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.
- SERMON VI.
- FAULTLESSNESS BEFORE GOD.
- (INNOCENTS’ DAY.)
-
- Revelation, xiv., 5.
-They are without fault before the throne of GOD. 76
- SERMON VII.
- PAST MERCIES REVIEWED.
- (NEW YEAR’S EVE.)
-
- Genesis, xxxii., 10.
-I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies, and of all 92
-the truth, which thou hast showed unto Thy servant; for
-with my staff I passed over this Jordan; and now I am
-become two bands.
- SERMON VIII.
- WORKING FOR GOD.
-
- St. John, ix., 4.
-I must work the works of Him that sent me, while it is day: 108
-the night cometh, when no man can work.
- SERMON IX.
- CHRIST’S TRUEST MANIFESTATION.
-
- St. John, xiv., 22.
-LORD, how is it that Thou will manifest Thyself unto us, 126
-and not unto the world.
- SERMON X.
- BLESSING ACCORDING TO PRAYER.
-
- St. Matthew, viii., 13.
-And JESUS said unto the centurion, Go thy way; and as thou 146
-hast believed, so be it done unto thee.
- SERMON XI.
- CHRIST STILLING THE STORM.
-
- St. Matthew, viii., 26.
-And He saith unto them, Why are ye fearful, O ye of little 161
-faith? Then He arose, and rebuked the winds and the sea;
-and there was a great calm.
- SERMON XII.
- UNITY WITH PEACE.
-
- Ephesians, iv., 1, 2, 3.
-I, therefore, the prisoner of the LORD, beseech you that ye 179
-walk worthy of the calling wherewith ye are called, With
-all lowliness and meekness, with long-suffering, forbearing
-one another in love; Endeavouring to keep the unity of the
-Spirit in the bond of peace.
- SERMON XIII.
- THE LAW IN THE GOSPEL.
-
- St. Luke x., 25.
-What shall I do to inherit eternal life? 193
- SERMON XIV.
- PRESENT SALVATION.
-
- II. Corinthians, vi., 2.
-Behold, now is the day of salvation. 211
- SERMON XV.
- CHRIST TOUCHED.
-
- St. Mark, v., 30.
-And JESUS, immediately knowing in Himself that virtue had 228
-gone out of Him, turned Him about in the press, and said,
-Who touched my clothes?
- SERMON XVI.
- PREACHING PARABLES.
-
- Ezekiel, xx., 49.
-Ah LORD GOD! they say of me, Doth he not speak parables? 245
- SERMON XVII.
- LIVING AND DYING UNTO GOD.
-
- II. Corinthians, v., 8, 9.
-We are confident and willing rather to be absent from the 264
-body, and to be present with the LORD. Wherefore we
-labour, that, whether present or absent, we may be accepted
-of Him.
- SERMON XVIII.
- RELIGIOUS ZEAL.
-
- II. Kings, x., 16.
-Come with me, and see my zeal for the LORD. 276
- SERMON XIX.
- CHRIST’S COMING DESIRED.
-
- Revelation, xxii., 20.
-Even so, come, LORD JESUS. 289
- SERMON XX.
- TRUE PROSPERITY.
-
- Genesis, xxxix., 2.
-The LORD was with Joseph, and he was a prosperous man. 305
-
-
-
-
-SERMON I.
-DEPENDENCE UPON GOD.
-
-
- PHILIPPIANS, IV., 5, 6.
-
- _The Lord is at hand_. _Be careful for nothing_; _but in everything
- by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be
- made known unto_ God.
-
-“THE Lord is at hand.” It is doubtful whether this admonition is
-designed to recommend the foregoing precept, “Let your moderation be
-known unto all men,” or whether it introduces and enforces the
-injunction, “Be careful for nothing.” It may well do both: on the one
-hand, exhorting the disciples to lead (and that manifestly) an unworldly
-life, seeing they were so shortly to be taken out of the world; and, on
-the other hand, cheering them in their sorrows, suppressing their
-anxieties and quickening their faith, by the remembrance, that comfort,
-and peace, and perfect bliss would soon be theirs—“The LORD is at hand.”
-
-The second advent of our LORD was always in the mind of the apostles. It
-is thought that they even counted upon its literal occurrence in their
-lifetime, as though the prophecies of it were among the things to be
-fulfilled before that generation passed away. Without subscribing to
-this view, against which many objections may be taken, it may be readily
-admitted that, as they were uncertain how soon it might happen, as they
-had no ground for concluding that it would _not_ be in their time, so
-they rightly laboured to impress upon the disciples its _possible_, if
-you will its _probable_ nearness. Besides, they knew that, virtually, it
-would be soon: for if CHRIST came not speedily in the flesh, speedily
-they would be called out of the flesh to Him, and then would cease the
-pleasures and cares of this world, and then would begin the possession
-and enjoyment of things eternal. How necessary then, that they who were
-but pilgrims and strangers here, living a life that was soon to be ended
-and accounted for, should be warned against excess of worldliness,
-against building houses where they were but permitted to pitch tents,
-against turning aside out of the path of pilgrimage, and wasting or
-abusing the time for journeying! How cheering, too, for those who were
-perplexed, or burthened, or afflicted, to be reminded that perplexity,
-and toil, and grief were only passing clouds, and mere inconveniences by
-the way—that soon they should be rid of them altogether, and should only
-be allowed to remember them to magnify their appreciation of attained
-rest and glory! And here let me observe, that the admonition “Be careful
-for nothing,” is not in this place a reproof of the worldling, coming
-across him in the path of mammon worship, of earthly aggrandisement, of
-forgetfulness of eternity, of GOD, of heaven, but is rather a
-consolation, an encouragement, for those, who while walking, or
-endeavouring to walk, in the right way, are depressed and hindered by
-trials, and perplexities, and afflictions. There are cares which man
-makes for himself, for which he is to be blamed, whereof he deserves to
-eat the bitter fruit. There are other cares which he suffers
-involuntarily, which GOD imposes upon him as discipline, which Satan
-thrusts upon him as temptations. With regard to the last, the
-Christian’s cares, St. Paul offers advice and consolation, saying in
-effect—Sink not beneath them, poor pilgrim; groan not on account of them;
-let them not distract your aims and desires from the right object of
-solicitude and hope. Weigh them in the right scales against the glories
-that are coming, and they will surely be found light. Measure them
-beside the joys of eternity, and they will be seen to be brief and
-transitory. “The LORD is at hand” to relieve you of them all, at His
-second advent, by the unclothing of death, by carrying you to Paradise.
-Be comforted, rejoice, rouse ye, and, without distraction, pursue your
-hopeful course. “Be careful for nothing.”
-
-We know the force of such an exhortation in earthly things. We know by
-experience how light is the labour which leads to rest, how possible it
-is to smile through present tears at the prospect of coming joy; what
-pains, and self-denials, and dangers, and encounters, are readily
-embraced by those whom ambition prompts, and approval cheers, and reward
-awaits. Nothing is too hard to bear, nothing too dear to relinquish,
-nothing too formidable to meet, nothing too much to do; the hands that
-hung down are lifted up, the sorrow is banished, the toil becomes
-pleasure, we rush to the fight, we delight in the race, forgetting the
-past, disregarding the present, hastening onward to the future, the rest,
-the victory, the prize, the glory. It is easy, then—not altogether, but
-comparatively—to obey the precept, “Be careful for nothing” in view of
-the prospect, “The LORD is at hand.”
-
-But, after all, I cannot but think that something better than a prospect
-is hinted at in the text. The apostle goes on to urge, “In everything by
-prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known
-unto GOD.” He does not say, “Make light of present cases, on account of
-coming consolation.” He does not bid the downcast lift up their eyes to
-the hills, whence by and by cometh their help. It is not “Bear, endure,
-encounter in hope,” but, “Get rid of what burthens you, by laying it upon
-Him, Who is near, by your side now, to take it. Be careful for nothing;
-put every care upon GOD (the LORD who is at hand to take it), by prayer
-and supplication with thanksgiving.” I say this is something better than
-a prospect; better, because of its superior influence, and better,
-because of the immediate relief. The teaching of Advent, all important
-as it is, too often affects but little such poor creatures of the present
-as we are. We are exhorted to look back to the first coming of CHRIST,
-to see what He suffered and did for us, what a foundation He laid for us
-to build on. We are exhorted to look forward to the second advent, to
-consider what CHRIST will do, to anticipate the glorious completion of us
-in Him as the building of GOD. We obey, and we are moved to faint
-gratitude for the one, to faint hope of the other. The retrospect and
-the prospect considered, we both see from what rock we were hewn, and
-into how beautiful a fabric we shall be fashioned; and, unless we are
-very incapable of feeling, in the view of past and future, we strive to
-accept thankfully and to sanctify duly the present. But, oh! how little
-constraining is the influence of a Saviour who _once_ visited the earth,
-of a Judge who shall _by and by_ visit it! How dim is the remembrance of
-long past mercies! how distant is the prospect of heavenly consolations!
-Earth is now present with all its attractions and rewards. The world,
-the flesh, and the devil are now assailing and afflicting us with their
-many temptations. How can we resist the seen, and heard, and felt
-fascinations? How can we fill up the present void, and lull the present
-pain, and endure the pressing trial, by proposing to ourselves the hopes
-of the future? Does the promise of food to-morrow fill the hungry
-to-day? Does the sight of the physician’s prescription on the instant
-stay the pain and progress of inflammation? Will a drowning man float
-till by and by a rope is brought and thrown to him? Will a discomfited
-army rally and conquer, because reinforcements at some future time will
-reach the field? In each of these cases, the prospect will have _some_
-influence, but will it be adequate to the occasion? Must not the present
-be met by the present? Do we not need, besides a Saviour of the past,
-and a Judge of the future, a LORD of the present? Yes, verily, and we
-are assured that we have Him in the words, “The LORD is at hand,” and
-advised how to avail ourselves of Him in what follows, “Be careful for
-nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving
-let your requests be made known unto GOD.”
-
-We are too apt to have but a religion of the future; to forget that there
-is _at hand_ a LORD and Helper; to act as though the first opportunity of
-serving GOD were in the hour of death, as though the blessings of reward
-and favour were only to be had in heaven; to treat GOD, in short, as if
-He were only the GOD of a future world. Such teaching as that of the
-text reproves and corrects us. As other passages of Holy Writ instruct
-us to make GOD the aim of this present life, using life as an
-apprentice-time to the profession of Christianity, as a season wherein to
-prove ourselves and be proved, and to set forth His glory; “Whether we
-live, we live unto the LORD.” “Whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of
-GOD;” so the text bids us make GOD the guide and supporter of this life.
-“In everything by prayer, with supplication, and thanksgiving, let your
-requests be made known as to GOD. And the peace of GOD, which passeth
-all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through CHRIST
-JESUS.”
-
-This is what we want to feel and act upon, that GOD is a GOD at hand, and
-not a GOD afar off; that we may _now_ cast all our care upon Him, knowing
-that He careth for us; that if we lay our burthen upon the LORD, He will
-_now_ sustain us: that if we commit our way unto Him, He will bring it to
-pass; that He waits to be gracious, not till this life is over, but only
-till we make known our requests, till we pray and supplicate, and give
-thanks. In proportion as we do not realise and act upon these
-assurances, we are blind to many of the charms, and insensible to many of
-the helps and comforts of our holy religion: we frustrate, too, the
-fulfilment in ourselves of the truth, that godliness has the promise of
-the life that now is: we run the risk of becoming earthly-minded, of
-being swallowed up of overmuch sorrow, of being cumbered with many cares,
-of being snared away and taken captive by the devil, of making shipwreck
-of our faith.
-
-O brethren, do not suppose that GOD only dwells on the margin of the
-haven, that we are left to steer our course, to buffet with the waves, to
-struggle against the storm, to repair the shivered mast, to stop the
-leakages, to sail into the harbour, and let down the anchor, and
-disembark upon the shore before He meets us. With Him as our Captain we
-are to set out. He as our pilot must guide us. He must rule the waves
-and bring us through them. The way is His, as the haven is His; unless
-He is with us throughout the first, we shall never reach the last. Grace
-is no reserved blessing. Heaven is no distant home. Grace is ever to be
-had if we will seek it. Heaven is everywhere, if we will but realise it,
-for where GOD is, is heaven.
-
-But GOD is not manifest to all. His help is not given unsought. The eye
-of faith alone can see Him, the cry of faith alone be heard. As He will
-be served for reward, so will He be asked for grace: we must be alert to
-see what help we want; we must be prompt to seek it. We must acknowledge
-Him, or He will not guide us. We must cast our care upon Him, or He will
-not take it. Unless we are careful for nothing, because we have
-committed our cares to Him, we must be full of cares, harassed by them,
-troubled, afflicted, distressed; or, being careless, we shall be deemed
-worthless, and left to drift upon shoals and into quicksands, and to sink
-in the gulf of destruction.
-
-Do I speak to those who are careful for many things? I do not mean those
-who are concerning themselves about worldly schemes, who would increase
-their wealth, their power, or their pleasure, who, regarding earth as
-their home, and resolving to make the most of it, are laying themselves
-out for many days, proposing to pull down their barns and build greater,
-to make to themselves a name, who are intent upon what they shall eat and
-drink, and wherewithal they shall be clothed, how they shall get their
-full of pleasure, how they shall cull all the advantages, and avoid all
-the disagreeables of life. As the minister of GOD, I have nothing to do
-with these, further than to cry out upon their folly and their sin, and
-to warn them that unless they repent and relinquish their cares, they
-shall be consumed by them. But do I speak to those who setting before
-them as the business of life, the service of GOD, as the end of life, the
-glory of heaven, are yet, by personal infirmity, by peculiar exigencies,
-and difficulties, and anxieties, by a frowning or fascinating world, by
-the wiles of Satan or by any other means, so troubled, so distracted, so
-drawn off from the pursuit of their object, and the entertaining of their
-hopes, that they find themselves carnal when they would be spiritual,
-standing still when they would be moving on, clinging to earth when they
-would be rising to heaven, waging war when they would be enjoying peace?
-Do I speak to those whose weak and carnal nature will not be enlisted in
-the hearty pursuit of godliness; whose crying temporal wants distract,
-and deafen, and deaden the yearnings of their better nature; whose
-occupation in the world seems to contend, and too successfully, for the
-best of their thoughts and aims, whose natural losses and deprivations
-sadden and absorb them, creating a void which they cannot fill, taking
-away a guide whom they used to look to, a support upon which they were
-wont to lean; whose patient labours in well-doing have failed of success;
-whose good is evil spoken of; whose many cares to train aright the
-children whom GOD gave them, have been repaid by waywardness; whose
-conscientious well-doing has brought upon them what should rather be the
-reward of ungodliness; who, in short, have not found in religion what
-they hoped for and honestly sought, and who cannot render to religion
-what they would? Do I speak to these? Well! I ask, Have you sought to
-get rid of care, by casting it upon the LORD? or have you rather asked
-human counsel, and leant upon human support, and hewn out for yourselves
-cisterns, and built for yourselves a refuge, instead of running into the
-refuge of GOD? Have you animated yourselves only by the thought of
-distant help, of future peace? Have you lost sight of the LORD at hand,
-the GOD of Providence, knowing, causing or assenting to, and waiting to
-guide, as you ask or ask not, the circumstances which try you? Have you
-realised that nothing happens but by His consent, and that His consent is
-given or withheld, not by what He sees of you, but by what He hears from
-you? Do you pray—not simply uttering certain words put into your mouths
-in Church formularies, or books of private devotion, not framing acts of
-general adoration, of vague acknowledgments of dependence and prayer for
-blessings, but presenting yourselves, in the utterance of your own
-feelings, as in all things the servants of His will, the dependents and
-petitioners of His grace? Do you supplicate? Is each ascertained want
-laid before Him in all its detail? Is every hindrance, every difficulty,
-every desire made known to Him as soon as perceived by yourselves? Is
-your care cast upon Him? Is He besought to take it, to relieve you of
-it, to tell you what to do respecting it? Can you say of all that now
-tries you, that nothing is uncommunicated to Him, no relief, no guidance
-unsought? And do you in everything give thanks. Ah, here, brethren, is
-the test! Here doubtless will many of you, who are clear hitherto, be
-obliged to plead guilty. You do not give thanks. You recognise GOD as
-Him from whom you may seek all. You do not sufficiently acknowledge what
-you have received. Of many special gifts, of power to bear with many
-trials, of guidance in various difficulties, of blessings continued and
-troubles not made worse (an important item), you make no acknowledgment.
-You know of many blessings for which you ought to be grateful: you may
-guess at many more, and besides there are many which you do not know, and
-cannot guess at, which yet doubtless have been poured out upon you, or at
-least have not been taken away from you. What of these? What of
-everything good in itself, or capable of being made good? What of the
-temptations, what of the afflicting providences of which you are the
-objects? You do not think, perhaps, that these are things to be grateful
-for: but, remember, the command is, “In everything with thanksgiving.”
-Yes, the prayer, without the thanksgiving, is not prayer. It is only
-part dependence. It asks, it does not acknowledge. It does not rejoice
-that GOD is yet operating; that He is chastening if He is not rewarding;
-that therefore, you are still the creatures of His providence, and may
-hope for blessing if you do not frustrate it.
-
-O mend all that is amiss, quicken all that is slow, revive all that is
-ready to perish. The LORD is at hand. Cast all your care upon Him.
-Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and lean not to your own
-understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct
-your paths. In everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving
-let your requests be made known to GOD. See Him by faith Who is
-invisible to natural eye. Lean on Him Whom the arm of flesh cannot
-touch. Speak to Him in all your circumstances of weal or woe, of trial
-or blessing. Pray to Him for what you want, and acknowledge all that you
-receive, of whatever kind, and ask Him what use to make of it. So rid
-yourselves of your cares, and then—I do not say that you shall be left
-without trials, for GOD does not promise that, rather does He lead us to
-expect trials as the signs and pledges of His love, but I do say that He
-will give you nothing, and leave you nothing, but what is good for your
-personal happiness and your eternal interest, and that in every trial,
-whether sent by Him, or allowed to be inflicted by the agents of evil, He
-will give you support, and guidance, and ardent hope, and abundant
-consolation; yea, He will bestow on you His peace which passeth
-understanding, and which, whatever your circumstances, shall assuredly
-keep your hearts and minds through CHRIST JESUS, unto eternal salvation.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON II.
-JUDGMENT HERE AND HEREAFTER.
-
-
- MALACHI, II., 17.
-
- _Where is the God of Judgment_?
-
-THE prophet had been complaining of the priests for neglecting to inform
-and correct the people, and of the people for disregarding GOD’S
-teaching. Reasoning and remonstrating with them, and supposing them to
-attempt self-justification, he tells them at last that they have wearied
-the LORD with their words—by which he means their acted and thought words
-rather than what they spoke—and in answer to the question, which he knows
-they would put, “Wherein have we wearied Him?” he says, By presuming
-licentiously that GOD is indifferent alike to good and evil, and has no
-moral likings or dislikings—“When ye say every one that doeth evil is
-good in the sight of the LORD, and He delighteth in them,”—or, if it were
-otherwise, that at least He does not act upon His feeling—“Where is the
-GOD of Judgment?” the manifestation of the discriminating, the rewarding,
-or punishing LORD. I do not propose to enlarge upon the text in its
-historic relation to the Jews, but, applying it to ourselves, to show,
-first, that the question, “Where is the GOD of Judgment?” is one which we
-Christians often ask in perverse unbelief, or in sad infirmity; and,
-secondly, that the question is one which in a better sense we should
-often ask (as we do not), in order to discern His operations, to become
-acquainted and impressed with the truth, that there is a judgment of all,
-_here_ and _hereafter_.
-
-“Where is the GOD of Judgment?” I say that this question is often asked
-in perverse unbelief, or in sad infirmity. Practically, we too often
-ignore the idea of judgment altogether. Our reason suggests to us, that
-if there is a moral governor of the world, then surely good will be
-approved by reward, and evil marked by punishment. The Bible plainly and
-most positively assures us, that, as rational and responsible creatures
-of GOD’S hand, we are subject to a judgment which His goodness, His
-truth, His justice, His holiness, cannot omit to pass on our every act,
-and word, and thought; that as purchased servants of CHRIST, we are set a
-certain work to do, with the express understanding that we shall be
-faithfully dealt with according to our treatment of that work, and are
-put upon a probation whereof at the end CHRIST _must_ take account, for
-He has been made LORD and Judge for that very end, and has received a
-commission from the Father, which He may in no single instance depart
-from. Yea, more than that, it tells us that the immediate effect on us,
-of all our good and evil, is _itself_ a judgment, contributing to the
-formation of the character which shall adapt us, and so consign us, to
-heaven or to hell. I say reason and the Bible so instructs us; and yet
-we practically ignore the judgment. Of course I do not mean that we
-strike it out of our creed, that we do otherwise than assent to it in
-theory, that we altogether forget it in practice, but that we do not make
-it the ruling principle of our lives—the impelling or restraining
-influence of every thought and deed. Am I not right? Reflect, dear
-brethren, how many wrong things you do or desire, with little hesitation,
-with no compunction, with no fear of judgment! Reflect, too, how many
-good things you pass over or forego, or will take no trouble to attain,
-through want of consideration of the reward that belongs to them, and
-which therefore you are losing! How ready are you to taste each cup of
-pleasure, to be engrossed with the pursuits of this world, to withhold
-what you should part with, to do what is wrong, to omit what is enjoined,
-in forgetfulness of the fact that for all these things GOD will bring you
-unto judgment! How impatient, too, under trials, how slow in spiritual
-work, how little interested in the love and attainment of godliness; as
-though these things were all loss, and suffering, and uninviting toil; as
-though there were no recompense of reward! Yes, there is something in
-the best of us, and much in the most of us, of practical disregard of
-judgment. Of course we know (and are in a measure influenced by the
-knowledge) that by and by we shall stand before GOD, to be blessed or
-cursed—that it is necessary, therefore, to secure a good hope of
-acceptance, and to make our peace with GOD through JESUS CHRIST, and that
-this is to be done by keeping all the ordinances of religion, and obeying
-in spirit the whole moral code, and striving to love and serve the LORD
-now; or at least by repenting of all that is amiss, and praying earnestly
-for pardon and quickening of our faith, before we die. But still, it is
-not a _judgment_ that we contemplate—a real scrutiny of our life’s
-ways—an actual weighing of us in the heavenly balance, that we may be
-rewarded or punished for those ways, and accepted or rejected according
-to our actual state. We are wont to consider GOD as an arbitrary Being,
-not absolutely bound by any laws, or promises, or threats, but free to
-treat us as He will, and disposed, for CHRIST’S sake, to be favourable to
-us—if we ask Him—without any regard to what we have been doing, and what
-we actually are. I am not sure that you will admit this. But, brethren,
-to help you to do so, consider how general is a vague trust to CHRIST’S
-merits—and GOD’S goodness on account of those merits—to cover all
-excesses and defects of duty, to accept any kind of character, as though
-there were no rule of reward, and no necessary qualification for heaven!
-How rare is the conviction, that while CHRIST’S merits are indeed the
-only ground of our acceptance, and GOD’S mercy is exercised on account of
-those merits, yet the merits and the mercy are applied to us on condition
-that we do certain works, and attain to a certain character in the
-strength of the Holy Spirit given to incline and enable us; that we are
-to be rewarded or punished, accepted or rejected, strictly according to
-the terms of that condition, and that the inquiry into its observance, in
-the scrutiny of our past lives and of our present state, in the
-pronouncing of them such as they were appointed to be, or the opposite,
-and the bestowal of the reward or punishment, is a strict judgment, in
-the passing of which the Judge has no room for arbitrary favour, no
-option, if I may so speak, to do otherwise than, in view of the evidence,
-to apply the fixed law—life for those whom it approves, death for those
-whom it condemns.
-
-Oh! there is a GOD of Judgment, and to us Christians there is no other
-GOD. CHRIST is full of merits. GOD accepts those merits, and is full of
-mercy on account of them. We cannot magnify the merits too much, nor
-rejoice too much in the mercy; provided (but provided only) that we
-remember that they are applied by rule, and that we must observe the
-rule, and be sure that GOD will in no wise, and in no case, depart from
-it. Trust to CHRIST’S merits; hope for GOD’S mercy, but count most
-surely on judgment, as you are most surely the objects of it.
-
-But, secondly, fully believing that there is a GOD of Judgment, the
-questions arise, Where is He? In what court does He sit? When does He
-judge? The common notion (and my remarks have hitherto fallen in with
-it) is, that He is only in a future world, and that He will not exercise
-His office till the last day. The notion is founded on a truth. CHRIST
-sits on the throne of GOD now, to send down grace, to intercede with the
-Father, to rule the Church. At the last day, and not before, He will
-leave that throne, and come forth in His glorious majesty to judge the
-quick and the dead, and to dispose of them in their appointed eternal
-abodes. We have a work to do, and a day set us to do it in, and account
-will not be taken of it, and the hire given us, till the day is over.
-There is a character to be formed ere we can enter heaven, and space, and
-opportunity, and power, are vouchsafed us for forming it. Respecting
-these, then, judgment tarrieth. And even when our individual time is
-over, when our work ceases, and our probation closes, there are others
-left to work and fashion themselves for eternity; and GOD has appointed
-that we, without them, shall not be made perfect. There is to be but one
-glorious descent from the throne, one general resurrection, one great
-assize, one gathering of the saints into the highest heaven, one opening,
-and then one shutting for ever of the lowest hell. When our day is over,
-we must, probably, as others do, sleep a night in the grave, and then on
-the morning of the Resurrection shall appear the GOD of Judgment. But
-surely, after all, there must be an earlier judgment! When the body is
-laid down, and begins its sleep, the soul does not lie down and sleep
-with it. “The body returns to the dust,” we are told, “but the spirit
-goes back to GOD who gave it;” and lest we should imagine that this is
-but a figurative way of describing a suspension of the spirit’s life, we
-are informed in many places not only that it continues greatly alive and
-awake, requiring a place of conscious abode, but that it is at once
-disposed of by GOD, and in a manner which shows an immediate judgment of
-it. As soon as Lazarus died, he was carried to Abraham’s bosom, and
-there was comforted: as soon as Dives died, in hell (a place of misery of
-some kind) he lift up his eyes, being in torments. “This day shalt thou
-be with Me in Paradise,” was the promise of Him, Who could not promise
-idly. To be absent from the body is, for the saint, to be present with
-the LORD, and a vision showed St. John the souls of the martyrs living
-and pleading beneath the altar. What does all this teach us, but that
-the GOD of Judgment meets us at the gate of death, and there and then
-judges and disposes of us? It is somewhat speculative to inquire what is
-the nature of the judgment. It is beyond us to understand how an
-immediate judgment is compatible with a future one. We know not whether
-GOD at first privately intimates what He will at last publicly pronounce;
-whether this is the actual, that only the formal decision; whether the
-scrutiny is now made, or only rehearsed; whether the soul is actually
-tried, or only committed for trial, and in the mean time so dealt with by
-immediate imprisonment, or liberation on pledge to appear, as to hint,
-rather than plainly declare what shall be its ultimate fate; whether it
-enters at once into a state of actual, though partial, experience of joy
-or misery, companying with GOD, with CHRIST, with holy angels, or with
-Satan and evil spirits; or whether it is left in an antechamber where it
-but anticipates the future reward, and actually receives none of it. All
-this is mystery. But certain we are, brethren, that death, is in some
-sense the time of judgment, and consequently that in some way, at the
-very moment of departure from this life we are confronted with the GOD of
-Judgment. Oh, that we could feel this! What a precious time and talent
-it would make our life; what an awful antechamber of GOD’S presence! How
-we should be deterred from doing evil; how stirred to do good! How
-should we be watching, staff in hand; how resolutely should we do our
-work, how patiently should we suffer! Could we then be at home in the
-world, prone to sinful pleasures, distracted or engrossed by worldly
-cares, indifferent to sin and holiness? No, it would be impossible!
-Could we be idle, if we knew that our work would so soon be scrutinised?
-Could we delay the cultivation of a grace necessary for heaven, if we
-knew that the time for acquiring it might so soon be over? Could we
-hazard the interests of eternity, if we knew that we were separated from
-them, not by a wide and lasting world, not by many, many years of
-forgetfulness in the grave, but only by a thin veil, through which they
-might even now be albut heard and seen, which the next moment might be
-rent in twain, which at the most, in a few short years, will be wholly
-taken away! Oh! brethren, we can risk our eternal hopes when they seem
-distant—we dare not, we could not, if we felt them close! Behold, the
-judge is at the door! Watch, lest it open and reveal Him! Behold the
-messenger is coming; be ready, for He may be sent to summon you to the
-presence of the GOD of Judgment!
-
-But we have not yet the full answer to our text. GOD is everywhere. He
-fills heaven and earth with His presence. And He is the same everywhere,
-and at all times; the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever; and so He is
-the GOD of Judgment, exercising judgment even in this life. It cannot be
-otherwise. It belongs to His very essence to love righteousness and hate
-iniquity. When He wills, it is done; when He feels, He acts; what He
-hates, He shrinks from—and if He shrinks, is it not judgment? What He
-loves, He clings to—and is not His presence favour, and support, and
-blessing? Brethren, I have often exhorted you not to shut GOD out of
-this present world as if He belonged only to the future. Live in the
-world to Him. “Wherever we live, we live unto the LORD.” Live in the
-world by Him. “The LORD is at hand. Be careful for nothing; but in
-everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests
-be made unto GOD.” And live in the world, under Him: for “The eyes of
-the LORD are over the righteous, and the face of the LORD is against them
-that do evil.” Yes, the GOD of Judgment is _here_. You know it was so
-in Old Testament times. The deed of righteousness then brought its
-immediate reward; the deed of sin its punishment. Murmur or disregard
-drove away the pillar of fire, repentance and prayer brought it back.
-You think it otherwise now perhaps, but “I am the LORD, I change not.”
-The children of Israel were carnal babes, GOD therefore showed Himself to
-their natural eye. _We_ are men in CHRIST, and the vision, therefore, is
-to our faith. It was with perishable toys that _they_ were pleased: He,
-therefore, rewarded or punished them with temporal things. It is
-differently, _in a measure_, that He deals with us; but not altogether
-differently. It is a mistake to suppose that GOD’S favour was always
-testified to the Jews by prosperity, His displeasure by adversity. Think
-of Abraham, of Job, of Moses, of Joseph, of the ungodly in great
-prosperity, and you will see the mistake. Temporal circumstances were
-more often, then, the tokens of spiritual, but the spiritual has always
-been the reality; and in comparison with it, the token, not always
-afforded, is immaterial. Oh! do not suppose that when the Man CHRIST
-JESUS came on earth as the messenger of grace, the GOD of Providence
-departed. More real and constant is His presence now, and more
-invariable His action. In respect of our service of CHRIST and
-candidateship for heaven, there is a sense in which He leaves us unjudged
-till the end. But, in another sense, as He must, from His very nature,
-be always judging, so are we Christians the special objects of His
-judgment. No winking at _our_ ignorance, no long-suffering with _our_
-sin. Enlightened and enabled, we are responsible, and immediately made
-to answer, for all that is wrong; and, specially endeared to Him, we are
-immediately rewarded for all that He approves. And this judgment is
-visible, if we will but look for it even in our temporal circumstances.
-I do not say that the righteous are always what the world calls
-prosperous, and the wicked always what the world calls unfortunate,
-though that is not seldom the case, much more often than, in our rash
-judgment, we suppose; besides, any kinds of temporal circumstances may be
-made, and often are made, the sources of temporal reward or punishment;
-but temporal things are not the best or the worst that GOD can give.
-They are chiefly used by Him as means; and could I describe to you the
-blessings which poverty and bereavement and disappointment and affliction
-have produced, and the curses which have accompanied riches and success,
-and immunity from loss and trial, you would see what effectual means they
-are, and would readily exclaim, “_Here_ is the GOD of Judgment!” But
-there is a better and a worse judgment. You know how GOD hardened
-Pharaoh’s heart, because it was not softened; how He made Saul’s
-perversity his punishment; how He stiffened Jeroboam’s arm that he could
-not draw it in from the deed of sin; what a sinful security He brought
-upon David for transgression; how Abraham grew rich by forsaking his
-home; how Job resigned much and therefore received more; how Joseph,
-fleeing from Potiphar’s wife, was made to prosper in all he did. These
-things are types of great realities—specimens of constant judgments. GOD
-stands over every man to watch what he does, and as soon as it is done,
-He judges and rewards it. Ah! let the wicked tremble at this, and let
-the righteous rejoice at it. A harassed or a calmed conscience may or
-may not be an accompaniment of the judgment, but a judgment there will
-surely be. Do you want an illustration? Why, then, should the man who
-commits a trivial sin to-day fall into a greater sin to-morrow? Why
-should a little resistance qualify for a great one? You say it is
-natural. If you mean by that that is _spiritual_, that it is the acting
-influence of GOD’S providence, I agree with you; but not otherwise. Man
-is not his own destroyer, nor his own saviour. It no more follows
-naturally that a man should fall into a great sin after a little one, or
-should conquer a strong temptation after overcoming a weak one, than that
-he should soil his garments or his flesh much to-day, because he soiled
-them a little yesterday, or that he should float in a flood because he
-has turned aside from a pool! It is a judgment that makes him sin again,
-and a judgment that enables him to resist again. In the one case, it is
-the angry withdrawal of grace, and the giving up to a reprobate mind, and
-the delivery to Satan; in the other it is the approving increase of
-grace, and the sending of angels to keep off the fiends. _Where is the_
-GOD _of Judgment_! Where, brethren, is He not, and when not acting?
-This world is the throne of judgment. Every moment is the trial time.
-Every act, every word, every thought, brings down upon it, on the
-instant, the sentence and the execution of the sentence! Think of this
-and act upon it. The eyes of the LORD are over the righteous. The face
-of the LORD is against them that do evil. Strive, then, each action to
-approve to His all-seeing eye. Know that it is always Advent; that the
-books are always open, and the judgment always set, and the sentence ever
-ready, “Blessed—or Cursed,” and angels and demons looking out and waiting
-for the signal of approach. The Last Judgment is the climax of the Death
-Judgment, the Death Judgment of the Life Judgment. Gain GOD’S approval
-here, and keep it here, and you shall not lose it hereafter. Forfeit it
-here, and obtain it not again here, and you can never have it. There is
-no condemnation for them that are in CHRIST JESUS. The rest are already
-condemned; though the GOD of Judgment gives them yet the chance—(oh! let
-them not trifle with it!)—that if they will appeal quickly, a fresh trial
-may be granted; and if they have made CHRIST their Advocate, the former
-sentence shall be reversed, and they, too, shall be blessed!
-
-
-
-
-SERMON III.
-THE WORLDLING REPROVED.
-
-
- ST. JAMES, IV., 13, 14, 15.
-
- _Go to now_, _ye that say_, _To-day or to-morrow we will go into such
- a city_, _and continue there a year_, _and buy and sell_, _and get
- gain_: _Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow_. _For what
- is your life_? _It is even a vapour_, _that appeareth for a little
- time_, _and then vanisheth away_. _For that ye ought to say_, _If
- the_ Lord _will_, _we shall live_, _and do this_, _or that_.
-
-“GO TO.” It is the language of rebuke, of remonstrance, and yet of
-exhortation. “Come, come, what are you doing? cease from it, for it is
-wrong. Come, let us reason together, ye that are forming worldly
-schemes, and laying out plans and works for the future, counting not only
-on _some_ continuance, but even on a definite time of your own marking
-out, ‘We will continue there a year.’ Come, I say, be wise; consider
-what your life is, how brief, how fleeting, how easily taken away—how
-uncertain of continuance—and rule and consecrate every part of it, every
-work, every prospective thought, with the limitation, ‘If the LORD
-will.’”
-
-Thus is the worldling reproved and exhorted—the man who is so foolish as
-to reckon surely upon what he knows is very uncertain, who is so sinful
-as to forget the providence of GOD, or at least not to submit himself to
-it. And, further on he is plainly told that this reckless confidence is
-sin:—“Therefore to him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him
-it is sin.”
-
-Observe here, my brethren—and you will thereby see how directly this text
-is addressed, not to very gross and carnal offenders, but even to such as
-ourselves—that the Apostle does not cry out against the going into the
-city and proposing to buy and sell and get gain there, or even against
-the fixing of a particular period of sojourn; but against the doing of
-all this _without reference and submission to_, _without dependence upon
-the will and providence of_ GOD; without remembrance that there is no
-certainty of life, and power, and opportunity. “What is our life” “If
-the LORD will?”
-
-GOD does not forbid, rather He requires us to engage in worldly
-occupations. He has sent us into the world in need of food and raiment,
-which the majority of us can only get by working for them, and has
-endowed us with faculties and powers which have their legitimate exercise
-in worldly pursuits. There can be no question that by GOD’S appointment
-man is to labour and trade, or employ himself in some way in worldly
-things, for sustenance and for exercise of many of his powers. And if
-this is so, then neither can there be any question, that it must be
-lawful to think in some way of the morrow, to provide what we shall need
-in it, to consider and plan for our employment and gain in it. It would
-be quite impossible to carry on many callings—more especially those which
-have distinctly the approval of GOD, as husbandry, for instance—if we
-might not forecast, anticipate, provide, propose, and plan. And if all
-this may be done, then we may and must mark out particular works and
-places, and specific periods of time, wherein to perform what we propose.
-If a husbandman may not think of the harvest, how shall he do the duties
-of the seed time? If the merchant may not fix on a mart nor make
-arrangements for sojourning there till he has disposed of his goods, nor
-count the number of days which the ship will require for transporting
-them, then how shall he know what wares to purchase? how shall he
-persuade himself to have anything to do with merchandise? Surely, he
-must take for granted—or at least he must act as if he took for
-granted—some certainty of time and opportunity, and so he must in one
-sense presume upon the future. Still, brethren, the very illustrations I
-have chosen tell against counting on actual certainty. The husbandman
-ploughs in hope and sows in hope; but knows all the time that the fowls
-of the air may rob him of his crop, that the needful rain or sun may be
-withholden from it, that the worm, and the mildew, and the blast may
-destroy it. The merchant freights his vessel with full knowledge—(not
-always without fear)—that fire or storm may cause it to be lost in the
-sea, or that if it reaches the place of sale, there may then be no demand
-for it. Each is obliged to admit contingencies; to prepare and act as if
-all power and all time and circumstances were in his own hands, while he
-knows and feels that it is far otherwise; that much may be uncontrollably
-against him; that he may be disappointed of all his hope. Nor does he
-omit altogether to provide for the contingency. He asks, “What if I
-should be disappointed, if my plans should fail, if the time should be
-prolonged or shortened against my expectation? What is to be done with
-the gain, if anything happens to me?” So he insures his vessel, and
-gives directions whither to carry, or what to do with his merchandise if
-aught should render it unsaleable at the proposed mart, and he makes his
-will! Wisely he takes into account what he calls “chance,” and therefore
-sobers his expectations and rules his plans by the consideration of what
-may happen to frustrate them! A like consideration—not of “chance,” for
-he does not believe in chance, but of the possible unexpected operations
-of GOD’S providence—is to sanctify the Christian’s plans and
-appointments, and to prevent him from becoming a worldling. He may think
-and say, what he will do on the morrow; he may set out on a long journey,
-or propose to himself a week, a month’s, a year’s, a ten years’ sojourn
-in some distant city; he may make ample and long preparations for buying
-and selling, and getting gain; he may pull down his barns (if they are
-not large enough) and build greater; he may entertain some thoughts of
-possibly enjoying, after years of toil and care, an old age of ease and
-happiness, and so may make provision for that happiness. He need not,
-and should not, be ever saying to himself, “It is of no use my
-undertaking this business, I may not live to carry it out.” “If I were
-sure of life, I would remove this and alter that, but let it be now, it
-must do for my poor uncertain days.” (The world would stand still, if
-men were to act, or refuse to act, upon such arguments as these,
-arguments not suggested by God.) No, brethren, whatever your calling,
-follow it honestly and heartily; whatever your possessions, use them, and
-use them so as to get the most legitimate good out of them, and do not
-despise the opportunities and the goods which GOD has given you. But
-consider when you propose to yourselves anything which draws by
-anticipation on the future, consider, I say, “What is my life? It is
-even a vapour that appeareth for a little time and then vanisheth away,”
-and qualify your scheme by saying to yourselves, “If the LORD will, I
-should live and do this or that.” Yes! and provide, as far as you can,
-_lest the_ LORD _should not will_. And here, brethren, we have suggested
-to us another reason for admitting an “if” into our counsels, and for
-allowing it to have its say, and for heeding well what it suggests. The
-Christian is allowed, and even required to follow a worldly calling, but
-still he has a higher calling, which he must not neglect, which he must
-most regard. Life was not given him only that he might eat and drink,
-and take his pleasure, and grow rich, and build palaces, and be filled
-with knowledge, and perfected in accomplishments. These are but the
-lower employments of life, or its intermittent pastimes. Its business is
-religion—the laying hold on salvation, and following the holy service to
-which we are bound, wherein we are apprentices and probationers for
-eternal glory, and whereby we are allowed and enabled to lay up treasure
-in heaven—the dedication of ourselves to CHRIST our Saviour, to live
-under His rule, and by His grace; to set forth His glory in all we do; to
-become qualified by unlearning and renouncing what is amiss, and
-acquiring new tastes, and inclinations, and powers, and fashioning
-ourselves after His glorious image for the state to which He will call us
-when this life is over. “If the LORD will I should live and do this or
-that.” How does such a suggestion break in upon and check the presuming
-worldliness of the called of GOD! “Here am I,” it makes him exclaim,
-“actually laying myself out for the engrossing and long-continued pursuit
-of worldly ends. Yet GOD may cut short my life in the midst of it, and
-if He does, without giving me time to resume my higher calling, to repair
-what is out of order, to fill up what is wanting, to make my peace with
-Him, to become fit for death—oh, to what in that case will my folly and
-my sin bring me! How shall I stand before Him at His awful Advent? What
-account shall I render of my neglected stewardship? What will justify my
-presumption in His delay? What excuse my want of the wedding garment?
-Surely He will deal with me as with one who knew his Master’s will, yet
-did it not; who refused the glory which he was created, and redeemed, and
-sanctified to render; who has preferred Mammon to GOD, earth to heaven;
-who has contracted the worldliness from which GOD shrinks, and despised
-the holiness which alone He will accept!” It is an awakening, a
-sobering, a solemn suggestion. It reveals to him the anomaly, the folly,
-the sin, the peril of his condition, whatever the kind of worldliness
-which engrosses him. He a servant of CHRIST, a votary of religion, a
-worker for eternity, an heir of glory, forgetting his calling, neglecting
-his best hopes and interests, perverting his time and powers, and
-opportunities from their highest and most necessary use, to gratify self
-with childish pleasures, to heap up gold, to make to himself a name among
-the pigmies of the earth; to become admired or stared at for his
-appearance or accomplishments; to excel in knowledge of languages, or
-sciences, or history, or for any other earthly end; when not only what he
-seeks must soon be yielded up (even if he succeeds in getting it), but
-also through the seeking he must neglect all that GOD requires of him,
-and forfeit all that GOD offers! Oh, how silly, how sinful, how awfully
-hazardous the course he is pursuing!
-
-What, then? Shall he abandon it all in terror? Shall he hate the world
-and flee from it? Shall he become a hermit, refusing to receive good,
-and to do good in his generation? Shall he give up his earthly calling,
-foregoing the temporal advantages which are held out to him; not
-exercising the powers which are entrusted to him; supposing that the GOD
-who put him into this world, and qualified him to fill a place in it, and
-stimulated him by pressing necessities, or by indwelling desires to seek
-profit or pleasure, nevertheless meant him to have nothing to do with the
-world; that because presently he is to die, now he ought not to live; but
-to drag a sad, inactive, solitary, impatient existence. Surely not! His
-place now is in the world, his work is in the world; he refuses GOD
-service in not exercising his worldly calling; he gives up the means of
-probation, and the opportunities of development and improvement in the
-highest powers and best graces, and disqualifies himself for heaven, if
-he fulfils not his destiny on earth. Let him abide in his calling; let
-him discharge its obligations; let him pursue its advantages, and cull
-its pleasures, and perform all its bidding; but throughout all, let him
-remember, and act upon the remembrance that he is not a mere worldling;
-and to keep him from being absorbed in the world, or grovelling in its
-pursuits, to quicken him in concern for higher responsibilities and
-privileges, to impress upon him that all that is of the world is
-temporary and fleeting, that the world is passing away from him, and he
-from it, let him reflect frequently and seriously, “What is my life? It
-is even a vapour, that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth
-away;” and so let him temper the lower life (and raise himself above it),
-by piously resolving that its present occupations, its plans and hopes
-shall all be subject to the condition, “If the LORD will I should live,
-and do this or that.”
-
-That we all want to be influenced by such thoughts is too evident to need
-proof. The very best of us are wont practically to regard this earth as
-our abiding home, or the only stage upon which we shall ever act a part,
-and earthly pursuits and pleasures as the only aims and rewards of our
-being. We may write “D. V.,” or say, “If the LORD will,” after every
-engagement, every proposed scheme. We may make our wills and set our
-houses in order, and purchase a burial place, and carry about a shroud,
-and yet forget that we have to die. Grey hairs, or enfeebled frames, and
-the perceptible growth within us of the seeds of mortal disease, and sick
-beds, and sudden deaths around us, may cause us momentary misgivings, may
-make us perhaps permanently a little uneasy: but still we live on, as
-though there were no end of life; we put off preparation for death, and
-for another state after death, as though we could not die till we chose
-to do so. Not for want of knowledge, of constant testimonies and
-reminders of the contrary are we thus confident (for we all know that our
-life is but a vapour which the heat may presently dispel, or the wind of
-the next moment cause to vanish), but because we do not feel ourselves to
-be so entirely in the hands of an Omnipotent and mysteriously exercised
-Providence, as to need to be constantly depending upon it, and asking of
-it, “If the LORD will;” and so presenting to ourselves, in all its force,
-the consideration that perhaps “The LORD may _not_ will.” I speak to
-men, and women, and children, full of present occupations and future
-plans. I bid you consider your occupations and review your plans. Do
-you imagine that the first may be at any moment interrupted, and the last
-never begun to be carried out? Some of you are almost exclusively
-pleasure seekers; others, careless creatures of the present; others
-intent upon business, or profit, upon obtaining power, or knowledge, or
-fame; either reaping a worldly harvest now, or sowing for a future
-worldly harvest. Others are divided in care and desire between this life
-and the next. Others are in theory, and in much practice, living above
-this world, using it but not abusing it, in it but not of it. Put the
-question to yourselves, all and each of you. Do you feel your life to be
-such a vapour, that it is in momentary risk of vanishing away; that only
-if the LORD will, will it appear a little time; that possibly He may not
-will? You would say, “yes,” doubtless, if you were forced to answer
-aloud, as you sit in church, interrogated by the messenger of CHRIST out
-of the Bible, just as to a question out of the Church Catechism, you
-would give an answer out of the Church Catechism. But do you _feel_
-“yes”? Is it your sure and strong conviction? Do your lives say “yes”?
-I shall not be unjust to you, if I say that I stand in doubt of many of
-you; that, alas! I have no doubt of some; that your hearts do not thus
-respond; that your lives give a manifest contradiction.
-
-Brethren, I am not here to accuse, but to admonish and help. Let me
-suggest, then, why you fail to realise such a palpable truth. It is,
-first, because you have an idea that the Advent is far off; and,
-secondly, because, as I have reminded you in so many ways lately, you
-shut GOD too much out of this present world. The first disciples, as you
-may see from St. Paul’s and St. Peter’s Epistles, were filled with the
-conviction that the Advent was very near, that the next moment might
-reveal it. This did not take them out of the world, for they believed
-that CHRIST would come to them in the world. Neither did it make them
-forsake their earthly calling, for they knew that it was in that calling
-that they were to serve GOD, and to prepare for His coming. But it
-caused them always to have regard to the end, and it sanctified every
-pursuit and plan with the thought, “The LORD may come,” and so constantly
-suggested the proviso, “If the LORD will.” We have no such conviction of
-CHRIST’S nearness, and therefore have little reference to it, and are
-faintly impressed with it. We argue, the Judgment has tarried so many
-years, it may therefore tarry many more. Death has so long spared us, he
-will not come to us yet. We shall have time to finish our present
-occupations, we can enter upon and execute many fresh plans. We need not
-raise a doubt, “If the LORD will.”
-
-But, secondly, we shut GOD out of this present world. We forget that He
-is ever with us; that He is constantly exercising His providence over us;
-that He is not ignorant, or indifferent, much less distant, when we
-propose and proceed to execute; that it is by His exercised permission,
-by His actual letting us go in anger, that we fall into sin; by His
-inclining, and helping, and carrying us, that we think, and attempt, and
-perform what is good; that thus watching and caring for us, and
-surrounding us, He is at once the Witness, the Judge, the Rewarder of our
-every thought and way; that consequently, when He has tried us enough, or
-when we have long wearied Him, He is at hand to decide about us, and,
-deciding, to execute the decision. His forbearance and interference, the
-length of the probation, the numbers and kinds of trial, are different in
-different cases. He knows what is right and sufficient for each, and He
-applies it, and then He says, “It is enough. Thy righteousness is as
-length of days. Well done, good and faithful servant;” or, “It is of no
-use that thou shouldst be stricken any more. Thou wilt revolt more and
-more. The whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint. Depart from
-me!” And in either case the vapour is dispelled—it vanisheth away.
-
-O for the full perception and realisation of this truth; that we are in
-the hands of a watching, proving, waiting, judging, visiting GOD. It
-would be hard then to do or propose anything, without immediately adding,
-“If the LORD will.”
-
-Two concluding thoughts suggest themselves.
-
-First, that life is of such different duration in different cases,
-because we have individual capabilities and responsibilities, and some by
-many trials and length of days are proved, others quickly and easily made
-perfect, or wholly hardened; and because a discerning, ruling GOD is ever
-at hand to close the trial at the fit moment.
-
-Secondly, that we are individually kept uncertain of the duration of our
-life, to counteract the sad proneness which belongs to us, of putting off
-eternal interests, and following our own ways to the uttermost; to give
-to every moment, and every act of life, such vital importance, that we
-may fear to squander or pervert it; to keep us ever mindful of our latter
-end, and always intent upon doing the LORD’S work, and preparing
-ourselves for heaven; that the GOD at hand may never be slighted, and the
-world be always so loosely held, that we may easily and readily let go of
-it whenever the LORD will.
-
-“Go to now, ye that say, To-day or to-morrow we will go into such a city,
-and continue there a year, and buy and sell, and get gain: Whereas ye
-know not what shall be on the morrow. For what is your life? It is even
-a vapour, that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away. For
-that ye ought to say, If the LORD will, we shall live, and do this, or
-that.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON IV.
-THE UNKNOWN GOD.
-
-
- ACTS, XVII., 22, 23.
-
- _Ye men of Athens_, _I perceive that in all things ye are too
- superstitious_. _For as I passed by_, _and beheld your devotions_,
- _I found an altar with this inscription_, TO THE UNKNOWN GOD. _Whom
- therefore ye ignorantly worship_, _Him declare I unto you_.
-
-THE city of Athens was wholly given to idolatry. It was crowded with
-altars, dedicated to the supposed superior deities, to deified men, to
-abstract virtues, Love, Truth, Mercy, and the like. Whatever new god was
-described and recommended to them was immediately recognised, and
-thenceforth worshipped; and, besides, the Athenians’ love of something
-new, led them to search out for and invent gods for themselves. Hence it
-came to pass, that there were more idols in that one city than in all the
-rest of Greece: so that Satirist did not much exaggerate when he said
-that in Athens you might more easily find a god than a man. It belongs
-not to our present purpose to consider how this arose; to contemplate the
-strange coexistence of so much superstition and so much cultivation of
-intellect, or to strive to enter into the feelings which animated Paul,
-when his spirit was stirred within him at the sight of the city wholly
-given to idolatry. We pass on to the time when the Apostle stood on
-Mars’s hill, in sight of many heathen altars, surrounded by Epicureans
-and Stoics and disciples of many other schools of philosophy, some
-striving to silence him, others intent upon hearing something new from
-him—to meet the contentious gainsayings of the one, to enlist the
-curiosity of the other; to make use of their various dispositions, of all
-that he saw and heard, in promoting the glory of GOD, and, if it might
-be, in leading them to salvation.
-
-It must be borne in mind that some of these news-seeking Athenians
-inconsistently enough contended with him, because he taught what was
-novel; while others, on that very account, were favourable to him, hoping
-that he would set forth some strange gods—some additional objects of
-worship to whom they might erect altars. “Ye men of Athens,” he said, “I
-perceive from actual observation that you, more than other people, have
-great regard for religion.” This is the right meaning of the words
-translated: “In all things ye are too superstitious.” It is not likely
-that the Apostle would have commenced a speech intended to conciliate and
-enlighten them, with words that would at once affront them, and make them
-deaf to all else he had to say. Besides, it is clear from what follows,
-that he is not directly calling upon them to abandon what was false, but
-to understand and accept rightly a truth which they held in ignorance.
-“I say nothing to you now upon the many gods whom you worship _by name_,
-but, pointing to an altar inscribed to the Unknown GOD (it was probably
-in sight) I answer those who contend with me for speaking about the
-unknown, and gratify those who want to hear something new, by taking that
-altar as my text, and preaching to you about ‘the Unknown GOD’—about no
-new god, for He is already the object of your worship; but still about
-one of whom much that is new to you may be said. Give ear to me, ye that
-are so full of reverence for the gods, while I describe to you an object
-indeed of your present reverence, but one of whose nature and operations
-and demands upon you, you know nothing.”
-
-Respecting the existence of such an altar, we are told that the Athenians
-through the very excess of their idolatry (which led them to look for
-gods in every place and circumstance, and to ascribe every event, good or
-ill, to the influence of some deity) had on more than one occasion, when
-an unusually severe pestilence had visited them, which they could not
-connect with any of their known gods, conjectured that it must be the
-doing of some god whom they did not propitiate with sacrifices, and,
-failing to find out who it was, and yet fearing to neglect his worship,
-had caused altars _without names_ to be erected, and offerings to be made
-to the nameless being; and that in course of time these altars came to be
-described, and to bear a corresponding inscription, as severally the
-altars of an “unknown god.” There is no reason to suppose that they
-meant to exalt that god above the others, that they had any clearly
-defined ideas of the general operations of one unknown Being, much less
-that they meant under that title to worship the GOD of the Jews; but with
-a kind of natural instinct, a very vague feeling that something beyond
-and above what they knew, existed, they had stumbled, as it were, in the
-dark, upon a real truth, which was now to be revealed to them. “Whom
-therefore ye ignorantly worship—Whom you are right in worshipping, but of
-Whose proper worship you know nothing, Him declare I, and reveal unto
-you.” You know how St. Paul went on, meeting without mentioning the
-errors of the various sects of philosophers, that there was indeed a GOD
-who made the world, and all things therein; that He was not a mere idol
-of wood and stone (“dwelling not in temples made with hands”), that He
-had no such passions, and no such needs as they ascribed to Jove and Mars
-and their deified men (“Neither is worshipped with men’s hands as though
-He needed anything”), that He was not a sentiment—an ideal thing—a being
-bound by fate—an indifferent spectator of men’s ways. “He giveth to all
-life and breath and all things.” “In Him we live and move and have our
-being.” “He hath appointed a day in the which He will judge the world in
-righteousness by the man whom He hath chosen;” to whom He has borne such
-signal testimony in raising Him from the dead; in whose name, and at
-whose command, I come to tell you of the resurrection from the dead, and
-to call you out of the ignorance which GOD will no longer wink at, and to
-urge upon you repentance and preparation for judgment. So he spoke of
-the unknown GOD. Some mocked, and refused to understand; some were in
-doubt and difficulty, and wished to hear more; others began to know Him
-who had hitherto been unknown, and clave unto the Apostle, and believed.
-And shortly after Paul departed from Athens, never, as far as we know, to
-visit again!
-
-It would be interesting to consider the strange rise and spread of
-ignorance which in course of time made the GOD, Who had been seen and
-heard and walked with in Eden, and had never left Himself without
-witness, wholly unknown to the creatures of His hand, and the objects of
-His providential care; to contemplate the idolatry of ignorant heathen
-man, not seeing GOD in all His works, not able to find Him even when
-looking for Him and desiring to worship Him, believing in every god but
-the true One, sometimes even offering sacrifices to devils; to discuss,
-too, how it is the world by wisdom knows not, and never has known GOD,
-that intellect cannot search Him out, that intellect has even blinded
-many to whom the unknown GOD was plainly exhibited; to ask how much of
-this is natural, how much unnatural, how much judicial—the punishment of
-pride, the reward of loving darkness rather than light, because of evil
-deeds. But interesting as would be the consideration of “GOD unknown in
-the world,” there is a more important theme suggested by the text for us
-to dwell on, namely, “GOD unknown in the Church.” “There standeth one
-among you Whom ye know not.” Let me speak to you on this, brethren.
-
-Whatever may be the state and disposition of the people whom the
-clergyman has to deal with in his various daily ministrations and his
-intercourse with the world, once a week, at least, he addresses an
-assembly in some sense given to religion. As he stands in the pulpit on
-the Lord’s Day he may adopt almost the words of St. Paul on the
-Areopagus: “I perceive that you (and such as you) are more than the rest
-of mankind GOD-fearing, taking an interest in religion, listening to its
-teaching, partaking of its ordinances, supplicating, praising, serving
-GOD.”
-
-It may, indeed, occasionally be that some present themselves to see if
-there is anything in the church for them to object to, or ridicule; that
-others have come in conformity to the fashion, to hear something new, to
-see and be seen; to make a show of respectability, to wile away an idle
-time; and that many others, though proposing to themselves the observance
-of a religious duty, are so formal, so listless, so unreal, that it
-cannot be said of them that they are “given to religion.” Nevertheless,
-I repeat that the clergyman, as he stands in the pulpit, has before him
-the best, _i.e._, the most religious of mankind; not mockers, and
-revilers, and persecutors; not gainsayers, and despisers, and forgetters;
-but real worshippers—more or less reverential and earnest, more or less
-enlightened—of the true GOD. But has he not in these same persons (as
-St. Paul had in the Athenians) many worshippers of an unknown GOD? May
-he not venture to say to almost all, “Whom ye ignorantly worship, Him
-declare I unto you.” Christian worshippers, my brethren, often have many
-idols, who share almost equally with GOD their interest and affections
-and service. They have, many of them, their “ism,” their Paul, their
-Cephas, or Apollos, their favourite dogma, their preferences and
-prejudices for some particular rites, and ceremonies, and modes of
-worship. In church, and out of church, their religion consists largely
-in giving heed to these things: GOD is in their thoughts, but not in all
-their thoughts, or not the chief, the engrossing object of their
-thoughts; He is one of many objects. You find this out if you listen to
-their remarks after service. “Such a chant went well or badly; the
-preacher’s manner was pleasing, or the contrary; his language very
-ornate, or very bald; the theme one they like, or one they do not like;
-the rubric strictly observed, or strangely disregarded;” and so on. Of
-course, as all these things are means to an end, and as the end is
-gained, or not gained, by their suitableness, or the opposite, it is
-lawful and right to give them some consideration: but I put it to you,
-brethren, whether they are not too often regarded as themselves the end;
-as though, provided they were satisfactory, there was nothing more
-wanting; as though they were rightly as much the objects of interest as
-the GOD in Whose service they are used, or, rather, as though regarding
-them were regarding GOD!
-
-O brethren, we are too attentive to the system—too regardless of the
-Centre! We want to know—(to feel, I mean, for the Christian’s knowledge
-is of the heart)—that GOD is above all—that where other objects have
-anything like an equal share of attention, where they hide Him from us in
-His pure essence and direct influence, there He is ignorantly
-worshipped—that He is a Spirit, not a chant, a voice, a figure of speech,
-a rubric, a turning east or west. Through these we may reach Him; many
-of them are steps and accessories to worship; but if in these we rest,
-then we set them up as idols, side by side with Him, and prove that to us
-He is but as the unknown god of the Athenians.
-
-See, dear brethren, I beseech you, if aught of this old error clings to
-you, and pray GOD to clear you from it, and resolve henceforth to strive
-to keep clear. Treat means as means—value them; be glad that they are
-becomingly afforded you, and rejoice if they help you; but do not let the
-best of them beguile you, nor the worst of them hinder you, from finding
-and worshipping GOD Himself; from going away filled with thoughts of Him.
-“I prayed to GOD; I praised Him; I held communion with Him; I heard the
-things of GOD from His messenger, and have now to go and live by what I
-have done, and received, and heard.” These are the thoughts to take away
-from church with you, and to prove to you that you wisely worship the
-known GOD.
-
-I have dwelt much on this part of the subject, because of the general
-forgetfulness of it; a forgetfulness which prevents many from rendering
-acceptable service to GOD, and from obtaining the full help and comfort
-which religion affords to all who rightly use it.
-
-But there are many other kinds of ignorant worship. It is possible to
-cast down all idols, and worship GOD alone, and yet err. The so-called
-spiritualist does this: the man who supposes that addressing himself
-directly to GOD, is sufficient, without the use of appointed forms and
-ordinances; who attaches no importance to baptism and holy communion; who
-thinks that no grace accompanies their use, or that he can have the grace
-without the sign; who says that praying at home is a good substitute for
-congregational worship; who boasts that he can read a sermon for himself,
-and a better one than he can hear in church; or that the Bible is
-sufficiently clear to him without an interpreter.
-
-Such an one ignorantly worships an unknown GOD. He dictates, instead of
-obeying; he chooses, instead of submitting to what is appointed for him;
-he puts reason in the place of faith; he refuses to walk in GOD’S way of
-salvation; he disputes the Divine wisdom in requiring him to be baptised,
-and to partake of the Cup and Bread of Blessing; in warning not to
-forsake the assembling of ourselves together; in asking, “How shall they
-hear without a preacher?” in appointing a standing ministry; he rebels
-against GOD, when he disregards these ordinances; he makes GOD a liar
-when he presumes to deem them unnecessary. Oh, he has great need that
-the GOD whom he ignorantly worships, should be plainly declared unto him!
-
-Again, that man ignorantly worships GOD, who substitutes the forms for
-the life of religion; who supposes that a sanctuary service atones for
-all want of service elsewhere; who prays in church, but not in his
-closet; who hears the Bible read or expounded, but does not search it
-diligently for himself; who receives sacraments, but does not foster, and
-use, and develop the sacramental grace, which is entrusted to him as an
-awful talent to be increased and accounted for; who balances the religion
-of Sunday against the worldliness of the whole week; who every seventh
-day eases his conscience of its sin, by sighing out the general
-confession, and forthwith takes to himself the comfort of the declaration
-of forgiveness, and then goes back to his old transgressions and
-omissions, till the holy day comes round again. Of course whoever does
-this, or any part of it deliberately, is grossly, culpably ignorant of
-the GOD whom he professes to worship; but it is not of such that I speak
-now. I have in mind professing Christians, persons who busy themselves
-about religion, who are regular in their attendance on means of grace,
-who never wilfully desecrate the LORD’S day, who knowing that unpardoned
-sin separates from GOD, and that without grace, life is unblessed, are
-anxious for pardon and grace, and frequently seek them in GOD’S appointed
-ways; but yet, forget, are not impressed with the danger of a relapse,
-and the sin of non-improvement, and so somehow or other, fall into a
-routine of formal religion on Sunday, which is not in their thoughts,
-except as a matter that belongs to next Sunday all through the week.
-This is to worship ignorantly an unknown GOD—a GOD Who does not accept
-intermittent worship, Who bestows pardon only on repentance and amendment
-of life, Who gives grace for use, Whose sacraments are meals to sustain
-life and strengthen for service, Whose Sabbath is a holy rest to refresh
-for holy work, in Whom we live, and move, and have our being, Whose glory
-is to be our constant aim, His presence our perpetual joy. But these,
-and many other ignorances—such as the disregard of particular attributes,
-the picturing for oneself what GOD ought to be like, and so varying the
-picture according to the fancy of him who draws it, instead of searching
-how, and what manner of GOD He has declared Himself to be, and what
-worship is appointed, and therefore acceptable—these, I say, are the
-faults of individuals, or of certain classes only. Let me now speak of
-an ignorance, a respect in which GOD is more or less unknown, which
-concerns us all. And here, dear brethren, my object is not to censure,
-to blame you for what you have not, but pointing out to you the GOD whom
-Scripture reveals, to help you to correct what is amiss, to fill up what
-is wanting in your conceptions of GOD, and so to attain to the
-blessedness of knowing Him fully, and to discharge the duty of
-worshipping Him in spirit and in truth.
-
-Observe St. Paul, while acknowledging the religious reverence of the
-Athenians, evidently deals with them as men who understood not the
-truths, the objects, the blessings of religion; as those who when they
-had built their altars, and celebrated their holy days, and offered their
-sacrifices, thought they had fulfilled all that religion required of
-them, and who expected to get nothing by their religion, but exemption
-from certain grievous pestilences, or help perhaps in war—mere occasional
-miraculous manifestations of dreadful power—who had no conceptions of
-sanctifying influence, of moral responsibility, of rewards of
-righteousness. To them he declares GOD to be, One not far from them, One
-whom they might find, in Whom they then lived and moved, and had their
-being, Who henceforth would not wink at any ignorance, Who was at present
-treating them, and regarding them with a view to a coming judgment. Now
-we are better (thank GOD, who maketh us to differ!) than these Athenians;
-but still we want somewhat of the heart-knowledge which Paul would have
-impressed on them. We want to be more fully convinced that religion is
-not a pastime, but a business; that not only duty, but interest,
-momentous interest, is involved in it, especially that it is not a mere
-concern and preparation and provision for the future, but a present
-substantial reality; that GOD is not the object of distant worship; that
-His wrath and His mercy are, not rarely, but constantly, being exercised
-here; that He is not a departed LORD, Who has set us to do His work
-against His return, and will take no account of us till some far off day;
-that He has not left us unrewarded, unpunished, unhelped in the present,
-not caring what we are, what we do, what we suffer, so as when He comes
-back, we have either done what He appointed, or have assumed the position
-of penitents for offence, and supplicants of compassion.
-
-Is it not matter of experience that we are not sufficiently influenced by
-the hopes and fears of religion, that we do not adequately reverence GOD,
-or seek Him, and rest on Him, because we suppose that He is afar off, and
-that all that we have to expect from Him, will only begin to be realised
-in the next world? GOD, as a present GOD, is too much unknown to us. We
-do not feel that He is now about us; that His eye is watching us, and His
-arm upraised over each of us at every moment of our lives; that He is a
-guest actually in us, to be honoured and waited on now. We do not know
-of His present closeness, of His immediate rewards and punishments, His
-pleasure or displeasure, His instant succour, or instant withdrawal from
-us, according to what He sees in us. We do all, and bear all in distant
-expectation, and therefore we do negligently, and bear feebly and
-impatiently. Could we realise the perpetual working, the instant
-retribution, the very touching of GOD now, it would be easy to regard and
-serve Him, it would be all but impossible to neglect Him. No man could
-prefer dross to gold, misery to bliss, death to life, if they were both
-offered him at the same moment. No one could hesitate whom to obey, whom
-to trust, whom to fear, whom to love, if GOD were seen on the one side,
-and fellow man on the other. It is because GOD, and the things of GOD,
-are supposed to be far off, that we first prefer the other, and then
-practically regard it as that which alone has real existence.
-
-Well, then, this is what we have to mend. I have been urging the mending
-on these Sundays in Advent, in striving to show you that there is a GOD
-present to superintend, and provide, and care for you in this life, and
-in every event and moment of this life; that there is an actual and
-immediate judgment of every deed, good and evil, and that there is a
-present business of religion, and a direct service of GOD to be now
-attended to. It is not head-knowledge that you want, but
-heart-perception, and realisation. You want to feel what you must know
-(because the Bible has told you that GOD is a GOD at hand, and not a GOD
-afar off); that godliness has the promise of the life that now is, as
-well as of that which is to come; that the irreligious is condemned
-already. No expectation, no delay, no vision. All fulfilled, immediate,
-and substantially real. You fancy, perhaps, that it cannot be so. You
-urge that it is contrary to your experience; you have served GOD, and not
-been rewarded; you have trusted in Him, and not been supported; you have
-sinned against Him, and not been punished. Brethren, believe me, you
-have not. “Experience” means that which has been ascertained by trial.
-Make trial, and all will be proved. Devote yourselves now to GOD, follow
-Him, give up for Him to-day, and you shall be rewarded to-day. Sin
-against Him to-day, and you shall be punished to-day. Invoke His aid
-to-day, and you shall surely have it. Do not prescribe your own mode of
-visitation. Be sure that He will use His, and watch for it, and seek to
-know it, and then you will have an experience to quote. I only repeat to
-you what He has said. When you know Him, you will find that He is true.
-Then wait on Him, acquaint yourselves with Him, serve Him in the present,
-and look for Him in the present, and you will find Him in the present.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON V.
-FAITH AND ITS BLESSEDNESS.
-
-
- ST. JOHN, XX., 29.
-
- _Thomas_, _because thou hast seen me_, _thou hast believed_: _blessed
- are they that have not seen_, _and yet have believed_.
-
-DOES our LORD mean to say that there was no blessedness in the sight
-which he then presented?—that it was not a precious privilege actually to
-see Him, to hear Him, to be perceptibly with Him? Would He, too,
-withdraw and reverse the blessing He had formerly pronounced—“Blessed are
-the eyes which see the things that ye see”? Would He tell us that the
-kings and prophets, who saw the promises only afar off, who fancied and
-conjectured, and died in hope, were more blessed than the hearers of the
-Sermon of the Mount, the spectators of the Transfiguration, the
-companions of that three years’ ministry, the guests at Emmaus, the
-disciple that reclined on His bosom? No, surely! The blessedness of the
-Apostles, in certainly seeing, and being with CHRIST in the flesh, is, in
-its peace and joy, a blessedness which stands pre-eminent and alone, and
-must do till again He is seen in Heaven. But peace and joy are not the
-greatest blessings. That which calms, that which gladdens, is nothing in
-comparison with that which sanctifies and elevates; and there is a
-blessedness which does this; and which, therefore, is greater. It is the
-blessedness which faith produces. “Blessed (_i.e._, more blessed) are
-they that have not seen, and yet have believed.” Belief, faith—what is
-it? It may be described as the assent of the understanding, to that
-which is not proved to any of our senses, but which appears credible
-because of the testimony given to it. We all have this faith, in human
-affairs. We all of us accept as true—are convinced of their truth, and
-act upon the conviction—things which are not proved to us, but are
-supported by reliable statement. If you serve for wages, or sell goods
-on credit, or become surety for another, or go out to seek a new home in
-a distant land, you do it in faith. You cannot see into the heart, and
-be sure of the honesty of your employer, your customer, your friend; but
-what appears, from what you are told by others of him, you rely on him.
-And so again, you do not actually know that there is such a land as you
-propose to seek, but you believe it, because of all that travellers have
-said of it, of the goods you have seen, the letters you have read, which
-are stated to have come from it. Of course, as the testimony varies in
-its credibility, this faith is of different degrees. You have such faith
-in your well-tried friend, in his integrity and his wisdom, that you
-know, you say, that he will not deceive you, and that he cannot be
-deceived himself. Others, of whom you know less, you believe more
-slowly. Some, you think, are not qualified to give testimony; they have
-the thing second-hand, or they were not competent to judge of what they
-saw, and heard, and felt; or they are not truthful, and may wilfully
-misrepresent: and even, in the best cases, faith is sometimes misplaced.
-Therefore, your faith in human things, has always, perhaps (and should
-have) a trace of doubt in it—sometimes is weak, sometimes fails
-altogether. It would be wrong and injurious to have equal faith in all;
-but, on the other hand, to be always doubting, to refuse to believe
-without seeing, would be misery, and folly, and mockery of self. Divine
-faith is different: the accepting (that is) of what is recommended to us
-by the testimony of GOD, by well-proved miracles, by prophecies since
-fulfilled, by any other of GOD’S witnesses. This is perfect. It admits
-of no doubts and qualifications. It is as sure of what it believes, as
-if it handled, and heard, and saw it: yea, surer, for its own judgment
-might be deceived; but GOD knows all things and judges rightly, and GOD
-cannot deceive. Therefore, when GOD reveals, we may not question the
-plausibility of what is shown; we have no room for doubt as to His
-opportunities of knowing, His truthfulness in communicating what is
-narrated. All we may do, is to ask—Has GOD spoken, are these things His
-testimony? And this we ought to do; for there is no blessing pronounced
-by the text on the credulous, who take everything as from GOD, without
-examination. Thomas surely would have erred, if, simply because some one
-told him of CHRIST’S resurrection, he had straightway believed it. We
-are exhorted not to believe every spirit, but to try the spirits whether
-they be of GOD. We have to examine miracles, to see whether they are
-real or pretended, and prophecies, to see that they were not written
-after the professed fulfilments, and all revelations, lest they should be
-spurious. Failing to do this, we might have followed Theudas, who came
-to nought, or Joan of Arc: we might become Mohammedans or Mormonites. We
-have to guard against this; not to be credulous; to be sure that it is
-GOD that speaks: but then, being sure, whatever He describes, however
-incomprehensible or improbable, whatever He commands, no matter how
-apparently unreasonable, whatever He promises, against experience,
-against opinion, against hope, to accept all, and rely on all, and lead
-the life of reliance. Yes, brethren, this is the believing which alone
-is blessed; the believing which leads to doing. Faith is the evidence by
-which we see things naturally unseen; it is the substance, the very
-handled reality, of things naturally only hoped for; and which, by its
-revelations of beauty and bliss, by its sanctions and persuasions, and by
-all that it shows us of the present, and promises or threatens in the
-future, makes us fly to GOD, and cling to Him, and depend on Him, and
-live for Him, and look for Him. Less than this—mere assent of the
-understanding, without heart-embracing, and life-demonstrating, and
-exercising—is not the belief that is blessed. Faith without works is
-dead, being alone. If then, brethren, you would be partakers of the
-blessedness promised in the text, you must have fully received, and be
-acting upon the form of religion which GOD has given you. You must have
-implicit trust in Him for help and support and peace and blessing. You
-must know that whatever He has described is real, whatever He has
-promised or threatened will surely be fulfilled, on the conditions He has
-laid down; and you must testify and act upon your knowledge by a
-corresponding life. I do not say that all this is demanded of you in
-perfection; that the hope of blessing is gone, if you fail of aught of
-it: but I do say that, if in anything you distrust GOD, if you question
-or demand further proof of, or are indifferent to anything He has
-revealed, and deliberately do not live by it, then you cannot claim the
-benediction of the text.
-
-But it occurs to you to ask, perhaps, how it is that GOD selects
-believing, rather than seeing, on any other way of reception for special
-blessing.
-
-Now, it is not necessary that GOD should account to us for what He does
-or wills. Creatures of His hand, we are made for Him; dependents on His
-bounty, we must thankfully receive it in any way and form of bestowal.
-But still there are reasons which may be briefly suggested for the
-selection of faith.
-
-First, then, faith embodies the entire trustful devotion to GOD, which,
-above any assent to what is proved, any following of what is seen or
-heard, magnifies the honour of GOD, and so sets forth His glory. It owns
-His truth, His providence, His love, and prompts to a free-will,
-spiritual, glorifying service of Him. Secondly, unless there are to be
-perpetual miracles, faith alone can be permanently and universally
-influential. If we are to be guided by sight, or hearing, or touching,
-then the revelations to one generation would have to be repeated to each
-following generation, and those of one country performed again in every
-other. Thus CHRIST would have had to continue on earth, to have visited
-every land, and been crucified and raised from the dead in every land, or
-to have gathered all nations into Judea to witness what was done; and
-this would have had to be repeated over and over again to our fathers, to
-us, to our children, or else some would have been without the necessary
-influence to serve, and love, and depend on Him. And more than this,
-since the sights we see and the sounds we hear, are soon over, and leave
-but a faint remembrance behind, we should be imperfectly influenced by
-them, when CHRIST ceased to speak; or when He passed into another place
-we should be without our object of worship, our instructor or hope. And
-even if these objections can be met, still the perpetuity of CHRIST’S
-visible presence, the beholding of His miracles, and hearing of His
-words, would necessarily put a stop to all worldly occupations; would
-make probation little more than a name; would constrain men by natural
-influences to a carnal or slavish adherence to Him, or would drive them
-into reckless rebellion, and instant and irrevocable condemnation.
-
-But again, faith is more blessed because it has greater
-privileges—because it reveals more clearly, brings nearer, than any sense
-could do. If you only hear a loved one, do you not desire to see him?
-If you see him, are you not unblessed unless you embrace him? And then,
-is there not an influence, a way of communicating, that surpasses this—a
-purer, a more spiritual influence, one which brings you together, and
-keeps you together, and makes you one—love, which surpasses, which is
-independent of, or only uses as accessories, the bodily senses? We are
-too apt, brethren, to talk of seeing as believing; to count sense above
-feeling; to exalt what belongs to the body, above what belongs to the
-mind or spirit. Doubtless, the error arises from the way in which we
-speak of faith giving way to sight in heaven, as though the eyes of the
-body only, and not the mind and spirit, were to behold CHRIST then; as
-though mental and spiritual perception were not better than bodily; as
-though there were no assurance that faith is an abiding gift, and that,
-therefore, while in heaven there will be much to gratify the eye of the
-body, there will still be much more which faith alone can realise. My
-brethren, the greatest eternal blessedness will be vouchsafed to faith,
-and the greatest blessedness of this state belongs to faith, because it
-is the exercise of man’s noblest and best, and most reliable faculties,
-far superior in excellence, far more certain in ascertaining the truth,
-than ears, or eyes, or hands.
-
-Once more, faith is blessed above seeing, because it grasps a set of
-truths, and enjoys a class of pleasures which are different from those of
-the senses, and which the senses cannot touch. GOD the Father invisible
-for ever, GOD the Holy Ghost, blowing like the wind where it listeth, so
-that you cannot see whence it cometh and whither it goes, ministering
-angels, spiritual influences, and consolations, and helps—what can ear,
-or eye, or hand know of these? But faith knows them, hears them, sees
-them, handles them, and joys in them. And this, brethren, exhibits the
-nature of faith’s blessedness; that to it is revealed the whole spiritual
-world; that the evidence which it needs, the object of its worship, its
-Saviour, its LORD, its hopes and fears, and encouragements and promises
-are never absent, and never missed, (but by its own dimness or voluntary
-blindness) whatever may become of the outward signs and boding presences.
-Picture to yourselves, brethren, the scene of that chamber where the
-raised CHRIST stood manifest, in the posture of blessing, before His
-adoring disciples. Imagine what Thomas had before felt, and what he now
-felt. Then hear CHRIST say—“The bliss of this moment might have been
-yours before, if you had sought to attain it by faith, and not by sight;
-and what you now see may be yours for ever, for in spirit I shall ever be
-with you, and by faith you may ever behold Me! Blessed are they that
-have not seen, and yet have believed”; and that blessing, brethren, was
-for us, if we will have it. If we believe, then we are thus blessed. If
-we are not blessed, we may be. O let us lay hold on this truth, let us
-cultivate faith, let us pray to GOD for an increase of it, and let us
-perpetually exercise it in beholding Him Who is ever with us, to pardon
-our faithless sins, to restore us to His company, to breathe upon us
-peace and blessing.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON VI.
-FAULTLESSNESS BEFORE GOD.
-(INNOCENTS’ DAY.)
-
-
- REVELATION, XIV., 5.
-
- _They are without fault before the throne of_ GOD.
-
-JOB declares that GOD puts no trust in His saints; that He charges His
-angels with folly; that in His sight the very heavens are not clean.
-This language is, of course, figurative, and not to be taken literally;
-but it well describes to us the transcendent holiness of GOD, and His
-utter abhorrence of all evil. In comparison of Him, heaven itself is not
-pure, and angels, endued with wisdom, swift and constant to obey,
-delighting in His will, even these are not perfect—fall far short of
-perfection before Him. Job would show us the distance between GOD and
-man. St. John, however, in the chapter of my text, would exhibit another
-truth, not contradictory, but rather supplementary to Job’s, namely, the
-nearness, through grace, of man to GOD. The Apostle is describing, for
-the comfort and encouragement of the tried and persecuted, a vision which
-he had seen of some of those who have passed away from this world, and,
-as a kind of first-fruits, are already with GOD and the Lamb; and he
-says, that “in their mouth is found no guile; for they are without fault
-before the throne of GOD.”
-
-“Without fault,” means here, without spot or blemish; not only free from
-actual transgression, but wholly untainted by corruption of sin—not
-wanting in anything that belongs to the perfect character of the approved
-of GOD.
-
-That man in his natural state is altogether faulty, that even in his
-redeemed, and spiritualised, and sanctified state, while here on earth,
-he has still many faults, are truths so plainly taught, so proved to our
-reason and experience, that it would be idle to enforce them. How, then,
-can he ever stand faultless before the throne of GOD? Now some would
-answer, that for CHRIST’S sake GOD overlooks, that CHRIST, by His merits,
-hides man’s faults; and so that the redeemed in heaven are not really
-faultless, but that for CHRIST’S sake faultlessness is reckoned, imputed
-to them. This is what may be called the popular answer to our question.
-But, brethren, how utterly wrong it is seen to be, when we consider that,
-in order to exalt GOD’S mercy and His wisdom in contriving justification,
-it sacrifices His truth and His holiness. GOD cannot call the faulty
-faultless. He Who is Truth cannot enter with His Holy Son (Who is also
-Truth) into a plan of deceit, by which, to Himself, to them, to angels,
-to the whole universe, sin shall be presented as holiness. GOD may agree
-not to reckon with men for their sins, to forget the past, on certain
-conditions to deal with the faulty as if they were actually faultless;
-but He cannot—I say it advisedly, it is beyond the limits of His power,
-as regulated by His truth—He cannot call evil good. And, brethren,
-besides, even if it were possible that by some strange agreement with the
-Son, sinful man should be passed off as holy, still his sin, while it
-remained, hide it, disguise it, call it by what name you will, must
-separate from GOD. Charity might forbear to punish it, or to make
-mention of it. Charity might even gild it over; but Holiness deals not
-with the name, but with the reality; and holiness must shrink from sin
-and thrust it away. This ought to be the most readily perceived and
-admitted of all Scripture truths, that GOD cannot tolerate near iniquity;
-that—if I may venture reverently to use such words—even if GOD were
-willing to receive to Himself an unchanged sinner, the actual reception
-would be morally impossible; the same heaven could not contain holiness
-and sin! No, brethren, if the sinner is to enter heaven, it must be, not
-because his name is changed, but his nature; he must be actually without
-fault before GOD. We see this to have been the case with those described
-in the text: for it is expressly said, “In their mouth was found no
-guile.” Observe, it is not, GOD mercifully overlooked their guile for
-the sake of His dear Son, the Guileless One; He charitably called them
-guileless; but “in their mouth was found (the testimony of truth to the
-searching of holiness) no guile: yea, for they are altogether blameless,
-without spot or blemish.” It is an actual, not an imputed faultlessness
-that is thus described. Now, how is it to be attained by sinful men?
-And here comes in a second answer of popular theology. At or after
-death, CHRIST meets the departed, and by His resurrection-power quickens
-that which was dead, purifies that which was corrupt, spiritualises,
-sanctifies, and, as by a miracle, converts the sinner into a perfect
-saint. This is an answer only second in popularity to the one we have
-been considering. Those who urge it, believe that man is naturally
-depraved, that, under grace, he retains much, almost all, his old nature,
-that he is very faulty in deed, in will and affections. They know that
-he must be faultless to gain accession to heaven and dwell with GOD and
-the Lamb, and this faultlessness they hope for and pray for; but there is
-no effort to acquire it; there is no concern for the absence, the
-continued absence of it; it is regarded as altogether a thing of the
-future; the free and perfect gift—perfect at once—to the released soul
-and the raised body. Men who hold this view, are often better than their
-creed requires them to be. In love of GOD and devotion to Him, they
-strive to abandon sin and cultivate holiness; but they have no definite
-object in view of becoming faultless here, in order to be faultless in
-heaven. They seem to believe that they cannot get any nearer to
-faultlessness whatever they do, and that those who have made no efforts,
-ay, have even led ungodly lives, and, but for a few last sighs and
-ejaculations, would have died ungodly deaths, are just as qualified, just
-as fit in many cases, just as sure recipients of instantly converting and
-perfecting grace in the next world!
-
-But if this is so, why have we such solemn warnings, to the effect that
-as the tree falls, so shall it lie? “He that is righteous, then, shall
-be righteous still. He that is filthy then, shall be filthy still.” Why
-is it that in the representations which we have of the Judgment, men are
-always dealt with according to what they were in life, “Inasmuch as ye
-did it,” “Inasmuch as ye did it not”? Why is the pound taken away from
-him that did not seek to increase it, and given to him who had gained ten
-pounds, and the commentary subjoined, “Unto every one which hath shall be
-given, and from him that hath not, even that he hath shall be taken away
-from him”? Why is the boaster of his privileges—“In Thy name have I cast
-out devils”—instantly dismissed with the words, “Depart from me, I never
-knew you”? Why are they reproved who called CHRIST LORD, LORD, but did
-not the things which He said? What did St. Peter mean when he exhorted
-“Save yourselves;” and Paul, “Work out your own salvation with fear and
-trembling;” “Let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall;”
-and CHRIST Himself, “Behold, I come quickly, and My reward is with Me, to
-give to every man according as his work shall be;” “Blessed are they that
-do His commandments that they may have right to the tree of life, and may
-enter in through the gates into the city”? Surely all this, as with a
-voice from heaven, calls on us to put away the delusion, that mortal life
-is not a probation, that man has not a fitness to acquire in this life,
-in order that he may be faultless in heaven. The answer of truth,
-brethren, to the question, “How can man be faultless in heaven?” is,
-briefly, By praying, and striving, through the blessing of GOD, the grace
-of the Spirit of CHRIST, and his own self-denial, and diligence, and
-cultivated holiness, to become less and less faulty here. After all, he
-will never, on this side of the grave, be without spot or blemish, and
-perfect in holiness. Whatever CHRIST may do for him here, he will still
-have much to be purged away, much to be quickened, much to be glorified.
-But, be sure, there must be a seed-time here and a growing here, if there
-is to be a harvest hereafter. There must be a service, if there is to be
-a reward; we must be faithful in a little, before we are made rulers over
-much; there must be a fitness, a partial, a main fitness acquired here,
-or no admission there to the inheritance of the Saints in light.
-CHRIST’S work in us hereafter is not a transforming, but a completing, a
-finishing, a perfecting work. “To him that hath”—that is, that has made
-use of and improved what he hath—“to him more shall be given,” and he
-shall abound. He who has traced in his soul and life the outline of the
-features of the blessed JESUS, shall have the likeness filled up and
-finished by the Divine artist, and be wholly conformed to His image. He
-who has kept down the flesh, shall have the power of the flesh destroyed
-in him. He who has sought after holiness, shall be made perfect. A
-great change; much taken away, much added, but not a transformation. A
-great work, which can only be done then, and only by CHRIST; but which
-will fail to be done then if materials are not provided for it now; if
-the foundation has not been laid, and the walls have not been raised, and
-all made ready for the roof of GOD’S adding, and the capping of the tower
-of glory. Yes; this is the qualification, without which you cannot be
-received, but, having it, cannot be refused. Labour and pray to be
-faultless here, and CHRIST shall at the end perfect your faultlessness,
-and shall present you faultless before the presence of His glory with
-exceeding joy. But the text seems to speak not of those who had washed
-away defilements, had secured pardon of offences, had repaired faults and
-made up deficiencies, in short, had been sinners, but, under the
-operation of the spirit of CHRIST, were become saints; but of those who
-never had been faulty, spotted, or blemished “These are they which were
-not defiled with women, for they are virgins. These are they which
-follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth.” Of course, there must have been
-the spot and blemish of original sin; but, apart from this—which CHRIST’S
-applied purifying power and all-sufficient merits would entirely
-remove—there seems to have been in the lives of these persons no actual
-sin, no omission of righteousness. Now, as there is no man that liveth
-and sinneth not, it has been conjectured that the vision here exhibits
-those who were taken away to GOD in their infancy, before they had the
-power or the will to do good or evil, and who, therefore, as far as
-actual deeds and feelings are concerned, not by work, or grace, or
-conviction, but absolutely and from the first were faultless: and
-probably the selection of the description as the Gospel for this day, the
-festival of the Holy Innocents, has gone far to confirm this conjecture.
-But, brethren, this surely is not the meaning, at least the full meaning,
-of the words. They describe freedom from defilement and following of the
-Lamb as things that might have been otherwise. They hold up for the
-example and encouragement of those who were tempted to lust, and to
-depart from following the living LORD, the praise and happiness of those
-who are without fault in these respects; and therefore they suggest to
-us, I think, as the most profitable and foremost thought, the
-blessedness, the superior blessedness of those who never have contracted
-sin, nor failed in holiness.
-
-Men sometimes seem to fancy that the most glorious character in heaven,
-the object of GOD’S fondest love, will be the once deep-stained and
-wholly defiled, that have been washed in CHRIST’S blood till they are
-become whiter than snow, the reckless, and rebellious, and blaspheming,
-who have been subdued and converted; and that in comparison of these, the
-mainly regular righteous life will almost pass unnoticed. It is easy to
-account for the supposition. We read, without due consideration, of her
-that sinned much, and was forgiven much, and therefore loved much; of the
-returned prodigal rejoiced over more than the son who had remained at
-home; of the joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over
-ninety-nine just persons who need no repentance; of publicans and harlots
-going into the kingdom of heaven before priests and scribes. We forget
-that these things were said to men who were not really righteous, but
-self-sufficient; that they were an accommodation to their own kind of
-reasoning; that they were the justification of special works and
-feelings, and peculiar demonstrations. Surely we are not to understand
-by them anything more than that sinners were _at times_ more in CHRIST’S
-thoughts than saints; that on the recovery of one lost sheep, the joy
-over that one caused the rest for the moment to be put out of
-remembrance. Surely we are not to understand that GOD has less love for,
-and shows less favour to those who have uniformly served and honoured
-Him, than to those whose life has been one of contempt and rebellion, who
-have refused to accept Him till they had made trial of all else; that
-GOD’S power and glory are more magnified in the ultimate conversion of
-such a sinner, than in the steady control and improvement of a life-long
-saint; that in themselves the reformed drunkards and defiled are better
-than those who were always sober and pure; that their memories are more
-blissful, and their themes of praise more satisfactory; that they are
-even equal in favour, in bliss, in manifested honour to those who were
-undefiled and consistently obedient, whom Holy Scripture distinguishes on
-this very account, of whom it relates, that they sing a song which no
-other can learn, signifying that they have a peculiar privilege and a
-peculiar joy! Brethren, be sure it is not so. GOD is abundantly
-gracious to all who call upon Him, late as well as early. No one,
-whatever his past life, shall be refused who comes to Him through CHRIST.
-In his late righteousness all his former sins shall be forgiven and
-forgotten; they shall not once be mentioned unto him. He shall have too,
-the joy of the righteous, and shall dwell with GOD in heaven; but still
-He Who makes one star to differ from another in glory, Who bestows
-different measures of reward upon different capacities, and different
-attainments, has a special interest and a superior blessedness for those
-who have never been stained, who have always stayed in their father’s
-house, and have obeyed His will and loved His voice. In themselves they
-are dearer to Him, as more like JESUS; and for them, He has seats closer
-to the throne of CHRIST, and offices of honour near His person.
-
-If this is so, if “faultlessness,” in the sense of never blotted, never
-imperfect, is the state that is most blessed, then, brethren, we might
-perhaps be tempted to envy the fate of those whom we commemorate to-day,
-who suffered so early for CHRIST’S sake, and as soon almost as they were
-born, were put to death. We might judge, too, that the little ones whom
-GOD so frequently takes away so soon after lending them, are summoned to
-a higher blessedness than we can ever know; and therefore that not only
-would it have been gain to die in infancy, but that it is positive loss
-to live to years of discretion and responsibility. Let us not err
-herein. We believe that the dear innocents, whose first consciousness is
-of bliss in heaven, whose reason begins to develop, and their will to
-exercise itself, only when sin is impossible, are not only unspeakably
-blessed, but that GOD specially loves them, and folds them to His bosom
-(as we did here), because of that innocence: no guile, no defilement—all
-simplicity and trust. Thankful then in their sober moments are all
-bereaved parents who are assured of their departed little ones’ eternal
-safety, and are spared the fears and anxieties, the heartrending
-realisation of self-will developed, and the world’s evil example
-followed, and the devil triumphant. The LORD gave, and the LORD hath
-taken away; and, in that He has taken away, from the evil to come, Oh!
-blessed be the name of the LORD.
-
-But, brethren, it is only because we fear for the future, that we
-thankfully accept such a present. Could we be sure that our little ones
-would remain faultless, that they would not abuse the world, nor fall
-into great error or misery, that they would grow in grace, and in the
-fear of the LORD, and at length surely attain to glory; then, not from
-selfishness, but for their sakes, we should covet length of days for
-them. And rightly, for there is a better faultlessness, and a
-correspondingly higher blessedness than that of infants, who were allowed
-no opportunity (and possessed no power) to contract fault: it is the
-faultlessness of those who shrink from the allowed opportunity, who
-restrain the possessed power, and overcome the persuading will, who pass
-through the fire without the smell of it being left on their garments,
-who make manifest by a life of self-denials, and resistances to
-temptations, and patience and perseverance in well-doing, their
-intelligent deliberate love of GOD, and hatred of evil. These are the
-tried, the eagerly accepted, the specially loved. These do the LORD’S
-work, and set forth the LORD’S glory. These shall indeed be welcomed
-with a “Well-done good and faithful servant,” for them shall be reserved
-the best seats on the right hand of GOD; and they shall joy in GOD, and
-GOD in them, with a peculiar joy, for they are likest unto CHRIST, Whose
-spotlessness was preserved among so many defilements, Who with heart, and
-mind, and life, consistently, unceasingly served GOD, and Who therefore
-is highly exalted, and has a name which is above all other names.
-
-Oh it is no mean privilege, brethren, which you forego, when you leave
-the ranks of the faultless, when you shrink from duty, or yield to sinful
-pleasure, or contract any stain of ungodliness. Say not, “It is only for
-once.” It will surely be for more than once; but if it were not, still
-from being faultless that _once_ makes you blotted and blemished. Say
-not, “I can repent by and by, and GOD of His mercy will accept me, and I
-shall be myself again.” You may not live to repent. Sin may disincline,
-the Spirit provoked may leave you; but even if you do repent—though GOD
-will undoubtedly forgive, and in a sense restore you—remember, you can
-never be as you were before. You may be cleansed, but not as at first
-clean; admitted to heaven, but not to the band of the one hundred and
-forty-four thousand of undefiled; joined to the glorious choir of the
-redeemed, but not allowed, not able to sing the peculiar song of the
-faultless.
-
-“But what,” some would say, “is the use of this preaching? We are all
-already faulty; we can none of us have a place among these choice first
-fruits of GOD’S harvest.” Brethren, faultlessness, pure faultlessness,
-is no longer ours; but comparative faultlessness (and Bible
-faultlessness, after all, is only comparative freedom from wilful sin)
-may, and, I trust, does pertain to many of us; and for each degree of
-nearness to faultlessness, if I understand the Bible aright, there is its
-peculiar reward. I would put you on your guard against losing that
-reward, by sinking to a lower level. I would urge you to hold fast what
-you have, to subdue yourselves, to resist the world and the devil, to be
-ever on the watch against danger, and to flee speedily from temptation,
-if it is too strong to fight against, to seek strength and sanctification
-in means of grace, to pray constantly (and strive constantly to make good
-your prayer), that CHRIST would keep you from falling, and finally
-present you faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding
-joy.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON VII.
-PAST MERCIES REVIEWED.
-(NEW YEAR’S EVE.)
-
-
- GENESIS, XXXII., 10.
-
- _I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies_, _and of all the
- truth_, _which thou hast showed unto Thy servant_; _for with my staff
- I passed over this Jordan_; _and now I am become two bands_.
-
-THESE are Jacob’s words. They form part of the prayer which he offered
-to GOD, when, on his return from Haran, he found that Esau was coming out
-against him with four hundred men.
-
-Mingled feelings must have possessed Jacob at this time; strange
-remembrances must have been his! Twenty years ago he had passed over
-that Jordan—near which he now stood—in flight from an enraged brother,
-meditating and preparing vengeance for an act of fraudulent injury. What
-a weary pilgrimage he had since followed; what sorrows, what desolations
-had possessed his aching heart; how he had toiled and suffered wrong;
-even now was fleeing from it! Yet, those twenty years gone, he was
-coming back, not to the prospect of peace and happiness, not to the hope
-that his brother had forgotten his vengeance, or that he would easily be
-reconciled to him; but to face a mindful, aggravated avenger,
-strengthened by four hundred followers. Surely he had fled and been in
-exile to no purpose! Surely, by deferring it, he had increased his
-trouble! It must have been that Jacob now acutely remembered the cause
-of Esau’s anger; that he meditated on the mean advantage that he had
-taken, the base fraud to which he had been a party, the lying, the
-profanity of his lips, the evil deeds which led to evil consequences.
-Ah! now he felt that man cannot sin with impunity, that transgression and
-punishment are bound together as cause and effect, that vengeance, though
-it tarry, though it slumber, though we run from it, and hide from it
-many, many days, will yet accomplish its purpose, will surely repay!
-Yes; and did he not feel that vengeance had even followed him; that he
-had been its victim all those twenty years; that the frauds of Laban,
-from first to last, and the strifes and dissensions of his own household
-were the fruits of his deceit; that GOD had allowed them, that in a way
-He had caused them in retaliation, in punishment of his sin! What an
-experience to him, what a proof to us, my brethren, that sin will surely
-find us out!
-
-But Jacob must have had other and different thoughts—thoughts which
-preponderated. As he called to mind his first passage over Jordan, did
-not he remember the wonderful vision that was vouchsafed him of angels
-descending to earth, ascending to heaven, in token of Divine providence,
-of the intercourse between man and GOD? Did he not remember the Voice
-which promised to be with him, to keep him in all places whither he went,
-to bring him again to this land, to give it to him and to his seed after
-him? Did he not look along those twenty years, and remember that GOD had
-been with him, and that, by His command, he was now coming back; and did
-he not hope, yes, even against hope, that GOD would be with him in the
-coming struggle, that He would crown His mercy and goodness with a
-present success, and with the establishment of himself and his seed in
-the promised land? And one other remembrance surely he had. He
-remembered the vow which in the fresh reverence of GOD’S presence, in
-glad and grateful acceptance of His promises, he had solemnly made, “The
-LORD shall be my GOD;” and he must have remembered how often he had
-forgotten that vow, how generally he had slightly regarded it. These I
-suppose to have been the feelings and remembrances which filled the
-breast of Jacob, when he uttered the prayer in which our text occurs.
-Observe how that prayer exhibits the right ordering of these feelings,
-making prominent, putting uppermost thoughts and acknowledgments of GOD’S
-goodness; and, in the moment of greatest peril, pausing to review
-mercies, and to give thanks! There is no bitter lamentation of his hard
-lot throughout those years of promised blessing; there is no pleading
-with GOD, that if he had sinned he had surely been punished enough; there
-is no mention of the merits of his contrite heart and amended life; there
-is no angry feeling against Esau, no supplication that GOD would smite
-and confound him. It is a godly, a model prayer. Betaking himself to
-GOD in the hour of danger, as his only confidence and help, he humbly
-urges no personal claim, but—that he is in the place of GOD’S commanding.
-“‘Thou LORD that saidst unto me Return unto thy country and unto thy
-kindred,’ I did not recklessly run into danger, I did not voluntarily
-gratify the natural yearning of my poor heart. Thou broughtest me here,
-O LORD protect me here;” and then having put forth himself, though but
-such a little way, and coming to consider GOD, Who had shown him such
-wondrous goodness, Who had fulfilled for him so truthfully all His
-promises, he exclaims, “I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies,
-and of all the truth which thou hast showed unto Thy servant: for with my
-staff—as a solitary, poor individual—I passed over this Jordan, and now I
-am become two bands. Deliver me, I pray thee.”
-
-This seems to me, brethren, a fit theme for a sermon on New Year’s Eve.
-Jacob, come back from Haran to Jordan, where he had made a covenant with
-GOD, may well typify our return to-night to the sanctuary of GOD, whence
-we went forth refreshed and pledged last New Year’s Eve. Jacob’s
-reflections—he is the pattern of a mediator—may well provoke us to ask of
-the days that are past, to remember all the way which the LORD our GOD
-has led us. Jacob’s prayer shows us how to speak to GOD, what we should
-feel in His presence on such an occasion as this, how to propitiate Him,
-and to secure His defence and blessing in what lies before us.
-
-I will not attempt, brethren, to picture the circumstances through which
-you have passed in the year which is now all but ended; many of them I
-could only guess at, many of them, to me, would be unimaginable. Recall
-them for yourselves and meditate on them. They will teach you much, and
-influence you much. I will address you simply as those who have made a
-halt in the journey of life, and who want now GOD’S blessing in the known
-and unknown dangers, anxieties, sufferings, and labours that lie before
-you in the coming year.
-
-Well: let your requests be made known unto GOD with prayer; above
-all—yes! I mean it—_above all_, with thanksgiving.
-
-But, first, before you approach GOD, to speak to Him, to ask of Him, to
-thank Him, be sure that you can say to Him, “I am in the way of Thy
-commandments.” If at this moment you are contentedly different from what
-you know He would have you to be; if you indulge, or do not resolutely
-renounce any besetting sin; if you deliberately neglect any positive
-duty; if in will and affections, and aims, you are worldly and selfish,
-and do not seek to be otherwise; if you are planning anything, or hoping
-for anything which GOD does not approve; if you are shrinking from,
-desiring to avoid, what He appoints; if you have not made up your minds
-to try to be holy, to walk in the way of righteousness; then, brethren,
-you are disqualified to pray to GOD. He hears not such. He has made no
-promises to them: they are not His. Go fashion yourselves (He will
-mercifully give you grace to do it) into the character that He loves; get
-you into the paths that He has marked out; turn your face towards the
-Holy Land, and then come to tell Him of your felt unworthiness, to speak
-His praise, to intreat Him to be with you, to defend and prosper you; and
-be sure you shall be welcomed and blessed.
-
-But, supposing you not disqualified to come, supposing you bent on
-coming, consider now your right posture and deportment before GOD. Ask
-nothing of right, ask all out of felt unworthiness, and that, not simply
-the unworthiness of the stranger, and alien, who want mercies which they
-have never known, and speak to a GOD that has not hitherto been their
-GOD, as the publican cried, “GOD be merciful to me a sinner;” but such an
-unworthiness as belonged to the prodigal, such as he felt and groaned
-under, when, reflecting on all the love and blessedness which he had
-experienced in his father’s house, and had despised, and sinned against,
-and seeing the Father coming towards him, ready to pardon, ready to
-embrace, ready to lead him home again, he was humbled to the very dust
-before Him, on account of his goodness, and declared himself unworthy to
-be called His son. Oh, my brethren, if you do not feel unworthy, when
-you approach the all-good and all-holy GOD, and if the feeling is not one
-enlightened by, and full of the remembrances of blessings already
-received, you are unfit to ask for further blessings. Not to have used
-GOD’S blessings is great indignity; not to be thankful for them is base
-ingratitude; but not to feel, that whether used or not used, appreciated
-or not appreciated, they are many and undeserved—this is to deny that you
-ever received them, or, claiming them as a right, to defy GOD to withhold
-them! Cultivate then, I pray you, this feeling of unworthiness; and,
-that you may do so the more readily, review the mercies, the promises
-made true which you have received; and tell out their number, their kind,
-and their magnitude to the GOD Who gave them, and would have them
-acknowledged. “With my staff I passed over this Jordan, and now I am
-become two bands.” Now the argument of these words is, “I do not come to
-Thee, professing that I am a fit person to be helped, but I claim Thee as
-a GOD who are wont to help such as I am. I am not worthy of the least of
-Thy mercies: but yet Thou hast shown me marvellous mercies. I possess
-now the evidences and pledges of Thy goodness. Therefore I pray for, I
-humbly count on further blessing, not because I am a holy man, but
-because Thou art a good GOD, and My good GOD.” It is an argument which
-prevails with GOD. He is pleased to see that we recognise His former
-gifts, that we make _them_—and not ourselves, our love of Him, our
-obedience, our prayers, and fastings, and study of His Word, and use of
-His grace—the ground of application. He likes that His consistent
-faithfulness should be invoked; that since He has made a beginning, just
-on that very account, He should be looked to (so as it be humbly), to
-continue His work, and to accomplish it. When you go to GOD to ask for
-fresh blessings, you cannot take with you better and more effectual words
-than those which make mention of, which exhibit as promises and pledges,
-what you have already received.
-
-But these words are not simply an argument for further help; they are,
-besides, a free acknowledgment, a pure praise of what has been given.
-They may be the plea of a beseeching heart, but they are besides the
-tribute of a grateful heart; and it is in this sense, brethren, that I
-specially wish you to adopt them to-night, and to make them a
-thanksgiving to GOD for past mercies reviewed. “With my staff I passed
-over this Jordan, and now I am become two bands.” Jacob might have found
-mercies enough to enlist his gratitude in any one year, or circumstance
-of his exile and pilgrimage, and doubtless he reviewed each and all
-particularly; but in his speech he comprehended all in a general mention
-of them, and summed them up, and demonstrated them by pointing to their
-effect. “Now I am become two bands.” Review your past mercies, consider
-how GOD has been with you at all times, and has ever been doing you good.
-Call to mind what progress you have been able to make spiritual or
-temporal; what success has attended you; what friends have been given
-you; what dangers you have narrowly escaped; what sicknesses recovered
-from; what wounds been healed, what troubles overcome, what tears
-staunched. Have they not caused you, like Jacob, to increase from the
-solitariness and poverty of that passing over Jordan, to the riches and
-prosperity of the two bands? Perhaps you say, you cannot trace such
-progress; you are much the same outwardly and inwardly, as you have been
-from the time that you can first remember. Then, brethren, you can
-furnish your own testimony, that GOD has dealt better with you than He
-did with Jacob, that your first state, your continued state has been all
-like his last. O discern and bless GOD for those least heeded but
-greatest mercies, the mercies which come to us at the beginning, and
-follow us all the days of our life—the continued prosperity of our
-family, the continued harmony and love, the bread always sure, the right
-understanding early implanted, the fear of the LORD from our youth.
-There is a way of travelling in our days which is so smooth, that often
-we cannot tell that we are moving; and there is a manner of blessing, so
-uninterrupted, so uniform, so without roughnesses and stoppages and ups
-and downs, that if we be not on the lookout, we may fancy that we are not
-blessed at all. Let not this be your case. Do not refuse to be
-grateful, because all goes well with you, because there is nothing that
-needs to be supplied, because nothing is taken away from you. Rather,
-let the measure of your blessedness be also the measure of your praise
-and the strength of your resolution. “Surely goodness and mercy have
-followed me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the
-LORD for ever.”
-
-But your object, perhaps, “Mine has not been this life of uninterrupted
-prosperity, but, on the contrary, one of continued adversity. It is
-Jacob’s first, not his last estate, that has been always mine.” What do
-you mean? That you were not born rich, nor influential, nor of honoured
-family? That you have not the wisdom of the philosopher, the dignity of
-the prince, the opulence of the successful merchant, the leisure of
-independent private life? That may be. Your state may be the reverse of
-all this, and yet be the state of the “two bands.” External prosperity
-in Jacob’s time was commonly, yet not always, the sign of spiritual
-blessings; in Gospel days, with our better light, and greater power of
-appreciation of the reality, the sign is not so often afforded,
-frequently the most favoured are without it; yea, and often it abides
-with the unblessed as the mocking substitute for true blessedness. If
-you are without GOD in the world; if you do not feel Him about your bed,
-and about your path; if you do not live in His fear, and hope for His
-mercies, and His rewards; if the thought of Him does not moderate your
-worldly joy, and direct your aims, and leaven your worldly work; if His
-comfort does not dry your tears, His strength support you, His grace
-sanctify you, then—no matter what your outward state, and your
-possessions, your powers, your happiness—you are poor and unblessed. But
-if He is thus with you in all your ways, if you have resolved, and are
-keeping the resolution, “The LORD shall be my GOD,” then is yours the
-state, or it is growing towards the state of the “two bands.” One more
-objection somewhat akin to this last, must be answered. There are some
-who say, “Mine was once the state of the two bands: it has long since
-been—or it is fast becoming—solitariness and the single staff. All thing
-are against me. Nothing that I put my hand to seems to prosper; I come
-into misfortune; the fountains of joy are dried up; my hope, my stay, are
-taken from me. When I look back upon the past, I look as it were up an
-incline down which I have rolled, or towards a pinnacle whence I have
-been cast down.” Now, of course, my brethren, all this may be the result
-of the displeasure of GOD, consequent upon your sin, or neglect of Him.
-Outward adversity is sometimes the effect of His wrath, sometimes it is
-the chastisement of displeasure, and the discipline of correction. If
-then in your heart, you know that you deserve such wrath, or need such
-correction (even then it is a blessing, and you ought to praise GOD for
-it, but still) you may be sure that it is the mark of disapprobation,
-something for you to grieve over, and seek to have removed. But if the
-testimony of your conscience is that you walk with GOD, then are these
-so-called reverses very blessings, not declines but advances, not
-hindrances but helps, tokens of GOD’S love upraisings of you towards
-heaven. Oh be like Jacob; count all mercy, get rid of selfishness, and
-meditate as he did, and you will prove that all is mercy, and proclaim
-it! You will find, for instance, that the loss of wealth took away with
-it the idol of your worship, the minister of your excessive pleasure;
-that altered position broke down your pride; that worldly sorrow led you
-to seek heavenly comfort; that the perfidy of so-called friends made you
-cease to put your trust in man, and caused you to rely on the friend that
-sticketh closer than a brother; that sickness and infirmity reminded you
-of death, and stimulated you to preparation for judgment; that the loss
-of those you loved, uprooted your clingings to earth, linked you to
-heaven, revealed to you One whom you knew not; Whom above all you ought
-to love; Who is better to you than sons and daughters; Who is the true
-and abiding Father of the fatherless, and GOD of the widow. No matter
-what your circumstances, how many your troubles, I tell you on the
-authority of God’s Word, that if you love Him, they all work together for
-your good; yea, they are all good in themselves. You will find them so,
-if you rightly review them, and each of you will be able to say, as
-truthfully as Jacob did, with much more meaning, because of your better
-knowledge and superior blessedness in CHRIST, “I am not worthy of the
-least of all the mercies and of all the truth, which Thou hast showed
-unto my servant . . . I am become two bands.”
-
-Try to feel this, brethren, and to express it this night to GOD; to tell
-out your praises for the mercies of your past life, and, in the review of
-them, to pledge yourselves to Him, that you will strive henceforth to
-recognise blessings more quickly, to use them better, to be more grateful
-for them. Be these the thoughts and vows with which you consecrate the
-last hours of a dying year. But, knowing that so soon as you set out
-again, your enemy, whom sin has given the advantage over you, will come
-to meet you, to smite you, to turn you back from the Holy Land, forget
-not this night to cry, “Deliver me, I pray Thee, O LORD. Take away from
-me the sin which exposes me to assaults, which makes me vulnerable. Give
-me Thy strength: go before me with thy blessing.” Do this, brethren,
-persevere in it day after day, night after night: wrestle with God,
-refuse to let Him go—you shall surely prevail: GOD will yield all you
-ask; and, in honour of your victory, He will change your name from Jacob
-to Israel, that is, you shall no longer be remembered by the name of your
-deceit and your sin. You shall be known, known to angels, known to Him,
-as princes, and prevailers with GOD.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON VIII.
-WORKING FOR GOD.
-
-
- ST. JOHN, IX., 4.
-
- _I must work the works of Him that sent me_, _while it is day_: _the
- night cometh_, _when no man can work_.
-
-I DWELL not on these words in their relation to the context. I pause not
-to consider whether their utterance was a justification of the
-Sabbath-day miracle that was presently to be performed—“no opportunity
-must be lost, no delay allowed of working the works of GOD”—or whether
-they were but the thinking and resolving aloud (so characteristic of our
-LORD), by which He kept ever in mind His great mission, by which He
-continually stimulated and pressed on that human nature of His; willing
-indeed, but yet weak, though not sinful; and made it vigorously
-industrious in the work of GOD; or whether, once more, CHRIST here but
-personified Christians, and spoke not of Himself, not to keep Himself
-mindful and intent upon His work, but as their example and
-representative, as though He had said, “A work of GOD will now be
-manifested in the restoration of this blind man. It will not be delayed
-till the Sabbath is over. See me serving GOD and serving Him now, by
-instant doing of all possible work. Consider me your example. Let this
-be your resolution, ‘I must work the works of Him that sent me, while it
-is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.’” It matters little to
-us what feeling or motive immediately prompted our LORD to speak the
-text. His words at once commend themselves to us as those which we may,
-which we ought to adopt, even if they belong primarily to Him; which,
-rather, since they were the ruling maxim of CHRIST, must be the ruling
-maxim of Christians.
-
-Well, then, these are our words (and CHRIST has shown us how to fulfil
-them), “I must work the works of Him that sent me, while it is day: the
-night cometh, when no man can work.”
-
-“Him that sent me.” Have we yet to learn, my brethren, that GOD sent us
-into this world; that we came not here by chance, or on our own account;
-that we are not independent beings, free to wander about or linger to do,
-or forbear to do, as we please? By the will—for the accomplishment of
-the purposes—of GOD, we are here on a mission, His messengers, His
-agents, workers for Him. GOD has made all things for His own use and
-glory. None of us liveth unto himself—He sent us forth. He gave us a
-charge. He watches to see what we do with it. He waits for our return;
-rather, He appoints, and, whensoever He will, enforces our return. And
-what is the mission? What has He sent us to do? To work the works of
-GOD, and make them manifest, to promote, to show forth His glory, to
-become ourselves all that He would have us to be, and to light and guide
-others to the same end. Work for GOD! How few ever think of such a
-thing! Work for themselves (and for others like themselves) for food to
-eat and raiment to put on, for money, for power, for fame, for pleasure;
-men understand this; they acknowledge the necessity of it, or the
-inviting, constraining desirableness of it, and they do it—do it
-generally, do it well, and heartily. A really idle man, a man that works
-not some works, is a rarity, an object of contempt when he is seen, a
-despiser of himself. But, work for GOD! How many do that? Who does it
-heartily, and does it well? Whose thoughts are full of it, whose deeds
-accomplish it? What fruits come of it? There are some, not a few, thank
-GOD! who can give a satisfactory answer to such questions; whose lives
-continually give it, and whom GOD, for their works’ sake in CHRIST,
-greatly approves. But I speak now to the many, yea, I speak to all; for
-the work of GOD so generally neglected, is by none perfectly performed.
-To all, then, I solemnly address the questions: “Do you work for GOD?”
-and “What work do you work for Him?” You are tempted to justify
-yourselves. You are not the unbelieving, and rebellious, and profane of
-our race. You recognise a GOD of providence and grace, a moral ruler of
-the world, a waiting Judge. To this GOD you say your prayers, His word
-you read, and reverence, and receive. To Him you dedicate at least
-several hours of each seventh day; by His commandments you order your
-daily life. You do no wrong to your neighbour by word or deed; you
-strive to purify and sanctify your very feelings and thoughts; you
-believe in a Saviour; you accept His salvation; you try to love Him; you
-partake of His means of grace; you rest in Him, and look to Him for final
-redemption, and something you do occasionally by way of persuading
-others; and something you give for the furtherance of religious works.
-It is well, brethren, if you do this; if you go through the form, and do
-not inwardly contradict what is outward, but rather incline to it.
-
-It is well, I say, because it is hopeful, it will, by grace, lead you
-farther; but if in your heart and soul you recognise GOD, and believe in
-a Saviour, then I am sure that you will not adduce what I have mentioned
-as specimens of the works of GOD. Acknowledgments that GOD ought to be
-served, pledges of service, they may be, but works they are not. And yet
-some, perhaps, would urge, “When the question was put, ‘What must we do
-that we may work the works of GOD?’ did not CHRIST answer, ‘This is the
-work of GOD, that ye believe on Him whom He hath sent”? and, say they,
-“Does not this show that literal working, as we work in and for the
-world, is not what GOD demands; that it is rather a mental assent, an
-entertaining and exercising of feelings, a believing, a thankful, a
-sanctifying remembrance of CHRIST’S work; a trust in it, a carefulness to
-do nothing that will render it ineffectual for our salvation, that is
-required of us? Surely, CHRIST has done the work Himself; we have but to
-accept it thankfully, and wait for it faithfully and holily.”
-
-Now, my brethren, it may be easily shown that this is not believing in
-Him whom GOD hath sent. To believe in Him is to embrace Him as the
-Author, and Finisher, and Giver of Salvation; to be assured that
-salvation can only be had from Him, in Him, and on His terms; to learn of
-Him, therefore—and, of course, of His Apostles and Evangelists after Him,
-for to them even clearer teaching was intrusted—what are the terms, and
-then to fulfil them resolutely and precisely. Do you need that I should
-quote the actual words, the chapter, and verse, in which CHRIST, through
-the Spirit, tells us, that He has redeemed us to Himself; that He has
-purchased us for a peculiar people zealous of good works; that He has
-left us a definite work to do against His return; that on His return He
-will judge and reward us by our works; that He will condemn as workers
-against Him those who have not worked for Him; that it is vain to
-acknowledge Him and not do the things that He bids; that He has left us
-an example that we should follow His steps, in that He fulfilled all
-righteousness, and went about doing good, and proposed to Himself, as
-that which must be done, and done heartily and without delay, the works
-and the manifesting of the works of GOD, and made it His meat and drink
-to do the Father’s will; that He has said plainly, that whosoever would
-not take up the cross and follow Him could not be His disciple. O wo to
-those who dare to say this means: Sit still in worldliness, and look at
-and admire Him doing the labour and pursuing the path of godliness—that
-He has attached all His promises to certain deeds; that He is ever
-represented as judging, not what men have thought and felt, but what they
-have done and become by doing; that by the Spirit He has commanded “Work
-out your own salvation with fear and trembling;” and “Whether ye eat or
-drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of GOD;” and “He that
-gathereth not, scattereth abroad”? Oh, my brethren, let us be honest; we
-know, we dare not deny it, that a work, rather that many works are
-imposed upon us by GOD, and that it will not do for us merely to think of
-them, to sigh over them, to approach them carelessly, reluctantly, to
-call preferred employments by their name; but that with clear
-understanding with heart-devotion, with constant application and real
-labour, we must do the works of Him that sent us.
-
-And, now, what are the works?
-
-The first, and most vitally important, is, to “work out our own
-salvation;” not to attempt of ourselves to undo what Adam did; not by any
-course of zealous doing to seek to recommend ourselves to GOD as
-deserving a reward, to propose to purchase heaven, to go to GOD the
-Father directly for it, and expect to get it from Him, either as a right
-or as a gift of compassion: but, knowing that it is only to be had of
-CHRIST, to seek it from CHRIST in appointed ways, in the measure, on the
-conditions which He has prescribed for all, and to fulfil the conditions.
-We are not naturally born in grace; we do not naturally inherit glory.
-CHRIST, by right, the Saviour of all men, is, in fact, “specially” only
-the Saviour of them that believe; of them who actually apply to Him and
-depend on Him, and remain in communion with Him for grace; who serve Him
-by fulfilling His commands and copying His example, who use His grace and
-grow in it, and by its power transform themselves into the character
-which alone can dwell in heaven. Now, all this is work—real, anxious,
-laborious work; this obeying of CHRIST, this imitation of His example,
-and following in His steps, this putting off of the old man and putting
-on of the new man. Are you intent upon it? Do you perform it? Consider
-the means of grace, prayer, praise, divine instruction, holy communion;
-do you faithfully and diligently use them? Read the Decalogue with the
-commentary of the Sermon on the Mount. Can you honestly say, All this I
-keep and do? Study the life of CHRIST—is your life like it: like it in
-humility, in self-denial, in labour, in fact, in hope, in aim? Examine
-yourselves. Are you cleansed from evil propensities—are you adorned with
-Christian graces—are you fit in person, in will, in desire, for a heaven
-full of holiness, whose employment will be the doing of GOD’S work, as
-angels do it, whose relaxation, if I may so speak, will be the
-contemplation and the praise of GOD? What do you leave undone, what do
-you transgress of GOD’S will? What covetousness do you root out, what
-evil tempers do you subdue, what rash zeal do you curb, what indolence do
-you overcome? Are you worldly, sensual, ill-natured, proud,
-self-seeking? Have you any trace of these stains upon you? Are you
-wanting in obedience, in patience, in holiness, in love of GOD? You
-cannot enter heaven, it would close its gates against you, you would flee
-from it as a place of torment, while you are in such a state. Now, what
-are you doing, or attempting to appropriate CHRIST’S salvation, to secure
-GOD’S approbation, to qualify yourselves in character, in taste and
-desire for a purely spiritual, a gloriously holy heaven? You know what
-concentrated thought, what single aim, what diligent, anxious,
-persevering labour are necessary to make you good scholars, able
-statesmen, accomplished members of society, successful tradesmen, apt
-mechanics; or, to descend lower, ordinary earners of daily bread. You
-may guess, then, what measure of these things is needed to perfect you in
-saintliness, and therefore you are able to answer the question—oh, how
-must you answer it?—whether you fulfil the acknowledged requirement of
-the text, “I must work the works of Him that sent me.”
-
-But, besides this, so to speak, selfish work, you have a work to do for
-and upon others. GOD Who wills to inform, and persuade, and save the
-world, appoints men, appoints you to accomplish His will. Like as
-CHRIST, besides qualifying Himself to be the Saviour, had also to
-proclaim, and recommend, and bestow salvation, so have you, while putting
-yourselves in the way of salvation, and diligently pursuing it, to be
-lights, and voices, and helping hands to others. You are lights of the
-world; you are ambassadors for CHRIST; you are your brothers’ keepers;
-you are teachers of GOD’S Word, and advocates of His cause, and
-treasurers of His gifts; you are under shepherds of CHRIST; you are
-fellow workers with Him, and dispensers of His manifold grace. GOD has
-given you these offices, and He has placed you where you may exercise
-them. He has given you authority over your children, and servants, and
-dependents. He has lent you influence over friends and associates. He
-has planted you in the midst of crowds of ignorant, indifferent, ungodly,
-that you may work for Him, in guiding, and persuading, and leading to
-salvation, in making manifest His glory. He has put into your power to
-contribute something—into the power of some to contribute much—to the
-various associations (which are, in fact, your agents), for doing the
-work of GOD in building and endowing additional churches, in providing
-more clergymen at home, in sending missionaries to the colonist and the
-heathen. You think, perhaps, that in the chief part of what I have said,
-I have been describing the clergy, and not the laity. But, brethren, the
-clergy are nothing but representatives, representatives, on the one hand,
-of GOD, teaching, exhorting, ministering grace in His name, by and from
-Him; representatives, on the other hand, of your prayers, and praises,
-and your works. You know whose would be the blame, and how great the
-blame, and how terrible the consequences, if the minister only confessed
-to GOD and praised Him, and partook of His sacraments. It is just the
-same, if he only teaches, and exhorts, and visits, and tends, and
-relieves; an empty sign, a mockery, a provocation of wrath, which will
-surely descend on those who cause it to be unreal, on those who do not
-make it real. Ministers we are, coming from GOD to you, going to GOD
-from you. Oh, you cannot suppose that if you leave two or three
-clergymen to deal with thousands of people, to inform them, to persuade
-them, to become acquainted with their wants, to relieve them out of their
-own poor means, you cannot suppose I say that in so doing, you are
-working the works of GOD, that when you have said your prayers, and
-listened to the sermon, and paid your pew rents, and dropped a
-superfluous coin into the plate of an occasional collection, you have
-obeyed and imitated CHRIST. No, brethren, you are under no such delusion
-of Satan. An awful responsibility is indeed upon the clergy. We have
-sworn to give ourselves wholly to a work in which your part is to
-support, and succour, and enable us. We are pledged to forego
-opportunities of acquiring fame, and gaining wealth and power, and taking
-pleasure. Wo to us, if we disregard the oath, if we cling to the things
-which we profess to have renounced! But if we fail, that will not excuse
-you; and if we are faithful without your adherence, the reward will be
-ours, the blood guiltily shed, or guiltily unstaunched, will be upon your
-heads. It is a solemn theme which I am discussing this morning, and I
-dare not but speak plainly upon it. Our fidelity will not profit you if
-you are not helpers of us. Our unfaithfulness, though we perish in it,
-will be visited on you, if you do not enable us, if you do not constrain
-us, by the power with which you should endow us, by the jealous concern
-which you should have for our work, by the diligent co-operation which
-you should exercise with us. It is easy to say, that you are not
-qualified for this, that your time is all engaged in your worldly
-calling, that you cannot spare from the means of your support, from the
-capital of your business, the money which the Church calls for. But,
-brethren, consider, that though GOD requires you to maintain yourselves
-and your families, though your worldly callings are appointed for you by
-GOD, though He allows you to give much time to them, to advance and
-enrich yourselves by them, yet all this is on the condition that you do
-not withhold from Him the direct service and offerings which constitute
-the one thing needful, the reward of which is all that shall survive this
-life, and this world! It was the fashion once among religionists to
-despise, to pronounce unclean (unfitting for the Christian), the use of
-the world, its callings, its profits, its pleasures. There is much
-danger of an opposite fashion prevailing in our days. The confining of
-religious service and worship to the honest, respectable, intellectual,
-liberal pursuit of some worldly vocation, “the religion of common life”
-as it is called, being regarded, not as the companion,—rather the
-handmaid—but the substitute (and a very good one, too) for pure spiritual
-religion. Both are wrong. The Christian may use the world, and in the
-right use of it he may be serving GOD. But he must not abuse it; and he
-does abuse it, if he allows himself to be engrossed by it; if he brings
-himself to a state, if he continues willingly in a state, where he is
-obliged to say, “I cannot spare any time or any money, my first thought,
-and concern, and provision must be for this life.”
-
-You have heard, or read, perhaps, that a contented, conscientious, and
-cheerful abiding in and following of our worldly occupations, that even
-the housemaid’s sweeping and cleaning may be religious worship; and there
-is truth in the statement, otherwise the Apostle could not have exhorted
-“Whether ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of
-GOD;” but, the Scriptural injunction means, “Prolong the remembrance of
-your spiritual worship: testify your yearning to get back to it: keep the
-face shining, when you come down from the glorious mount, so that while
-the world demands your bodies, your souls, your hearts and spirits may
-still be given to GOD, and even the bodily acts spiritualised by doing
-them in submission, in holy observance of the will of GOD, in thankful
-use of the means of support and helps to usefulness, which He thus
-affords you.” Worldly occupations and worldly goods are to the Christian
-what meals, and recreations, and sleep are to men generally: necessaries,
-supports of the lower life, refreshments, and invigorators for something
-better. Give yourselves wholly to these and you become sensualists,
-idlers, sluggards; and give yourselves wholly to the world and you are
-followers of Mammon and forsakers of GOD! You see the right use of the
-world, as far as this life is concerned, when the son toils to support an
-aged parent, when the young man struggles to get on, that he may
-establish a home, when the father seeks through his profession to provide
-for his family, when the lover of literature diligently tries to make his
-calling afford him money for books and time to read them. This is
-employing the world as a necessary means to a desired end. And so you
-see the right use of the world, in regard to a better life, in him who
-labours and perseveres, and advances in it with the view of getting as
-much out of it as he can for GOD.
-
-Be sure that there are none so busy but, in the midst of their business,
-they can think of what they like better; none so pressed for time, but
-they can spare some of it, if they have a mind to; none so poor as to
-have nothing to spend on what they covet. So use the world, and, in
-using it, you will work the works of GOD, because you will often take
-from it, and often come out from it, for the direct and more purely
-spiritual works of GOD.
-
-But CHRIST, our pattern, said not merely “I must work the works of GOD,”
-but I must do them “while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can
-work.” We know what that meant in His case. He had taken human nature
-in its weakness, and He had to bring it to its full strength, to fit it
-for glory and exaltation to the throne of GOD. He had in His life to
-speak the word of GOD to many people, and in many places, and each
-opportunity must be seized, or others would be forfeited. He had to
-relieve present sufferings, and to supply present wants; to meet
-necessities while they were pressing. Soon the time would come for Him
-to go to the Father: then He must be perfect; then He would have no more
-opportunity in the flesh for benefitting man and glorifying GOD; then He
-could make no more preparation for the setting up of His Church.
-
-The words have a similar meaning with regard to us; but in our cases the
-necessity is more urgent, the delay more awful, because we have no fixed
-time allotted us—“to-day, and to-morrow, and the third day I must be
-perfected.” Our life is to be taken from us without our consent, and may
-be taken at any moment; we have not power to lay it down when we will,
-and power to keep it as long as we will. And, besides, we have not been
-using each year, each day, each hour, to the best advantage. We have
-left undone much which we ought to have done, we have done much which we
-ought not to have done. We have all this to correct, and yet to give
-full attention to the works yet remaining.
-
-Look we in at ourselves, brethren, and see what requires to be done in us
-before we are fit for heaven. Listen to the cries of spiritual distress,
-and consider what has to be supplied. Think of the souls that are dying,
-and will soon be dead, if we do not revive them. Remember we what frail,
-short-continuing, dying creatures we are; how soon at the latest, how
-suddenly, it may be abruptly, without a moment’s warning, we may be
-called to present ourselves, to be dealt with according to our fitness,
-to give account of our works for GOD.
-
-Let the arrival of a new year set us reviewing the past year, with its
-catalogue of offences, of neglects, of things to be wiped out, debts to
-be paid, progress to be quickened. Let us heed well its injunction and
-its warning, “Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might,
-for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom in the grave
-whither thou goest.” Let us look up for the opening clouds and listen
-for the Advent voice, “Behold, I come quickly, and My reward is with Me
-to give to every man according as his works shall be;” and let us
-instantly resolve and instantly begin to perform our resolution and
-persevere in it, nor dare to forget it: “I must work the works of Him
-that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON IX.
-CHRIST’S TRUEST MANIFESTATION.
-
-
- ST. JOHN, XIV., 22.
-
- _Lord_, _how is it that Thou wilt manifest Thyself unto us_, _and not
- unto the world_.
-
-ON the festival of the Epiphany, and on several Sundays afterwards, we
-commemorate what are called manifestations of CHRIST; revelations and
-exhibitions of Him, in His nature, His person, His might, His wisdom, His
-various offices. In one sense, CHRIST’S whole life, from the manger in
-Bethlehem to the Mount of the Ascension, was a manifestation. It was not
-possible to see or hear Him, without becoming convinced—if open to
-conviction—that He was different from all other men, and superior to
-them. His every deed, His every word, His every look, designedly or
-undesignedly proclaimed “This is GOD manifest in the flesh!” Still,
-there were some particular exhibitions of Himself, which, from the
-special circumstances attending them, the preparation made for them,
-their peculiar importance, their wonderful effects, or their relations to
-certain classes or individuals, are entitled to be distinguished from the
-rest of that life-long Epiphany, and to be called _par excellence_ the
-manifestations of CHRIST.
-
-Of this kind, was the exhibition to the shepherds, and again, that to the
-wise men of the East—prefiguring, commencing the manifestation to the
-Gentiles; the declaration that He must be about His Father’s business,
-the baptism by John, the show of His power in converting water into wine,
-in cleansing the leper, in calming the troubled sea, in casting out
-devils; the unfolding of His wisdom in speaking parables, the preaching
-of judgment by the Son of Man—all of which are in turn commemorated at
-this season. Of this kind, again, were the teaching on the Mount, all
-the miracles, the Transfiguration, the appearances after the
-Resurrection, the Ascension, the wonders of Pentecost, the light that
-shone from heaven on Saul journeying to Damascus, and the voice that said
-“I am JESUS whom thou persecutest.” These were all pre-eminent
-manifestations, as being designedly full of significance, making special
-revelations to special persons; displaying, so to speak, the chief
-features of CHRIST, and teaching most important lessons. Nevertheless,
-they were rather preludes and signs of CHRIST’S truest manifestation,
-than that manifestation itself—faint glimmers of coming light, rustlings,
-warning movements, scarcely upliftings of the curtain that hung between
-things spiritual and the would-be spectators of them—parables, and
-prophecies. They left not those who saw them where they were, but they
-carried them not whither they would be or should be. They bade them look
-and listen; but they revealed not the sight, nor spake the word. Strange
-as it may seem, CHRIST was not truly manifested till the clouds of heaven
-hid Him, and, in the flesh, He ceased to appear and speak till
-judgment-time. The truth was, as yet, not taught, but only hinted at,
-and men were not yet ready for it, and could not receive it. It is not
-in what we call the Gospels, but in the Epistles, that the truth as it is
-in JESUS is revealed. It is not in the miracles of His earthly ministry,
-but in the spiritual wonders which, after Pentecost, the Apostles wrought
-in His name; that the real power of CHRIST, the power to bless, is seen
-and felt. All before was but a type, a shadow, a dream. The antitype,
-the reality, the waking vision, belong to apostolic days, and to the days
-after them. Then was the Gospel revealed, which before was only brought
-nigh. Then was the kingdom of Heaven opened. Then did JESUS, through
-the Spirit, begin to speak and show Himself openly and plainly to Jews
-and Gentiles, and to draw all men to Him. Then did spiritual wisdom
-begin to enlighten, and spiritual power begin to enable the hitherto
-blind and helpless. Then first, even to the Apostles, and then, by them,
-to the world, began to be displayed GOD manifest in the flesh. Up to
-that time, though He was in the world, the world knew Him not. He stood
-among them, but they did not see Him; He spoke, but they did not hear:
-yea, though He had come to His own, they did not receive Him, till the
-Pentecostal light made all clear, and the voice of the Spirit declared
-“This is the beloved Son of the Father,” and the power of Divine grace,
-enabled and constrained to believe on His name, to receive Him
-intelligently and heartily, and through Him, and in a measure like Him,
-to become sons of GOD.
-
-Then and thus was CHRIST truly manifested, as it were in these last
-times.
-
-But there is even yet a better manifestation, one more really worthy of
-the name—that, namely, which is made to the Disciples, but not to the
-world.
-
-In a sense, all that has hitherto been described was an external
-manifestation—a manifestation to the world. The Gospel was preached
-openly, the credentials of its heralds were publicly exhibited, whosoever
-would might hear and see; and only when they refused, and judged
-themselves unworthy of eternal life, did the Apostles turn away from
-them, or pass on to another place, shaking the dust off their feet as a
-testimony against them. Even the inward grace, the power to see
-spiritually, to believe, and to accept CHRIST, was so far manifested to
-the world, that it was offered to all, and was within the reach of all.
-The Apostles, who taught men their need of salvation, and exhorted them
-to save themselves, both showed them the way and promised them the grace
-of salvation; and thus, therefore, was CHRIST openly, and with power,
-manifested to the world. But, in the chapter of the text, CHRIST makes
-it a special promise to those that love Him, that He will manifest
-Himself to them. Judas (not Iscariot) rightly concludes that this is a
-manifestation which shall be made to none but approved disciples; and,
-accepting the promise, he ventures to ask, respecting its fulfilment,
-“LORD, how is it that Thou wilt manifest Thyself unto us, and not unto
-the world?”
-
-It must be borne in mind that the Jewish notion, a notion shared by the
-disciples, was that the MESSIAH would manifest Himself in all the pomp
-and power of a triumphant earthly prince, exhibiting Himself to the whole
-world, ruling all the nations of the earth, and demanding the homage and
-adoration of all men. They waited in expectation that the kingdom of
-Israel would be restored, that Jerusalem would become the capital of the
-world, that CHRIST would sit visibly on a splendid throne, in the midst
-of her, and that they would occupy the nearest places to Him of honour
-and power. This notion was still theirs, as we know, when CHRIST led
-them out to the Mount of the Ascension; and we can well understand,
-therefore, that Judas, and those with him, must at this time have been
-greatly perplexed by the intimation, which CHRIST’S promise conveyed,
-that He was only to be manifested to those that love Him. It is out of
-this perplexity—not, as I said before, questioning the fact of a partial
-manifestation, but unable to understand it, and seeking
-enlightenment—that Judas asks, “LORD, how is it that Thou wilt manifest
-Thyself unto us, and not unto the world?”
-
-The words translated “How is it,” render possible a threefold
-interpretation of this question. 1st. LORD, what has happened—how is it
-come to pass that the original design (at least, what we suppose to be
-the original design) of an universal manifestation is altered, and now
-only a partial manifestation to be afforded? 2ndly. LORD, what has been
-done by us, what special merits have we, whence is it that we are to be
-so signally favoured, and others passed over? 3rdly. LORD, what kind of
-manifestation will that be which some eyes only shall perceive? In what
-way wilt Thou reveal Thy presence to us, so that the world, in the midst
-of which we dwell, into the midst of which, therefore, Thou must come to
-us, shall not partake with us of the vision. It is scarcely profitable,
-perhaps, to consider whether or no the first interpretation is
-admissible; nor need we attempt to decide between the second and the
-third. Let us rather combine them; and taking the question out of
-Judas’s mouth, and adopting it as our own, let us reverently and
-teachably ask, as we need, of Him who giveth wisdom liberally, “LORD, how
-is it, on what account, and in what way, that Thou wilt manifest Thyself
-unto us, and not unto the world?”
-
-I. On what account is He partial? Why does He make us to differ? Not
-then, for any recommendation we had to His favour—for we were all
-concluded under sin, and all guilty before GOD. Not again, for any
-merits or deserts in His service, for at the best, if we have done all
-that He set us to do (and who has?) we are yet but unprofitable servants.
-No! there was nothing which should make GOD respect and choose us before
-others; and we have done no work for which we can claim reward. GOD is
-no respecter of persons. It is impossible, by any mere natural deeds or
-efforts to please Him. We have all sinned and come short of His glory.
-We all sin, and deserve wrath every day. But CHRIST, Who would have all
-men to be saved, Who has died for all, and risen again for all, and sent
-down His Holy Spirit ready to justify, to sanctify, to bless all, has
-nevertheless made the bestowal of His grace conditional. He requires a
-certain “receptivity” for it. It is not thrust upon all, willing or
-unwilling, proud or humble, GOD-fearing or GOD-despising. Men must feel
-their need of it; and, feeling their need, they must express it, at least
-to Him, and must go to Him in His appointed ways to obtain it. CHRIST in
-sufficiency, in desire, the Saviour of all men, is, in fact, specially
-only the Saviour of them that believe—believe with that impelling desire,
-and that active faith, which make them flee to Him to be saved, and
-earnestly ask of Him, “What must I do to be saved?” And next, having
-this fitness, this receptivity for grace, and so receiving it, CHRIST
-requires men to treasure up the grace with reverence and godly fear; to
-use it with diligence, with zealous effort, to improve it, to grow in it;
-to strengthen it constantly by all appointed means of sustenance and
-exercise; to accomplish with it all that He wills and directs to be done;
-to be heartily grateful to the Author, the Sustainer, the Finisher of
-Salvation. “He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is
-that loveth Me, and he that loveth Me shall be loved of My Father, and I
-will love him, and will manifest Myself to him.” So then it is only to
-love that the manifestation is made; and love is proved by obedience, and
-obedience is the hearty faithful performance, in the spirit as well as
-the letter, of the expressed will of CHRIST.
-
-And here, brethren, before we go further, let us see in the light of
-these conditions, why it is that religious influences affect so little
-the vast mass of mankind. There is a manifestation of CHRIST to the
-world. He is ever speaking in their ears and showing Himself to their
-eyes. His Church, with its Bible, its means of grace and ministry, its
-duration and extension, besides being a standing miracle, the infallible
-credential of His divine authority, the proof of His wisdom and His
-power, is a very exhibition of Himself, mighty and eager to save. The
-Spirit, which is with and in that Church, declares Himself to be able and
-ready to enlighten, and persuade, and strengthen all, without exception,
-without delay, if only they will come to Him. And yet how many, not only
-of the recklessly profane, the grossly carnal, the resolutely blind and
-deaf, but of the well-disposed, the moral, the albut exemplary, have no
-perception whatever of CHRIST! How many so-called Christians, not only
-in their business or their pleasure, when they turn away their eyes from
-the manifested GOD, but even when they come up to the sanctuary, when
-they read the Bible, when they kneel in prayer or stand to praise, when
-they look Zionwards, when they are all attent, eyes and ears, yet see no
-sight, and hear no sound of CHRIST! The world which they have left is
-remembered, and stands before them in a life-like picture. The sights
-they would not see, the sounds they would not hear, they cannot escape
-from; but CHRIST, the object of their worship, in some sense the desire
-of their eyes, they look for but cannot find; if He stands in the midst
-of them, they know it not!
-
-Is not this, brethren, the experience of many of you? You do not, of
-course, ever expect open visions, perceptions with natural eyes and ears
-of a spiritually manifested Saviour; but do you not often fail to obtain
-what you think (and rightly) you ought to aim at obtaining, a real,
-though spiritual, a convincing, constraining, sanctifying, and cheering
-manifestation of CHRIST? Do you not often, do you not almost always find
-just that wanting, which should make religion real? “Oh!” you exclaim,
-“would that when I kneel down in church, to make solemn confessions, to
-utter supplications, to pray for pardon, for favour, for grace—oh! that
-such a vision of CHRIST were afforded me, that I were possessed with such
-feeling of His presence, as would prevent my turning away so readily from
-the solemnity, to see who is coming into church, to admire or criticise
-the dress or appearance of those beside me, to remember the worldliness
-of yesterday, to anticipate the worldliness of to-morrow. Oh! that when
-I sit with open Bible before me, and slight and slur over its difficult
-parts, and give little heed to the personal application of its histories,
-and treat albut with indifference its exhortations, its warnings, its
-promises, its threats—Oh! that some voice would recall me from my
-wandering, and dispel my irreverence, and concentrate my devout attention
-with its heard command, ‘Thus, saith the LORD, Hear what the Spirit
-saith.’ Oh! that when I go about the world, and neglect my religious
-duty here, and transgress it there, yielding readily to temptation,
-hankering after, following worldliness, led by the persuasions, awed by
-the frowns, constrained by the demands of the world, oh! that CHRIST
-would stand at least before my spiritual vision, and utter to the ears of
-my soul, ‘Forbear. Take up thy cross. Follow me.’ Oh, that He would do
-all this for others too: for those whom I love, who go farther out of the
-way, for the carnal, for the godless, for the souls that are carelessly,
-that are deliberately perishing! Oh! that for His own honour’s sake He
-would openly show Himself and dispute—with the Devil, with Mammon, with
-Pleasure, with Folly—the possession of the souls which He has purchased
-for Himself! Why does He not give some proof, why does He not exercise
-some persuasion which must be felt, which could not be disregarded? Oh!
-that He would rend the heavens and come down; that He would cheer the
-saint; that He would confound and convert the sinner by His manifested
-presence.”
-
-It is thus, if I mistake not, that we sometimes think and wish. But,
-brethren, the words which prompted Judas to speak, reprove our thoughts.
-They show us that it is not by oversight, by defect, by mismanagement, by
-any failure to accomplish what was intended, but by deliberate design, by
-exact fulfilment of what GOD proposed, that the real, the strong
-influences of Christianity are not brought to bear upon men generally.
-
-CHRIST manifests not Himself fully to the world. He never meant to do
-it. He never will do it, till he comes to judgment.
-
-GOD, we are told, “will have mercy on whom He will have mercy, and whom
-He will He hardeneth.” These awful words do not mean what some attempt
-to make out of them—that there is an arbitrary election to salvation, and
-so for all others an inevitable destruction. They mean rather that while
-His mercy is ready to flow, and is always flowing, if you desire it, you
-must go to the fountain for it. GOD is under no necessity to save all
-men. We do not confer a favour on Him by consenting to be saved. His
-glory will be manifested in destruction as in salvation. He desires to
-save us. He will save us, and rejoice in our salvation, if we seek to be
-saved: but if we are rebellious, or indifferent, if we will not comply
-with the conditions on which only He will manifest His best presence to
-us, then we must not complain, if He makes good His declaration, and
-proves it by withholding Himself from us, that whom He wills (and in what
-way He wills) on them He has mercy, and all others, though He long bears
-with them, and gives them much time and opportunity for conforming to His
-will, yet is He content, yea, determined to leave them in their hardness,
-to confirm them in their hardness, because they will not be softened in
-the way which He has chosen to prescribe.
-
-Oh! my brethren, do not suppose that it is the weakness, the impotence of
-Christianity, the frustration of the will of GOD that is demonstrated in
-the world’s ungodliness, in the perdition of so many immortal souls. No!
-It is rather the power of Christianity to keep its own for its own: it is
-the glorious vindication of the sovereign will of Jehovah to save whom He
-will; it is the corroboration of CHRIST’S word, that none should come to
-the Father but by Him; it is the terrible, deliberately-inflicted
-punishment of those that will not come unto Him that they might have
-life; it is the manifestation, so to speak, of His non-manifestation: “If
-ye will not love me, holding my commandments and keeping them, then you
-cannot be loved of My Father, and so cannot be loved of Me, and I will
-not manifest myself to you.”
-
-It is ourselves, brethren, and not GOD that must be changed. The seed is
-scattered over all the field, but it grows only in the good ground. If
-CHRIST is not manifest to us, it is because we have not complied with the
-conditions of manifestation. He is faithful to His promise, but we have
-not closed with the promise. Realising, then, that it is not binding on
-GOD to save us—excepting on the terms which He has Himself laid down—and
-presenting to ourselves the momentous interests at stake, let us comply
-with GOD’S terms, and let us strive to do so gratefully. Let us be at
-pains to ascertain CHRIST’S will; let us diligently and scrupulously keep
-it, endeavouring all the while to follow it, not as mere routine of
-morality, but as active direct service of CHRIST Himself, and proposing
-to ourselves, as the motive to its observance, gratitude for CHRIST’S
-salvation, and as the reward of observance, the manifestation of CHRIST.
-So doing, we shall soon find that there is a real, an unequalled power in
-Christianity to attract and constrain us; we shall soon know how it is
-that CHRIST will manifest Himself to His disciples, while He is hidden
-from the world.
-
-II. I have left but little time for the consideration of the second form
-of our question, namely, in what way CHRIST will manifest Himself only to
-the chosen. There is no need of a lengthy discussion of this subject,
-because, with all our spiritual short-sightedness, we are not like the
-Jews, we can have no difficulty in understanding the possibility of
-CHRIST’S manifestation of Himself to whom He will, and at the same time
-His hiding of Himself from all others. We know that like as ghosts are
-sometimes said to appear to but one of a roomful, so if it pleased
-CHRIST—and in any other way which He pleased—He could stand visibly at
-this moment before any one of us, and utter to that favoured ear
-distinctly audible words, while the rest of us saw and heard nothing of
-Him.
-
-And there is no use in the discussion of the nature of CHRIST’S truest
-manifestation, because even if the preacher had realised it in all its
-perfect blessedness, his words would fail to describe what he had felt;
-yea, the best possible description would be wholly unintelligible to the
-natural man who perceives not, and cannot perceive, the things of GOD,
-while it would be wholly unnecessary, rather would be solemn trifling
-with those who have actually partaken of the blessedness. No, brethren,
-it cannot be spoken—and if it could, I believe, it might not be—how
-CHRIST shows Himself to those who love Him and keep His commandments. It
-is only in its realisation that you can understand what the promise
-means: “We will come unto Him and make our abode with Him.” Go, fulfil
-the conditions, and you shall receive the promise; and it shall disclose
-to you its own wonders, and its own transcendent bliss, and its own
-constraining power.
-
-But though we may not describe the manifestation itself, we may observe
-and recount the effects it produces. The Israelites might not come up to
-GOD and see Him face to face in the Mount, but they were allowed, and it
-was good for them, to behold the shining of Moses’s face when he returned
-from the Divine presence. Doubtless, to many, it was an additional proof
-of the being of GOD; to not a few it may have been an incentive to seek
-the blessing of His favour. And so, brethren, it may be with us. Taking
-knowledge of those who have been with JESUS, we may see on them some
-reflection of His glorious self, some marks of a bliss which we shall
-covet to share, which may stimulate us both to believe better in its
-reality and to strive more earnestly for its fruition. Yes! and
-comparing ourselves with them very humbly, with unceasing prayer and
-watching against false confidence, we may even discern on ourselves the
-faint dawn, the first streaks of the Divine twilight, which tell (oh! how
-unspeakable the bliss!) that the dayspring is about to mount above our
-horizon; that the Sun of righteousness is about to shine into our hearts
-with all His glory.
-
-Consider, then, such as Abraham, who, after He had seen CHRIST—for CHRIST
-was often manifest before the Incarnation—could himself resolutely
-destroy his best earthly hope if GOD required it; Job, who, after the
-vision of perfect holiness, abhorred himself and repented; Jacob, who
-felt (and felt throughout his life, we may be sure) how dreadful, how
-consecrated was the place where GOD was met; Joseph, who possessed a
-power to resist effectually the sin, which so many dare to say there is
-no resisting (“How can I do this great wickedness and sin against GOD?”);
-Daniel, who entered courageously into a den of lions; Simeon, who longed
-for death, and the enjoyment of the permanent vision, after he had once
-seen CHRIST; Stephen, who died, almost like his Master, “LORD JESUS
-receive my spirit;” and the many others, who endured and laboured, and
-resisted, and persevered, and rejoiced in tribulation, and hoped against
-hope, as seeing Him who is invisible. Yes, brethren, consider these.
-Think what they were, men of the same flesh and blood, of like
-infirmities, and like sin with yourselves. Think how they secured the
-favour of GOD, by the same simple means which are within the power of the
-least of you, yea, and more within your power than theirs, at least of
-most of them, because of the clearer light, and the better grace of
-Gospel times. Think what a reflection they showed of the visions of
-CHRIST which they enjoyed. Think how real must have been their religious
-life; how enviable their peace and bliss; what a glorious light they
-afforded for the example and encouragement of other men; and be no longer
-content that with all your faculties and opportunities, all your
-knowledge and invitations, all your proffers of Divine grace, all the
-perpetual revelations of CHRIST to those who desire Him, you yet should
-never see Him; but resolutely accepting His terms, hold and keep His
-commandments, and pray, and meditate, and labour to love Him.
-
-Then plead and watch—you shall not plead in vain, nor watch very long—and
-the Father, and the Son, and the Spirit will surely come unto you and
-make their abode manifestly within you, cheering you with the light of
-the Divine countenance, strengthening you with the strength of Divine
-grace, moulding you more and more into the image of CHRIST (which must be
-yours in perfection before you can partake of His fullest manifestation),
-abiding with you here, and shining clearly even in the deepest darkness,
-and by and by transplanting you, perfected in grace and spiritual
-perception, to the place where CHRIST is always seen, with an eye that
-shall never be dim, with a delight which, however it grows in desire,
-shall be more than satisfied, as you behold His face in righteousness,
-and are filled to overflowing with the fulness of His presence.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON X.
-BLESSING ACCORDING TO PRAYER.
-
-
- ST. MATTHEW, VIII., 13.
-
- _And_ JESUS _said unto the centurion_, _Go thy way_; _and as thou
- hast believed_, _so be it done unto thee_.
-
-WE must compare the narrative contained in St. Matthew’s Gospel with its
-parallel in the 7th chapter of St. Luke, to obtain a clear and full idea
-of the circumstances which preceded the healing of the centurion’s
-servant. St. Matthew records just so much of the history as would
-illustrate the teaching that the Gentiles from afar should be received,
-and many of the children of the kingdom cast out: St. Luke sets forth in
-order all the particulars, small and great, which he had been able to
-obtain from those who were eye-witnesses and ministers of the word.
-
-From the harmonised accounts we gather that a certain centurion, who had
-renounced the worship of the “gods many,” and become a proselyte of the
-gate, hearing of the miracles of JESUS, sent certain elders of the Jews
-to beseech the exercise of His healing power upon a favourite servant,
-who was grievously tormented, and at the point of death. He does not
-seem to have come at all himself. The deep sense which he entertained of
-personal unworthiness would alone have deterred him; and, besides, he
-knew that there was a middle wall of partition between Jews and Gentiles,
-and that as yet JESUS was not sent but unto the house of Israel. The
-elders, come to JESUS, seek to enlist His sympathy and active interest,
-by pleading that the centurion, though not actually a Jew, was a friend
-of Jews, and had done much for the support of the Jewish worship. “He is
-worthy for whom Thou shouldst do this, for he loveth our nation, and
-himself hath built us a synagogue. Come, then, and heal his servant.”
-JESUS replies, “I will come and heal him;” and straightway sets out with
-them. But when He was not far from the house, the centurion, alarmed at
-the temerity of his former request, and shrinking instinctively from One
-so high and so holy, sent some of those around him to prevent further
-condescension and trouble, on behalf of one so unworthy, and to suggest
-that JESUS should but express His will (which he felt must be omnipotent)
-from the spot where He stood: “Say in a word and my servant shall be
-healed.” The centurion had arrived at the knowledge of a great truth,
-namely, that CHRIST’S power was not confined to the scene of His bodily
-presence: and he described the process of reasoning by which he had
-arrived at it. “I am but a man, myself under authority, yet I have but
-to say, Go, come, do this, and, lo! it is done by my servants here,
-there, or wherever else I appoint, while I remain still. How much more
-shalt _Thou_ speak and be obeyed, Thou who art Absolute and Supreme in
-authority, Whose will all the spiritual armies of heaven observe, and are
-prompt and eager to perform. ‘Speak the word only, and my servant shall
-be healed.’” When JESUS heard it, He marvelled and said to them that
-followed, “Verily, I say unto you, I have not found so great faith, no,
-not in Israel.” Twice we read that our LORD marvelled—once at unbelief,
-and once at belief. And this is no mere figurative statement. Our LORD
-literally marvelled. His human nature, much as He knew of what was in
-man, was taken aback by the unexpected and extraordinary display, in the
-one case of perverse blindness, in the other of clear spiritual
-perception. “Verily, I say unto you, I have not found so great faith.”
-It is remarkable that our LORD selects the centurion’s _faith_ for
-admiration. He dwells not on his care and anxiety for his slave, on his
-general good will and good deeds, on his consciousness of unworthiness,
-his resolute humility, “LORD, I am not worthy that thou shouldst come
-under my roof.” No! it is his faith, to which JESUS gives this highest
-praise. That while he walked among His own people, who were taught of
-GOD, and was haughtily and indignantly treated, yea, despised; that while
-Jews saw and albut felt His power, and refused to acknowledge it, a
-Gentile, at a distance, should be filled with reverential awe of Him,
-should assert so confidently the fulness of His power, should have such
-an insight into its spiritual working, should find and adduce proofs of
-that power and its working, to satisfy himself, to plead to CHRIST—this
-was, indeed, worthy of note; this was, as yet, unparalleled. “I have not
-found so great faith.”
-
-We need not, however, suppose—in fact we must not suppose—that our LORD
-meant to omit the commendation of the centurion’s other good qualities:
-rather as they were all the fruits of faith, were they all praised in the
-praise of faith. Why did he love the Jews—why did he build them a
-synagogue—why did he seek miraculous healing for his servant—why did he
-employ Jewish elders as his intercessors—why did he, an important Roman
-officer, feel unworthy of the company of a wandering Jewish peasant? Was
-it not through faith? faith in the true GOD, faith in the laws of His
-worship, faith in His awful holiness, and no less in His merciful
-goodness, faith in His manifestation in JESUS of Nazareth? Yes, it was
-all of faith, and it was all admired and praised when JESUS marvelled and
-said, “I have not found so great faith.” But still the highest faith—the
-thing most marvelled at and chiefly commended, was the spiritual
-perception of a bodily unseen LORD, the belief in His unlimited, and,
-under all circumstances, available power. “I have never seen Thee: yet I
-know Thee who Thou art. Thou art not here, yet with a word Thou canst
-cause Thy power to be here, and to accomplish here all Thy will.”
-Blessed are they that have not seen and yet have believed: and blessed
-are they precisely in the way of their own wise choice, “Go thy way; and
-as thou hast believed, so be it done unto thee.” It was great honour
-given to CHRIST. It was the opportunity of a wondrous manifestation, and
-so we read, “The servant was healed in the selfsame hour.”
-
-But shall we suppose that the centurion, by his humility and his faith,
-deprived himself of the bliss of receiving CHRIST, that CHRIST,
-_therefore_, turned away, and thought no more of him? Even in that case
-he would not have been without his reward. The servant, who was dear to
-him, was preserved and healed, the Jews, whom he loved, must have
-honoured and loved him, when he had thus prevailed with GOD, and,
-besides, what a conviction was his of the power of CHRIST, what a token
-of approval, in the fact that he had, as it were, proposed his own
-conditions for a miracle, and those conditions had been graciously
-accepted and fulfilled! He needed no vision after this to prove to him
-that JESUS was the Son of GOD; no voice from heaven to speak to him
-comfort and assurance of hope. He had sought CHRIST. He had found Him
-and been found of Him. Great was his reward; and his joy such as could
-not be taken away. He would have been greatly blessed, then, had no more
-been done for him. But did that CHRIST, Who bestows such honour on
-humility, Who so loves them that love Him and His, Who has made the best
-of His promises, yea, all of them to faith, did He, think you, give no
-further token, no higher blessedness to that centurion? Did He not
-rather prove to him, that he had made a wise choice, that he had chosen
-the best kind of blessing, in asking for spiritual presence rather than
-bodily presence? Did He not manifest Himself to him, in that peculiar
-way of which the world knows, and can know nothing? Did He not go, He
-and the Father, and make spiritual and permanent abode with him? Yes,
-surely, this is all implied in the words, “Go thy way; and as thou hast
-believed, so be it done unto thee.”
-
-This view of the subject has its evident lessons and promises for us. Be
-it ours, brethren, to learn and practice the lessons, and doubt not but
-GOD will fulfil to us the promises.
-
-In dismissing now the general subject, and attempting only to deduce
-practical instruction from the words of the text, I would ask you to
-notice first, the kind of answer which prayer gets; it is blessed in the
-way it asks to be blessed. When the elders besought our LORD that He
-would come and heal the servant, then we read, He went with them. When
-presently the centurion, through his friends, urges, “Speak the word
-only, and my servant shall be healed,” then CHRIST stays His own
-progress, and sends on His grace. “Go thy way; and as thou hast
-believed, so be it done unto thee.”
-
-It is thus that prayer is generally answered: what we ask for, that we
-obtain. _Generally_, I say, yet not always; for our wise and good LORD,
-when, in our ignorance, we prefer a wrong or a foolish request, sends us
-rather what He knows us to need, than what we ask. A father does not
-give his beloved son stone for bread, nor a scorpion instead of a fish.
-And it may be, yea, it often is the case, that we ask GOD for what we
-think would support us, or be of some other benefit to us, when its
-bestowal would cause us to stumble, or, perhaps, crush our spiritual
-strength, or poison our spiritual life. And then, I say, of His wisdom
-and goodness, He sends us away _not empty_—oh, no! none ask of GOD and
-obtain not, if they ask with right feeling—but blessed in a different way
-from that we ventured to prescribe. This truth is worth a little more
-thought. There are many of you, brethren, I doubt not, who have again
-and again prayed to GOD (and very earnestly) to continue to you some
-blessing which you were in danger of losing, or to confer upon you
-something which you felt you wanted, and who yet were not answered
-according to the prayer. Perhaps, you were failing in business, or your
-influence was being diminished, or your health breaking down, or your
-child dying. Well, you earnestly, humbly, with faith and strong tears
-deprecated the calamity again and again; but still it came upon you as
-though you had never prayed; or you asked to be lifted out of your
-poverty or your misery, to be endowed with wisdom, to be made
-influential; you loved, and prayed GOD to make you loved again; you
-struggled to get a situation which was just what you needed, you prayed
-continually that you might succeed. It was all without avail. “No
-answer came.”
-
-No answer came! Say not that, brethren. Assuredly, an answer did come,
-if you prayed aright. It may be that you did not get what you wanted, or
-keep what was departing; for GOD knew your choice was an unwise one, and
-therefore of His love would not grant it. But He gave you a
-compensation, and more than a compensation. Just as when CHRIST prayed
-that the cup of His last agony might pass from Him. GOD rather
-strengthened Him from heaven to endure the agony, and made it His way to
-glory—so, when you have deprecated, or besought, against the will of GOD
-choosing for you, He has enabled you to bear the calamity, to do without
-the thing coveted, and has made all to work for your good. What He does
-it may be you know not now, but you shall know hereafter. And when in
-heaven’s light you see that the continued or bestowed prosperity would
-have made you proud and ungodly, that power or influence (though you
-meant it not) would have been perverted by you to your ruin, that the
-child taken away, had it remained, would have destroyed itself, and been
-a curse to you, that the disappointment, and the toil, and the suffering,
-which you so prayed against, were just the things that planted and
-nurtured in you Christian graces, and worked out for your glory—oh! then
-you will see that GOD did answer your prayers, and you will bless him
-fervently for sending His own answer instead of the one you dictated.
-
-Meantime, in the light of this hope, remember always to add to your
-prayers for specific blessings the holy proviso, “Nevertheless not as I
-will, but as Thou wilt.”
-
-But I said that generally, whenever, that is, there is no harm to
-ourselves in what we ask, GOD gives us what we pray for; and I produced
-proofs, which might be multiplied manifold that it is so. “Go thy way;
-and as thou hast believed, so be it done unto thee.” Surely this is
-worth a thought; not only, or chiefly, as showing us GOD’S marvellous
-condescension and the efficacy of prayer, but as admonishing us that the
-height, the amount, the nature of our blessedness, depends upon
-ourselves, upon what we ask in prayer. What a solemn consideration is
-this! GOD sits upon His heavenly throne, with listening ear and
-outstretched hands; angels wait to waft our supplications to His
-presence, the Holy Spirit to make intercession for us, the blessed Son to
-present our cause and plead it! It only remains for us to ask. Whatever
-we ask, if we are faithful, if it is good, we shall receive. What we ask
-not, that we shall not receive. Think of that, brethren! Call to mind,
-as far as you can, what kind of prayers you have been wont to make.
-Review your past and present state. In anything are you spiritually
-unblessed? Have you only an inferior blessedness? Ah! have you not all
-that you prayed for? Lack you not just that, which you never faithfully
-sought? This life, and the things of this life, have been often in your
-thoughts, and in your prayers, for yourselves and for others. You have
-prayed that GOD would preserve you, that He would defend you from danger
-and gross temptation, that He would give you health, and comfort, and
-earthly blessing, that He would protect and prosper those you love. You
-have not prayed much for spiritual blessings, or you have been content
-with supplicating inferior spiritual blessings. A clean heart, a renewed
-mind, lively faith, heavenly peace, joy in the Holy Ghost,—if these are
-not yours, do you not know why? It is because you never asked for them,
-or, at least, never asked with that appreciation, that earnestness which
-alone prevails with GOD. GOD is willing to give them. GOD has promised
-to give them. He stands ever ready to fulfil His promise. But,
-nevertheless, for these things he will be inquired of. The measure of
-the expressed desire is the measure of the supply. Nothing less, in most
-cases nothing different, and always nothing more, may you expect from
-GOD, than that which you ask. O let the knowledge of this truth kindle
-in you desires, and teach you words wherewith to approach GOD. Miss not
-His choicest gifts for want of asking. Prefer not for yourselves that
-which is earthy, and poor, and fleeting. Thrust not away—and you do
-thrust away, if you do not woo—perfect spiritual blessedness. When next
-you kneel before GOD, whenever henceforth you kneel before Him, remember
-that while He is the owner and ready-giver of all good gifts, it is yet
-only what you ask that you will receive of Him. As thou hast believed,
-so shall it be done unto thee.
-
-But, secondly, it is faith we see which gives force to prayer. “As thou
-hast believed.” “Whatsoever ye ask, believing, ye shall receive.” “Let
-him ask in faith, nothing wavering.” “Let not him that wavereth think
-that he shall receive anything of the LORD.” GOD would have us wait on
-Him, with confidence in His sufficiency, with sure expectation that He
-will give what we ask. If we lack this confidence and this expectation;
-if we make formal, rather than eager and hopeful requests; if we have any
-misgivings as to the answer; if we secretly resolve what we will do, if
-there is no answer; if we wait not, and watch not, for the answer, then,
-brethren, we forfeit the blessing. GOD heareth not such—we virtually ask
-Him not to answer us. We mock Him with the idle form of prayer. O ye
-who ask GOD for guidance, at the same time questioning yourselves as to
-what ye shall do—ye that pray against temptation, and forthwith yield to
-it—ye that profess to cast care upon GOD, all the while being full of
-cares—ye that beseech Him to help you, yet go on helping yourselves—ye
-that pray, and live as though you had not prayed, that call upon GOD, but
-wait not for his answer—ye that are not certain, that feel not the
-certainty, and act not, or forbear from acting upon it, that what you ask
-you shall obtain, be sure that you shall go empty away, and that because
-of your unbelief. It is hollow formalism, it is fearful trifling, it is
-blasphemous mockery, to ask without faith, without sure calculation upon
-receiving. You dare not treat an earthly friend so. You shall not, with
-impunity, treat GOD so! Ah! here is the explanation of unanswered
-prayer—prayer for that which is desirable and right—it was not offered in
-faith; the answer was not expected, and relied on; the life did not
-manifest expectation and reliance! Would you indeed receive anything
-from GOD? Prefer your request, in full acknowledgment of GOD’S ability,
-in faithful trust in His performance of all that you ask according to His
-will, and show your faith by utter renunciation of all self-guidance and
-self-dependence, by patient waiting, by steadfast resistance of all that
-GOD forbids, and persevering pursuit of all that He commands. Impress
-this upon yourselves as the spirit of your prayer, and the rule of your
-lives. Make yourselves such as GOD hears. Cleanse yourselves by the
-power of His grace from sin, that you may be allowed to approach Him.
-Arm yourselves with the godly resolution that, come what will, you will
-serve the LORD; and seek, above all, His kingdom and the righteousness
-thereof. Examine yourselves, your peculiar wants and difficulties, that
-you may inform your prayers, and make them pointed and particular,
-expressing what you need and desire. Then offer them, with felt
-unworthiness, with holy adoration, in the certain conviction that He
-hears you, that He can supply your need, that He will supply it; and take
-to yourselves such just consolation and assurance, and let your life
-manifest them, as if CHRIST, Who cannot lie and cannot fail, had audibly
-declared to you, “Go thy way; and as thou hast believed, so be it done
-unto thee.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XI.
-CHRIST STILLING THE STORM.
-
-
- ST. MATTHEW, VIII., 26.
-
- _And He saith unto them_, _Why are ye fearful_, _O ye of little
- faith_? _Then He arose_, _and rebuked the winds and the sea_; _and
- there was a great calm_.
-
-IT was after a day of laborious teaching, that our LORD to escape for a
-time from the crowds that thronged Him, to obtain rest and quiet, perhaps
-to exercise His ministry in other places, commanded the disciples to
-steer the ship, in which He had been teaching, across the sea of Galilee,
-and to convey Him to the other side. Immediately, it would appear, that
-they set out, He laid Himself down and fell asleep. Partaking of human
-nature in its infirmity, though not in its sin, He was worn out with
-labour, and absolutely required, yea, hastened to rest. He sunk into a
-deep sleep, then, as soon as He assumed the posture of repose. But anon,
-a storm arose. One of those squalls (which so often come down upon lakes
-surrounded by mountains) suddenly filled the air with boisterous wind,
-and so upraised and agitated the waves, that they dashed over the ship,
-and threatened it with destruction. The disciples, many of whom were
-fishermen, and others accustomed to occupy their business upon or beside
-the water, must have been too familiar with storms to be easily
-frightened. The darkening clouds, the howling wind, the troubled water,
-would, of course, arouse them to energy, warning them that they were in
-danger, and requiring them to watch and labour to save themselves; and so
-we can well imagine them running hither and thither, with anxious looks,
-loosing or furling the sails, as might be necessary; avoiding quicksands,
-and rocks, and shallow places; lightening the ship of dangerous burthens;
-directing their course by the safest way, to the haven where they would
-be. But either they must have been sorry sailors, with coward hearts,
-which we are not willing to believe, or their courage must have been
-overcome by very unusual and imminent danger, ere they would have rushed
-to their Master, and cried to Him, in terror, “LORD, save us, we perish!”
-or, in rash reproach, “Carest thou not, that we perish?” Yes! I say,
-there must have been unusual and imminent danger, and even something
-more—some supernatural portent—thus to strike with terror, thus to fill
-with despair.
-
-However this may be, they cried unto the LORD, and the LORD heard them.
-He had slept calmly through the roar of the wind—yea, even while the
-waves washed over Him; but the cry of distress entered quickly into His
-ear, and He awoke to answer it. “Why are ye fearful, O ye of little
-faith?” were His awakening words. This is not a rebuke for coming to
-Him; they had done right therein. He would presently prove it by the
-miracle He would work for them. Neither is it an assertion that there
-was no real danger, that they had been too easily alarmed: for an
-inspired Evangelist, St. Luke, writing long afterwards, in the light of
-what CHRIST now said and did, expressly states that the vessel was filled
-with water, and that they were in danger. No; it is an acknowledgment of
-the danger, but it is also a pledge that it should be averted, and it is
-a tender reproach for not being confident of deliverance. “Why are ye
-fearful, O ye of little faith?” Am not I with you? Do not I know your
-wants? Have I not power and will to relieve them? Where is your faith,
-in the prophecies of what I have yet to do, that you suppose I am now to
-perish? Where is the confidence which becomes my followers?—which
-others, with less knowledge and encouragement, less ground of hope, have
-so fully shown. “Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of
-death, I will fear no evil, for Thou art with me.” Yea, though He slay
-me, yet will I trust in Him! Thus He reproves, and calms, and assures
-them in their trouble, and then He proceeds to deliver them out of it.
-“He arose”—we read—“and rebuked the winds and the sea, and there was a
-great calm.” It was a wondrous manifestation of His Majesty. It was a
-gracious condescension to infirmity. It was a proof, too palpable to be
-resisted, too marvellous to be forgotten, that He is able to keep, and
-that He will keep, in safety and in peace, those whose minds are staid on
-Him, who commit themselves to His keeping. Well may the disciples, in
-the awful stillness of that calm, have been filled as much with
-reverential fear as with admiration. “They feared exceedingly, and said
-one to another, What manner of man is this, that even the wind and the
-sea obey Him?” They had witnessed several of His epiphanies: they had
-tasted of the water made wine; they had seen the leper cleansed; and had,
-at least, heard on reliable testimony, that the centurion’s servant was
-restored—yea, in the early evening of this very day, just before they
-left the shore, JESUS had been casting out evil spirits, with His word,
-and had healed all the sick that were brought to Him: but in their eyes
-(whether they were right or wrong concerns us not now) this was a greater
-miracle, greater in extent, greater in power, greater in the suddenness,
-the certainty (felt by themselves, remember, as no other had been) and
-the peace and joy of its effect. Much must it have informed their
-worship, much must it have increased their faith. Power did it give them
-to proclaim hereafter that they knew in whom they had believed, patience
-to endure for His sake, in His strength; peace in persecution, comfort in
-sorrow, hope amidst otherwise confounding terrors and dismay, that they
-had actually experienced CHRIST’S salvation from destruction; that the
-experience had been vouchsafed them as a pledge of His constant care;
-that they had been told, on its account, to trust—never henceforth to be
-fearful, and of little faith!
-
-Of great importance, then, was that miracle of the Stilling of the Storm,
-if it meant no more, and accomplished no more than this: if it only
-showed, that on a large, as on a small scale, over elements, as well as
-over diseases, on the sea no less than on the land, JESUS was “mighty to
-save”; if it only furnished the eye-witnesses of His ministry with a
-great instance of His gracious power; if it only prepared them for their
-life of storms and difficulties, and supported them in their dangers and
-distresses, and kept them faithful and joyful.
-
-But, surely, it has more meaning, and more worth, than this.
-
-First, it reveals to us, if I mistake not, a contention between spiritual
-powers (the Son of GOD on the one side, the Devil on the other), followed
-by a victory of the good, and a conspicuous defeat of the evil. That was
-no accidental raging of wind and waves, that was no operation of the GOD
-of providence using the elements to accomplish good purposes which was
-rebuked by the voice of the Son of GOD. Rebuke would be meaningless
-addressed to mere wind and wave: it would be blasphemous addressed to
-GOD. It is only when speaking to the Devil, to fevers and distempers,
-the effects of demoniacal possession, to Peter or others, prompted by
-Satan, speaking his words, doing his work, that CHRIST uses rebuke. Here
-then, surely, Satan was at work, and here he was confounded! The enemy
-of souls had never ceased to watch and seek to destroy the Saviour. He
-had stirred up Herod against Him in His infancy. He had personally
-assailed Him in the wilderness. He was now using the elements, over
-which much power is often allowed him, as we see in Job’s case, as his
-agents of evil. But with all his wisdom and perception, he knew not what
-was in JESUS. He thought once that he could as easily have made Him
-sceptical as he did Eve, “hath GOD said,” “If Thou be the Son of Man.”
-He thought now that while the Son of Man slept he was unconscious and
-powerless. And so in his folly he sought to wreck the vessel, and
-overwhelm Him whom it carried in the depths of the sea. Attempting this,
-he did but give occasion for an additional manifestation of CHRIST’S
-mission and power to destroy him and his works. On the shore, before He
-started, CHRIST had cast out devils. On the shore for which He was
-making He would again cast them out. On the sea He now meets them, and
-confounds them. O what a mighty, what a galling conquest! Satan had let
-loose all the powers of the winds, he had lashed the waves into utmost
-fury, the disciples were dismayed, the Saviour was asleep, the ship was
-sinking. “Only a few moments,” doubtless, he exultingly thought, “and
-there shall be a second destruction of man, the kingdom shall surely
-become mine, for there will be none to dispute it”—when, lo! the LORD
-arose, and, with a word, made him undo the work he had done. “Peace be
-still;” and the wind ceased, and there was a great calm! O signal
-defeat! O earnest of the promise that the head of the serpent shall be
-bruised, that Satan himself shall be bound and trodden under foot, and
-cast into the lake of fire, and shall deceive and vex no more. Surely,
-this is one of the chief scenes, one of the most mysterious and important
-events, one of the most glorious manifestations of CHRIST’S life on
-earth.
-
-But this is not all its significance. The miracles of our LORD were
-acted parables—types of spiritual things—rather outward signs, not
-themselves to be given up, but thereafter to be accompanied by inward
-grace.
-
-The ship on the sea of Galilee represents the Christian Church, or the
-individual member of it. The sea is the world; the storm, with its
-adverse wind and difficult waves, figures the trials, the buffetings, the
-persecutions, the fears of this mortal life; the disciples are the types
-of weak yet willing human nature—both our warnings and our examples; and
-CHRIST is Himself, yet, so to speak, but a figure of the true, dwelling
-in His Church in each faithful member, often apparently unheeding,
-unconscious, yet always our sure defence and deliverer, prompt to hear
-when called upon, able to comfort, mighty to save.
-
-That entry into the ship, and sailing forth into the sea, represents our
-first journey, and each renewed journey to CHRIST, in Baptism, in
-Confirmation, in Holy Communion, in every fresh repentance, every vow,
-every act of worship. Forth we go with Him. All is calm and hopeful.
-We seem to have to journey over quiet waters. The shore of Heaven is
-straight before us, and we are making for it. But, as soon as we set
-out, our envious, deadly enemy, hating our LORD, and hating us, plots our
-destruction, and assays its accomplishment. Soon trouble takes the place
-of peace, winds of adversity toss and try us, hope begins to pale, terror
-to dismay, the waters go even over our soul, and He who should calm us,
-and sustain and cheer us, seems to have fallen asleep, to help us not, to
-take no notice of us. It is the hour of GOD’S trial, of the Devil’s
-temptation! What shall we do? If we are wise sailors, like as I have
-supposed the disciples to have done, we shall meet the occasion with
-well-directed energy; we shall keep the vessel away from the quicksands
-of pleasure, the shallows of pride, the rocks of offence, and the
-whirlpools of sin. We shall cast out the weight that drags us down,
-sloth, indifference, besetting sin. We shall bear up against the
-boisterous winds of adversity. We shall resolutely and perseveringly
-pursue the straight course through the waters, making for, looking for
-the shore. Unless we do all this, we have no right to hope. But we must
-take care, lest in, ay, even by doing it, we lose our hope. Satan
-destroys many because they make no effort to save themselves; but he
-destroys quite as many because they rely on their own efforts. It is a
-fact that we can do nothing by ourselves; that human wisdom,
-self-reliant, is sure to be confounded, and human effort, independent, to
-be paralysed. But even if for the time we see what is right, and are
-successful in doing it, he will enshroud us in such horrible darkness, he
-will fill our ears with such dismal sounds, he will so toss and bewilder
-and overwhelm us, that presently weariness, perplexity, and despair will
-cause us to give up, to consent to our own destruction. The disciples in
-that storm-tossed ship seem to have been bringing themselves well nigh
-into this ruin, first to have relied on themselves, and then to have
-despaired of themselves, all the while forgetting Who was with them, Who
-should have been their guide, Who was their sure protector, when, all at
-once, before it was too late, they remembered and aroused Him, and called
-Him to their aid. It was their bliss to find that “the saint’s extremity
-is GOD’S opportunity;” that it is never too late, before destruction, to
-call upon Him and be saved; but they were not allowed to enjoy this bliss
-unmixed with reproach for self-confidence and for want of confidence in
-Him. In all the storms and dangers which beset us on the sea of life,
-let us take example from the disciples to call upon Him who can save us,
-and let us also take warning from them, not to forget His company, or to
-suppose that He forgets us.
-
-Such seems to be a sketch of the interpretation of the meaning and
-instruction for us of this acted parable.
-
-And now, brethren, having learnt the general truth, let us pick out and
-dwell upon some of its particulars.
-
-And first, in setting out with CHRIST, expect storms and dangers. We are
-too apt to suppose that the war of life is to be waged only with men,
-that the storms of life are only encountered in temporal things. We can
-well understand that it was otherwise, that it must have been otherwise,
-with the first founders of the Church, with confessors in the face of
-unbelieving Jews and heathen Romans, with the Reformers, with
-missionaries now: but in our own case we calculate on a smooth and safe
-journey over the sea of time to the shore of eternity, ay, and after many
-days, experience, we say, confirms our calculation. No sore temptations
-try us; no conflict of good and evil principles tosses and tears us; no
-despair threatens to drown us. We have trouble enough in the world, in
-earning our daily bread, in claiming and maintaining our own, in becoming
-rich, or powerful, or famous, in ruling those who rebel against our just
-authority, who would gainsay our words, and frustrate our efforts. But
-in spiritual things this is not the case. We find it easy (I speak that
-which the manifest lives and apparent feelings of what are called
-respectable men justify my speaking) to follow the course which we would
-in religion—we worship in church, we read the Bible and pray at home
-without opposition. It costs us no trouble to keep the letter of GOD’S
-chief commandments. We know nothing of spiritual wrestling, spiritual
-fear, spiritual despondency. Why should we? Our ways are mainly
-upright; our consciences not afraid, our duty plain and simple; and in
-CHRIST, therefore, our hope sure. I know that men think this (at least
-they do not think otherwise), and in their lives they act it, even if
-they dare not shape it into words. But, brethren, if it is so with you,
-look to it, for the calm is more deadly than the storm. The Devil is the
-inveterate enemy and the untiring assailant of CHRIST and Christians.
-His whole being and energy are concentrated in the aim and effort to bury
-the ark of CHRIST in the sea of eternal destruction. If, then, you pass
-over that sea, and are enshrouded by no darkness, beaten by no winds,
-tossed by no billows, be sure that it is because CHRIST is not in your
-company. That Church has had its candlestick removed, which dwells in
-security, peaceful and prosperous; and that individual has not CHRIST for
-the tenant of his heart who experiences not what the storm-tossed vessel
-typified. Satan is intent upon destroying every one that is CHRIST’S.
-If he attempts not your destruction, it is because he does not consider
-you CHRIST’S—and, remember, though he is not all-wise, he is as an angel,
-and an archangel in perception—because your vessel bears not CHRIST;
-because you are on no journey with CHRIST to cast out evil spirits and
-drive them over steep places into the sea. O, my brethren, it is an
-awful sign, a death-boding distinction, when Satan lets us alone in this
-sea of life, and deems it unnecessary to keep us by violent efforts from
-reaching heaven. It is the expression of his informed and deliberate
-judgment that we are not going thither! O ye who dwell at ease and glide
-smoothly along the journey of life, put back, take CHRIST on board, and
-joy when you find in yourselves the signs of His presence, the assaults
-of Satan, the warring within you of good and evil, the stirrings of
-conscience, the flutterings of spiritual fear. I do not mean become
-morbid, and delight in what is mournful and terrible; but suspect and
-refuse the peace which Satan offers without contest, and determine to
-have only that which in CHRIST’S strength you win and maintain.
-
-Next, consider the meaning of CHRIST’S lying asleep in the storm, and
-interfering not to control it, till so earnestly called up.
-
-In providence and in grace GOD delights, so to speak, to hide Himself,
-though He exhibits the results of His works. He is the Author of every
-gift, and the Ruler and Promoter of its use; but He puts it into our
-hands as His agents, and bids us with it accomplish His will. As the
-heart is the fountain of the blood which flows through our members, as it
-is bone and muscle that give strength to the arm, so is GOD the Source of
-grace to the soul, and the prevailing Power of our efforts. Still, it is
-not Himself prominently and foremost that does the work in the world, but
-we from and by Him. The explanation of this economy seems to be, first,
-that He would have us walk by faith—remembering Him, relying on Him,
-working for Him—rather than by right, constrained, whether we will or
-not, without feeling or desire, or dependence, to see, and admit, and
-feel His power. And, secondly, that He would give us an individuality, a
-certain dependent independence, which shall make us feel personal
-responsibility, and allow us to deserve (in a sense) the recompense of
-personal effort. Thus, He leaves the fool to say, There is no GOD, and
-rewards the faithful by revealing Himself to belief. Thus, while there
-is a GOD, while He is not far from us, while in Him we live and move and
-have our being, we are required and stimulated to seek Him, to feel after
-Him, and find Him. Besides, or more properly _therefore_, we have to
-call upon Him before He answers. Even when He had determined, and
-declared His determination, to bless the Israelites, He made the
-condition, “Nevertheless, for these things I will be inquired of.” He
-would have us live by spiritual dependence. He would have us communicate
-to Him our wants. He would have us draw down by prayer the supply. And
-this He effects by making it a law, that He will know nothing of us, at
-least know nothing so as to heed for our good, but what we tell Him, and
-will give us nothing but what we ask. I have so lately enlarged upon
-this subject that I will add nothing upon it now, but to bid you remember
-the necessity and the power of prayer.
-
-Lastly, consider what is taught by that remonstrance, spoken in the
-interval between awaking and acting, “Why are ye fearful, O ye of little
-faith?” I have already said that CHRIST did not disapprove the prayer,
-but only the fear which had preceded it, the poverty of the faith which
-accompanied it. Neither did He demand of the disciples the impossibility
-of being undisturbed in the midst of such perturbation. It is
-natural—natural even to the Christian full of grace, to be affected by
-the circumstances which attend him. CHRIST was so affected Himself, as
-His prayers, and shrinkings, and watchings, and open teaching assure us.
-He, who wept at human misery, though He was just going to put it to
-flight; He, who shrank from the trial which He had deliberately and of
-choice encountered, has sanctioned and recommended (shall I say
-enforced?) by His example the same feelings in His disciples. He does
-not forbid us to be human, but only requires us to leaven humanity with
-godliness. Trials we are to have, and trials we ought to feel. To be
-stolid and callous is to be unchristian, for none ever felt trials as
-CHRIST did. But in our trials, while we feel, and weep, and shrink, we
-are not to be faint-hearted. We are to know in Whom we have believed.
-We are, therefore, to bear them, and submit to them; but we are not to be
-overpowered by them. We are not to allow them to exercise such an
-influence as to make us forget that there is One greater than the storm,
-Who rules it even in its wildest raging, Who will cause it to cease when
-it is fitting, Who will not allow it to overwhelm us if we are dependent
-on Him in its continuance, if we hope in Him to stay it. Terrible is the
-darkness of the sky, powerful is the violence of the wind, drenching are
-the waves, but the ship shall not sink, for CHRIST is in it. Whatever,
-then, the terrors and the trouble of the present, we have hope, we have
-confidence in the future. “Why art thou so cast down O my soul, and why
-art thou so disquieted within me? Hope in GOD for I shall yet praise
-Him, Who is the health of my countenance and my GOD.”
-
-Such is the teaching of CHRIST’S remonstrance. And the time of its
-utterance, the delay to assuage the storm, teaches this further lesson,
-that in this life CHRIST will give us comfort in trouble, but not
-necessarily deliverance out of trouble. By and by He will indeed deliver
-us. But the best blessing here is not immunity, but trust and support.
-There is a peace in war, a joy in sorrow, a strength in weakness, with
-which the world and the Devil cannot intermeddle. Seek we this, and be
-sure we are wanting in what CHRIST delights to afford, if we have it not.
-But having it, bear we patiently, thankfully, all outward commotion,
-faithfully expecting the time, when openly, as already inwardly, CHRIST
-shall arise and command “Peace be still,” and there shall be a great and
-abiding calm.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XII.
-UNITY WITH PEACE.
-
-
- EPHESIANS, IV., 1, 2, 3.
-
- _I_, _therefore_, _the prisoner of the_ LORD, _beseech you that ye
- walk worthy of the calling wherewith ye are called_, _With all
- lowliness and meekness_, _with longsuffering_, _forbearing one
- another in love_; _Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in
- the bond of peace_.
-
-IT was the prayer of our Blessed LORD—what an earnest prayer it was,
-delivered in what solemn and affecting circumstances—that all His
-disciples might be one, even as He and the Father were one. He had
-laboured to secure this oneness, by teaching them that there was the same
-truth for all to receive, and the same work for all to do. Individual
-fancies and theories were not to be indulged, where the whole teaching
-was of GOD; pride was not to exercise itself where everything was
-received, and nothing earned; ambition was checked, by being told that,
-by seeking, it should lose, that he who would be first should be last.
-All were equal in position, all equal in privileges. In serving one
-another, in preferring one another—by this alone could they please GOD;
-in this way only could they reach unto eminence. Devoted to a common
-LORD, directed by a common revelation, enabled by a common grace,
-exercised in a common work, cheered by a common hope, surrounded with
-common trials and difficulties—what could there be within, without, past,
-present, or future, which should prevent them from all thinking the same
-thoughts and doing the same works, sinking the individual in the company,
-clinging to one another, labouring together, knit together in a holy
-bond—“One LORD, one faith, one baptism, one GOD and Father of all, Who is
-above all, and through all, and in all.” To think for oneself, what was
-it but to reject GOD’S truth; to act independently, but to forsake their
-appointed work; not to serve and love the brethren, not to serve and love
-the LORD; to separate from the Christian company, to go away from CHRIST?
-
-Even if the Spirit had not been given to effect this unity, if the Gospel
-had not enforced it by the plainest denunciation of heresies and
-schisms—crimes classed by it with the worst and lowest, and most certain
-to exclude from heaven; even if CHRIST had never prayed for their union,
-nor taught them that they were to be united, still, if the disciples of
-religion were like the followers of any other cause, it might have been
-expected—it would have seemed morally impossible that it should be
-otherwise—that the remembrance and love of their Master, the cause which
-they had taken up, the knowledge of the way in which alone it could be
-furthered, their common relationship, and interests, and aims, and hopes,
-would have kept them in one body, would have bound them fast to each
-other in the bonds of peace. And, doubtless, it would have been so, but
-for the influence and machinations of the evil one. There could have
-been no other fruit from such seed, but that the enemy sowed tares in the
-same field. In CHRIST, self had been denied and destroyed. His Church
-was to be the embodiment and propagator of self-denial, self-submission,
-self-devotion. Such a Church threatened antichrist with certain
-destruction: for antichrist is the spirit of self—and selfishness
-destroyed, where would be sin? Therefore, the Devil sought to break up
-or mar and impair the Church; and, to accomplish his object, infused into
-as many of its members as he could, the very spirit of self, which it was
-commissioned to destroy. Alas! he was too successful in his fell work.
-Soon self began to ask, “Why should I not choose what to believe—what to
-do? Why should I not make to myself a name, and claim for myself
-authority, and power, and reverence? Why should I not have private
-views, and seek private ends? Why should I suffer, and forbear, and seek
-another’s good, rather than my own?” The selfish question was father to
-the selfish determination; and so, even in the Apostles’ time, the faith
-was mutilated here and denied there—there were heresies, and schisms, and
-strifes, and boastings of spiritual gifts, and withholding of temporal
-substance from GOD, and indulgence of lusts, and hatings, and revengings,
-and backbitings, and fightings, and denying of one another, among those
-who were all called with one calling, enlightened and sanctified by one
-Spirit, appointed to “keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.”
-And so it has continued to the present time. There is no such reasoning,
-and questioning, and quibbling, and deciding for oneself what to believe,
-about any other subject, as about the truth, which GOD has plainly taught
-and has clearly defined. There are no other divisions so numerous, so
-lamentable, so strife-begotten, and strife-engendering, as in the one
-body of CHRIST. Pride, and ambition, and self-seeking, in all its worst
-forms; evil suspicions, revilings, hatred, persecutions, have abounded,
-and do abound, and boldly manifest themselves in that very community
-whence self was to be expelled! Many antichrists are in the world, but
-as many in the Church. The very heathen repel our attempts to convert
-them, by bidding us first agree what to believe ourselves. The worst of
-men say they have a right to despise us for our bitter jealousies and
-disliking of one another; and the taunt is common, and has been in some
-measure provoked, that religion is only a mask, a cloak to hide men’s
-basest passions and worst deeds.
-
-It may be urged—it ought to be urged—that this is not altogether the
-fault of Christians. It was the will of GOD that the goats should be
-allowed to mingle with the sheep, that the tares should not be rooted out
-from among the wheat, that the net should contain small as well as great,
-worthless as well as good fishes. Hence they are “not all Israel, who
-are of Israel.” And so the bad feelings and deeds, the things which are
-an offence and a reproach in Christendom, are to be charged not
-altogether to CHRIST’S true followers, but to those who only in name are
-Christians—to the world, in fact, intruding into, and mixing itself up
-with, the Church.
-
-Yes; this is so. The world has sought and found scope in the Church for
-the wild exercise of its reason, for profane speculations, and whimsical
-fancies; for self-indulgence, too, in all its forms; for lusts, and
-strifes, and false accusations, and enmities, and wickedness, of every
-hue and measure. The worst heretics and schismatics, the fiercest
-persecutors, the bitterest accusers of the brethren, are evidently not
-true followers, even in intention, of CHRIST; they are not rebels and
-traitors, “they are not of us,” they belong to the enemy, and have stolen
-into our camp; and are now mixing themselves with us, and confounding,
-and harassing, and misguiding us, as part of the subtle warfare which is
-being waged by Satan against us. But still, alas! we are not clear. Too
-many who deserve to be called something better than nominal Christians,
-too many—ay, even of the best of us—make no endeavour—that is worthy of
-the name—to keep the unity of the Spirit; or, if they strive for unity,
-forget the bond of peace.
-
-It is very common to find a man who has been at much pains to find out
-for himself the doctrines and requirements of Christianity, who heartily
-accepts every article of the creed, who is scrupulously exact in keeping
-all the ordinances, who would think himself guilty of no ordinary sin, if
-he frequented the place of worship of another sect, or contributed of his
-substance to their cause, who is yet all the while utterly indifferent to
-the fact that almost every article of his creed, and every ordinance of
-his Church, is ignored, and even denounced by some one or other of the
-many bodies of men calling themselves Christian communities. He thinks
-it no business of his to defend the faith, or to vindicate the
-ordinances. Let every man look to himself, is his maxim, and leave
-others alone; or, perhaps, if he is momentarily interested in the matter,
-if a wish springs up that it were otherwise, he soothes himself, and
-spares himself further anxiety and labour, by suggesting that Christian
-charity would not interfere with another’s liberty. “These others,” he
-reasons, “have a religion, and follow it. It is not altogether the same
-as mine, but it is in many respects like it, perhaps in all essentials.
-At any rate, it is better than none; it would be presumptuous to suppose
-that they may not be saved by it. Therefore, if I must help in
-proselytizing any, it shall not be these mainly right, but the godless,
-the followers of no religion!”
-
-Now, brethren, such a man is utterly in fault: he is incurring the
-Apostle’s reproach of being carnal, in allowing divisions; he is
-offending against the very Christian charity which he thinks he is
-exercising; he is unconcerned about the due honour of GOD; he is
-disobeying the injunction to endeavour “to keep the unity of the Spirit.”
-The question is not, whether a man can be saved in heresy or schism, but
-whether any Christian, who honours GOD and loves the brethren, ought to
-wink at heresy or schism? And the answer is plain—he ought not! Is GOD
-honoured, is He pleased, when the creature, to whom He reveals Himself,
-says, in effect, Thus much of the Divine account I will accept; the rest
-I do not like, cannot reconcile with my private pre-conceived notions,
-cannot see to be reasonable, therefore, I reject it? Is GOD obeyed, when
-His servant, instead of fulfilling His whole will, sets aside
-capriciously, or for some selfish reason, certain positive precepts of
-that will? Is any Christian in a certainly accepted and safe state, or
-in the way to it, who does not use, who ignores the need of, prescribed
-means of cleansing and sanctifying? And if he is not, how far is it
-charitable, to let him remain as he is, without concern? My brethren, we
-all recognise it as the duty of every Christian to promote the knowledge
-and acceptance of the truth. Can we be said to discharge this duty, if
-we care not about the mutilation or distortion of the truth? We all
-acknowledge that we ought to love one another, to have fervent charity
-among ourselves. Is it charitable—is it not culpably selfish—to have, as
-we believe, the best, if not the only, right faith—and not to be
-concerned that others have it not? Is it not, too, strangely perverse to
-admit, that those in separation are brethren, fellow-pilgrims,
-fellow-heirs, to hope to meet them in heaven, and to think, and feel, and
-live in perfect harmony with them for ever; and yet here not to be
-concerned that we never can give them the right hand of fellowship—cannot
-journey with them, and help, and make for the inheritance together—can
-never even meet them in prayer and communion—must let them be as utter
-strangers? In earthly matters none of this would be tolerated, could
-possibly be. Why, then, can it be—why is it in religion? Because we are
-not jealous enough for the honour of GOD, because we do not truly love
-the brethren, because we do not endeavour to keep the unity of the
-Spirit!
-
-But it is possible to err—there are many who do err—on the other side;
-who, in their zeal for the faith, insist that all shall think and do
-precisely as they do, or shall forego the name of brethren: who have been
-at no pains to search out the ground of their own faith, and see how much
-of it is derived from GOD, and how much from man; who make no distinction
-between important and unimportant misconceptions; who class together the
-wilful teacher of error and the misguided learner, the originators of
-schism and the inheritors of it; who blame for their faults those whom
-they should rather pity for their misfortune; who would make the path of
-orthodoxy as narrow as possible, and excommunicate all whom they could
-detect treading on its borders; who not only see nothing right beyond
-their own Church, but are impatient of much that is within it; who split
-the Church up into parties, and bring about the worst of
-schisms—divisions, misgivings, and oppositions, among members of the same
-household, continuing in the same house; who would have undue prominence
-given to certain doctrines; who fight for or against certain ceremonies
-and vestments, and certain kinds of music; who are ever looking for
-something to protest against, to blame, or to pity, in their
-fellow-worshippers or their ministers. These men think that they do GOD
-service (for I speak not now of the wilful); they are intent upon serving
-Him; but it is like Saul before his conversion, with an ignorant and
-persecuting zeal. They want to establish and keep, what they think, the
-unity of the Spirit, but they care not for the bond of peace. If a
-member of their own communion does not think as they do, they quarrel
-with him, they bid him go, they would thrust him out: while, as for
-members of other Christian bodies, they think worse of them, they speak
-worse of them, they shun them more than they would an infidel or a
-reprobate! Let not this be thought exaggeration; not always, nor very
-often, let us hope, do they come to this growth; but of this kind, alas!
-too nearly of this measure there are not a few among both High Churchmen
-and Low Churchmen; and in this direction works all zeal that is not fully
-enlightened by GOD, that is not warmed with love for CHRIST, and love for
-those whom CHRIST died to save and win. Zeal is good, earnest contention
-for the faith is imperatively required of every Christian, but so is
-right knowledge and love. Right knowledge, I venture to say, while
-condemning actual heresy and schism, would often be content with creeds
-in general terms, and would make much easier, than many strict
-religionists conceive, the terms of communion, so as to include as many
-as were really desirous of being included; and love, Christian love,
-would sigh and sorrow over differences, and yearn after separatists; and
-would labour, and persuade, and spend, and be spent, and wrestle in
-prayer, to cement, to convert, to bring in. O it is _self_ that is so
-stern and strict in defining what is correct theology; it is antichrist
-in his worst mood, that would thrust out or cut off a brother sinner!
-
-My brethren, understand clearly that you are most solemnly bound to
-accept yourselves, and to urge upon others, the whole teaching of GOD,
-nothing less and nothing more; to render yourselves, to persuade others
-to render, precise and perfect obedience. You may not be indifferent
-about others, but you must not be overbearing. You are keepers and
-helpers of the brethren, but you are not judges and avengers. It is your
-duty to honour GOD, and to maintain His honour; it is your mission to
-persuade others to honour Him also. GOD is honoured in unity, in
-agreement, in faith, in union, in practice, and service, and worship.
-You have then to promote this unity; but, as a pre-qualification, you
-must have so entered into the mind of the Spirit, as to know—specially
-for GOD’S missionary work—what liberty is allowed, and to feel, after
-your poor measure, what CHRIST feels of love for each individual soul.
-In the prosecution of your work, the text directs you—You are called with
-one calling, the Gentile is included with the Jew; the aim is union, not
-separation, that all may be saved. By all means, save whom you can. Be
-lowly, let not self intrude, where CHRIST should be put forward; be meek,
-let not self recoil where CHRIST would suffer; be patient, enduring,
-long-suffering, slow to take offence, determined not to give offence,
-bent upon returning good for evil, forbearing one another in love, making
-every allowance for wrong training, for natural prejudices, for
-individual infirmities—ay, and even perversities. Be very zealous for
-the unity of the Spirit; but be sure that you are breaking, not
-promoting, that unity, wherever you sever or endanger the bond of peace.
-Follow this advice—and I do not say you will root out heresy, and heal
-divisions, but you will do much towards it. Argument, and censure, and
-ridicule, and remonstrance, and denunciation, and persecution, have been
-trying, ever since the Christian era, to establish the unity of the
-Spirit, and have rather destroyed it. Try you, whether he was not
-enlightened and sanctified by the Spirit, who said, and acted upon it,
-“that one ounce of love could do more than many pounds of controversy.”
-Men may be repelled from you, by your orthodoxy, your zeal, your
-reasoning, your stout remonstrance. They will be subdued by your
-forbearance, and will come after you for your love!
-
-To the best of you, I say, there is some indifference which you ought to
-shake off. To the best of you, I say, get farther from bigotry and the
-spirit of self.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XIII.
-THE LAW IN THE GOSPEL.
-
-
- ST. LUKE, X., 25.
-
- _What shall I do to inherit eternal life_?
-
-WE have here the question of a Jewish lawyer, who is said, in propounding
-it, to have tempted our LORD. This does not necessarily, or even
-probably, mean, that his object was simply to ensnare and entangle JESUS
-in his speech: but rather that he was putting Him to the test, that he
-might judge of the qualifications and orthodoxy of the New Teacher. But,
-besides this, he seems, from the commendation presently passed on him, to
-have had a better motive; to have been like the scribe who was not far
-from the kingdom of heaven, to have felt personal anxiety about
-salvation, and to have sought from our LORD, in an honest, though
-somewhat professional and self-sufficient manner, the resolution of a
-real doubt. “What shall I do to inherit eternal life?” He had listened
-to the words in which JESUS reminded His hearers, that they had greater
-privileges than those who lived before them (“Blessed are the eyes which
-see the things that ye see. For I tell you that many prophets and kings
-have desired to see those things which ye see, and have not seen them,
-and to hear those things which ye hear and have not heard them”), and
-rightly concluding that they were an announcement of the arrival of
-Gospel times, and the setting forth of their speaker as the Great Gospel
-Teacher, he asked, what was there _new_ for him to hear and learn, and
-what consequently remained for him to do, that he might inherit eternal
-life. The reply of our LORD is remarkable. “What is written in the law?
-how readest thou?” There is nothing new, nothing taken away, nothing
-added or altered. I come, to fulfil the ceremonial law, to enforce the
-moral law, what does that bind upon thee? And he answering said, with
-much wisdom—much spiritual discernment, “Thou shalt love the LORD thy GOD
-with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and
-with all thy mind: and thy neighbour as thyself. And JESUS said unto
-him, Thou hast answered right: this do, and thou shalt live:” _i.e._,
-shalt have eternal life. Observe, throughout this lawyer’s speech, how
-correct is his theology. “What shall I do to _inherit_ eternal life?”
-not to gain, to purchase, to earn it, but to inherit it. “I do not claim
-it as a profitable servant, I am not so foolish as to suppose that I can
-procure it by any surrender, or exchange, or labour. It comes (to those
-to whom it comes at all) as an inheritance, to the children of the
-covenant, the heirs of faithful Abraham. And this heirship is not a
-natural, but a spiritual one. I am a Jew outwardly, but I do not
-therefore claim to be certainly a Jew inwardly. They are not all Israel
-who are of Israel. Abraham’s child according to the flesh, I would also
-be, what I am not necessarily, what indeed I am not at all of mere
-natural birthright, Abraham’s child according to the promise.” And next
-observe, how he seeks to secure the inheritance. “What shall I _do_?”
-Eternal life is not the reward of service, it is not the fruit of labour,
-it is the privilege of a spiritual relationship; but still it cannot be
-enjoyed by those who are indifferent about it, or by those who only
-desire it. It must be laid hold on by real active efforts; it must be
-maintained by a particular course of conduct; salvation must be worked
-out. “What must I do” to secure it? Truly he is an enlightened scribe!
-He knows that eternal life is the free gift of a GOD, Who is no respecter
-of persons; Who recognises no birthright, no personal merits; Who will
-have mercy on Whom He will have mercy: but that yet grace does not fall,
-as the rain from heaven, alike upon the barren and the fertile, the
-thankless and the thankful, the careless and the anxious, the indolent
-and the active; but is ever guided by a discerning and distinguishing
-hand, is ever bestowed upon righteousness. And so he asks, What is the
-righteousness that inherits grace: knowing well what was the prescribed
-righteousness of the law, how men were to be saved in times past; but
-expecting that under the Gospel, an additional, perhaps a different
-course was to be followed.
-
-We have already seen that CHRIST referred him back to the law, as
-revealing and enacting all that was necessary. “What is written in the
-law? How readest thou?” It is in his answer to this question that we
-see chiefly the perfection of his religious theory and his great
-intellectual superiority to the scribes generally. For, observe, he does
-not reply “We must be circumcised; we must be sprinkled with the blood of
-goats and heifers; we must keep the Passover; we must wait on the
-temple-services; we must give tithes of all that we possess.” Nor,
-again, does he say, “We must observe all moral precepts; we must refrain
-from all idolatry; we must do justice and love mercy; obeying implicitly
-the commandments of the two tables.” No! in theory he is wiser than
-that: he has no reliance on external rights and ceremonies: he is sure
-that GOD demands something better than a servile conformity with certain
-precepts and restrictions. GOD, he knows, looks to the heart, requires
-the spirit rather than, _i.e._, beyond the letter. The law has taught
-him this: Moses gave him from heaven ceremonies to perform, and moral
-commandments to keep; but Moses told him, that mere outward conformity
-with these things was not righteousness; that the law was spiritual; that
-the acts done and refrained from under it were only exhibitions of a
-principle which must reign within: “Thou shalt love the LORD thy GOD with
-all thy heart and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with
-all thy mind, and thy neighbour as thyself.” Even so, “Thou hast
-answered right,” said CHRIST. “Thou hast learnt under the law, all that
-the Gospel would teach. To exhibit this is the bent of My life on earth,
-to enforce it will be the mission of My Church. Love is the fulfilling
-of the law. This do, and thou shalt live.”
-
-It appears to me, brethren, that in this conversation, carefully
-considered, we may find a clue to the satisfactory interpretation of
-those perplexing sayings about the differences between the law and the
-Gospel: “The letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life.” “Ye are not
-under the law,” “the ministration of condemnation;” “The covenant that
-was confirmed before of GOD in CHRIST, the law which was 430 years after
-cannot disannul.” “The Law and the Prophets were until John.” “I am not
-come to destroy the law.” “This do and thou shalt live.”
-
-It is a common notion that there is an essential difference, amounting
-even to a contradiction between the law and the Gospel. GOD is
-supposed—as if He were an imperfect Being changing His ways
-capriciously—to have suspended the Covenant of Grace which He had made
-with Abraham, from the time of Moses to that of CHRIST, and to have given
-the Jews in its stead a Covenant of Works, which He well knew they could
-not keep, and under which, therefore, they were sure to be destroyed: or,
-if He accepted any of them under the law, then, it is said, that inasmuch
-as their obedience was of course imperfect, He must have been content
-with less than He had required, and have disregarded His own decree, “The
-soul that sinneth it shall die.” Nay, more than this: that He dispensed
-for a time with the merits of CHRIST’S atonement and the finding of
-salvation through Him, and dealt with man on his own merits, and rewarded
-him for an imperfect obedience. But now, it is urged, all this is once
-more changed. The law, having served its purpose of showing men that
-they could not obey GOD in the letter, having concluded them all under
-sin by disallowing the things they were prone to, and requiring what they
-could not do, having disappointed and balked them in their efforts to
-obtain salvation by it, and so caused them to abandon its observance in
-despair, and to inquire for another way of salvation—thus being a
-schoolmaster to lead them to CHRIST—has now been wholly repealed; so that
-we have nothing more to do with it, being brought out of bondage into
-liberty, and what we find forbidden or required by it, is not forbidden
-or required by us _because it is in the law_, but may be done or left
-undone, notwithstanding what the law says, unless some eternally moral
-principle, independent of Jewish sanctions and restrictions, would be
-thereby violated! I have put this in plainer and stronger words than any
-of yourselves probably would use, or are accustomed to hear: but I have
-not exaggerated the matter. In proof, let me ask, Are there not many who
-think the rehearsal of the Decalogue out of place in the Communion
-service? who object to moral preaching as savouring of the obsolete law?
-who talk about the “filthy rags” of their own righteousness, as if they
-were something wrong in keeping in the law? who believe that CHRIST is
-glorified most when they do least? who boast of a liberty to use or use
-not ordinances and means of grace? who reproach others with being, for
-instance, Sabbatarians? who speak of the GOD of the New Testament almost
-as if the GOD of the Old Testament were another Being, of different
-attributes, enacting different laws? And even among those who have not
-distinctly set the law and the Gospel in opposition, is there not a vague
-notion that somehow the Old Testament does not concern us Christians, and
-that our way of salvation is different from that of the Jews, and much
-easier to follow? O how do such persons reconcile with their notions
-CHRIST’S teaching of the lawyer, whom He not only told to look for the
-way of salvation in the law, but commended for finding it there, and
-enjoined to keep it as the condition of salvation: “This do, and thou
-shalt live.”
-
-The fact is, the way of salvation has always been the same, since man
-became a sinner. Eternal life has always been a free gift in CHRIST.
-Not for their merits or deservings does GOD love men; not by their own
-inventions or labours do they procure acceptance. The precious blood of
-CHRIST shed (in effect) before the foundation of the world, has ever been
-the fountain for sin; the intercession of CHRIST has ever been the means
-of reconciliation; the grace of CHRIST’S sanctified human nature applied
-by the Holy Spirit has ever been the leaven of regeneration, of
-conversion, of perfection in holiness and fitness for the inheritance of
-the saints in light. But GOD has never been indifferent to the way in
-which men receive His free gifts. He at first created man for His own
-glory, and He has redeemed, and would sanctify him for His glory. He
-made man to love Him, to depend on Him, to render Him the grateful homage
-of a free-will service, to reflect His own glorious attributes of
-holiness and love. The sin of Adam and Eve was not that they ate of a
-particular fruit reserved from them, but that they frustrated the end for
-which they were created; that they found not their delight in the way of
-GOD’S will; that they chose for themselves out of Him; that they doubted
-His truth, gave themselves over to the influence and dominion of another
-lord. They would have sinned as greatly, as hatefully, had they
-scrupulously refrained from the deed of sin, but in their hearts longed
-after it, and in their hearts murmured against the restriction, and
-disputed the importance or the justice of it. And so the holiness of
-pardoned man does not consist in the mere mechanical, servile, or selfish
-rendering of outward obedience, in the number of enjoined things which he
-does, and the number of forbidden things which he avoids; but in the
-inward love and gratitude which he feels towards GOD, in his filial
-reverence of his Heavenly Father, in his delight to carry out GOD’S known
-will, and his anxiety to learn more, that he may do more of it, in his
-heart’s beating, so to speak, in unison with GOD’S heart, and his life’s
-reflecting GOD’S light and love.
-
-To bring men to this state, that He may delight in them, that they may
-glorify Him in all things, is the purpose and aim of GOD’S great scheme
-of salvation; and, to forward that scheme, is, and has been, the object
-of all His dealings with men of all times (when they have not been
-judgments of wrath, because mercy was refused), whether they have been
-encouragements or remonstrances, pleadings or rebukes, blessings or
-chastisements, the promulgations of moral laws, the laying on or taking
-off of positive or ceremonial commandments. None of these things could
-in themselves have made men what GOD willed them to be, loving children
-of a loving Father; yet they had, or were designed to have, their effect
-in bringing them back little by little to a right mind, and a right life.
-But being used by a wise and discerning GOD, though their object was
-always uniform, the use of them has varied, one being employed in this
-case, another in that, according to the state of those on whom they were
-to operate. Thus Adam, fresh from the hand of GOD, full of knowledge and
-intelligence, and holiness and love, was left, it would appear—but with
-one commandment, the test of his integrity—to worship and glorify GOD as
-his own heart and mind dictated; while the Jews, coming out of Egypt,
-sunk in ignorance, given to idolatry, perverse in will and affections,
-were dealt with as babes, albut without mind and without heart. To them
-it was necessary to declare, that there was but one GOD, to command them
-to worship Him, to prescribe every particular of the worship, to bid them
-not blaspheme Him, to hedge them in by numerous restrictions, to write
-down every item of their duty, to encourage their obedience by immediate
-rewards, to check their transgressions by instant punishments! They were
-treated, in fact, just as wise and fond parents treat little children:
-their minds taught by pictures—brazen serpents, pillars of light and
-fire, gorgeous tabernacles, sacrifices of bulls, and goats, and lambs,
-burnings of incense, and the like—and their hearts and lives trained by a
-course of discipline suited to their comprehension, and a system of
-rewards and punishments which they could appreciate. These things were
-means to an end. They impressed upon the Jews, that reverence and
-obedience were due to GOD. They taught them to look to Him for reward
-and punishment, to love and fear Him. But like the arbitrary discipline
-we use with children, and the toys which we give or take away from them
-according to their conduct, they were to be set aside (as far as they
-were childish) so soon as more intelligent and better influences could be
-employed, and the children be taught to use their minds and hearts, in
-exercising reverence, and love, and fear, not in little observances and
-restrictions, not in mere literal compliance with some particular
-expressed laws, but according to the principle of love which would devote
-itself entirely, and which uses all its powers to find out what is
-devotion, and to practice it.
-
-Thus, I say, the Jews were dealt with from Moses to CHRIST, and then men
-were bidden to put away childish things—the Spirit being given to raise
-them above childishness—and henceforth to render enlarged, enlightened,
-loving service to GOD. They were not released from reverence and
-submission: very few commandments hitherto observed were repealed, save
-those that were typical and ceremonial, and which, of course, gave way to
-the antitype and to the new ritual of Christianity; but henceforth, they
-were told, GOD would not be pleased with mere literal obedience: Do what
-you did before, but do it in the spirit, and carry it farther, and search
-about to see whether your own hearts and minds cannot regulate your lives
-in things not prescribed.
-
-Indeed, all this had been told them before, as the quotation of the
-lawyer from Deuteronomy alone would suffice to show; but it was not so
-strictly required of them as it is of us, because allowance was made for
-their childish want of spiritual comprehension, and because the
-perfection of obedience was postponed till the full strength was given to
-render it, as well as the enlightened mind to understand it.
-
-In Gospel times the law is spiritualised, the observance of the
-commandments is extended beyond the outward life, to the very thoughts
-and desires. To covet is to steal, to lust is to commit adultery, to
-hate is to murder! Hence, while in one sense, our obedience is easier,
-because we render it under the influence of enlightened minds and kindled
-feelings, of love and gratitude—whereas, the Jew was perpetually crossing
-and driving himself to keep a law which had no other recommendation to
-him than that its observance preserved him from immediate chastisement—in
-other respects, our obedience is not only more imperatively necessary,
-because our privileges and responsibilities are greater, but it must be
-more precise, because any wilful deviation from it—in us who are of a
-mature and enlightened age—will surely indicate an unloving heart; and he
-that has no love has no spiritual life!
-
-This, after all, is the distinction between the good works of the Jew and
-those of the Christian; not that the former sought salvation on account
-of them, while the latter makes them but the tribute of praise and love
-for salvation—for the Jew believed that he was saved by ordinances, not
-by works—but that the Jew’s was the enforced obedience of slavish fear,
-while the Christian’s is the spontaneous expression of filial love. If
-the Christian were perfect in moral perception, he would be a law to
-himself, and would need but little of a written law; but not being thus
-perfect, he finds his greatest help to glorify GOD, in the studying and
-following of the Mosaic laws, which are samples and specimens furnished
-by GOD, of acceptable works, and which, moreover, are a standard whereby
-he may measure, not so much how near, as how far he is, from doing the
-whole will of GOD.
-
-This purpose, then, the law serves to Christians: it points out the ways
-in which love should exercise itself; and so, by confronting the
-negligent or transgressing, proves to them the absence or the
-imperfection of their love. The Christian is not free from the
-observance of one jot or one tittle of it, though he is no longer under
-the law, but under grace; but even if he has kept it all, he is not
-necessarily accepted: he has not rendered service pleasing to GOD, if his
-will is not better than his power, his heart larger than his deeds! This
-the lawyer knew theoretically; and yet, against his knowledge, he sinned.
-When asked what the law required him to do, he answered rightly, that the
-law required, above and beyond particular deeds, an impelling principle
-of love for GOD, and, for His sake, for man also. But then, when his
-answer was commended, we are told that he, willing to justify himself
-(which means, either to excuse himself for past imperfection, or to
-attain presently unto the condition of the just, without becoming all
-that was required of him) demanded, “And who is my neighbour?” showing
-thereby, how much his heart was behind his mind; betraying the fact, that
-while he professed entire devotion to GOD, he was really trying to find
-out with how stinted and formal an obedience, he could win and keep his
-favour.
-
-In review of this history, let me suggest to you, in very few words, some
-important truths.
-
-“What shall I do to inherit eternal life?” is a momentous question for
-each of you to ask of GOD, through His revealed word. For the
-inheritance never shall be yours, unless you observe the conditions upon
-which it was promised; and one of those conditions (a most important
-one), is, that you should pursue constantly a course of righteousness,
-both to glorify GOD by prescribed service, and to acquire by spiritual
-exercise the necessary character for heaven, without which none can enter
-it.
-
-To do righteousness—not simply to feel, or think, or speak righteously—is
-what is plainly enjoined upon you. Still, you must remember that you are
-not to propose to yourselves, as the approved course, the observance only
-of particular laws, the confining of religion to special times, and
-places, and objects, and deeds; the mere walking in a clearly marked out
-path, as though hands, and feet, and ears, and lips, without heart or
-mind, could work out salvation; as though, too, it were not practicable
-or desirable, that you should offer unto GOD any free-will service,
-something besides what He has asked you to do! Above all, having come to
-understand, that while the fruit of religion is in the life, the germ of
-it is in the heart; that without faith, and hope, and love, it is
-impossible to please GOD; that the law to you is spiritualised; that you
-are brought out of the bondage of servants into the glorious liberty of
-sons; that not the mere letter of the law, but the spirit of it is to be
-your guide; that outward deeds are not of themselves acceptable to GOD,
-but only as signs of enlightened hearty feeling—things done in faith and
-love; that worship in the temple is nothing, unless you worship out of
-the temple likewise; that bowing the knee, and praising with the lips,
-are an abomination, unless the spirit, too, is bowed and the soul
-upraised; that bodily sacrifice alone is no sacrifice, that it needs the
-broken and contrite heart, and the devoted spirit—while understanding, I
-say, all this, and rejoicing in the reasonable, heart-sprung, spiritual
-service of the Christian, beware lest you separate what GOD has joined,
-or substitute free-will for commanded service, using your liberty
-otherwise than as servants of GOD; carrying out, as you suppose, the
-spirit of the law wholly in your own way, instead of keeping, while you
-spiritualise the letter of the law. “The time is come when, neither in
-Jerusalem nor in this mountain, shall ye worship the Father,” does not
-mean that appointed places of worship shall not be resorted to, but that,
-besides, GOD shall be worshipped everywhere. A yearly celebration of the
-Passover is no longer necessary; but a continual feast is substituted for
-it. GOD seeks now to be worshipped in spirit and truth—that is, not
-without the body, but in addition to the body, with the spirit. The
-letter by itself killeth, because it is formal, and leaves the noblest
-powers and feelings of man unengaged for GOD; but the letter, as the
-carrying out of the Spirit, is still so imperative, so vital, that he who
-does not observe it foregoes the promise, “This do, and thou shalt live!”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XIV.
-PRESENT SALVATION.
-
-
- II. CORINTHIANS, VI., 2.
-
- _Behold_, _now is the day of salvation_.
-
-ST. PAUL, having just quoted a prophecy of Isaiah, which relates to an
-accepted time and a day of salvation, in the text declares the fulfilment
-of that prophecy: “Now is the accepted time; now is the day of
-salvation.” That which was then promised, is now performed; that which
-was formerly but anticipated, and only embraced by faith, while yet afar
-off, is now realised and brought near. But the prophecy itself was
-mentioned by the Apostle, to enforce an entreaty, “We then as workers
-together with Him, beseech you also that ye receive not the grace of GOD
-in vain. For He saith, I have heard thee in a time accepted, and in the
-day of salvation have I succoured thee.” It is evident, then, that St.
-Paul would impress upon the Corinthians that men are in danger of
-receiving the grace of GOD in vain, of not benefitting by all the
-merciful and bountiful provision made through CHRIST for their
-redemption, and justification, and sanctification, by not recognising
-that this is the day of salvation, and so, not looking and preparing for,
-and receiving a present salvation.
-
-Salvation is, as you know, the result—possible in all cases; certain,
-wherever the conditions are observed—of redemption by CHRIST. In its
-perfection, it is absolute freedom from the guilt, the taint, and the
-power of sin, and complete, effectual, and abiding holiness of heart and
-life. It belongs not to our proposed subject to consider at any length
-the destruction from which this is a salvation, nor the manner in which
-it was wrought out for lost sinners by CHRIST, nor the blessedness of its
-perfect possession and fruition, which can only be had in heaven. We
-have rather to do with what is present, than with the past and the
-future. We inquire not now, What has CHRIST done, or, What shall we
-reach by and by, but, What ought we to do now? What have we, or may we
-have now? In what respects, to what extent, is salvation a thing of the
-present?
-
-First, then, it is present in the offer to bestow it, and the
-exhortations and influences to lay hold on it. When CHRIST rose
-victorious from the tomb, having paid the ransom for all the prisoners of
-the law, and purchased the right and power of being their Saviour, He did
-not immediately make all the men of His time actual partakers of the
-privileges, nor did He provide that all who should thereafter be born,
-should from their birth inherit the blessing, as from Adam they had
-inherited the curse. No man might say, “CHRIST has died and risen again,
-therefore, I am certainly saved, without any reserve or delay on His
-part, without any effort, almost without any desire, on my part.”
-Salvation was then provided; rather, the fountain was then opened, and
-began to flow; but each man in his turn, at the call of GOD, and in the
-way of GOD’S appointment, was, so to speak, to help himself to salvation.
-In other words, what CHRIST did, was not to take all who were then living
-into an ark, and to cause all that sprung from them to be born and
-brought up in that ark; but simply to build an ark, and leave it open for
-all ages, and to offer helps to reach it, and to urge an entrance into it
-upon all men, by the entreaties and promises of His love, and the threats
-of His wrath.
-
-We want to be impressed with this. We are too apt to look upon salvation
-as an accomplished fact, belonging to the past; to speak of the
-blessedness of being born after the atonement has been made; to take for
-granted that we are actually saved, rather than that we have a present
-offer of salvation; and even to regard the ordinances of religion, as
-Baptism and Holy Communion, more as ceremonies of thankful faith,
-acknowledgments of obligation for past favours, than as means of laying
-hold on a now offered, and, as yet, unattained blessing.
-
-Think a moment, brethren: look into your ways and thoughts about
-religion, and you will, perhaps, find that it is so with you; that,
-whatever may be your theory, your practice does not assent to the truth,
-that “Now is the day of salvation”; that you have now to be saved, yet to
-be washed from sin, to have its power destroyed in you, to be qualified
-for salvation, to lay hold on it, to work it out with fear and trembling,
-as that which, though commenced, is not certain to be completed—which,
-even when got, may again be lost. It may occur to you, as an objection
-to this statement, that you use means of grace, and somewhat diligently;
-that you exercise yourselves in prayer, and by Christian discipline; that
-you depend continually upon the ever-present grace of GOD; that you count
-not yourselves to have attained; that you seek to go on unto perfection.
-All this may be true, and yet—I beseech you ask yourselves whether it is
-not so with you—the latent feeling may be, that salvation is a thing
-inherited, already, in a measure, attained; and that what religion
-requires of you, and what you render, is gratitude to the Giver, and a
-due appreciation of the gift, sought to be testified and developed by a
-becoming life, and an enlarging of the spiritual faculties, which by and
-by will have so much more to exercise themselves upon.
-
-But, secondly, is not this, it may be urged, a right view and feeling?
-Is not this what the ministers of religion should labour to impress upon
-the baptized: that they have received salvation—the grace of GOD, which
-bringeth salvation? Are we not taught by the Church, and by the Bible,
-that in baptism we were born again, that we then became children of
-GOD—and if children, then heirs, joint heirs with CHRIST; that we are,
-therefore, from that new birth as actually the inheritors of a blessing,
-as naturally we were inheritors of a curse; and that, thenceforth, it is
-proper for us to say, “I heartily thank my Heavenly Father that he hath
-called me to this state of salvation through JESUS CHRIST”? It is even
-so, brethren. “Now is the day of salvation,” may mean to us Christians,
-“now we _have_ salvation,” rather than “now it is only offered to us.”
-It may be intended to stir us up to a consideration of our high calling,
-to an appreciation of the great gift already bestowed, to a remembrance
-of what GOD has already done for us, to a sense of His abiding presence.
-There is no doubt—whether this text teaches it or no is another
-question—that the disciples of CHRIST have a present possession, as well
-as a present offer of salvation; and what I meant in the first part, was
-not to hide this truth, but to guard against the error, to correct
-whatever amount you might have of the feeling, that we have already a
-final gift, so complete that nothing can be added to it, so altogether of
-the past, that we can do nothing in the present, but acknowledge the
-goodness of GOD in bestowing it, and wait on Him patiently and holily
-till He is pleased to reveal to us the full excellencies of the gift, and
-to enable us to enjoy them in the eternal heaven. Above all, I meant to
-protest against, to awaken from the fearful delusion, that CHRIST has
-conferred absolutely on mankind, or upon any chosen number—the elect—the
-salvation which, by His precious merits, He procured; that it is ours
-independently of means of grace, without closing with present offers of
-it, and making present exertions, and showing present appreciation of it;
-that it can be ours at all, without earnest seeking and praying for it,
-and strivings, and workings, and self-denials, and crucifyings of evil,
-and growth in grace, and perseverance unto the end. “By grace are ye
-saved, and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of GOD.” Work out your
-own salvation, each individual of you; make that your own which was once
-procured for all that would have it; work out your own salvation with
-fear and trembling. Your salvation (I speak to the baptized) is _begun_,
-you have _present_ salvation—_i.e._, you are in the way which leads to
-salvation. You have guaranteed to you, on conditions, the helps
-necessary to attain perfect salvation. You may derive, and should be
-deriving, present benefits from your salvation, and you should experience
-present joy in it.
-
-You have, I say, present salvation. You have been made members of that
-One Body, which was sanctified, and which is able to sanctify all other
-bodies that are joined to it: you are branches of that glorious tree,
-whose sap, pervading every healthy branch, gives it present strength and
-develops its beautiful growth, and by and by will produce the fruit of
-everlasting life. You have the life of CHRIST kindled in your souls.
-Your bodies are the temple of the Holy Ghost. Now is the day of
-salvation, and _present_ salvation, too; not merely past salvation
-applied, not that you are washed in a lake whose waters _once_ flowed
-from a glorious Fountain; not that you partake of a store of
-sanctification, long ago laid up; but that now each individual of you is
-operated upon by a present influence, deriving directly from the source,
-the water of life, having sanctification produced in you by the
-now-working and influencing Spirit. Creatures of the present, there is a
-present salvation for you; and that does not mean merely that you have
-for yourselves to seek and lay hold of a ready salvation, but that a
-merciful and grace-giving GOD, a loving Saviour, an indwelling Spirit,
-are present with you, and personally operating upon you for your
-salvation.
-
-Dear brethren, try to understand and feel this. Do not suppose that
-GOD’S gifts are in any way separated from the Giver by time or by
-distance. Once for all, He resolved to give, but severally as each needs
-and rightly seeks, He gives; and when He gives, it is not by messengers,
-through long mediums, _but out of His own hand_. The bread which we
-break and the cup which we bless, are the communion of the Body and Blood
-of CHRIST. The bread is not the Body, nor the wine the Blood, nor is the
-reception of them the way of applying to us any stored up blessings; but
-when we keep the ordinance which CHRIST has appointed, then He fulfils
-His promise of blessing us, and, with the sign, Himself the reality
-enters into our souls.
-
- There present in the heart,
- Not in the hands, th’ eternal Priest
- Will His true self impart.
-
-And so of all other ordinances. They are nothing, and give nothing of
-themselves. Their whole value—but what an unspeakable value it
-is—consists in their being appointed ways of bringing us into direct
-communication with a present GOD, our Father, our Saviour, our
-Sanctifier!
-
-But there is another view to take of present salvation—namely, that from
-its very nature, it cannot be received at any one time in perfection, in
-such a state as to need no care to preserve it, no sustentation and
-renewal, no constant direction and blessing from the Author, and
-Regulator, and Finisher of it. It is spiritual life. Who does not know
-to what hazards life may be exposed, and how, from its very nature, it
-requires to be fed with proper food, and kept in health, and exercised,
-and developed? It is a spiritual sap. And what a mockery of life and
-support to the branch, would be one single, separated, unrenewed
-imparting from the vine, of the sap, which indeed ceases to be sap when
-the flow from the trunk is interrupted! The work of salvation is GOD’S
-work, begun by Him, continued by Him, and to be completed by
-Him—therefore, it must have His continued personal superintendence. He
-must work in us to will and to do of His good pleasure.
-
-Thus is salvation _present_ as distinguished from the _past_.
-
-But in another sense it is now the day of salvation. We have not to
-expect it as a thing wholly future, we must not delay to close with it as
-though there were a better time and way of doing that to be afforded
-hereafter. Salvation is present in its rewards and effects.
-
-This, again, is a truth we need to be impressed with. We are wont to
-look too much to the future, to _hope_ to be with GOD hereafter, to
-_long_ for salvation, to sigh for the season of sanctification. By and
-by we shall be comforted. By and by we shall be strengthened. By and by
-we shall be holy and happy! Thus it is that we only expect salvation,
-that we persuade ourselves that we are not to receive anything here by
-way of real spiritual joy and blessing, and that we are not required to
-reach any high degree of spiritual excellence here! But, brethren, how
-unreasonable is this persuasion. To believe that GOD is present with us
-and operating upon us, and pouring out His benefits upon us all our
-lives, and yet that we are none the better, that we do not derive any
-blessedness from Him: or, again, to believe that GOD has given us
-spiritual life, that He imparts to us, and constantly superintends, the
-grace which justifies and sanctifies; and yet that we can, or at least
-need make no use of this grace, not grow in it, not become purer, and
-holier, that it is ineffectual, that we may consent to its being
-ineffectual till life is over—O is not such a persuasion unreasonable,
-are we not ashamed of it? Imagine a mother not feeding or taking care of
-her infant, and yet counting on its thriving! or, fondly and diligently
-tending, taking care of her infant, and continuing to do so year after
-year, yet perfectly satisfied though it gained no strength, did not grow,
-nor walk, nor speak, nor show the slightest sign of getting out of
-babyhood! Imagine, I say, satisfaction with such a state, and hope all
-the while, yea, conviction, that presently, when the usual number of
-years were over the child would somehow be a man! Or, imagine the
-husbandman expecting a harvest without sowing, or ploughing; or planting
-his field diligently, and rejoicing in refreshing rains, and ripening
-suns, yet not disappointed if the ear did not ripen, or even if the blade
-did not spring up; not concerned about it, not expecting it, sure of
-harvest at the usual time, even if that usual time should be next week,
-and there were yet no sign of a crop! Imagine this! you say. Such
-imagination is idle; it is a mockery of common sense to suppose such a
-thing possible. Well, then, my brethren, what is to be said of the
-spiritual nurses of the new life of GOD in the soul, of the spiritual
-husbandman of the seed of grace in the heart, who do nothing towards, or
-who expect nothing of present salvation? Brethren, NOW is the day of
-salvation, the day in which salvation is offered, in which it is actually
-conferred, in which it should be working and growing, yea, and bestowing
-its joy and peace. If in aught of this it fails, be sure there is some
-fault in yourselves—it is not that grace is of itself unreal, or
-unproductive, but that you receive it in vain, that you do not
-sufficiently heed and reverence it, that you do not sufficiently guard
-it, and sustain and refresh it, that you do not sufficiently use it.
-
-There ought to be in every baptized Christian, a gradual, steady, and
-even perceptible Christian progress. Our salvation ought to be ever
-nearer and nearer than when we believed, not only in the expectation of
-our complete adoption and removal to glory, but in our fitness for glory,
-and desire and hope of it. If we have the same evil tendencies, are as
-easily overcome by the same temptations, have the same dislike or
-imperfect taste for spiritual occupations, the same poor appreciation of
-religious privileges and hopes as we had a year, a month, a week ago,
-then assuredly our salvation stagnates, we are not using what GOD has
-given us, we are not yielding to, we are resisting His living influence!
-Grace, my brethren, is an useless gift, if it is to effect nothing: a
-time of probation is an idle space, if there is no trial. Faith is
-little entitled to be called “the substance of things hoped for, the
-evidence of things not seen,” if it produces no spiritual conviction: and
-as for hope—what kind of anchor is it to the soul, if it is ever
-shifting, if it grasps nothing?
-
-If any man is in CHRIST, he is a new creature, that is, he is becoming a
-new creature, with new life, and powers, and energies, and tastes, and
-aims, and hopes. He will grow in grace if he has rightly received it,
-and in the knowledge and love of CHRIST. He will manifestly (at least to
-himself manifestly) be putting off the old man with his affections and
-lusts, and putting on the new man, which after GOD is created in
-righteousness and true holiness. He will endure trials more and more
-patiently, as seeing more clearly Him who is invisible. He will resist
-temptations more easily, and do good more consistently and gladly, and be
-more pained and more penitent after every sin. He will have a growing
-love of searching GOD’S word, and speaking to Him in prayer and praise,
-and receiving Him in Holy Communion. He will gradually be raised above
-the world, and will soar higher in imagination and affection and hope
-towards heaven. Each day will have witnessed some advance—or some more
-than recovery if there has been a relapse. And when the night cometh,
-the end of the day of attaining salvation, he will want but little to
-complete his resemblance to CHRIST, his pattern, and to perfect his
-salvation.
-
-If, then, brethren, you would obtain an answer to the momentous question,
-Whether you shall be saved, whether there is a good hope that you are in
-the way of salvation, I would bid you not so much look back to your
-Baptism and Confirmation, and count the number of your attendances on
-Holy Communion, of the sermons you have heard, the prayers and praises
-you have offered—though these are all great things—but rather, I would
-say, ascertain whether you have present salvation, for the future depends
-on the present; and to ascertain this, examine well whether you are
-putting off the old man and putting on the new, as I have just described.
-As another test—and a very great help in godliness, to which there is no
-equal in feelings and exercises—inquire into your hope of future
-salvation (by which I do not mean only your expectation, but also your
-eager desire), and into your joy for present salvation.
-
-If religion is a reality, it is a great reality. Its immediate blessings
-are so precious, and its prospects so transcendently glorious, that the
-man who is not filled with joy and desire on their account, has no part
-or lot in them, or is strangely culpably ignorant of his privileges and
-his hopes. No wonder that he easily yields to sin, that he finds
-spiritual employments wearisome, that he makes no progress in salvation.
-If GOD touches him and he feels not, if heaven has come down to him and
-he knows it not, if glory is revealed to him, and he does not burn for
-it, if CHRIST has put him in the ark and he is not comforted by the
-immediate deliverance and counting on the perfect salvation—then, surely,
-he has received the grace of GOD to little sanctifying, and so to little
-saving purpose!
-
-O let him beseech GOD earnestly and perseveringly to give him spiritual
-sight and feeling, to fill him with joy and peace in believing, to make
-him rejoice, not only for what he has, but for what he expects of
-salvation; working, like St. Paul, in view of the crown laid up,
-confident that, whether absent or present, he is accepted by GOD, knowing
-that to depart is to be with CHRIST.
-
-But, lastly, let him guard and pray against mistaking _present_ for
-perfect salvation, the road and discipline and growth for heaven, for
-heaven itself. The possession which he has, precious as it is, is not a
-perfect one; and, moreover, he may lose it. Remember Paul’s care, lest
-he should be a castaway, his caution to take heed lest we fall, his
-fearful sayings about forfeited grace. O brethren, seek as the best
-immediate blessing and the best stimulus to godliness, an assurance of
-hope in perfect salvation. But be sure that it is founded upon the
-reception and right use and evident growth of grace, upon present
-salvation; and, withal, be not high-minded, but fear. You know your own
-frailties, the influences of the world, the subtlety and tremendous power
-of Satan’s temptations. Any of these is sufficient to make you wander
-out of the right way, or stand still, or turn back, or to cause you to
-faint in your spiritual course, and even to threaten the destruction of
-your spiritual life. You are sure of GOD, of His favour, of His
-upholding, of His preserving you unto the day of perfect redemption; but
-you are not sure of your observance of the conditions on which only you
-may count on Him. And if you disregard these conditions, then are you
-plainly taught, by precept and example, that a neglected GOD will not
-abide with you, and a resisted Spirit will not strive with you, and that
-grace received in vain will be taken away. Remember this, let it keep
-you from presumption, make you watchful against temptation, always
-clothed in the armour of GOD, and wielding the sword of the Spirit, and
-abounding in the work of the LORD; praying, too, always, that the present
-may be an earnest of the future, that the Spirit will sustain, and
-sanctify, and perfect you, and that GOD, Who has begun a good work in
-you, will perform it until the day of JESUS CHRIST.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XV.
-CHRIST TOUCHED.
-
-
- ST. MARK, V., 30.
-
- _And_ JESUS, _immediately knowing in Himself that virtue had gone out
- of Him_, _turned Him about in the press_, _and said_, _Who touched my
- clothes_?
-
-A CROWD always waited on our LORD when He taught or walked openly. In
-this case, there was an unusually great crowd following and thronging
-Him, because it had become known that He was on His way to work the
-miracle of raising up a child from the point of death. It is not hard to
-guess what were the elements of this crowd. First, there were the idle,
-curious multitude ever to be found where novelty or excitement is
-promised. Then there were those who knew not why they were come
-together, who were there because others were, who had no mind or interest
-in the matter. (There are always many of these in every crowd.) Then
-there were the scribes and lawyers, always talking about, listening to,
-or disputing religious truths—never coming, or caring to come, to the
-knowledge and practice of the truth. Then there were the seekers after
-loaves and fishes, who hoped to get something by coming. Then there were
-the entrappers and enemies of our LORD, seeking for witness against Him,
-hoping to see some work done, to hear some word said which might form the
-ground of accusation against Him. And, lastly, there were some—a few
-only—whom faith impelled to seek from Him the healing of their diseases,
-the relief of their burthens; and whom love drew after Him, to see Him,
-to serve Him, to dwell upon the gracious words that proceeded out of His
-mouth. Of the last class was a woman who had been afflicted with a
-grievous malady for twelve years, who had tried all earthly means of
-relief, and had grown worse under them, who was despised and shut out
-from the company of mankind by reason of her visitation, who had become
-destitute in seeking cure. All things were against her. Her misfortunes
-were what many would describe as more than could be borne. Her case was
-hopeless. Nothing seemed left to her but to succumb to helpless misery,
-and wait in groans and tears for death—when, lo! a sudden gleam of
-brightest hope burst upon her, there was a Physician Who could cure all
-diseases, and His remedy was to be had without price! It does not appear
-whether the fame of JESUS had reached her in some remote place, whence
-she had dragged her poor afflicted body, sighing and groaning, wandering
-many days, searching in many places; or whether, being “accidentally,” as
-men say, near where the crowd passed, she had now heard, for the first
-time, of the new Prophet; and, gathering from the passers-by that He was
-going to restore a dying damsel, concluded that the possessor of such
-power, so graciously exercised, could and would heal her too. Be that as
-it may, she had full faith in His ability: “If I may but touch his
-clothes I shall be whole.” And, having such faith, she resolved to act
-upon it, making her way through the crowd, and doing that, through which
-her faith suggested the power would be transmitted. How she came to
-propose to herself, or who proposed to her, such a course, how much of
-ignorance and superstition there was in it, is beside our present
-consideration. Her faith, her perseverance, her humility, are rather the
-things to be noted. Her faith, which was so strongly convinced of the
-existence in JESUS, and the certainty of being able to obtain from Him
-the grace of healing. Her perseverance, poor, feeble, tottering woman!
-which was not overawed by the greatness of the crowd, and did not give up
-when she was dragged hither and thither, hard pressed here, shut out
-there—perhaps even thrown down and trampled on more than once. Her
-humility, which—eager as she was for cure, bent, too, as she was upon
-having it—made her fear the eyes of the crowd, though she cared nothing
-for their thrusts and hard usage, which dared not face her Healer; which
-caused her to shrink back from the first touch, and seek to hide herself,
-and steal away with the blessing.
-
-Pausing here for a moment, brethren, to consider that this woman, in her
-malady, is a type of all who are affected with the disease of sin; that
-in the fruitless issue of her recourse to earthly physicians, she
-allegorises the vanity, the mockery, of all human expedients to restore
-or ameliorate moral distempers; showing that such “remedies” do but cause
-to suffer more, and make worse—pausing, I say, to consider this, and to
-reflect that herein we have a representation of ourselves as sinners, of
-our helplessness but for CHRIST, of our greater suffering and sure
-deterioration, through our very efforts to become better without CHRIST;
-reflecting on this, realising it, and feeling it, are we able to go on
-and see in her discovering of the right Healer, in her efforts to be
-healed by Him, in her faith, and perseverance, and humility, what we have
-discovered, what we believe, and what we do, and what we feel? O what a
-pitiable sufferer is that, who hears with indifference or with lukewarm
-inactive belief, that there is a Physician that can make well; who knows
-that He is ready, that restoration is to be had, and yet does not seek
-it; who even pleads infirmity as a reason for not striving to be cured;
-who is deterred by the sight of a crowd that must be got through; who is
-discouraged by the first obstacle, and gets up and goes back after the
-first fall! And how blinded are the senses, and how dead the feelings of
-the sinner, who does not feel the degradation of his state, but makes
-open display of himself before the crowd, and with a bold front and
-unshrinking touch, comes to the All-pure and All-holy to be healed!
-Learn, fellow sinners, from this poor woman, what your sin is, how
-defiling, how miserable, how sure to grow worse under human treatment.
-Learn, too, by Whom alone it can be healed, and with what efforts, and
-what feelings, you must seek the healing. For, consider how the
-All-seeing eye and the All sympathising heart beheld and loved that
-woman, for her deeds and feelings. _Before_ she touched Him, the virtue,
-the power of healing, was made ready to flow; and, as soon as she had
-touched, she was called forth, and commended, and owned, and further
-blessed: “Daughter, thy faith hath made thee whole; go in peace, and be
-whole of thy plague.”
-
-Partly, no doubt, for the sake of others, this manifestation and speech
-were made. JESUS generally hid His wondrous works from the gaze of the
-masses, and forbade that they should even hear of them by the hearing of
-the ear: just as He concealed the meaning of His speech by veiling it in
-parables, hard to be understood, that mere curiosity might not be
-indulged, that faith might have some privilege over want of faith, that
-needless provocation of His enemies might be avoided, and witness against
-Him withheld, that those who He knew would see and hear in vain, might be
-spared the greater condemnation of beholding and despising. Sometimes,
-however, an exception was made, and JESUS spoke and acted openly; that
-those present might see, and those absent might hear of Him, and so come
-unto Him and be saved. This may have been the case here. Or, more
-probably, the manifestation was not so much for the multitude, it was for
-the inner circle; for Jairus, whose faith needed to be prepared, for the
-shock of the coming announcement—“Thy daughter is dead, why troublest
-thou the Master any more?” or for better heeding of the injunction, “Be
-not afraid, only believe;” for the disciples, too, whom He would thus
-confirm in the faith, and prepare for their mission and sufferings, whom
-He would thus enable to record for our instruction and comfort, the
-things which JESUS has done, which He is ever ready to do again. But,
-specially, it was for the woman herself; that she might not suppose that
-she had obtained _unknown_ possession of a blessing, or that it was the
-mere touch which cured her, and not the All-knowing Healer, pleased by
-her faith and so making effectual an otherwise useless act; that she
-might become acquainted with Him, and so learn to love Him, and
-gratefully remember Him, and by and by, when she came to know his will,
-might delight to do it; that she might have something more than she
-sought—this is ever the rule of CHRIST’S giving—the “Go in peace,” as
-well as the “Be whole of thy plague;” that she might be taught, and we,
-through her, that Divine mercy is ever to be acknowledged, and open glory
-to be given to GOD.
-
-The history is replete with profitable suggestions—lessons of faith and
-practice. Let us select three for present consideration.
-
-First, let us observe, that we may throng and press JESUS, and yet not
-touch Him. “Thou seest the multitude thronging Thee, and sayest Thou who
-touched me?” Even so! The idle, curious, controversial, captious
-thronging is nothing accounted of: it is the touch of eager desire and
-humble faith which alone is noticed. At first, brethren, we are tempted
-to think, that the most strangely indifferent, the most unblessed of men,
-are those who do not join the throng, and press about the LORD JESUS.
-That He is in the sanctuary, and men do not enter into His presence
-there; that He is teaching the way of life, and men will not hear sermons
-nor read the Bible; that He may be conversed with, and yet men will not
-pray; that He may be touched, and yet sacraments are not received: this,
-we think, is as strange as it is sad. And so, indeed, it is. But it is
-stranger and sadder, that any should come into the Sanctuary, and not
-perceive CHRIST’S presence; that they should hear and read without
-learning; that they should use words of prayer and yet not be heard; that
-they should press and throng JESUS in ordinances, and never touch Him;
-deriving no benefit from Him, because they seek it not aright; being
-beneath His eye, and yet unnoticed; crowding around Him, and upon Him,
-and yet unfelt! But assuredly, as of old it was, so it is now. If mere
-idleness brings men to the Sanctuary, mere observance of a decent
-fashion, if they come only to hear and see something new, to wile away
-the time which hangs wearily upon them, to gain themselves a good name as
-respectable and pious, if they are watching to see, what may be
-criticised, what may be talked about and condemned, if they are rendering
-merely a formal obedience, and offering only an outward service—then, I
-was going to say, CHRIST takes no more notice of them than if they were
-not present; but I should rather say, He is wrathful against them for
-being present. He blinds their eyes, and turns away His own. He is dumb
-to them; they deaf to Him. He yields nothing to them, though they seem
-like Moses to have cleft the rock. He feels them not, though they
-squeeze and press! My brethren, it may be that some of you have long
-been in the company of CHRIST, have missed very few opportunities of
-public worship, have become very familiar with the Scriptures, have often
-repeated prayers and psalms, have been frequent communicants, and yet are
-none the better in feeling and desire, have experienced no spiritual
-relief, have no more love or perception of the truth, than if you had
-been utter strangers to CHRIST, and never been near Him nor heard of Him.
-Hence it may be that religion is to you but a name: it profits you not,
-it affords you no delight, it exercises no influence upon you. Would you
-know why? Because you have been but thronging and pressing, because you
-have had no real sense of your misery, have entertained no real desire to
-be relieved and blessed, and so have made no well-directed, persevering
-effort to touch CHRIST! You are, as you feel, no better, no wiser, than
-if there were no CHRIST, or you had never been near Him! And you will
-never be wiser and better, however much you press and throng, till you
-realise your want, and are convinced that CHRIST alone can relieve it,
-and come to Him faithfully, resolutely, humbly, to touch the hem of His
-garment, and be healed of your plague. First, then, strive to know what
-you want, and to be convinced that CHRIST can and will grant it; and,
-then, feeling the desire of it, being sure from Whom alone it can be had,
-and how it must be sought, draw near—with the feeling of necessity, with
-the perseverance of desire, with the consciousness of unworthiness—and
-effect the touch of faith. You shall not, in that case, remain
-unblessed; your plague shall be stayed, your faith shall be commended,
-your effort crowned, your humility exalted; you shall have more than you
-sought; enlarge your desire as you will, it shall be more than satisfied:
-and He whom you would but touch, and then shrink away, shall call you
-forth, and own, and bless you, and give you everlasting peace and perfect
-salvation.
-
-Next, let us observe, that nothing can keep back and nothing hide from
-CHRIST. We are sometimes tempted, in the deep sense of our unworthiness,
-in review of the distance between us and the Healer, of the many
-obstacles which intervene, to give up in despair, and say to ourselves,
-“It is of no use trying, I am not fit for such a blessing, and if I were,
-I cannot reach it.” Now, consider, who could be more unfit, and who more
-unable to approach CHRIST than this poor woman. There was a positive law
-which forbade her coming; her touch was pollution: yet CHRIST reproached
-her not with disregarding that law, nor refused her because of it; and
-when she touched He did not recoil, but encouraged her. For _us_ there
-is no excommunicating law. From us CHRIST is pledged not to recoil.
-“Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden,” is an invitation,
-a positive command. “Him that cometh unto Me I will in no wise cast
-out,” is a most solemn pledge. Why, then, should we shrink? What shall
-we fear? And as for difficulties and hindrances, our own infirmities,
-the opposition of the world or the Devil, the sneers of despisers, the
-distance, the crowd, the hurrying on, can aught compare with what
-threatened this woman, and what she overcame? O are we not ashamed to
-forego salvation, to keep away from CHRIST, to desist from determination
-to reach Him, by any plea of personal infirmity, or of difficulty in the
-way? What in ourselves is worse than the twelve years’ growing,
-enfeebling, overwhelming malady of this woman? What in aught around us
-is more impenetrable than the great crowd? and whenever was CHRIST as
-distant from us as He was from her? And then as to the discouragement
-which Satan would suggest to us, that in our age we cannot, like this
-poor woman, get anything from CHRIST by stealth; that the power to heal
-flows not unconsciously; that He must see, and approve, and stay for us,
-and even anticipate us; and that by reason of our insignificance and the
-wide extent of His dominion, it is not reasonable to suppose that we
-shall be observed—brethren, are we not assured, by the fact that _she_
-was discerned, and watched for, and singled out from the great multitude,
-that the gaze which is comprehensive enough to include all is particular
-enough to distinguish each; that there is nothing beneath His notice;
-that He can get through, and will get through, all that stands between us
-and Him: that He who keeps vast globes in their orbits, takes thought
-even for sparrows; that He counts the hairs of each individual’s head;
-that He hears each sigh, and feels each sorrow; that the roar of the
-universe is not louder in His ear than the feeblest cry of distress from
-the lowest of His creatures? O it is a blessed assurance, and one for
-which we should be heartily thankful, that it was always when there was
-most to distract, that CHRIST was most closely attentive; that it was in
-the most dazzling glare that He saw most clearly; that it was when He
-seemed most absorbed in other aims, that His notice and help were most
-readily secured; that in the way to raise the daughter of Jairus, He was
-so easily stopped to heal and bless the woman with the issue of blood!
-No sight too insignificant to escape His eye; no sound too faint to reach
-His ear; no crowd so great as to hide the individual; no object so
-engrossing as to exclude from notice, or to hurry on from concern for the
-least, the unworthiest of other objects!
-
-Lastly, let us observe that power to heal was ready to flow wherever
-there was a channel made for it. We are not, of course, to understand
-that CHRIST healed unconsciously; that any mere formal touch secured, as
-it were, without the violation of His will, the grace which He was
-anointed to bestow; but we are to understand, that such is the law of
-grace, that where there is a demand there is a supply; that like as the
-thirsty sand surely drinks in the rising wave, like as a sponge absorbs
-the water into which it is plunged, so the sensibly void heart, the
-yearning desire, the faithful effort, the moral fitness, is sure of what
-it wants and seeks, if it is found in the place where what it wants
-exists. It is one of the most wonderful, most mysterious, and at the
-same time most sure effects of CHRIST’S incarnation that human nature,
-needing and desiring, put into communion with Him, possessing,
-overflowing, shall have by the necessary operation of an invariable law,
-the thing which it wants, and which He has to bestow. There is no
-chance, no mere probability in the case: CHRIST is the ever-flowing
-fountain; if you stand beneath, the water must come over you. He is the
-root full of sap, if you are one of the branches joined to Him, the sap
-shall flow into and permeate you.
-
-It is this which makes ordinances effectual signs of grace; means, not by
-which grace may _perhaps_ be bestowed, but by which it is _sure_ to be
-bestowed, if they are rightly used. The woman, whose history we have
-been considering, might have been disappointed in her hope: for CHRIST
-had not taught her, nor made her any promise, nor prescribed to her any
-course; but He has so enlightened _us_ in the mystery of His Incarnation;
-He has so pledged to us His grace; He has so shown us how to obtain it,
-that we may most confidently say, “If I may but touch, I shall be whole.”
-Grace, the manifold grace of CHRIST’S glorified body—the source of
-sanctification and every blessing, is ready to flow, and will flow as
-soon as He is touched. Of course, as we have seen, this touch must be
-directed by right feeling; but still, observe, there must be a touch.
-“Thy faith hath saved thee.” Not because it kept thee still, sighing
-for, talking of, waiting for Me, but because it roused thee, and made
-thee encounter so much, and do so much to come and touch Me. Faith gives
-quality to the touch, but, after all, the touch secures the blessing. So
-it ever is. The touch necessary, and the touch effectual. “He that
-believeth _and is baptized_ shall be saved.” “Except ye eat the flesh of
-the Son of man and drink His blood, ye have no life in you.” The water
-of Baptism is the laver of regeneration. The bread which we break, and
-the cup which we bless, are the Communion of the Body and Blood of
-CHRIST. Using the outward part rightly, you do certainly receive the
-inward grace: for as soon as CHRIST is rightly touched, and these are
-appointed ways of touching, immediately—as it were, spontaneously—virtue
-to heal goes out of Him.
-
-Let it not, however, be supposed, that this view of the way of healing
-and sanctifying makes CHRIST a servant of grace instead of the LORD of
-grace; that it directs us to a mere storehouse to help ourselves, instead
-of sending us to a living, loving, discerning Saviour, of Whom we are to
-crave the help and blessing which are His to give as He will. No,
-brethren, it exalts ordinances, but only because they are CHRIST’S
-ordinances, the clothes in which He is clad, as He walks among us, the
-garments through which power to heal is transmitted from Him to us. The
-use of these things without a sense of unworthiness, without humility and
-faith, is like the thronging of CHRIST by the crowd, not only
-unprofitable, but rude and profane; and this sense of unworthiness, this
-humility and faith, together with the power and perseverance to act upon
-them, are all the gifts of CHRIST, seed sown, increase given by Him
-according to His will. Look, then, to the Physician, as well as to the
-remedy, to the Giver of grace as well as to the Channel of grace; and,
-knowing that without Him you can do nothing, and except from Him receive
-nothing, beseech Him to enable you to seek grace rightly, and then to
-bestow it freely, not for any worthiness, for any feeling, for any deed;
-but simply because of your necessity, out of His boundless love.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XVI.
-PREACHING PARABLES.
-
-
- EZEKIEL, XX., 49.
-
- _Ah_ LORD GOD! _they say of me_, _Doth he not speak parables_?
-
-EZEKIEL had been commissioned with the utterance of a warning, in
-figurative but very intelligible language, that GOD was about to bring a
-great calamity upon Jerusalem and all Judah; that young and old, good and
-bad, should be affected by it—“I will kindle a fire in thee, and it shall
-devour every green tree and every dry tree”; that the judgment should be
-irresistible “the flaming flame shall not be quenched,” and the
-destruction universal; “all faces from the south to the north shall be
-burned therein.” According to some expositors, as soon as he received
-this commission, concluding from his past experience that the Jews would
-profess not to understand his message, or would say, that it was an
-exaggeration, or that it did not apply to them, and so disregard it, he
-entreated of GOD, in the words of the text, that such an excuse might be
-taken away by the delivery instead of a plain and unmistakeable warning:
-“O LORD, not a parable. Thy people will not heed parables.” Whereupon
-GOD, in gracious condescension to His prophet, in determination to be
-heard and understood by the people, substituted for this first message,
-not indeed wholly unfigurative language, but a simpler parable, which
-carried with it to all its own interpretation. But it is better, I
-think, to suppose, that Ezekiel does not here anticipate the people’s
-perversity, and so persuade GOD at once to withdraw His words; but that
-he narrates and grieves over the actual reception which the message,
-faithfully delivered, had encountered. The people would not hear it.
-They said it was obscure: a parable, an enigma, a poetical exaggeration.
-GOD did not speak to them by it; or, if He did, they could not tell what
-He said. “Ah! LORD GOD—alas! it is the old tale—I told them Thy words,
-but they would not hear; they turned away from me, saying, Surely we
-cannot understand him.”
-
-Whichever was the case, whether Ezekiel only expected, or actually
-experienced this treatment, we are sure that it was not wholly on account
-of special obscurities which veiled the matters he had to declare, nor on
-account of any special deafness and hardness of heart which belonged to
-that people. For every Christian teacher has had reason to anticipate,
-has actually endured the like from Christian congregations.
-
-Often and often in preparing for the pulpit, is the preacher tempted to
-set aside some important theme, to withhold some wonderful truth, to
-forbear even to suggest some glorious consolation, because he believes
-that in uttering it, he will not have the ears, or, if he has the ears,
-he will not have the minds of his hearers; that they will not understand
-his saying; and so, of course, will not receive it. Often and often,
-too, when having used the full liberty of a Christian prophet and
-whatever ability GOD has given him, of simplifying to the utmost, and
-recommending with all his energy, the Gospel message, he is constrained
-to feel, he is made, perhaps, by men’s open speech to know, that he is
-regarded as the setter-forth of unmeaning, extravagant, or inapplicable
-words. Of course, this charge is not always unfounded. We are not
-inspired: we often speak our own words; our minds may not have rightly
-conceived the subject we would discuss, or we may be wanting in ability
-to express clearly what we understand. Under various influences we do,
-too, at times speak more or less extravagantly, and our knowledge and
-discretion are not so complete, that we invariably select what is
-precisely suited to our hearers. In such cases, we ought to expect, we
-have no right to complain of, the rejection, the disregard, or the
-fruitlessness of our preaching. But, brethren, when we are sure that the
-fault lies not in the preacher, when he has taken pains to enter into and
-reveal the mind of the Spirit, to teach what he knows GOD would have you
-understand and believe, to urge what he knows GOD would have you do, to
-describe and recommend what he knows GOD would have you love and
-seek—when he has done this, and you receive not his words, excusing
-yourselves by saying that he is obscure, or over-strict, or fanciful, or
-enthusiastic, or anything else—oh! then has he not a right to complain to
-GOD? yea; and is it not his duty to remonstrate with you? Brethren, we
-charge not such as you who are here assembled with the wilfulness of
-Ezekiel’s hearers. In you we do not suppose there is any actual
-unbelief, or deliberate dislike of the truth. It is not forced in your
-case upon unwilling ears: for you come to hear it. It is not rejected
-because you hate it. Nevertheless, we have somewhat against many of you
-of Ezekiel’s complaint, respecting your treatment of the read or preached
-Word of GOD.
-
-We have to complain, brethren, that many of you are under the mistaken
-notion that you have almost a right to select the preacher’s theme, at
-least to dictate its mode of treatment; and that if your right is
-disregarded, then you are justified in excusing yourselves for not
-profiting or heeding. Bear with me, beloved. Is it not the case, that
-you sometimes find fault with the subject of the sermon? You do not want
-to hear so much about man’s depravity: you do not like the preacher to
-make such a point of observing religious ordinances: what a high standard
-of morality he sets up; how strict is the holiness he describes; why will
-he discourse of the horrors of hell? So, again, of the manner of
-treatment. You do not care for argument; you cannot enter upon theories;
-you are weary of quotations of historical illustrations; the style is too
-florid, or too bald: it is poetical; or it is commonplace; or somehow it
-is not what you like; and therefore—I would not say you turn away from
-it, but you do not try, as much as you ought, to heed it; and you excuse
-yourselves for not improving under it by blaming the preacher.
-
-The fact is, there is too often a great forgetfulness of the fact, that
-when the preacher speaks to you it is your part to be as listeners and
-learners of GOD. It is not for you to choose the subjects, nor to
-dictate the method of teaching. It is true, perhaps, that your taste and
-aptitude are greater for some subjects than others: it is true that you
-are more easily enlightened, and impressed, and influenced in some ways
-than in others. It is natural, and I would not say it is wrong, for you
-to prefer those subjects and ways; but be sure nevertheless, that it is
-the very contrary of wisdom and humility, of reverence for GOD, of regard
-for duty and interest, not to give the most earnest heed to whatever GOD
-says to you through His servant, to dare to treat it lightly, because
-either of the topic or the way of handling it. When a message comes to
-you from GOD, surely it is no reason for not receiving it, that you would
-prefer a message about something else! And if the diction in which that
-message is clothed is hard or distasteful to you, while you may lament
-it, may ask for an explanation, may solicit consideration for your taste,
-or help in overcoming your distaste, you may not on any account disregard
-what has been said. The word gone forth shall not return. Where the
-seed has been sown, increase shall be expected. The day is coming, when
-all your opportunities and means of knowing GOD’S will, and all your
-incentives to serve Him, shall be taken account of by Him Who has
-afforded them, and then shall the worst preacher, the most apparently
-obscure and inapplicable sermon you ever heard be a witness for or
-against you, to testify what regard you had for GOD’S message, what
-humility, what teachableness, what readiness to receive and to do what
-was clear, what anxious diligence and pains to understand what was
-obscure.
-
-Brethren, you may choose what subjects you will hear discussed in the
-secular lecture-hall, and if you do not like the entertainment you may
-refuse to be entertained by it, and resolve to hear no more of it, to
-dismiss it altogether from your thoughts. But you do not come to church
-to be entertained; you have no option there of selecting or rejecting.
-It is your misfortune (though it may be his fault) if the preacher does
-not interest you, or the sermon immediately commend itself to your mind,
-and to your heart; but, being there, you must hear whatever is said, and
-however it is said; and having heard, be sure you must give account to
-GOD of the hearing! Settle this in your minds, impress yourselves with
-the solemn authority of the preacher, and with the importance and
-responsibility of heeding him, and it will be very seldom that you will
-object even in thought, “Doth he not speak parables?”
-
-But there are particular complaints, about which I would say a few words
-specially.
-
-First, there is a complaint against the preaching of mysterious and
-profound truths. If the preacher dwells upon such a subject as the
-Incarnation of CHRIST, the nature of CHRIST’S presence with His Church,
-of the Spirit’s indwelling, or the rationale of the efficacy of the means
-of grace; or if he attempts to explain any difficult text, no matter what
-pains he may take to simplify the subject, how he may labour to show its
-importance and to recommend its consideration, he is met at once with the
-objection that he speaks parables, and so with a tacit refusal to heed.
-“Why puzzle one’s brains,” it is urged, “with such matters, when there
-are so many simple themes and easy lessons in the Gospel. I cannot
-understand such things. They are too profound. The preaching of them
-may be clever, but it is thrown away upon me. I do not want to work and
-task my mind, but to warm my feelings.” Such is the reward the preacher
-often gets for taking unusual pains to edify his hearers! Such is the
-wilful, the determined ignorance of many of GOD’S people respecting those
-truths, the understanding of which most concerns them, and honours Him.
-It ought to be sufficient to correct these unwise and unwilling, to
-remind them that whatever GOD has revealed He requires to be accepted,
-and that as there can be no acceptance of that which is not understood,
-it is a foremost duty of the Christian preacher and the Christian learner
-to employ themselves in the solution of Scripture difficulties, and the
-comprehension of revealed mysteries. Such objectors do not intend it,
-but they grievously slight GOD when they refuse to heed so much of His
-teaching, yea, they even cast a slur upon His wisdom in striving to teach
-what, according to them, cannot be learnt. And are they not unjust to
-themselves? Have they really such narrow and shallow understandings, so
-impossible to widen and deepen? Would they confess to such incapacity if
-they were listening to a scientific lecture? would they complain if the
-lecturer introduced them to new facts, showed them fresh experiments,
-suggested to them explanatory theories, sought to make them wiser than
-they were? Would they shut their ears at the sound of the first new
-term: would they shrink back at the first invitation to tread upon
-unfamiliar ground; would they protect themselves against being
-enlightened, by claiming to be hopelessly ignorant? Would they not
-rather make the most of the opportunity, opening ear and stretching mind
-to catch all they could, finding pleasure in being carried beyond and
-above themselves, resenting indignantly a hint that the thing was out of
-their reach, professing, somewhat ostentatiously pretending a greater
-delight and fuller understanding than they really had? O why is it the
-fashion to claim to be so wise in secular matters, to boast of ignorance
-in religion? It is well, indeed, that men should not sham to be wise in
-GOD’S presence, but it is ill, very ill, that they sham to be ignorant,
-or that they should be content to be ignorant when they might be wise,
-ignoring and disowning the powers which GOD has given them!
-
-Take these remarks, dear brethren, into your serious consideration.
-Remember that GOD has given you intelligent minds, in order that you
-might think of and serve Him with understanding. Much, indeed, about Him
-is absolutely incomprehensible; much has He designedly withheld; before
-many mysteries, has He put up the warning, “Draw not nigh hither;” but
-much has He told you plainly, and much has He propounded in sufficiently
-obscure or difficult terms, to task and exercise your minds in their
-necessary unravelling. With respect to these things, as it is only by
-much resistance that you can withstand the temptations to which you are
-exposed; as it is only by great efforts that you can acquire the holiness
-without which no man shall see the LORD, so is it, only by real and often
-hard study, that you can attain unto the knowledge of which GOD has made
-you capable, and in which He bids you grow. The elementary, the vitally
-necessary truths of the Gospel are, it may be, within the immediate
-comprehension of the simplest and most uncultivated understanding; but
-shall it, therefore, be said to you, shall you be allowed to say of
-yourselves, that you need not be concerned about anything beyond? Would
-you be satisfied if you had only so much secular education as would
-enable you to spell out sign-post directions? Would it be no reproach to
-you, having so many faculties and opportunities, only to be able to read
-and count? Would you miss nothing of duty, of interest, of pleasure, if
-your intellect were uncultivated, if you were wholly unacquainted and
-totally unable to appreciate arts and sciences, poetry, music,
-literature, or any facts or theories not connected with your worldly
-calling, not necessary to procure your daily bread? Would not life be
-irksome and intolerable, if held only on such terms? Would you not be
-ashamed of attempting to hold it on these terms? Would you not consider
-that you were robbing yourselves of all that was worth having? Would you
-not admit that you had missed and ignored your high calling, your power
-to be enlightened and wise beings, and had sunk shamelessly and guiltily
-to the level, below the level—for he answers the end of his creation—of
-the irrational brute? And shall you who feel such shame for worldly
-ignorance, shall you who make such efforts to gain secular knowledge, who
-are ever widening your minds, and storing up in them as much as they will
-hold, who delight in growing wiser and more learned, who will study
-unwearily, and exercise all your intellect, and consume I know not what
-time, in unravelling the worthless mystery of some enigmatical line in a
-poem of fiction—shall you contentedly pass over the difficulties, and
-remain ignorant of the mysteries which meet you in nearly every verse of
-the Word of GOD? Shall you be otherwise than glad and attentive when the
-preacher draws your attention to them? Shall you even unfairly and
-ungratefully charge him with _speaking_ parables, when he is really
-_explaining_ parables?
-
-Dear brethren, it is rarely that the public preacher, who has to take
-thought for the simpler ones of the flock, can enlarge upon profound
-truths. When he does, take care that you make the most of the rare
-occurrence, and compensate for the forbidden frequency, by diligent
-private study, by ready use of that individual aid which the clergyman is
-as rejoiced, as he is bound, to afford you. Acquaint yourselves now, as
-far as may be, with GOD, and the things of GOD. Furnish yourselves with
-the answer, the want of which was such a reproach to Nicodemus, to the
-question—“How can these things be?” Show, at least, as much interest in
-salvation, in sanctification, in heaven, in eternal bliss, as will lead
-you to inquire what they are, and require, and promise. Get now the germ
-of that knowledge, which is to expand hereafter albut to an infinite
-grasp, and is to revel in spiritual science. Cast away the reproach of
-knowing not; provide against the doom which awaits him that improves not
-the talents entrusted him: “From him that hath not, shall be taken away
-even that he seemeth to have.”
-
-There is another class of objectors—to another kind of preaching. Those,
-namely, who resist the force of plain exhortations to repentance,
-self-denial, submission, obedience, holiness, and the like; by persuading
-themselves that the preacher urges these severely and unduly. Doth he
-not speak parables, they say, exaggerating—describing ideal duties?
-Surely, what he urges is not the thing really required of us; surely, if
-we escape not with impunity, yet some allowance will be made for our want
-of it. Would he bring in all guilty? Would he cross every delight and
-desire of our life? Would he expect us so to subdue the spirit, so to
-overcome natural impatience, as never to resent, to shrink, to murmur?
-Must obedience be so uncompromising, so constant, so perfect, to be
-obedience at all? Is holiness so imperatively necessary? Surely the
-preacher is unreasonable, he is extravagant, he speaks parables. These
-objectors are easily answered. In this matter no teaching of our own can
-be more explicit, more exacting, more positive, and more unsparing, than
-that of the New Testament. When we enforce these things, we are backed
-by an authority which cannot be questioned; and are able to prove that
-our words are those of soberness and truth. “Except ye repent, ye shall
-all likewise perish.” “If any man will come after me, let him deny
-himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me.” “Whosoever doth
-not this, cannot be my disciple.” “Whosoever loveth me, keepeth my
-commandments.” “If any man love not the LORD JESUS, let him be anathema
-maranatha.” “Without holiness no man shall see the LORD.” Are these
-words parables, are they untrue, figurative, extravagant? And if not,
-what that we say, or can say, on this head, may be resisted or slighted,
-under the plea, that is a parable?
-
-Once more. When we discourse from the pulpit, on a living and near
-Saviour, an indwelling Sanctifier, a surrounding spiritual tempter, on
-heaven or hell, on enduring as seeing Him who is invisible, on having our
-conversation in heaven, on the evidence of things unseen, on the feeling
-and grasping, so to speak, as though they were substantial and at hand,
-of things hoped for—oh! then, how many there are who hear us as though we
-were dreamers or narrators of fables, speakers who should be allowed some
-poetic license; who, to make their speech attractive, or perhaps from the
-spontaneous dictation of their enthusiasm, use figures of rhetoric and
-speak parables! I do not mean that these persons wilfully take up this
-position, that they are intentionally, or in desire, gainsayers of the
-truth, but merely that they do not enter into its conception, and cannot
-rise to its height. They lag behind, they are earthy, they see only the
-visible, feel only the tangible to bodily senses. The temporal to them
-is real; the spiritual, not through unbelief, nor obstinacy, nor moral
-blindness, but from infirmity, and earthly-mindedness, and
-unspirituality, is regarded too nearly as unreal; and, therefore, when it
-is discoursed upon, they seem to be listening to empty dreams, and the
-preacher to be displaying flights of fancy.
-
-Dear brethren—I speak to such—I know that many of you wish it were
-otherwise; you would that your mind could conceive, and that your heart
-could feel, these truths. In your best moments, you more than suspect
-that the preacher is right after all, and you are wrong; that _you_ are
-dreaming, and not he; that his words are a parable only to those who will
-not see and hear. It is not in man to afford you much help, in coming to
-a right state. If I refer you to the Bible, which we do but echo from
-the pulpit, you will still say, Ah! but does not this, too, speak
-parables? If I bid you go and exercise your reason, or consult others
-who have done so, it is more than possible that you will come away from
-the consultation—alas! many do—more convinced than before that we _do_
-speak parables, that each one is a GOD to himself, that there is no other
-devil than a man’s own evil passions, that there is no hell but in a
-remorseful conscience, that eternity does not mean “for ever!” No; there
-is no help for you in man, in yourselves, or in others. You must,
-indeed, purify and elevate your affections, so that they may wish for
-better things; you must bring down your reason from the high seat where
-it sits, and speculates, and dictates; you must try to accept the truth
-that the natural man cannot receive nor judge of spiritual things; but,
-then, you must go to GOD Himself, and humbly, teachably, earnestly ask
-for that spiritual discernment which alone can see, and feel, and love
-the things of GOD. Do this, not once, but often; not negligently or
-hastily, but earnestly and perseveringly; and presently, if not all at
-once, yet gradually, most surely, your spiritual eyes shall be opened,
-you shall see GOD, you shall love CHRIST, you shall perceive the motions
-of the Holy Spirit. The invisible world shall be unveiled, and shall be
-found to contain all the beauties, all the horrors, and to hold out all
-the hopes and fears, to be as real, as near, as sure to be ours, for weal
-or woe, according as we are, or are not, Christians, as the preacher or
-the Bible, of which he is the expounder, asserts. Thenceforth you will
-not complain of spiritual teaching that it is parabolic, of strong
-assertions of the obligation of Christian graces, that they are
-immoderate, too exacting, too severe. No! heart and mind will testify,
-and life will approve, “Lo, now speakest thou plainly, and speakest no
-proverb.” Yes; and knowing somewhat of GOD, and your relation to Him,
-and desiring to know more, whenever in your private reading of the Bible
-a difficulty meets you, or whenever the preacher discourses, as it seems,
-in parables, you will give the most earnest and interested heed, to see
-if you cannot divine the mystery; and failing that, instead of remaining
-in willing ignorance, you will use all the means placed within your
-reach, the comparing of parallel places, your commentaries, and the
-private instructions of your clergyman, pleading all the while with
-CHRIST, and urgently beseeching of Him, “LORD, thou knowest all things,
-declare unto me this parable.”
-
-Thus doing, you will soon find that to you it is given to know the
-mysteries of religion; and the knowledge, sanctified by the Spirit, will
-assuredly work in you a greater love of GOD, a more consistent and more
-successful pursuit of holiness, a growing taste and eagerness for that
-better state, whence ignorance, in all its degrees, shall be banished for
-ever, and where we shall know even as now we are known.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XVII.
-LIVING AND DYING UNTO GOD.
-
-
- II. CORINTHIANS, V., 8, 9.
-
- _We are confident and willing rather to be absent from the body_,
- _and to be present with the_ LORD. _Wherefore we labour_, _that_,
- _whether present or absent_, _we may be accepted of Him_.
-
-THE apostle had been speaking, in the preceding chapter, of the troubles
-and persecutions which he daily endured, and of the hopes and
-consolations—the life by faith rather than by right—which made their
-endurance easy. Having touched upon the theme, he could not but enlarge
-upon it; and doing so, his ardent expectations carried him out of the
-present, and made him covet and attempt to grasp the future. Before his
-enlightened eye and spiritualised heart, his affliction was light and its
-continuance brief; the present state was but as a tent, quickly to be
-taken down, and then in its place should be digged the deep foundation
-and reared the abiding edifice of a building of GOD eternal in the
-heavens. Outstretched, then, were his thoughts, and desires, and earnest
-were his prayers, not so much to get rid of what he had, as to attain
-what he hoped for and was promised. He knew indeed that the tabernacle
-must be removed; that his present state must cease—either by actual death
-or by a change, which the quick at CHRIST’S coming must undergo, much the
-same as death; he felt the burthen which was upon him; he yearned and
-groaned to be rid of it; but looking to the end he disregarded the way;
-dwelling, not upon the change but what was to come after it, he sought
-not death, but life. He longed, not to be unclothed, but clothed upon.
-Nay, recognising the good, and so the desirableness of this life,
-shrinking too naturally from the thought of dissolution, he would keep
-the present till he had the future, he would have what he wanted _added_
-to what he possessed, rather than _substituted_ for it. Present life was
-in many respects dear to him; he would that the evil were purged away
-from it, and the good left; and then that the good were augmented,
-enfolded, absorbed by the transcendent, satisfying perfect blessedness
-which GOD had promised, and for the attaining whereof He had bestowed His
-effectually working Spirit.
-
-At this point he seems to have sobered himself, or perhaps rather to have
-designedly exhibited the latent soberness and contentedness which had
-guided him all along. “We are confident,” he says, that is, of good
-cheer, well comforted, easily bearing what is, patiently waiting for the
-future; preferring, indeed (if a preference be allowed), to be absent
-from the body and fully present with the LORD; but still chiefly
-animated, not by a selfish yearning for the quickest attainment of peace
-and glory, but by the noble, GOD-adoring ambition, of being and doing
-that which is divinely approved. “Wherefore, in view of all that is and
-shall be, we make it our chief aim, we devote ourselves, not so much to
-reach heaven, to gratify self, as whether on earth or in heaven, to enjoy
-the approval and favour of God.” “Be silent,” he would say, “ye groans
-for deliverance; check yourselves, ye eager aspirations for glory; let
-principle rule rather than desire, and let the principle be, whether we
-live let us live unto the LORD, whether we die let us die unto the LORD.
-Let not dying or living be the engrossing thought, but that whether we
-live or die we may be the LORD’S.”
-
-In this, as in so many other respects, our bright exemplar, Paul, shows
-us both what we may allow and what we should aim at.
-
-And first he shows us that even the saint—the approved of GOD—may shrink
-from the thought of dissolution. “We groan, being burthened, because”
-(this is the right translation) “we would not be unclothed,” we would not
-die. I envy not the man—there is something unnatural, yea, and
-unspiritual, too, in him—who does not shrink from the first thought of
-death coming to himself or to those whom he loves. For death, in its
-best form, is a remembrancer of the wrath of GOD against the sinner, and
-it is in a sense a triumph—no matter that it is short—it is a defiling
-and withering touch—no matter that it shall soon be wiped away, and its
-blasting undone—of the foul and fierce enemy of GOD and holy man. It is
-that, too, which cuts asunder the ties which we are allowed and
-encouraged to fasten here between ourselves and loved friends and
-delightful pursuits and pleasing possessions. It is that, too, which
-abruptly closes the period of probation and preparation for heaven; which
-stays all cleansing and perfecting, which says imperatively to us, “No
-more shall you remove, no more shall you acquire—as you are shall you
-face GOD—stereotyped are you for eternity.” It is that, too, which
-enthrals and deadens the one half of us, though it liberates and quickens
-the other, which separates the body from GOD, while it joins the spirit
-to Him, which, while it exalts the latter to Paradise, consigns the
-former to the grave, to corruption, to temporary annihilation. Terrible
-is death to many, awful to all—undesirable even to the saint—and only
-tolerable because not so much of the soul’s immediate gain as of the
-body’s future hope. For if it were proposed to us to choose for eternity
-between perfect disembodied bliss, and very imperfect bliss in the body,
-there is no one, I conceive, who knows the capabilities of the body, both
-of rendering to GOD and receiving of Him, who would not prefer, and I
-think rightly, life in the flesh to life out of it.
-
-The words of St. Paul exhibit in himself, and seem to allow in others,
-this shrinking from dissolution, this desire to keep the body, albeit
-changed, perfected, caught up into the heavens; to be spared the pulling
-down of the earthly tabernacle, even to make way for the heavenly eternal
-building.
-
-But St. Paul goes on to show that this desire was secondary to that of
-exchanging faith for sight, imperfection for perfection. He would not on
-any account remain earthy: he longed for the fullest and most glorious
-presence of GOD, and if it needs must be that the desired change and
-attainment could only be brought about by dissolution, oh, then he was
-ready, he was willing rather to be absent from the body. He returned
-from the shrinking; he rallied from the fear; he was confident, well
-content, and desirous to die.
-
-And herein he is the pattern of a true Christian. He is not so in love
-with death that he can see nothing in it to shrink from or fear, nothing
-to disturb him. He does not so hate this life as to hurry to be quit of
-it. With all its trials, and disappointments, and hindrances, and
-miseries, there is much in it which is dear to him, in which he finds
-delight, from which he is loth to part. GOD, too, is felt here, and seen
-by faith, and bestows appreciable blessings; here GOD’S work is to be
-done, here GOD’S glory to be promoted. Therefore “to live is CHRIST.”
-But still there are greater and better things beyond. There is a place
-where trouble never comes, where happiness is perfect, whose company, and
-possessions, and pleasures, are such, that nought on earth is worth
-having or thinking of in comparison of them. There is a state in which
-GOD’S work may be done as angels do it, without hindrance from within or
-without; in which glory to GOD is easily, and fully, and delightfully
-rendered. There is a presence of GOD which is visible and palpable,
-where His voice is clearly heard, where He is beheld face to face, where
-the everlasting arms are substantially felt as they embrace and uphold,
-where His love is perfectly realised and enjoyed, and perfectly
-reciprocated.
-
-What can be valued, or can interest in comparison of all this? What can
-content that is short of this? What can deter from the seeking of this?
-what valley seem dark and uninviting at the end of which this glory
-shines? what way be dreary and lonely, along which GOD’S rod and staff
-are offered as supporters and comforters? This being the end and the
-aim, if to attain it death must be passed through, then welcome death!
-We are confident, full of cheer at the prospect, eager to set out—“To die
-is gain.”
-
-But the best feature of the Christian, as exhibited in St. Paul, remains
-for us to gaze on. After all, it is not the holiest ambition to aspire
-to heaven; it is not the highest vocation to enrich and perfect self.
-GOD has made us capable of heavenly bliss. He offers it to us. He would
-have us seek it; He blesses and will reward the seeking. But still He
-did not make and redeem us, He does not sanctify us only or chiefly for
-this. The Christian’s vocation is the service of GOD. The end of his
-being is the glory of GOD. And so our chief thoughts, and aspirations,
-and endeavours, are not to be deliverance from troubles, perfection in
-joy, getting out of the present into the future, exchanging earth for
-heaven; but, being and doing what GOD approves, wherever, in whatever
-circumstances, GOD appoints. “Wherefore we labour, that whether present
-or absent we may be accepted of Him;” that whether it pleases GOD to come
-to us while we are in the body, or to call us to Him out of the body, He
-may find us prepared for what in either case awaits us; “for we must all
-appear before the judgment-seat of CHRIST, that every one may receive
-according to the things done in the body.”
-
-The Christian may shrink from the first thought of death, and wish not to
-be unclothed. He ought to aspire to heaven, and that he may reach it, be
-well content, willing rather, to be absent from the body. But above all
-he must labour in whatever state he is, therein so to be serving GOD, as
-to have His present acceptance and always to be prepared for His coming
-judgment.
-
-We want to feel this and to act upon it. To put self with even its most
-innocent instincts and best interests and noblest aspirations somewhat
-aside, that GOD may be more nearly all in all; to be less filled with
-groaning and coveting on our own account and more occupied in serving and
-glorifying CHRIST. It is well not to love this world, to have realised
-its vanity and misery, to have broken the links that would bind us to it,
-to refuse to find our perfect joy in aught that belongs to it. It is
-well to yearn for deliverance from all that vexes and hinders and hurts;
-to desire ardently—even to pray earnestly and continually for—presence
-with the LORD, and all that that presence implies, in Paradise, in
-Heaven. But when by GOD’S grace we have come to this state, we are not
-perfect, we have not _begun_ to be perfect. No! we have only qualified
-ourselves in mind and heart for the commencement of that which is
-demanded of us in life, the single, contented, glad, immediate, and
-constant service of GOD in the state and circumstances in which He has
-placed us.
-
-Brethren, we are all dwelling in tabernacles, tents that have no firm
-foundation; which are to be taken down and soon. The general judgment
-may tarry, CHRIST may not come in His glorious majesty, and meet us while
-in the body: but if not then _death_ will surely come, and out of the
-body we must go to meet CHRIST. How soon shall that be? How soon shall
-we meet Him? Do you ever give these things a serious thought? Do you
-ever consider that the apparently capricious last enemy is wont to take
-the young and strong as often as the old and feeble, and, _as_ he
-chooses, sometimes to sound the warning note from afar off, sometimes to
-come silently, suddenly as a thief in the night? Do you feel—I single
-out each man, each woman, each child that hears me, and in GOD’S name I
-ask that individual—Do you feel that _you_ may be Death’s next victim,
-that ere the day is over you may be gone to your account, or at least the
-seeds of mortal disease may be beginning to grow in you? Oh, do not
-resist this appeal by persuading yourselves that the thing is improbable.
-Let it be enough that you know (and you do know) that it is possible,
-and, if possible, that you ought to entertain the possibility.
-
-Well now, let me farther ask, Are you prepared, are you preparing to die?
-Are you going to leave the vast concerns of an eternal state to the
-consideration of a moment, a moment too which may be denied you, if not
-by the instant cutting of life’s thread, by mortal fears and lingerings,
-and recoilings, by the engrossing pains of the body, by the locking up of
-the senses in stupor or delirium? Are you putting off concern; heedless
-of thought and preparation for meeting GOD? Are you calculating upon
-being able to think and feel aright when you will, to ask and obtain
-pardon for all that is wrong, to be excused for all deficiencies in a
-moment, to do the work of life on a sick-bed, to satisfy GOD with the
-dregs of the cup of life, to become a passive recipient of the necessary
-holiness which GOD bids all acquire actively? Do you suppose it will
-suffice to think of these things when the doctor tells you you cannot
-recover; to send for the clergyman to teach and move you when the faculty
-of heeding is well nigh gone, to pray for you, if you are unable to pray
-for yourself, to sigh over your body, if, alas! the soul has fled? Or
-are you now more or less possessed with religious thought and feeling,
-sitting loose to this world, weaning yourselves more and more from it,
-nerving yourselves for the last hour, sighing over and confessing your
-sins, trusting to CHRIST’S mercy, aspiring to heaven, praying for
-acceptance? Whether you are indifferent to or merely postponing concern,
-for self’s best interests, or whether you are already absorbed by self’s
-best interests, let me remind you—without presuming to set any bounds to
-GOD’S mercy, without disputing that GOD has sometimes received those who
-first turned to Him on a death-bed, without caring to satisfy those who
-want to know how little religion will save a man—let me remind you, I
-say, and do not be weary of the repetition, that to be truly acceptable
-to GOD, it is not enough that you entertain some religious thoughts, and
-go through some religious forms at the last, or even that you are filled
-with religious thoughts and feelings all your life long, you must be
-serving GOD now, in the day of your ability, at the call of every
-opportunity, in whatever state and circumstances you are placed, doing it
-as so much work set you to do and presently to be scrutinised and
-accounted for, rendering it as the faithful, grateful homage of a
-pardoned and sanctified and loving sinner. Let this be your rule, a rule
-to be observed not only in theory but in practice also; not only in the
-rendering of obedience, but in the treating of all that you have, and the
-accepting of all that happens to you, as from the LORD—“Whether we live,
-we live unto the LORD, or whether we die, we die unto the LORD.”
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XVIII.
-RELIGIOUS ZEAL.
-
-
- II. KINGS, X., 16.
-
- _Come with me_, _and see my zeal for the_ LORD.
-
-JEHU, the son of Nimshi, one of the captains of Israel, had been selected
-and anointed by Divine command, to supplant King Joram, to smite the
-whole house of Ahab, and to avenge the poured-out blood of GOD’S
-servants, the prophets. It is easy to account for the choice of such an
-agent. GOD, we believe, performs no miracle unnecessarily. When what He
-wants exists already, He searches it out and uses it; instead of making a
-new creation, or changing and converting what, so to speak, comes first
-to hand. At this time He had need, for His purposes respecting Israel,
-of a man bold, impetuous, full of vigour, prompt to undertake, resolute,
-courageous, uncompromising to perform. Such an one pre-eminently, was
-Jehu; and therefore, said the LORD, “I have anointed thee king over the
-people of the LORD, even over Israel, and thou shalt smite the house of
-Ahab thy master, that I may avenge the blood of My servants the prophets,
-and the blood of all the servants of the LORD, at the hand of Jezebel.”
-
-We know with what alacrity Jehu assumed his office, and set about the
-discharge of its stern and bloody duties; how he drove furiously to slay
-Joram, assailing him the while with loud reproaches for tolerating the
-wicked doings of Jezebel; how he caused Ahaziah, king of Judah, to be
-slain; how he commanded Jezebel to be thrown from the window, and trod
-her under foot; how he effected the wholesale slaughter of seventy
-persons of King Ahab’s sons, of all his great men, and his kinsfolks, and
-his priests, until he left him none remaining; and how, too, returning
-from this destruction, he met forty-two of the brethren of King Ahaziah,
-and caused them all to be slain at the pit of the shearing house. The
-words of the text introduce us to his last recorded deed of this kind,
-namely, the destruction by subtlety of all the followers of Baal, and the
-suppression of his worship throughout the land of Israel.
-
-In reading this narrative, the questions naturally arise, How far were
-the deeds of Jehu a performance of the Divine will? Was Jehu in any
-respect, and if so, in what, a holy character? Under what influence did
-he act, and forbear to act? May we consider these questions rightly, and
-learn from them lessons of wisdom by GOD’S grace to be carried out into
-holy practice!
-
-There is, then, no doubt, because we may read the command for it, in
-plain words, that GOD willed the destruction of Ahab’s whole house and
-the extermination of the abominable idolatry of the Zidonians. Jehu
-seems, indeed, to have been unnaturally ready for the executioner’s
-office, to have discharged it savagely, and to have availed himself of
-what is never needed or allowed in GOD’S service, of subtlety, fraud,
-lying: but still, making allowance for excesses, arising from his natural
-disposition, from his professional familiarity with deeds of blood, and
-probably from a proud misconception of the authority under which he
-acted, it must be admitted that, in the main, Jehu so far did the will of
-the LORD.
-
-Under what influence, prompted by what feelings, he did it, is a question
-less easy to answer decidedly. There are some—and not a few—who say that
-his animus was altogether bad; that carnage was his delight; and that he
-wickedly, and for his own pleasure and private ends, availed himself of
-the Divine commission, and served himself under the pretence of serving
-GOD. That Jehu was selfish there is great reason to believe, and
-something shall be said on that head presently; but that he was a
-hypocrite, that his principle, the motive under which he acted, was
-wholly bad, is proved not to be the case by the inspired commendation of
-him. GOD has made even the wicked for Himself, He uses them to
-accomplish His purposes (as He did the Assyrians to punish the
-Israelites, Satan to try Job, Judas to betray our LORD); but in such
-cases as they do of freely devised wickedness, what He overrules for His
-own good purposes, He condemns and punishes them for their offence,
-though He makes use of it. Now, in Jehu’s case, He praised and rewarded,
-and so there must have been something right in him: “And the LORD said
-unto Jehu, Because thou hast done well in executing that which is right
-in mine eyes and hast done unto the house of Ahab according to all that
-was in mine heart, thy children of the fourth generation shall sit on the
-throne of Israel.” And the promise was fully realised.
-
-It seems clear, then, that Jehu’s deeds not only accomplished the Divine
-will, but that they were done with that design; in obedience and in zeal.
-They were a soldier’s exact observance of orders, they were the fruits of
-a servant’s devotion to his master.
-
-We should be able to leave this statement without qualification were it
-not for two passages in the chapter of the text: the one, that in which
-Jehu makes such boastful mention of his doings, “Come with me, and see my
-zeal for the LORD;” the other, that in which the inspired writer records,
-“Howbeit from the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, who made Israel to
-sin, Jehu departed not from after them, to wit, the golden calves that
-were in Bethel, and that were in Dan.” From the first of these we are
-compelled to infer that there was an evil leaven pervading his best
-obedience; and from the last, that other feelings often influenced him
-beside zeal for GOD, and other lords had dominion over him; so that he
-wilfully desisted or was deterred from doing all that was required of
-him. Hence it is plain that we must revise our estimate of his
-character, to account both for his zeal and want of zeal.
-
-The most satisfactory way of viewing him, to make him at all consistent,
-is to suppose that, after all he was not a changed and converted man, and
-did not act from spiritual feelings; but that he was hitherto employed in
-pursuits congenial to his natural taste, and so found his own pleasure in
-doing the LORD’S. In the destruction of Ahab’s race and the overthrow of
-Baal, the soldier exercised the profession which he had chosen and loved.
-In daring exploits and deeds of blood, he found a carnal gratification.
-Moreover, he was all the while strengthening and advancing his own cause.
-His throne was unsafe while any of Ahab’s posterity survived to dispute
-it with him, his people’s allegiance was not sure while there was any
-link with the Zidonians remaining; and the LORD’S displeasure at the
-idolatry of Israel, he well knew, would show itself again, as it had done
-before, in the withholding of prosperity from them, and allowing them to
-be harassed by their enemies. It was, then, a congenial and politic
-course which he had hitherto followed. It may have been done with
-greater ardour and satisfaction, because it was the LORD’S will; Jehu may
-not at the time have had any distinct perception of the workings of a
-lower motive, but still he would, doubtless, have done all, and done it
-as readily and effectually had he owned no allegiance to GOD, and
-received no Divine command. This view of Jehu seems to be corroborated
-by the fact, that when the time was come for him to serve GOD in
-comparative quietness, he served Him not; and when the performance of the
-Divine will in rooting out schism, threatened to break up the separation
-of Israel from Judah, by restoring the worship at Jerusalem, then he not
-only desisted from the work of reformation, but gave his countenance to
-the old error, and encouraged the people to go after the golden calves,
-that were in Bethel and that were in Dan. And so that which he would
-have others consider, and which, perhaps, he even believed himself, was
-zeal for GOD, was chiefly the indulgence of his own passions and the
-service of self; and it came to pass, that he who had done well, even
-according to all that was in GOD’S heart, henceforth took no heed to walk
-in the law of the LORD GOD of Israel.
-
-Such was Jehu’s zeal—a natural, or mixed, is not wholly selfish zeal, the
-zeal of Saul who sought to slay the Gibeonites, but spared Agag alive;
-the zeal of the chief priests and Pharisees who put CHRIST to death, and
-demanded Barabbas to be released; not the zeal of Phinehas, of Josiah, of
-Him who was always straitened till He did His Father’s will; zeal not so
-much immoderate or blind, as blemished and partial; not being always
-zealously affected in a good work.
-
-The review of such a character may be very profitable. How many of us,
-my brethren, are very warm, very exact in serving GOD, in the things to
-which we are naturally inclined? How many of us, if we bid not others
-(as we too often do), “Come with me, and see my zeal for the LORD,” at
-least flatter, and puff up ourselves, in the contemplation of the service
-which we are rendering to GOD? How many of us have only just as much
-zeal as squares with our own desires or interests; and in all else,
-either desist when GOD urges “Go on,” or persevere when He cries
-“Forbear!” The zealous man has been advised, by a great moralist, always
-to suspect that pride, or interest, or ill temper, is at the bottom of
-his zeal. Provided we guard against the grave error, so prevalent in the
-last century, of despising and condemning all religious zeal, it is well
-to entertain this suspicion—of ourselves, I mean—till we have proved it
-to be false, or by repentance and amendment have made it false. For who
-does not know how much a proud, carnal, selfish, ill-tempered man or
-woman may do in the service of self, which has the appearance of zeal for
-GOD? What pious labours men will undertake, if they happen to be in the
-path of their natural inclinations! What warfare they will wage against
-sins that they have no mind to! What platform speeches they will make,
-what pamphlets or letters publish, against the disciples of a religious
-school to which they do not belong! They are zealously affected; they
-come out and are separate; they are enthusiastic, energetic, noisy; they
-put forth all their own strength; they invoke the civil power; they would
-have authority from the synagogue, if it were to be had, to punish all
-who do not conform; they smite with the sharp sword of a bitter
-persecuting tongue or pen; they work, they speak, they give, they fight,
-they endure—all, they say, in zeal for the LORD; and yet, if you follow
-them into the quiet scenes of life, if you come upon them where self has
-nothing to gain or enjoy, or where it has anything to lose or fear
-losing, to all appearance they take no heed to walk in the law of the
-LORD GOD. It is very likely that they are not communicants; that they
-are irregular in their attendance at Church, or greatly wanting in proper
-demeanour and devotion when there; that they aid but seldom, and
-slenderly, in the spread of religion around them, and the relief of GOD’S
-poor; that they are rarely seen to open the Bible; not men of prayer;
-exhibiting tempers, and following ways which belong not to the holily
-zealous; tolerating beneath their own roof, or within the reach of their
-influence, something as hateful in the sight of GOD as the calves that
-were in Bethel and that were in Dan.
-
-O how many who are zealous at one time, are without zeal at another! How
-many who make a great show of religion, and talk much about it, and
-contend in public for it, are utter strangers to its real influence, are
-wholly without love for it! How many, too, who honestly consider
-themselves zealous for GOD, are only serving Him in the bent of their
-natural inclinations, and taking no heed to Him, where self must be
-denied; like men of cold temperament, despising bodily indulgence, yet
-making a god of mammon; prodigals, inveighing against covetousness;
-destroyers of the temple of Baal, restorers of the calves of Bethel and
-Dan; saints in some things, devils in others!
-
-O ye who boast of zeal, or claim to have it, take care that ye have it
-towards GOD, and that ye are constant in it! Distrust the energy which
-works only at times, and in some directions. Suspect the feeling which
-excites and fills with ardour to-day, but is listless and dead to-morrow;
-which chooses for itself what to do for GOD, what to think of GOD, what
-truth to meditate on chiefly, what practice alone to follow. Zeal for
-GOD is entire, regular, consistent devotion to Him. It fills the whole
-man with all spiritual desires and feelings; it works out in the whole
-life; albeit, it is generally calm, and sober, and quiet, not boasting
-nor thrusting itself forward, not making much ado.
-
-Do not suppose, brethren, that in speaking thus on the subject of zeal, I
-would discourage, in any degree, the entertaining of a fervent spirit, or
-would allow, for a moment, that strong feeling and strong expression of
-it, and manifested earnest activity, are, in the slightest degree,
-incompatible with real religion. On the contrary, I would maintain that
-there is no religion at all in the man or woman who is not—allowing for
-the differences of temperament—stirred within by it, and impelled to
-speak of and act upon it; who is afraid, or unwilling, or negligent, to
-show it. Zeal, I maintain, is good—nay, is necessary; zeal, which makes
-one burn with the glowing thought of immortality, which rouses one to
-ardent work and holy contention; which finds, and _must have_, its vent
-in the speech; which shows itself designedly, that it may impress others,
-and set forth the glory of GOD. Only, I would have you judge of that
-zeal in others, and find it in yourselves; not in what Jehu did, but in
-what he omitted, and ought to have done; not in that which indulges
-natural desires, but in that which crosses them; not in that which
-secures worldly advantages, but in that which disregards, and even
-sacrifices them; not in that which exists, or is quickened only in times
-and places of excitement, but which burns brightest and highest, and
-spreads farthest, in solitude and silence; not where there is immediate
-praise, or glory, or notoriety, in the sight of men, but in that which is
-seen alone by GOD. Seek to be zealous, rest not till you are zealous,
-for there is no service of GOD, no acceptance with Him but through zeal:
-but expect to find your zeal, know that there only GOD will find it, in
-your deep conviction of sin, in the fervour of your penitence, in the
-uncompromising persecution of your own lusts, in the crossing of your own
-will, in the refraining from that you would naturally choose to do, and
-the performance of that you shrink from through worldly motives, in the
-earnestness of your prayers, in the frequency of your acts of communion,
-in the diligence of your searching of the Scriptures, in the munificence
-of your private charities, in the strenuousness of your efforts to do
-good to others, in the secret contemplation and desire of heaven, in the
-soul’s appreciation of your high calling, in faithful love of GOD in your
-hearts! Have such zeal, and manifest and exercise it as often and as
-consistently as the Holy Spirit enables you, and then the whole of your
-life, within and without, from first to last, shall have the commendation
-which Jehu’s at the beginning had; and an infinitely better promise shall
-be fulfilled to you, Ye shall sit on the throne of heaven with CHRIST,
-and reign with Him for ever and ever.
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XIX.
-CHRIST’S COMING DESIRED.
-
-
- REVELATION, XXII., 20.
-
- _Even so_, _come_, LORD JESUS.
-
-AS it was the common belief of the early disciples that CHRIST was to
-come in His glorious Majesty, to render unto every man according to his
-works, so was it a common desire, a frequent prayer, that He would come
-quickly. They were not content with being merely mindful of the fact
-that He would come at some time, they were not merely anxious to be
-prepared, lest He should come soon; but they looked for His coming, they
-hasted towards it, they loved the thought of His appearing. Some of
-them, expecting that they should not taste of death till He had actually
-appeared to them in His fullest glory, looked ever with eager eyes for
-the opening of the heavens, and the revelation of the Son of Man: others,
-believing that it was through the gates of death that they should enter
-into CHRIST’S presence and realise His Second Advent, wished to die,
-courted death, yea, hardly resigned themselves to the Divine will, that
-they should as yet continue in the flesh.
-
-Perhaps you may think that this was a natural rather than a spiritual
-frame of mind. On earth their portion had all along been one of sorrow
-and suffering, and evil reproach; and prophecy bade them look on for
-aggravations of what they already endured, and for many additional and
-greater troubles. What wonder, then, that they struggled to escape from
-the present, that they shrunk from the future, that they prayed that
-CHRIST would speedily come to them, or that He would speedily take them
-to Himself! What wonder that St. Paul, for instance, amid his toils, and
-perils, and sufferings, and revilings, and failures, and disappointments,
-with the prospect of nothing on earth but sorer persecution and greater
-trials, should desire to be absent from the body, and to be present with
-the LORD! What wonder that St. John, so cruelly entreated by foes, so
-disregarded by should-be friends, when in the isle of his banishment the
-voice of his LORD told of His speedy coming, should promptly and ardently
-respond to Him, “Even so, come, LORD JESUS.” Having nothing, and
-expecting nothing that flesh could desire; enduring much, anticipating
-more that was undesirable, grievous, hateful, what wonder, you would ask,
-that they yearned in their hearts to be delivered from such bondage, and
-to be transferred to the abode of peace and glory: that they offered
-frequently and fervently those Advent prayers, “Thy kingdom come,” “LORD
-JESUS receive my Spirit,” “Even so, come, LORD JESUS”! Even had they
-expected no hereafter, had they supposed that the coming Judge would
-annihilate them, or that the grave would bury them in eternal
-forgetfulness, it would still have been natural for them to have courted
-and prayed for the cessation of toil and the end of suffering.
-
-So some persons are wont to reason. It is natural, they say, for those
-to whom this world is a blank or a sea of troubles, to set their hopes on
-another world. It is natural for those whose life here is all weariness,
-to be desirous to give up that life, even though they shall have no life
-hereafter.
-
-But is it really natural? Does affliction naturally make us look
-heavenwards? Does a troubled life naturally reconcile us to the thought
-of speedy death, yea, and cause us to desire it, to pray for it?
-
-On the contrary, do we not often find persons unspiritualised by
-affliction? Do not many maintain that their worldly troubles are the
-hindrance of religious thought and practice? Is not death by very
-instinct shrunk from by well-nigh all, and most by those whose
-circumstances seem to recommend it as naturally the greatest good?
-
-You hear those who are vexed or thwarted, or oppressed, or wearied,
-exclaim in some moment of impatience or despondency, “I am weary of my
-life.” You find some so worn out, like Job, by long and accumulated
-troubles, that they continually sigh, and from the heart, “Oh! that I had
-given up the ghost!” You hear the thoughtless, the proud, the obstinate,
-protest “I had rather die.” But let them be taken at their word, let
-Death show himself to be really close at hand, to be coming to them, and
-they will recoil with horror from his touch, and piteously cry to be
-spared. Occasionally one is found who, lacking patience and perseverance
-to extricate himself lawfully from pressing difficulties, or, mad with
-vexation because he cannot accomplish some worldly scheme, or because he
-has been frustrated in some wickedness: or because having done the
-wickedness, he fears to face the worldly consequences of his deed, not
-merely says that he wishes to die, and prays for death; but then and
-there ministers it to himself. Yet even in such cases, while he would
-escape from life, he does not deliberately seek death. Nay, when he
-finds he is encountering death, he often desists from his half-done deed,
-or, if it be too late for that, shrieks frantically for others to rescue
-him.
-
-There are exceptions to all these rules, when men really wish to die,
-when they deliberately court and procure death; but they are sufficiently
-rare to vindicate the truth, that they are not natural.
-
-Certainly the desire and prayer of the first disciples to be removed from
-this world were not natural. They did not despair in difficulties. They
-were not unwilling to endure continued trials and sufferings. They were
-not disgusted with life. All that CHRIST required of them they burned to
-do; all that He laid upon them they rejoiced to bear; and while aught was
-undone or unsuffered, they chose and desired to remain; and even then, it
-was not exhausted nature asking for rest, it was not weariness or dislike
-of life’s lot which prompted the prayer, “Even so, come, LORD JESUS:”
-they gloried in their then vocation, they loved their appointed work;
-they would not relinquish it, they would not be unclothed, but clothed
-upon, advanced, and perfected: they loved CHRIST, and so yearned to see
-Him; they loved His service, and so coveted a state in which it could be
-more fully and uninterruptedly rendered; they loved other men, the alien
-and the outcast, and so longed for the day when all the kingdoms of the
-world should become the kingdoms of the LORD and of His CHRIST, when
-every soul should be subject to and rejoice in His rule! They looked for
-CHRIST’S coming, not because they supposed it would release them from His
-service, and transfer them to an abode of luxurious immunity and rest and
-glory; but because they thought it was the necessary prelude to full
-usefulness, to entire submission to His will, to unremitted, glorious
-service under His perceived eye, and in the perfection of His strength.
-They thought death was gain, and they desired it, not as the time of
-sleep, the chamber of inactivity and oblivion, but as the door, the short
-passage, which led into a world wherein the kingdom of CHRIST was fully
-set up, and wherein they should unceasingly experience His rule, and act
-as its agents. They prayed that GOD would shortly accomplish the number
-of His elect, not with the carnal desire that their enemies might be
-confounded, and that those then without might be kept without: nor yet
-with selfish impatience for their own promised reward; but that the work
-of grace might be effectual, where now it seemed to be received in vain;
-that the darkness which encompassed so many might be dispelled, that all
-Israel might be saved, and might join them in glorifying GOD.
-
-This was the feeling which prompted their Advent prayers; this was the
-feeling which they laboured to arouse in those to whom they spoke, and in
-us, for whom they wrote. When St. Paul tells us, that to him to live was
-CHRIST, and to die was gain, that he desired to depart and be with
-CHRIST, though he was content to remain, he shows one of the many
-respects in which we are to be followers of him. When St. John records,
-that he replied to CHRIST’S announcement, “Behold, I come quickly,” “Even
-so, come, LORD JESUS,” he personates the Church and every acceptable
-member of it, and shows us the attitude and the feeling which becomes
-each one of those who wait for the LORD’S appearing; even as St. Peter
-does in direct appeal: “What manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy
-conversation and godliness, looking for and hasting unto the coming of
-the day of GOD?”
-
-Alas! brethren, how far are we below the appointed standard of acceptable
-discipleship! How little is CHRIST’S Second Advent in our minds, even as
-a mere doctrine, a truth of Scripture! How small is the influence which
-it is allowed to exercise on our thoughts and affections, and lives! How
-seldom do we suggest to ourselves the possibility of its nearness! How
-faintly, if at all, in what mere words—words, which do not spring from
-feelings, and are not illustrated by actions—do we pray for its speedy
-arrival!
-
-Even those among us, who are rightly mindful, who study to be prepared at
-all times, lest speedily and suddenly the Son of Man should come forth to
-judgment, or should send forth the angel of death to bring them to His
-bar—even these can scarcely be said to desire the coming, which they
-think of and prepare for: much less to pray for it, and to do what in
-them lies to hasten it. Even if we are faithful servants, able to render
-a right account whenever it shall be called for, we dread rather than
-hope for the day of our LORD’S return. Even if we have our lamps trimmed
-and oil with us in our vessels, if instead of slumbering, we are
-watching, would it not still be to us an unwelcome cry, “Behold the
-bridegroom cometh, go ye out to meet Him”? What would be the first
-feeling of the best of us, if at this moment an angel stood revealed, and
-announced “The day of the LORD is come”? which of us can honestly,
-heartily say now, “I would not live always. I would not live till
-to-morrow, if GOD graciously willed that I might die to-day?”
-
-Of course there are many reasons why we should shrink from an immediate
-advent. We all of us need to cast off some works of darkness: something
-is wanting in the spiritual armour of the best accoutred. We feel that
-we have much work to do for GOD before the night cometh; we have many
-graces to cultivate and many others to acquire, before we shall be fit
-for CHRIST’S coming; and, besides, naturally, the unprovided for, the
-unprotected, the unguided, that will be left behind, if we go, tempt us
-to linger, with eyes earthwards; and fashion chains to bind us down. But
-setting aside all this, supposing it all changed, so that we were fit in
-all other respects for heaven, and nothing and no one on earth really
-required us, does not conscience convince us that still we would rather
-not go yet, that we shall be the better pleased the longer we are allowed
-to stay, that our real prayer (that which our feelings suggest, though
-our mouths dare not utter it, nor our minds dwell on it) is “LORD JESUS,
-come _not_ quickly.”
-
-Why is this? I do not mean why is it in the case of the wilful, the
-sensual, the worldly—there is no need to ask the question of them;
-CHRIST’S coming will be their utter confusion, and the immediate
-forerunner of their destruction. It is easy to understand why _they_
-wish him to delay. But why is it in the case of the truly penitent, the
-reformed, the faithful, the holy, the comparatively ready for CHRIST’S
-kingdom of glory? The foremost reason seems to be that they have never
-had the courage to meditate calmly and sufficiently on death. The first
-thought of death alarms them. And this is natural, for death is part of
-the punishment of sin, and all that reminds of sin should alarm. But it
-is only the _first_ thought that alarms. If they would give it further
-consideration, they would see that death is deprived of his sting, that,
-monster as he appears, to them he is harmless. “There is no condemnation
-for them that are in CHRIST JESUS.” Death is not their enemy, but their
-friend. In fact, he is death no longer. He is an appointed minister to
-take them out of what might be more properly called death—this mortal
-life—and introduce them into real life. He does not separate them from
-CHRIST, but joins them more truly to Him. It is not a dark, bottomless
-pit, with sides that cannot be climbed, to which he brings them, but a
-short valley leading from the plain of this world to the city of glory,
-which he that enters passes through in a moment, ay, and less than a
-moment, and is new born for eternity. Bring yourselves, brethren, to
-believe this, to feel the reality of it, to be sure that the moment your
-body falls asleep in JESUS your spirit is wafted to Paradise, and begins
-to rest consciously on CHRIST, and to company with the spirits of the
-just departed. Then, though the nearness of death may for the moment awe
-you—because it is the antechamber which leads directly into the presence
-of so much holiness and glory—it will have no power to fill you with
-dismay, no undesirableness to make you shrink from it. No, brethren, you
-will think much of it, you will patiently hope for it, you will
-anticipate it and watch for it, and when it draws nigh, you will welcome
-it with joy, and hasten to be transferred by it from mortal life to
-immortal!
-
-Another fault is, that CHRIST is not sufficiently in all our thoughts.
-Our religion is too much of mere routine; our obedience is mechanical,
-unintelligent; our holiness is acquired, because of an imposed necessity;
-our faith is but historical. We do not feel what St. Paul felt when he
-said, “To me to live is CHRIST.” By which it is clear he meant much more
-than that CHRIST’S service was his one employment, CHRIST’S rewards his
-one expectation, CHRIST’S grace his only strength. He did not simply
-look back to a crucified Saviour, nor forward to a coming Judge,
-believing himself to be made a servant, and to have by and by to render
-an account, to be liable to a judgment of his service; but meanwhile to
-have no LORD near and over him. No! the CHRIST that had departed in the
-flesh was felt to have come back in the spirit. St. Paul saw Him by
-faith, knew Him, walked side by side with Him, served Him personally,
-derived constant grace from Him, loved Him, and felt His love. CHRIST
-was the Alpha and Omega of his being, the beginning, the motive power of
-all his thoughts, and words, and deeds, the companion of all his ways,
-the object of all his aims: CHRIST the power of GOD unto salvation,
-CHRIST a very present help and comfort, CHRIST the hope of glory. Life
-was full of CHRIST in its experiences, its aims, its delights, and hopes.
-Gladly, therefore, would he retain it as long as GOD willed; but knowing
-that death was gain, that after death CHRIST would be more palpably with
-him, that he would be more able to appreciate CHRIST, that heavenly joys
-would then be added to the joys he had on earth, he still longed for his
-departure, he desired ardently to be clothed upon, he loved the thought
-of CHRIST’S final appearing, and his whole life acted the prayer which
-St. John uttered, “Come, LORD JESUS.”
-
-Brethren, you must live as Paul did, you must appreciate life as he did,
-if you would desire death as he did. You must acquaint yourselves with
-CHRIST by study and meditation, by the Spirit’s invoked aid. You must
-think of a living LORD as well as of a dead Saviour. You must have
-reference in all your ways, not only to the first advent and to the last,
-but, also, and I would even say chiefly, to the constant advent. You
-must have come to perceive that the promise is fulfilled, “Lo, I am with
-you alway.” You must endure as seeing Him who is invisible. You must
-carry CHRIST about with you. You must do all to the glory of Him, felt
-to be near, to be served and glorified. When you would go anywhither,
-your first thought must be, “Will CHRIST accompany me? Except thy
-presence go with me, O LORD, carry me not up hence.” When you have aught
-to do or suffer, your realisation of a near and available helper must
-make you begin with the prayer, “O LORD, raise up thy power and come
-among us, and with great might succour us.” Gratitude for benefits
-provided so long ago will never prompt you to render due Christian
-service, vague expectation of inconceivable joys will never quicken your
-steps Zionwards. You must know CHRIST, feel Him, converse with Him,
-depend on Him, and then, while you enjoy the life here, you will yet
-yearn for a place and a condition where you can have perfectly and
-uninterruptedly what now for so many reasons you have but in small part,
-and, “Thy kingdom come,” “Even so, come, LORD JESUS,” will be your
-fervent and frequent prayers.
-
-I have spoken all along as if what we call “death” were the coming of
-CHRIST, which you ought to desire and pray for, because we have all come
-to take for granted that in our several cases death will surely precede
-judgment, that CHRIST will not be revealed in our time. I need scarcely
-remind you, that we do not know that; that at any moment the final advent
-might take place, and so each one of us be caught up alive—and never see
-death. If then, when you desire more of CHRIST, you think that through
-the gate of death is the probable way of gaining it, and so look for
-death, you must not forget that there is another way, and that you may
-possibly first meet CHRIST face to face there. Be your desire to be more
-fully with CHRIST, and submissively leave to Him to decide how that
-desire shall be accomplished, through death or without death. But in
-either case remember that your ultimate thought should rest upon the
-final advent, and your most fervent prayers be for it. Though you gain
-much by dying, being freed from many hindrances of perception of CHRIST,
-being made more fit for His presence, seeing Him more clearly, feeling,
-and hearing, and loving Him better, your state and privileges will still
-be imperfect. You must stand before Him in glorified bodies before you
-are capable of being and receiving all that He graciously designs; and
-all the elect must stand there with you before His perfect gifts shall be
-bestowed. God does not will that we, without them, should be made
-perfect. The final advent, then, is to be the frequent subject of our
-prayers; the speedy completion of all God’s preparatory measures, the
-swiftest communication, far and wide, of the knowledge of His name and
-will, the quick filling up of the number of the elect.
-
-This we are to pray for, and this we are to aid in accomplishing. CHRIST
-will come when all is ready, and He has left us to make ready. First to
-prepare ourselves, then to prepare others. When this work of the
-forerunner has been done, the LORD Whom ye seek will come. He does but
-tarry till men be told of His coming, and persuaded to look for and
-desire it. When we tell them, when we persuade them, we hasten His
-coming—that coming in perfect glory to bestow in perfection on us, on
-all, that which, till then, at the best must be imperfect.
-
-Should not this quicken our own growth in spiritual things? should it not
-prompt us to admonish, and persuade, and help others? should it not impel
-us to give more substantial aid to, to interest ourselves more about, to
-pray more frequently and really for the success of missionary enterprise,
-that those who have heard of CHRIST may be found out in their
-forgetfulness, and reminded of Him, that those who are as yet strangers
-and aliens may be brought into His household, and made fellow heirs with
-us, and expectants of His coming?
-
-
-
-
-SERMON XX.
-TRUE PROSPERITY.
-
-
- GENESIS, XXXIX., 2.
-
- _The_ LORD _was with Joseph_, _and he was a prosperous man_.
-
-IF you were asked, brethren, to make a list of what you consider
-prosperous men, what kind of persons what you put into it? Those, I
-doubt not, with whom all goes smoothly, who come in no misfortune like
-other folk, who have riches in possession, acquire fame, are exalted in
-honour; whose wishes are largely gratified, whose every project succeeds;
-who, in short, experience no reverse, no temporary withdrawal or
-suspension of good fortune, and peace, and pleasure. What is the first
-prosperous man that comes into your mind? Perhaps, a successful
-speculator, who years ago made what is called a “lucky hit,” and has gone
-on repeating it, till he has become a millionaire. Perhaps, a
-professional man, whom fortune took by the hand as soon as he set out,
-and who has been hurried along with giant strides, favoured, flattered,
-well remunerated, till he has reached the summit of success. Perhaps,
-some uniformly thriving, respectable, happy tradesman, whose business
-prospers, who is always able to pay his way, can afford time and money
-for pleasure, and has good heart and health to enjoy it; in whose
-household there is no strife or division, no sickness, no vacated place;
-all present success, or bright hope. Or, perhaps, you fasten on an
-artisan, who is never out of work, who always meets with considerate and
-liberal employers, whose sobriety and uprightness, and other good
-qualities, are recognised and respected abroad, and rewarded by comfort,
-and affection, and well-doing at home.
-
-But it is a clergyman who bids you select: so you must look about with a
-religious eye. Then you pick out, perhaps, those who are naturally
-endowed with good will and resolution, and are strong to perform it; who
-have been early trained in the right way, so that doing good has become
-habitual and comparatively easy; who have no overwhelming concern about
-the support of their lower life, are not distracted by worldly cares or
-by the claims of society upon them, nor much exposed to unspiritual
-influence; who have no immoderate passions, encounter no sore
-temptations, but _can_, without hindrance, and _do_, from desire, live
-calm, and easy, and creditable lives. These, you would say, are
-prosperous men, and so, in a sense, they are—very prosperous—and far be
-it from me to say, wrongly, or unhappily prosperous. We know, indeed,
-what snares riches bring with them, how many grave responsibilities are
-imposed upon all to whom much has been given, how dizzy one becomes
-through standing on a great height, and how easy and dangerous it is to
-fall from it. We know, too, that constant success is apt to make us
-self-reliant, forgetful of GOD, proud, imperious, uncharitable; and that
-uninterrupted peace and happiness in this world too often beguile us,
-softly indeed, but surely, out of all thought of heaven. And once more,
-we know that an even temperament and an untempted life may easily lead to
-routine-religion, to self-righteousness, to spiritual apathy and
-deadness. On these accounts, we must not count them _surely_ happy who
-prosper in the world; but, on the other hand, we may not judge their
-state certainly unhappy; nor deem the desire to be like them necessarily
-wrong or unwise. _If_ we can make sure of both worlds; _if_ we can have
-the best of this, and not lose the other; _if_ no harm will happen to our
-spiritual state, and no fitness for it be unattained and unkept; _if_ GOD
-will be surely with us, while we _thus_ prosper—then religion does not
-require, rather forbids, that we should give up our good things, that we
-should forbear to seek them, to use them, and to rejoice in them. All
-these various states may, or may not be, truly prosperous. Wherefore be
-not rashly carried away with admiration and desire of any of them; be
-slow to judge unfavourably of them, or to refuse, if you be called to any
-of them.
-
-But what I would have you chiefly note now is that there are other kinds
-of true prosperity; rather, that if you would find out who truly prosper,
-and whether you yourselves are truly prosperous, you must look for other
-signs than those of worldly success and happiness; you must not conclude
-that the inward part, the very substance of prosperity, is wanting,
-because the outward life is sorely tried, and thwarted, and deprived, and
-saddened.
-
-The Spirit of Truth describes, in the chapter of the text, a truly
-prosperous man. Three several times, in a few verses, is Joseph’s
-prosperity put prominently forward. Now just think what his life had
-been, and was, and was yet to be! He had been motherless from an early
-age; his father’s love made him the object of his brothers’ envy and
-hatred. He was thrown into a pit to die, and only escaped death to
-become a slave in a foreign land to a heathen master. Ere long he was
-made the victim of a foul accusation; he was thrust into prison, and
-there detained many long years; and when, at last, a hope of deliverance
-dawned upon him, he was cruelly disappointed by the king’s servant, whom
-he had kindly tended and reassured in trouble, and another two years of
-incarceration, of suspense worse than despair, had to be endured! Yet
-was he _all the while_—mark that!—a prosperous man. The Scripture does
-not say or mean that _by and by_ he attained to a prosperity, in which
-all his former adversity was forgotten. It is of the present, not of the
-future, that prosperity is predicated. Nor may we suppose that there was
-but a _show_ of adversity, that Joseph was really what we call prosperous
-all the while, in that he enjoyed many advantages, that he made steady
-way towards greatness, that his troubles were but as the toils and
-difficulties which, in a measure, the most successful have to encounter;
-or the just merits of misdeeds and the correction of faults. Up to the
-time of his release from prison, all through the years which Scripture
-says were prosperous, every hope and aim had been frustrated. It was not
-that he had difficulty in entering upon his work, that he had much to
-resist and suffer from its pursuit; but that after it was done, the
-reward of it was denied him: he only climbed the hill, to be rolled back,
-just as he reached the summit. His child’s life commended him to the
-love of his father, _therefore_ he was thrust out. He won the good-will
-of his master, was diligent in his work, which prospered in his hand; was
-trustworthy and trusted, rose to be overseer of the house, and _then_,
-when he had good hope of his freedom and of returning to his yearned-for
-home, without any fault of his, he was degraded, branded with infamy, and
-cast into prison. Here, again, he deserved prosperity: the very jailor
-acknowledged it, and honoured and well treated him. The door, too,
-seemed to be opening for his deliverance, when a fellow-prisoner went
-forth full of his praise, an eye-witness of his sorrow, to make mention
-of him to Pharaoh—but alas! the most strange forgetfulness took
-possession of the butler, and for two years the name of Joseph never
-crossed his lips, nor thought of him entered his mind. And even when
-delivered out of prison, and exalted by Pharaoh, he became but a chief
-_slave_, next the throne in dignity, second to the king in power, but
-still not free to return to his home, still kept ignorant whether his
-father was yet alive! Was this what we can call, by any stretch or
-limitation, “prosperity”? And mark, that all his trouble came upon him,
-not only _in_, but _for_, his well-doing. In obedience to his father, he
-went to visit his brethren, and thus afforded the occasion of selling him
-into bondage; because he did his duty to Potiphar, he was put into
-circumstances of danger; by refusing to sin against GOD, he incurred the
-reproach and punishment of sin; by honestly asserting before Pharaoh, “It
-is not in me, I am nothing but a servant,” he lost the opportunity of
-obtaining what the king would have been most ready to give him, and
-afraid to refuse, absolute freedom.
-
-My brethren, you and I can hardly bear with trials, and sufferings, and
-reproaches, and ill-treatment, when we dimly suspect, or are actually
-conscious, that we have deserved them. How should we murmur, and cry
-out, and kick, and rebel, if we were thus treated for well-doing! With
-what words should we answer him who sought to calm and comfort us in such
-trouble, by assuring us that we did wrong to count it adversity, that it
-was indeed prosperity!
-
-Yet GOD says that Joseph was a prosperous man. It is evident, therefore,
-that we know not the meaning of prosperity, and must search in His
-dictionary for the interpretation of it. It is soon found: the first
-part of the text supplies it—“_The_ LORD _was with him_.”
-
-Ah! here is light from heaven. Prosperity does not mean the state of
-careless independence; being what we will, having what we desire,
-accomplishing what we propose: it means, the state of dependence, of
-being kept and ordered by GOD’S providence, treated as He wills, used in
-accomplishing His purposes. _By right_, we are GOD’S, by creation, and
-redemption, and sanctification, sent into this world, reconciled and
-restored after defection, enabled and commissioned to do the will of GOD.
-We are as much the agents of His purposes as the elements, or any other
-of His creatures; and it would be just as reasonable, were it possible,
-for the sun to complain that it is sometimes covered with clouds; the
-rain, that it has to descend and be absorbed in the earth, or lost in the
-sea, or scattered in snow; the wind, that it must blow when and where He
-pleases, as for us to say of any state into which we are brought, of any
-work to which we are put, or of any calling off from it, “I like not
-this; I am not prospered. All these things are against me”! We have no
-right to independence; we ought not to be independent, and if we are, it
-is either because we have forsaken our appointed service, or because GOD
-deems us unfit for it, and, therefore, uses us not! A chief part of
-Joseph’s prosperity, remember, consisted not in the advancement of
-himself, but in the accomplishment of GOD’S work: “_That which he did_,
-the LORD made it to prosper.”
-
-But _by privilege_, as well as by right, are we GOD’S. We are not mere
-tools in His hand: we are living agents, intelligent to understand His
-will, free to do it or decline it, capable of loving it. We are,
-therefore, taken into His counsel, made fellow-workers with Him, treated
-all along by Him according to our merits, finally rewarded according to
-our work; not, however, in the way of our own choice, but of His. O if
-we realised this, and did our part according to the belief, we should
-never murmur at, or question anything that is appointed us, or befals us.
-For what does such questioning amount to, but an assertion that GOD does
-not make the right use of us, or that He does not treat us worthily? And
-what is that, but to deny His wisdom, His justice, and His love? No man,
-who is worth a thought, counts it adversity, that he is bound by the
-conditions, and must accept the trials, and do the work of his chosen
-earthly calling, that he is obliged, for instance, to serve in his shop,
-or pore over his books, or risk storms at sea, or face the dangers of
-war; that, in short, he cannot be and do what he will, but must obey the
-law of circumstances—why, then, should he reverse all this in his divine
-mission and heavenly calling, and demand a liberty, an immunity, a
-choice, which common sense would tell him should not and could not be
-granted?
-
-But there is another, a chief consideration, which should incline us to
-be sure that the ordering of GOD’S providence is the conferring of True
-Prosperity. GOD uses us, indeed, as servants, and appoints us our
-individual work out of the several circumstances around us. But He
-likewise makes us His friends, and uses the circumstances around us, as
-ministers to us. It is in them that He speaks to us and visits us; it is
-by them, that He rewards and punishes us now; it is through them that He
-disciplines and trains us, and perfects us for heaven. We were not made
-for them, but they for us. And what shall we be saying of the Artificer
-and the Superintendent of their use if we question their general fitness,
-or the special application of them to ourselves? “Sorrow is not good for
-me.” “I am ruined by that disappointment.” “Through taking that stay
-from me, I am become helpless.” “Removing me thither is overwhelming me
-with adversity.” These, my brethren, are not only the expressions of
-ingratitude, and the reasonings of unbelief, they are the dictations of
-arrogant presumption dethroning the wisdom of GOD, and putting our folly
-in its place. We have no right to choose for ourselves: and if we had,
-how could we do it? Is not GOD wise to know what is best for us? Is not
-He good to apply it? Should we not fear the fulfilment of any hope, the
-accomplishment of any purpose of our own, and cry, “O LORD, not as I
-will, but as Thou wilt. Except Thy presence go with me, carry me not up
-hence”! Should we not accept with full resignation, with heartfelt
-gratitude, any imposed condition, and say, “It is the LORD, let Him do
-what seemeth Him good,” “It is good for me to be here.”
-
-We may reason this out, and the example of others proves it, and our own
-experience confirms it. Admit the fact, that the LORD was with Joseph,
-_i.e._, that He used him as His agent, that He loved him, and designed to
-deliver him from evil, and to bless him to the uttermost; and then look
-along his life to see whether wisdom and love did not guide all his
-circumstances to this end. It was GOD’S will that Joseph should cause
-Jacob to come into Egypt, and should sustain him there. How every step
-of his seeming adversity helped to accomplish this will! The telling of
-his dream engendered the hatred of his brethren; that hatred sold him to
-the Midianites, the Midianites brought him to Potiphar, the false
-accusation cast him into prison, in the prison he interpreted the king’s
-butler’s dream, and therefore he was summoned to interpret the king’s
-dream, and for so doing made the ruler of Egypt, and the dispenser of
-corn to the famished nations. This brought the sons of Jacob to him:
-this enabled him to dispose of them according to the will of GOD. Thus,
-“that which he did the LORD made it to prosper.” And then of his
-personal prosperity. Was not his father’s preference likely to spoil
-him? Did he not run daily risks from the hatred of his brethren? Was
-his best state that of an honoured slave in Potiphar’s household? Was it
-well that he should daily encounter the temptations of his mistress? Was
-there no good discipline in that prison-life? Did not deliverance come
-at the fitting moment, rightly so late, under such circumstances?
-Supposing he had chosen for himself, what else could he have chosen that
-would have been better, or as good as GOD’S choice for Him? And if,
-brethren, we look along _our_ lives in the light of GOD’S providence, is
-it not just so with us? Supposing us to be faithful servants of GOD, has
-not all that has happened to us been for our good? Was it not well for
-us that we were removed from the state in which we were being spoiled,
-becoming selfish and proud? Was it not good for us to be afflicted? Did
-not some earthly loss make us seek to fill the void with heavenly
-consolation? Are we not now better—better in fact—better in hope—because
-GOD has prospered us in His own way, than if we had had what _we_ thought
-prosperity? Yes, surely; and had we been wise, in the hour of our worst
-trial, we should have known that we were truly prosperous, in that GOD
-was with us, that His jealous love had taken us from the foolish fondness
-that was spoiling us, from the bitter envy that would not rest till it
-had destroyed us, from the secular prosperity that would soon have made
-us forget our birthright, from the temptation that sought to defile us!
-
-If we have been wanting in this wisdom hitherto, let us fill ourselves
-with it now. Let us accept everything that befals us in the path of
-faith and obedience as true prosperity; true prosperity, not only because
-it is accomplishing by us GOD’S wise purposes, not only because it is
-advancing us to glory, but because, it is the felt, the immediate, wise,
-loving operation on us of a present GOD, present to sustain, to comfort,
-to sanctify, to bless, present under a better covenant than that with
-Joseph, present more graciously, and more effectually; GOD the Father of
-our LORD JESUS CHRIST, GOD the Son, who has given Himself for us, and has
-promised to be with us always even to the end of the world, GOD the Holy
-Ghost, proceeding from the Father and the Son, bringing near and applying
-true prosperity, and fitting us for it, and enlightening us to see it,
-and causing us to rejoice in it.
-
- * * * * *
-
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-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Plain Sermons preached at Archbishop
-Tenison's Chapel, Regent Street, by James Galloway Cowan
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Plain Sermons preached at Archbishop Tenison's Chapel, Regent Street
- Second Series
-
-
-Author: James Galloway Cowan
-
-
-
-Release Date: December 29, 2021 [eBook #67036]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLAIN SERMONS PREACHED AT
-ARCHBISHOP TENISON'S CHAPEL, REGENT STREET***
-</pre>
-<p>Transcribed from the 1860 William Skeffington edition by David
-Price.&nbsp; Many thanks to the British Library for making their
-copy available.</p>
-<h1>PLAIN SERMONS</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">PREACHED
-AT</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">ARCHBISHOP TENISON&rsquo;S
-CHAPEL,</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">REGENT
-STREET.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">BY</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">JAMES GALLOWAY COWAN,</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">MINISTER.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><b>Second Series</b>.</p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">WILLIAM SKEFFINGTON, 163,
-PICCADILLY</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">1860.</p>
-<h2><a name="pageii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. ii</span><i>BY
-THE SAME AUTHOR</i>&mdash;<i>FIRST SERIES</i>.</h2>
-<p class="gutindent">Plain Sermons, preached at Archbishop
-Tenison&rsquo;s Chapel, Regent Street.&nbsp; Fcap. cloth, price
-3s. 6d.</p>
-<h2><a name="pageiii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-iii</span>CONTENTS.</h2>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
-class="GutSmall">PAGE</span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON I.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">DEPENDENCE UPON GOD.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Philippians, iv., 5, 6.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>The Lord is at hand.&nbsp; Be careful for nothing; but in
-everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your
-requests be made known unto <span class="smcap">God</span></p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page1">1</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON II.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">JUDGMENT HERE AND HEREAFTER.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Malachi, ii., 17.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Where is the God of Judgment?</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page16">16</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON III.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE WORLDLING REPROVED.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">St. James, iv., 13, 14, 15.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Go to now, ye that say, To-day or to-morrow we will go
-into such a city, and continue there a year, and buy and sell,
-and get gain: Whereas ye know not what shall be on the
-morrow.&nbsp; For what is your life?&nbsp; It is even a vapour,
-that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away.&nbsp;
-For that ye ought to say, If the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-will, we shall live, and do this, or that.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page32">32</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center"><a
-name="pageiv"></a><span class="pagenum">p. iv</span>SERMON IV.<br
-/>
-<span class="GutSmall">THE UNKNOWN GOD.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Acts, xvii., 22, 23.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Ye men of Athens, I perceive that in all things ye are too
-superstitious.&nbsp; For as I passed by, and beheld your
-devotions, I found an altar with this inscription, <span
-class="smcap">To the Unknown God</span>.&nbsp; Whom therefore ye
-ignorantly worship, Him declare I unto you.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page48">48</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON V.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">FAITH AND ITS BLESSEDNESS.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">St. John, xx., 29.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed:
-blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page66">66</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON VI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">FAULTLESSNESS BEFORE GOD.</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">(INNOCENTS&rsquo; DAY.)</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Revelation, xiv., 5.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>They are without fault before the throne of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page76">76</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON VII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PAST MERCIES REVIEWED.</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">(NEW YEAR&rsquo;S EVE.)</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Genesis, xxxii., 10.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies, and of
-all the truth, which thou hast showed unto Thy servant; for with
-my staff I passed over this Jordan; and now I am become two
-bands.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page92">92</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center"><a
-name="pagev"></a><span class="pagenum">p. v</span>SERMON VIII.<br
-/>
-<span class="GutSmall">WORKING FOR GOD.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">St. John, ix., 4.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>I must work the works of Him that sent me, while it is
-day: the night cometh, when no man can work.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page108">108</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON IX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">CHRIST&rsquo;S TRUEST
-MANIFESTATION.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">St. John, xiv., 22.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p><span class="smcap">Lord</span>, how is it that Thou will
-manifest Thyself unto us, and not unto the world.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page126">126</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON X.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">BLESSING ACCORDING TO PRAYER.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">St. Matthew, viii., 13.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>And <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> said unto the
-centurion, Go thy way; and as thou hast believed, so be it done
-unto thee.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page146">146</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">CHRIST STILLING THE STORM.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">St. Matthew, viii., 26.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>And He saith unto them, Why are ye fearful, O ye of little
-faith?&nbsp; Then He arose, and rebuked the winds and the sea;
-and there was a great calm.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page161">161</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center"><a
-name="pagevi"></a><span class="pagenum">p. vi</span>SERMON
-XII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">UNITY WITH PEACE.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Ephesians, iv., 1, 2, 3.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>I, therefore, the prisoner of the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, beseech you that ye walk worthy of the
-calling wherewith ye are called, With all lowliness and meekness,
-with long-suffering, forbearing one another in love; Endeavouring
-to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page179">179</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XIII. <br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE LAW IN THE GOSPEL.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">St. Luke x., 25.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>What shall I do to inherit eternal life?</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page193">193</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XIV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PRESENT SALVATION.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">II. Corinthians, vi., 2.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Behold, now is the day of salvation.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page211">211</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center"><a
-name="pagevii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. vii</span>SERMON
-XV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">CHRIST TOUCHED.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">St. Mark, v., 30.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>And <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>, immediately knowing
-in Himself that virtue had gone out of Him, turned Him about in
-the press, and said, Who touched my clothes?</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page228">228</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XVI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PREACHING PARABLES.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Ezekiel, xx., 49.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Ah <span class="smcap">Lord God</span>! they say of me,
-Doth he not speak parables?</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page245">245</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XVII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">LIVING AND DYING UNTO GOD.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">II. Corinthians, v., 8, 9.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>We are confident and willing rather to be absent from the
-body, and to be present with the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>.&nbsp; Wherefore we labour, that,
-whether present or absent, we may be accepted of Him.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page264">264</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XVIII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">RELIGIOUS ZEAL.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">II. Kings, x., 16.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Come with me, and see my zeal for the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page276">276</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center"><a
-name="pageviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. viii</span>SERMON
-XIX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">CHRIST&rsquo;S COMING DESIRED.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Revelation, xxii., 20.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Even so, come, <span class="smcap">Lord Jesus</span>.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page289">289</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan='2'><p style="text-align: center">SERMON XX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">TRUE PROSPERITY.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Genesis, xxxix., 2.</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>The <span class="smcap">Lord</span> was with Joseph, and
-he was a prosperous man.</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
-href="#page305">305</a></span></p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h2><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 1</span>SERMON
-I.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">DEPENDENCE UPON GOD.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Philippians</span>, <span class="smcap">iv</span>.,
-5, 6.</p>
-<p><i>The Lord is at hand</i>.&nbsp; <i>Be careful for
-nothing</i>; <i>but in everything by prayer and supplication with
-thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto</i> God.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">The</span> Lord is at
-hand.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is doubtful whether this admonition is
-designed to recommend the foregoing precept, &ldquo;Let your
-moderation be known unto all men,&rdquo; or whether it introduces
-and enforces the injunction, &ldquo;Be careful for
-nothing.&rdquo;&nbsp; It may well do both: on the one hand,
-exhorting the disciples to lead (and that manifestly) an
-unworldly life, seeing they were so shortly to be taken out of
-the world; and, on the other hand, cheering them in their
-sorrows, suppressing their anxieties and quickening their faith,
-by the remembrance, that comfort, and peace, and perfect bliss
-would soon be theirs&mdash;&ldquo;The <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> is at hand.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>The
-second advent of our <span class="smcap">Lord</span> was always
-in the mind of the apostles.&nbsp; It is thought that they even
-counted upon its literal occurrence in their lifetime, as though
-the prophecies of it were among the things to be fulfilled before
-that generation passed away.&nbsp; Without subscribing to this
-view, against which many objections may be taken, it may be
-readily admitted that, as they were uncertain how soon it might
-happen, as they had no ground for concluding that it would
-<i>not</i> be in their time, so they rightly laboured to impress
-upon the disciples its <i>possible</i>, if you will its
-<i>probable</i> nearness.&nbsp; Besides, they knew that,
-virtually, it would be soon: for if <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> came not speedily in the flesh,
-speedily they would be called out of the flesh to Him, and then
-would cease the pleasures and cares of this world, and then would
-begin the possession and enjoyment of things eternal.&nbsp; How
-necessary then, that they who were but pilgrims and strangers
-here, living a life that was soon to be ended and accounted for,
-should be warned against excess of worldliness, against building
-houses where they were but permitted to pitch tents, against
-turning aside out of the path of pilgrimage, and wasting or
-abusing the time for journeying!&nbsp; How cheering, too, for
-those who were perplexed, or burthened, <a name="page3"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 3</span>or afflicted, to be reminded that
-perplexity, and toil, and grief were only passing clouds, and
-mere inconveniences by the way&mdash;that soon they should be rid
-of them altogether, and should only be allowed to remember them
-to magnify their appreciation of attained rest and glory!&nbsp;
-And here let me observe, that the admonition &ldquo;Be careful
-for nothing,&rdquo; is not in this place a reproof of the
-worldling, coming across him in the path of mammon worship, of
-earthly aggrandisement, of forgetfulness of eternity, of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, of heaven, but is rather a consolation,
-an encouragement, for those, who while walking, or endeavouring
-to walk, in the right way, are depressed and hindered by trials,
-and perplexities, and afflictions.&nbsp; There are cares which
-man makes for himself, for which he is to be blamed, whereof he
-deserves to eat the bitter fruit.&nbsp; There are other cares
-which he suffers involuntarily, which <span
-class="smcap">God</span> imposes upon him as discipline, which
-Satan thrusts upon him as temptations.&nbsp; With regard to the
-last, the Christian&rsquo;s cares, St. Paul offers advice and
-consolation, saying in effect&mdash;Sink not beneath them, poor
-pilgrim; groan not on account of them; let them not distract your
-aims and desires from the right object of solicitude and
-hope.&nbsp; Weigh them in the right scales against the glories <a
-name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 4</span>that are
-coming, and they will surely be found light.&nbsp; Measure them
-beside the joys of eternity, and they will be seen to be brief
-and transitory.&nbsp; &ldquo;The <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-is at hand&rdquo; to relieve you of them all, at His second
-advent, by the unclothing of death, by carrying you to
-Paradise.&nbsp; Be comforted, rejoice, rouse ye, and, without
-distraction, pursue your hopeful course.&nbsp; &ldquo;Be careful
-for nothing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We know the force of such an exhortation in earthly
-things.&nbsp; We know by experience how light is the labour which
-leads to rest, how possible it is to smile through present tears
-at the prospect of coming joy; what pains, and self-denials, and
-dangers, and encounters, are readily embraced by those whom
-ambition prompts, and approval cheers, and reward awaits.&nbsp;
-Nothing is too hard to bear, nothing too dear to relinquish,
-nothing too formidable to meet, nothing too much to do; the hands
-that hung down are lifted up, the sorrow is banished, the toil
-becomes pleasure, we rush to the fight, we delight in the race,
-forgetting the past, disregarding the present, hastening onward
-to the future, the rest, the victory, the prize, the glory.&nbsp;
-It is easy, then&mdash;not altogether, but comparatively&mdash;to
-obey the precept, &ldquo;Be careful for nothing&rdquo; in view of
-the prospect, &ldquo;The <span class="smcap">Lord</span> is at
-hand.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>But,
-after all, I cannot but think that something better than a
-prospect is hinted at in the text.&nbsp; The apostle goes on to
-urge, &ldquo;In everything by prayer and supplication with
-thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; He does not say,
-&ldquo;Make light of present cases, on account of coming
-consolation.&rdquo;&nbsp; He does not bid the downcast lift up
-their eyes to the hills, whence by and by cometh their
-help.&nbsp; It is not &ldquo;Bear, endure, encounter in
-hope,&rdquo; but, &ldquo;Get rid of what burthens you, by laying
-it upon Him, Who is near, by your side now, to take it.&nbsp; Be
-careful for nothing; put every care upon <span
-class="smcap">God</span> (the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> who
-is at hand to take it), by prayer and supplication with
-thanksgiving.&rdquo;&nbsp; I say this is something better than a
-prospect; better, because of its superior influence, and better,
-because of the immediate relief.&nbsp; The teaching of Advent,
-all important as it is, too often affects but little such poor
-creatures of the present as we are.&nbsp; We are exhorted to look
-back to the first coming of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, to
-see what He suffered and did for us, what a foundation He laid
-for us to build on.&nbsp; We are exhorted to look forward to the
-second advent, to consider what <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-will do, to anticipate the glorious completion of us in Him as
-the building of <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; We obey,
-and we are <a name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-6</span>moved to faint gratitude for the one, to faint hope of
-the other.&nbsp; The retrospect and the prospect considered, we
-both see from what rock we were hewn, and into how beautiful a
-fabric we shall be fashioned; and, unless we are very incapable
-of feeling, in the view of past and future, we strive to accept
-thankfully and to sanctify duly the present.&nbsp; But, oh! how
-little constraining is the influence of a Saviour who <i>once</i>
-visited the earth, of a Judge who shall <i>by and by</i> visit
-it!&nbsp; How dim is the remembrance of long past mercies! how
-distant is the prospect of heavenly consolations!&nbsp; Earth is
-now present with all its attractions and rewards.&nbsp; The
-world, the flesh, and the devil are now assailing and afflicting
-us with their many temptations.&nbsp; How can we resist the seen,
-and heard, and felt fascinations?&nbsp; How can we fill up the
-present void, and lull the present pain, and endure the pressing
-trial, by proposing to ourselves the hopes of the future?&nbsp;
-Does the promise of food to-morrow fill the hungry to-day?&nbsp;
-Does the sight of the physician&rsquo;s prescription on the
-instant stay the pain and progress of inflammation?&nbsp; Will a
-drowning man float till by and by a rope is brought and thrown to
-him?&nbsp; Will a discomfited army rally and conquer, because
-reinforcements at some future time <a name="page7"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 7</span>will reach the field?&nbsp; In each of
-these cases, the prospect will have <i>some</i> influence, but
-will it be adequate to the occasion?&nbsp; Must not the present
-be met by the present?&nbsp; Do we not need, besides a Saviour of
-the past, and a Judge of the future, a <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> of the present?&nbsp; Yes, verily, and
-we are assured that we have Him in the words, &ldquo;The <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> is at hand,&rdquo; and advised how to
-avail ourselves of Him in what follows, &ldquo;Be careful for
-nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication with
-thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We are too apt to have but a religion of the future; to forget
-that there is <i>at hand</i> a <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-and Helper; to act as though the first opportunity of serving
-<span class="smcap">God</span> were in the hour of death, as
-though the blessings of reward and favour were only to be had in
-heaven; to treat <span class="smcap">God</span>, in short, as if
-He were only the <span class="smcap">God</span> of a future
-world.&nbsp; Such teaching as that of the text reproves and
-corrects us.&nbsp; As other passages of Holy Writ instruct us to
-make <span class="smcap">God</span> the aim of this present life,
-using life as an apprentice-time to the profession of
-Christianity, as a season wherein to prove ourselves and be
-proved, and to set forth His glory; &ldquo;Whether we live, we
-live unto the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory <a
-name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>;&rdquo; so the text bids us make <span
-class="smcap">God</span> the guide and supporter of this
-life.&nbsp; &ldquo;In everything by prayer, with supplication,
-and thanksgiving, let your requests be made known as to <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; And the peace of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, which passeth all understanding, shall
-keep your hearts and minds through <span class="smcap">Christ
-Jesus</span>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This is what we want to feel and act upon, that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> is a <span class="smcap">God</span> at
-hand, and not a <span class="smcap">God</span> afar off; that we
-may <i>now</i> cast all our care upon Him, knowing that He careth
-for us; that if we lay our burthen upon the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, He will <i>now</i> sustain us: that if
-we commit our way unto Him, He will bring it to pass; that He
-waits to be gracious, not till this life is over, but only till
-we make known our requests, till we pray and supplicate, and give
-thanks.&nbsp; In proportion as we do not realise and act upon
-these assurances, we are blind to many of the charms, and
-insensible to many of the helps and comforts of our holy
-religion: we frustrate, too, the fulfilment in ourselves of the
-truth, that godliness has the promise of the life that now is: we
-run the risk of becoming earthly-minded, of being swallowed up of
-overmuch sorrow, of being cumbered with many cares, of being
-snared away and taken captive by the devil, of making shipwreck
-of our faith.</p>
-<p><a name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>O
-brethren, do not suppose that <span class="smcap">God</span> only
-dwells on the margin of the haven, that we are left to steer our
-course, to buffet with the waves, to struggle against the storm,
-to repair the shivered mast, to stop the leakages, to sail into
-the harbour, and let down the anchor, and disembark upon the
-shore before He meets us.&nbsp; With Him as our Captain we are to
-set out.&nbsp; He as our pilot must guide us.&nbsp; He must rule
-the waves and bring us through them.&nbsp; The way is His, as the
-haven is His; unless He is with us throughout the first, we shall
-never reach the last.&nbsp; Grace is no reserved blessing.&nbsp;
-Heaven is no distant home.&nbsp; Grace is ever to be had if we
-will seek it.&nbsp; Heaven is everywhere, if we will but realise
-it, for where <span class="smcap">God</span> is, is heaven.</p>
-<p>But <span class="smcap">God</span> is not manifest to
-all.&nbsp; His help is not given unsought.&nbsp; The eye of faith
-alone can see Him, the cry of faith alone be heard.&nbsp; As He
-will be served for reward, so will He be asked for grace: we must
-be alert to see what help we want; we must be prompt to seek
-it.&nbsp; We must acknowledge Him, or He will not guide us.&nbsp;
-We must cast our care upon Him, or He will not take it.&nbsp;
-Unless we are careful for nothing, because we have committed our
-cares to Him, we must be full of cares, harassed by them,
-troubled, <a name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-10</span>afflicted, distressed; or, being careless, we shall be
-deemed worthless, and left to drift upon shoals and into
-quicksands, and to sink in the gulf of destruction.</p>
-<p>Do I speak to those who are careful for many things?&nbsp; I
-do not mean those who are concerning themselves about worldly
-schemes, who would increase their wealth, their power, or their
-pleasure, who, regarding earth as their home, and resolving to
-make the most of it, are laying themselves out for many days,
-proposing to pull down their barns and build greater, to make to
-themselves a name, who are intent upon what they shall eat and
-drink, and wherewithal they shall be clothed, how they shall get
-their full of pleasure, how they shall cull all the advantages,
-and avoid all the disagreeables of life.&nbsp; As the minister of
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, I have nothing to do with these,
-further than to cry out upon their folly and their sin, and to
-warn them that unless they repent and relinquish their cares,
-they shall be consumed by them.&nbsp; But do I speak to those who
-setting before them as the business of life, the service of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, as the end of life, the glory of
-heaven, are yet, by personal infirmity, by peculiar exigencies,
-and difficulties, and anxieties, by a frowning or fascinating
-world, by the wiles of Satan or by any other <a
-name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>means, so
-troubled, so distracted, so drawn off from the pursuit of their
-object, and the entertaining of their hopes, that they find
-themselves carnal when they would be spiritual, standing still
-when they would be moving on, clinging to earth when they would
-be rising to heaven, waging war when they would be enjoying
-peace?&nbsp; Do I speak to those whose weak and carnal nature
-will not be enlisted in the hearty pursuit of godliness; whose
-crying temporal wants distract, and deafen, and deaden the
-yearnings of their better nature; whose occupation in the world
-seems to contend, and too successfully, for the best of their
-thoughts and aims, whose natural losses and deprivations sadden
-and absorb them, creating a void which they cannot fill, taking
-away a guide whom they used to look to, a support upon which they
-were wont to lean; whose patient labours in well-doing have
-failed of success; whose good is evil spoken of; whose many cares
-to train aright the children whom <span class="smcap">God</span>
-gave them, have been repaid by waywardness; whose conscientious
-well-doing has brought upon them what should rather be the reward
-of ungodliness; who, in short, have not found in religion what
-they hoped for and honestly sought, and who cannot render to
-religion what they would?&nbsp; Do I speak to these?&nbsp; Well!
-I ask, <a name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-12</span>Have you sought to get rid of care, by casting it upon
-the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>? or have you rather asked
-human counsel, and leant upon human support, and hewn out for
-yourselves cisterns, and built for yourselves a refuge, instead
-of running into the refuge of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp; Have you animated yourselves only
-by the thought of distant help, of future peace?&nbsp; Have you
-lost sight of the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> at hand, the
-<span class="smcap">God</span> of Providence, knowing, causing or
-assenting to, and waiting to guide, as you ask or ask not, the
-circumstances which try you?&nbsp; Have you realised that nothing
-happens but by His consent, and that His consent is given or
-withheld, not by what He sees of you, but by what He hears from
-you?&nbsp; Do you pray&mdash;not simply uttering certain words
-put into your mouths in Church formularies, or books of private
-devotion, not framing acts of general adoration, of vague
-acknowledgments of dependence and prayer for blessings, but
-presenting yourselves, in the utterance of your own feelings, as
-in all things the servants of His will, the dependents and
-petitioners of His grace?&nbsp; Do you supplicate?&nbsp; Is each
-ascertained want laid before Him in all its detail?&nbsp; Is
-every hindrance, every difficulty, every desire made known to Him
-as soon as perceived by yourselves?&nbsp; Is your care <a
-name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>cast upon
-Him?&nbsp; Is He besought to take it, to relieve you of it, to
-tell you what to do respecting it?&nbsp; Can you say of all that
-now tries you, that nothing is uncommunicated to Him, no relief,
-no guidance unsought?&nbsp; And do you in everything give
-thanks.&nbsp; Ah, here, brethren, is the test!&nbsp; Here
-doubtless will many of you, who are clear hitherto, be obliged to
-plead guilty.&nbsp; You do not give thanks.&nbsp; You recognise
-<span class="smcap">God</span> as Him from whom you may seek
-all.&nbsp; You do not sufficiently acknowledge what you have
-received.&nbsp; Of many special gifts, of power to bear with many
-trials, of guidance in various difficulties, of blessings
-continued and troubles not made worse (an important item), you
-make no acknowledgment.&nbsp; You know of many blessings for
-which you ought to be grateful: you may guess at many more, and
-besides there are many which you do not know, and cannot guess
-at, which yet doubtless have been poured out upon you, or at
-least have not been taken away from you.&nbsp; What of
-these?&nbsp; What of everything good in itself, or capable of
-being made good?&nbsp; What of the temptations, what of the
-afflicting providences of which you are the objects?&nbsp; You do
-not think, perhaps, that these are things to be grateful for:
-but, remember, the command is, &ldquo;In everything with <a
-name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-14</span>thanksgiving.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yes, the prayer, without the
-thanksgiving, is not prayer.&nbsp; It is only part
-dependence.&nbsp; It asks, it does not acknowledge.&nbsp; It does
-not rejoice that <span class="smcap">God</span> is yet operating;
-that He is chastening if He is not rewarding; that therefore, you
-are still the creatures of His providence, and may hope for
-blessing if you do not frustrate it.</p>
-<p>O mend all that is amiss, quicken all that is slow, revive all
-that is ready to perish.&nbsp; The <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> is at hand.&nbsp; Cast all your care
-upon Him.&nbsp; Trust in the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> with
-all your heart, and lean not to your own understanding.&nbsp; In
-all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your
-paths.&nbsp; In everything by prayer and supplication with
-thanksgiving let your requests be made known to <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; See Him by faith Who is invisible
-to natural eye.&nbsp; Lean on Him Whom the arm of flesh cannot
-touch.&nbsp; Speak to Him in all your circumstances of weal or
-woe, of trial or blessing.&nbsp; Pray to Him for what you want,
-and acknowledge all that you receive, of whatever kind, and ask
-Him what use to make of it.&nbsp; So rid yourselves of your
-cares, and then&mdash;I do not say that you shall be left without
-trials, for <span class="smcap">God</span> does not promise that,
-rather does He lead us to expect trials as the signs and pledges
-of His love, <a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-15</span>but I do say that He will give you nothing, and leave
-you nothing, but what is good for your personal happiness and
-your eternal interest, and that in every trial, whether sent by
-Him, or allowed to be inflicted by the agents of evil, He will
-give you support, and guidance, and ardent hope, and abundant
-consolation; yea, He will bestow on you His peace which passeth
-understanding, and which, whatever your circumstances, shall
-assuredly keep your hearts and minds through <span
-class="smcap">Christ Jesus</span>, unto eternal salvation.</p>
-<h2><a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 16</span>SERMON
-II.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">JUDGMENT HERE AND HEREAFTER.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Malachi</span>, <span class="smcap">ii</span>.,
-17.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><i>Where is the God of
-Judgment</i>?</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> prophet had been complaining of
-the priests for neglecting to inform and correct the people, and
-of the people for disregarding <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> teaching.&nbsp; Reasoning and
-remonstrating with them, and supposing them to attempt
-self-justification, he tells them at last that they have wearied
-the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> with their words&mdash;by
-which he means their acted and thought words rather than what
-they spoke&mdash;and in answer to the question, which he knows
-they would put, &ldquo;Wherein have we wearied Him?&rdquo; he
-says, By presuming licentiously that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> is indifferent alike to good and evil,
-and has no moral likings or dislikings&mdash;&ldquo;When ye say
-every one that doeth evil is good in the sight of the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, and He delighteth in
-them,&rdquo;&mdash;or, if it were otherwise, that at least He
-does <a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>not
-act upon His feeling&mdash;&ldquo;Where is the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment?&rdquo; the manifestation of
-the discriminating, the rewarding, or punishing <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>.&nbsp; I do not propose to enlarge upon
-the text in its historic relation to the Jews, but, applying it
-to ourselves, to show, first, that the question, &ldquo;Where is
-the <span class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment?&rdquo; is one
-which we Christians often ask in perverse unbelief, or in sad
-infirmity; and, secondly, that the question is one which in a
-better sense we should often ask (as we do not), in order to
-discern His operations, to become acquainted and impressed with
-the truth, that there is a judgment of all, <i>here</i> and
-<i>hereafter</i>.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where is the <span class="smcap">God</span> of
-Judgment?&rdquo;&nbsp; I say that this question is often asked in
-perverse unbelief, or in sad infirmity.&nbsp; Practically, we too
-often ignore the idea of judgment altogether.&nbsp; Our reason
-suggests to us, that if there is a moral governor of the world,
-then surely good will be approved by reward, and evil marked by
-punishment.&nbsp; The Bible plainly and most positively assures
-us, that, as rational and responsible creatures of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> hand, we are subject to a
-judgment which His goodness, His truth, His justice, His
-holiness, cannot omit to pass on our every act, and word, and
-thought; that as purchased servants of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, we are set a certain work to do, <a
-name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>with the
-express understanding that we shall be faithfully dealt with
-according to our treatment of that work, and are put upon a
-probation whereof at the end <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-<i>must</i> take account, for He has been made <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> and Judge for that very end, and has
-received a commission from the Father, which He may in no single
-instance depart from.&nbsp; Yea, more than that, it tells us that
-the immediate effect on us, of all our good and evil, is
-<i>itself</i> a judgment, contributing to the formation of the
-character which shall adapt us, and so consign us, to heaven or
-to hell.&nbsp; I say reason and the Bible so instructs us; and
-yet we practically ignore the judgment.&nbsp; Of course I do not
-mean that we strike it out of our creed, that we do otherwise
-than assent to it in theory, that we altogether forget it in
-practice, but that we do not make it the ruling principle of our
-lives&mdash;the impelling or restraining influence of every
-thought and deed.&nbsp; Am I not right?&nbsp; Reflect, dear
-brethren, how many wrong things you do or desire, with little
-hesitation, with no compunction, with no fear of judgment!&nbsp;
-Reflect, too, how many good things you pass over or forego, or
-will take no trouble to attain, through want of consideration of
-the reward that belongs to them, and which therefore you are
-losing!&nbsp; How ready are <a name="page19"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 19</span>you to taste each cup of pleasure, to
-be engrossed with the pursuits of this world, to withhold what
-you should part with, to do what is wrong, to omit what is
-enjoined, in forgetfulness of the fact that for all these things
-<span class="smcap">God</span> will bring you unto
-judgment!&nbsp; How impatient, too, under trials, how slow in
-spiritual work, how little interested in the love and attainment
-of godliness; as though these things were all loss, and
-suffering, and uninviting toil; as though there were no
-recompense of reward!&nbsp; Yes, there is something in the best
-of us, and much in the most of us, of practical disregard of
-judgment.&nbsp; Of course we know (and are in a measure
-influenced by the knowledge) that by and by we shall stand before
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, to be blessed or
-cursed&mdash;that it is necessary, therefore, to secure a good
-hope of acceptance, and to make our peace with <span
-class="smcap">God</span> through <span class="smcap">Jesus
-Christ</span>, and that this is to be done by keeping all the
-ordinances of religion, and obeying in spirit the whole moral
-code, and striving to love and serve the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> now; or at least by repenting of all
-that is amiss, and praying earnestly for pardon and quickening of
-our faith, before we die.&nbsp; But still, it is not a
-<i>judgment</i> that we contemplate&mdash;a real scrutiny of our
-life&rsquo;s ways&mdash;an actual weighing of us in the heavenly
-balance, that we may be rewarded or <a name="page20"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 20</span>punished for those ways, and accepted
-or rejected according to our actual state.&nbsp; We are wont to
-consider <span class="smcap">God</span> as an arbitrary Being,
-not absolutely bound by any laws, or promises, or threats, but
-free to treat us as He will, and disposed, for <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> sake, to be favourable to
-us&mdash;if we ask Him&mdash;without any regard to what we have
-been doing, and what we actually are.&nbsp; I am not sure that
-you will admit this.&nbsp; But, brethren, to help you to do so,
-consider how general is a vague trust to <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> merits&mdash;and <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> goodness on account of those
-merits&mdash;to cover all excesses and defects of duty, to accept
-any kind of character, as though there were no rule of reward,
-and no necessary qualification for heaven!&nbsp; How rare is the
-conviction, that while <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-merits are indeed the only ground of our acceptance, and <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> mercy is exercised on account of
-those merits, yet the merits and the mercy are applied to us on
-condition that we do certain works, and attain to a certain
-character in the strength of the Holy Spirit given to incline and
-enable us; that we are to be rewarded or punished, accepted or
-rejected, strictly according to the terms of that condition, and
-that the inquiry into its observance, in the scrutiny of our past
-lives and of our present state, in the pronouncing of them such
-as they were <a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-21</span>appointed to be, or the opposite, and the bestowal of
-the reward or punishment, is a strict judgment, in the passing of
-which the Judge has no room for arbitrary favour, no option, if I
-may so speak, to do otherwise than, in view of the evidence, to
-apply the fixed law&mdash;life for those whom it approves, death
-for those whom it condemns.</p>
-<p>Oh! there is a <span class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment, and
-to us Christians there is no other <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-is full of merits.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span> accepts
-those merits, and is full of mercy on account of them.&nbsp; We
-cannot magnify the merits too much, nor rejoice too much in the
-mercy; provided (but provided only) that we remember that they
-are applied by rule, and that we must observe the rule, and be
-sure that <span class="smcap">God</span> will in no wise, and in
-no case, depart from it.&nbsp; Trust to <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> merits; hope for <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> mercy, but count most surely on
-judgment, as you are most surely the objects of it.</p>
-<p>But, secondly, fully believing that there is a <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment, the questions arise, Where
-is He?&nbsp; In what court does He sit?&nbsp; When does He
-judge?&nbsp; The common notion (and my remarks have hitherto
-fallen in with it) is, that He is only in a future world, and
-that He will not exercise His office till the last day.&nbsp; The
-notion is founded on a truth.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> sits on the throne of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> <a name="page22"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 22</span>now, to send down grace, to intercede
-with the Father, to rule the Church.&nbsp; At the last day, and
-not before, He will leave that throne, and come forth in His
-glorious majesty to judge the quick and the dead, and to dispose
-of them in their appointed eternal abodes.&nbsp; We have a work
-to do, and a day set us to do it in, and account will not be
-taken of it, and the hire given us, till the day is over.&nbsp;
-There is a character to be formed ere we can enter heaven, and
-space, and opportunity, and power, are vouchsafed us for forming
-it.&nbsp; Respecting these, then, judgment tarrieth.&nbsp; And
-even when our individual time is over, when our work ceases, and
-our probation closes, there are others left to work and fashion
-themselves for eternity; and <span class="smcap">God</span> has
-appointed that we, without them, shall not be made perfect.&nbsp;
-There is to be but one glorious descent from the throne, one
-general resurrection, one great assize, one gathering of the
-saints into the highest heaven, one opening, and then one
-shutting for ever of the lowest hell.&nbsp; When our day is over,
-we must, probably, as others do, sleep a night in the grave, and
-then on the morning of the Resurrection shall appear the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment.&nbsp; But surely, after
-all, there must be an earlier judgment!&nbsp; When the body is
-laid down, and begins its <a name="page23"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 23</span>sleep, the soul does not lie down and
-sleep with it.&nbsp; &ldquo;The body returns to the dust,&rdquo;
-we are told, &ldquo;but the spirit goes back to <span
-class="smcap">God</span> who gave it;&rdquo; and lest we should
-imagine that this is but a figurative way of describing a
-suspension of the spirit&rsquo;s life, we are informed in many
-places not only that it continues greatly alive and awake,
-requiring a place of conscious abode, but that it is at once
-disposed of by <span class="smcap">God</span>, and in a manner
-which shows an immediate judgment of it.&nbsp; As soon as Lazarus
-died, he was carried to Abraham&rsquo;s bosom, and there was
-comforted: as soon as Dives died, in hell (a place of misery of
-some kind) he lift up his eyes, being in torments.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;This day shalt thou be with Me in Paradise,&rdquo; was the
-promise of Him, Who could not promise idly.&nbsp; To be absent
-from the body is, for the saint, to be present with the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, and a vision showed St. John the souls
-of the martyrs living and pleading beneath the altar.&nbsp; What
-does all this teach us, but that the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment meets us at the gate of
-death, and there and then judges and disposes of us?&nbsp; It is
-somewhat speculative to inquire what is the nature of the
-judgment.&nbsp; It is beyond us to understand how an immediate
-judgment is compatible with a future one.&nbsp; We know not
-whether <span class="smcap">God</span> at first privately
-intimates what He will at last publicly <a
-name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 24</span>pronounce;
-whether this is the actual, that only the formal decision;
-whether the scrutiny is now made, or only rehearsed; whether the
-soul is actually tried, or only committed for trial, and in the
-mean time so dealt with by immediate imprisonment, or liberation
-on pledge to appear, as to hint, rather than plainly declare what
-shall be its ultimate fate; whether it enters at once into a
-state of actual, though partial, experience of joy or misery,
-companying with <span class="smcap">God</span>, with <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, with holy angels, or with Satan and
-evil spirits; or whether it is left in an antechamber where it
-but anticipates the future reward, and actually receives none of
-it.&nbsp; All this is mystery.&nbsp; But certain we are,
-brethren, that death, is in some sense the time of judgment, and
-consequently that in some way, at the very moment of departure
-from this life we are confronted with the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment.&nbsp; Oh, that we could
-feel this!&nbsp; What a precious time and talent it would make
-our life; what an awful antechamber of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> presence!&nbsp; How we should be
-deterred from doing evil; how stirred to do good!&nbsp; How
-should we be watching, staff in hand; how resolutely should we do
-our work, how patiently should we suffer!&nbsp; Could we then be
-at home in the world, prone to sinful pleasures, distracted or
-engrossed <a name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-25</span>by worldly cares, indifferent to sin and holiness?&nbsp;
-No, it would be impossible!&nbsp; Could we be idle, if we knew
-that our work would so soon be scrutinised?&nbsp; Could we delay
-the cultivation of a grace necessary for heaven, if we knew that
-the time for acquiring it might so soon be over?&nbsp; Could we
-hazard the interests of eternity, if we knew that we were
-separated from them, not by a wide and lasting world, not by
-many, many years of forgetfulness in the grave, but only by a
-thin veil, through which they might even now be albut heard and
-seen, which the next moment might be rent in twain, which at the
-most, in a few short years, will be wholly taken away!&nbsp; Oh!
-brethren, we can risk our eternal hopes when they seem
-distant&mdash;we dare not, we could not, if we felt them
-close!&nbsp; Behold, the judge is at the door!&nbsp; Watch, lest
-it open and reveal Him!&nbsp; Behold the messenger is coming; be
-ready, for He may be sent to summon you to the presence of the
-<span class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment!</p>
-<p>But we have not yet the full answer to our text.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> is everywhere.&nbsp; He fills heaven and
-earth with His presence.&nbsp; And He is the same everywhere, and
-at all times; the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever; and so He
-is the <span class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment, exercising
-judgment even in this life.&nbsp; <a name="page26"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 26</span>It cannot be otherwise.&nbsp; It
-belongs to His very essence to love righteousness and hate
-iniquity.&nbsp; When He wills, it is done; when He feels, He
-acts; what He hates, He shrinks from&mdash;and if He shrinks, is
-it not judgment?&nbsp; What He loves, He clings to&mdash;and is
-not His presence favour, and support, and blessing?&nbsp;
-Brethren, I have often exhorted you not to shut <span
-class="smcap">God</span> out of this present world as if He
-belonged only to the future.&nbsp; Live in the world to
-Him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Wherever we live, we live unto the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Live in the world by
-Him.&nbsp; &ldquo;The <span class="smcap">Lord</span> is at
-hand.&nbsp; Be careful for nothing; but in everything by prayer
-and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made unto
-<span class="smcap">God</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; And live in the
-world, under Him: for &ldquo;The eyes of the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> are over the righteous, and the face of
-the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> is against them that do
-evil.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yes, the <span class="smcap">God</span> of
-Judgment is <i>here</i>.&nbsp; You know it was so in Old
-Testament times.&nbsp; The deed of righteousness then brought its
-immediate reward; the deed of sin its punishment.&nbsp; Murmur or
-disregard drove away the pillar of fire, repentance and prayer
-brought it back.&nbsp; You think it otherwise now perhaps, but
-&ldquo;I am the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, I change
-not.&rdquo;&nbsp; The children of Israel were carnal babes, <span
-class="smcap">God</span> therefore showed Himself to their
-natural eye.&nbsp; <i>We</i> are men in <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, and the vision, <a
-name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>therefore, is
-to our faith.&nbsp; It was with perishable toys that <i>they</i>
-were pleased: He, therefore, rewarded or punished them with
-temporal things.&nbsp; It is differently, <i>in a measure</i>,
-that He deals with us; but not altogether differently.&nbsp; It
-is a mistake to suppose that <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> favour was always testified to
-the Jews by prosperity, His displeasure by adversity.&nbsp; Think
-of Abraham, of Job, of Moses, of Joseph, of the ungodly in great
-prosperity, and you will see the mistake.&nbsp; Temporal
-circumstances were more often, then, the tokens of spiritual, but
-the spiritual has always been the reality; and in comparison with
-it, the token, not always afforded, is immaterial.&nbsp; Oh! do
-not suppose that when the Man <span class="smcap">Christ
-Jesus</span> came on earth as the messenger of grace, the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of Providence departed.&nbsp; More real
-and constant is His presence now, and more invariable His
-action.&nbsp; In respect of our service of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> and candidateship for heaven, there
-is a sense in which He leaves us unjudged till the end.&nbsp;
-But, in another sense, as He must, from His very nature, be
-always judging, so are we Christians the special objects of His
-judgment.&nbsp; No winking at <i>our</i> ignorance, no
-long-suffering with <i>our</i> sin.&nbsp; Enlightened and
-enabled, we are responsible, and immediately made to answer, for
-all that is wrong; <a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-28</span>and, specially endeared to Him, we are immediately
-rewarded for all that He approves.&nbsp; And this judgment is
-visible, if we will but look for it even in our temporal
-circumstances.&nbsp; I do not say that the righteous are always
-what the world calls prosperous, and the wicked always what the
-world calls unfortunate, though that is not seldom the case, much
-more often than, in our rash judgment, we suppose; besides, any
-kinds of temporal circumstances may be made, and often are made,
-the sources of temporal reward or punishment; but temporal things
-are not the best or the worst that <span class="smcap">God</span>
-can give.&nbsp; They are chiefly used by Him as means; and could
-I describe to you the blessings which poverty and bereavement and
-disappointment and affliction have produced, and the curses which
-have accompanied riches and success, and immunity from loss and
-trial, you would see what effectual means they are, and would
-readily exclaim, &ldquo;<i>Here</i> is the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment!&rdquo;&nbsp; But there is a
-better and a worse judgment.&nbsp; You know how <span
-class="smcap">God</span> hardened Pharaoh&rsquo;s heart, because
-it was not softened; how He made Saul&rsquo;s perversity his
-punishment; how He stiffened Jeroboam&rsquo;s arm that he could
-not draw it in from the deed of sin; what a sinful security He
-brought upon David for transgression; how Abraham <a
-name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>grew rich by
-forsaking his home; how Job resigned much and therefore received
-more; how Joseph, fleeing from Potiphar&rsquo;s wife, was made to
-prosper in all he did.&nbsp; These things are types of great
-realities&mdash;specimens of constant judgments.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> stands over every man to watch what he
-does, and as soon as it is done, He judges and rewards it.&nbsp;
-Ah! let the wicked tremble at this, and let the righteous rejoice
-at it.&nbsp; A harassed or a calmed conscience may or may not be
-an accompaniment of the judgment, but a judgment there will
-surely be.&nbsp; Do you want an illustration?&nbsp; Why, then,
-should the man who commits a trivial sin to-day fall into a
-greater sin to-morrow?&nbsp; Why should a little resistance
-qualify for a great one?&nbsp; You say it is natural.&nbsp; If
-you mean by that that is <i>spiritual</i>, that it is the acting
-influence of <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> providence, I
-agree with you; but not otherwise.&nbsp; Man is not his own
-destroyer, nor his own saviour.&nbsp; It no more follows
-naturally that a man should fall into a great sin after a little
-one, or should conquer a strong temptation after overcoming a
-weak one, than that he should soil his garments or his flesh much
-to-day, because he soiled them a little yesterday, or that he
-should float in a flood because he has turned aside from a
-pool!&nbsp; It is a judgment that makes him sin again, <a
-name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 30</span>and a
-judgment that enables him to resist again.&nbsp; In the one case,
-it is the angry withdrawal of grace, and the giving up to a
-reprobate mind, and the delivery to Satan; in the other it is the
-approving increase of grace, and the sending of angels to keep
-off the fiends.&nbsp; <i>Where is the</i> <span
-class="smcap">God</span> <i>of Judgment</i>!&nbsp; Where,
-brethren, is He not, and when not acting?&nbsp; This world is the
-throne of judgment.&nbsp; Every moment is the trial time.&nbsp;
-Every act, every word, every thought, brings down upon it, on the
-instant, the sentence and the execution of the sentence!&nbsp;
-Think of this and act upon it.&nbsp; The eyes of the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> are over the righteous.&nbsp; The face
-of the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> is against them that do
-evil.&nbsp; Strive, then, each action to approve to His
-all-seeing eye.&nbsp; Know that it is always Advent; that the
-books are always open, and the judgment always set, and the
-sentence ever ready, &ldquo;Blessed&mdash;or Cursed,&rdquo; and
-angels and demons looking out and waiting for the signal of
-approach.&nbsp; The Last Judgment is the climax of the Death
-Judgment, the Death Judgment of the Life Judgment.&nbsp; Gain
-<span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> approval here, and keep it
-here, and you shall not lose it hereafter.&nbsp; Forfeit it here,
-and obtain it not again here, and you can never have it.&nbsp;
-There is no condemnation for them that are in <span
-class="smcap">Christ Jesus</span>.&nbsp; The rest are already
-condemned; <a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-31</span>though the <span class="smcap">God</span> of Judgment
-gives them yet the chance&mdash;(oh! let them not trifle with
-it!)&mdash;that if they will appeal quickly, a fresh trial may be
-granted; and if they have made <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-their Advocate, the former sentence shall be reversed, and they,
-too, shall be blessed!</p>
-<h2><a name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>SERMON
-III.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE WORLDLING REPROVED.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">St.
-James</span>, <span class="smcap">iv</span>., 13, 14, 15.</p>
-<p><i>Go to now</i>, <i>ye that say</i>, <i>To-day or to-morrow
-we will go into such a city</i>, <i>and continue there a
-year</i>, <i>and buy and sell</i>, <i>and get gain</i>:
-<i>Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow</i>.&nbsp;
-<i>For what is your life</i>?&nbsp; <i>It is even a vapour</i>,
-<i>that appeareth for a little time</i>, <i>and then vanisheth
-away</i>.&nbsp; <i>For that ye ought to say</i>, <i>If the</i>
-Lord <i>will</i>, <i>we shall live</i>, <i>and do this</i>, <i>or
-that</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Go to</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is
-the language of rebuke, of remonstrance, and yet of
-exhortation.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come, come, what are you doing? cease
-from it, for it is wrong.&nbsp; Come, let us reason together, ye
-that are forming worldly schemes, and laying out plans and works
-for the future, counting not only on <i>some</i> continuance, but
-even on a definite time of your own marking out, &lsquo;We will
-continue there a year.&rsquo;&nbsp; Come, I say, be wise;
-consider what your life is, how brief, how fleeting, how easily
-taken away&mdash;how <a name="page33"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 33</span>uncertain of continuance&mdash;and
-rule and consecrate every part of it, every work, every
-prospective thought, with the limitation, &lsquo;If the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> will.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Thus is the worldling reproved and exhorted&mdash;the man who
-is so foolish as to reckon surely upon what he knows is very
-uncertain, who is so sinful as to forget the providence of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, or at least not to submit himself to
-it.&nbsp; And, further on he is plainly told that this reckless
-confidence is sin:&mdash;&ldquo;Therefore to him that knoweth to
-do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Observe here, my brethren&mdash;and you will thereby see how
-directly this text is addressed, not to very gross and carnal
-offenders, but even to such as ourselves&mdash;that the Apostle
-does not cry out against the going into the city and proposing to
-buy and sell and get gain there, or even against the fixing of a
-particular period of sojourn; but against the doing of all this
-<i>without reference and submission to</i>, <i>without dependence
-upon the will and providence of</i> <span
-class="smcap">God</span>; without remembrance that there is no
-certainty of life, and power, and opportunity.&nbsp; &ldquo;What
-is our life&rdquo; &ldquo;If the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-will?&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="smcap">God</span> does not forbid, rather He
-requires us to engage in worldly occupations.&nbsp; He has sent
-us into the world in need of food and raiment, which <a
-name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 34</span>the majority
-of us can only get by working for them, and has endowed us with
-faculties and powers which have their legitimate exercise in
-worldly pursuits.&nbsp; There can be no question that by <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> appointment man is to labour and
-trade, or employ himself in some way in worldly things, for
-sustenance and for exercise of many of his powers.&nbsp; And if
-this is so, then neither can there be any question, that it must
-be lawful to think in some way of the morrow, to provide what we
-shall need in it, to consider and plan for our employment and
-gain in it.&nbsp; It would be quite impossible to carry on many
-callings&mdash;more especially those which have distinctly the
-approval of <span class="smcap">God</span>, as husbandry, for
-instance&mdash;if we might not forecast, anticipate, provide,
-propose, and plan.&nbsp; And if all this may be done, then we may
-and must mark out particular works and places, and specific
-periods of time, wherein to perform what we propose.&nbsp; If a
-husbandman may not think of the harvest, how shall he do the
-duties of the seed time?&nbsp; If the merchant may not fix on a
-mart nor make arrangements for sojourning there till he has
-disposed of his goods, nor count the number of days which the
-ship will require for transporting them, then how shall he know
-what wares to purchase? how shall he persuade himself to <a
-name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 35</span>have anything
-to do with merchandise?&nbsp; Surely, he must take for
-granted&mdash;or at least he must act as if he took for
-granted&mdash;some certainty of time and opportunity, and so he
-must in one sense presume upon the future.&nbsp; Still, brethren,
-the very illustrations I have chosen tell against counting on
-actual certainty.&nbsp; The husbandman ploughs in hope and sows
-in hope; but knows all the time that the fowls of the air may rob
-him of his crop, that the needful rain or sun may be withholden
-from it, that the worm, and the mildew, and the blast may destroy
-it.&nbsp; The merchant freights his vessel with full
-knowledge&mdash;(not always without fear)&mdash;that fire or
-storm may cause it to be lost in the sea, or that if it reaches
-the place of sale, there may then be no demand for it.&nbsp; Each
-is obliged to admit contingencies; to prepare and act as if all
-power and all time and circumstances were in his own hands, while
-he knows and feels that it is far otherwise; that much may be
-uncontrollably against him; that he may be disappointed of all
-his hope.&nbsp; Nor does he omit altogether to provide for the
-contingency.&nbsp; He asks, &ldquo;What if I should be
-disappointed, if my plans should fail, if the time should be
-prolonged or shortened against my expectation?&nbsp; What is to
-be done with the gain, if anything happens to me?&rdquo;&nbsp; So
-<a name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 36</span>he insures
-his vessel, and gives directions whither to carry, or what to do
-with his merchandise if aught should render it unsaleable at the
-proposed mart, and he makes his will!&nbsp; Wisely he takes into
-account what he calls &ldquo;chance,&rdquo; and therefore sobers
-his expectations and rules his plans by the consideration of what
-may happen to frustrate them!&nbsp; A like
-consideration&mdash;not of &ldquo;chance,&rdquo; for he does not
-believe in chance, but of the possible unexpected operations of
-<span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> providence&mdash;is to
-sanctify the Christian&rsquo;s plans and appointments, and to
-prevent him from becoming a worldling.&nbsp; He may think and
-say, what he will do on the morrow; he may set out on a long
-journey, or propose to himself a week, a month&rsquo;s, a
-year&rsquo;s, a ten years&rsquo; sojourn in some distant city; he
-may make ample and long preparations for buying and selling, and
-getting gain; he may pull down his barns (if they are not large
-enough) and build greater; he may entertain some thoughts of
-possibly enjoying, after years of toil and care, an old age of
-ease and happiness, and so may make provision for that
-happiness.&nbsp; He need not, and should not, be ever saying to
-himself, &ldquo;It is of no use my undertaking this business, I
-may not live to carry it out.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;If I were sure
-of life, I would remove this and alter that, but let it be now,
-it must do <a name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-37</span>for my poor uncertain days.&rdquo;&nbsp; (The world
-would stand still, if men were to act, or refuse to act, upon
-such arguments as these, arguments not suggested by God.)&nbsp;
-No, brethren, whatever your calling, follow it honestly and
-heartily; whatever your possessions, use them, and use them so as
-to get the most legitimate good out of them, and do not despise
-the opportunities and the goods which <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has given you.&nbsp; But consider when
-you propose to yourselves anything which draws by anticipation on
-the future, consider, I say, &ldquo;What is my life?&nbsp; It is
-even a vapour that appeareth for a little time and then vanisheth
-away,&rdquo; and qualify your scheme by saying to yourselves,
-&ldquo;If the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> will, I should live
-and do this or that.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yes! and provide, as far as you
-can, <i>lest the</i> <span class="smcap">Lord</span> <i>should
-not will</i>.&nbsp; And here, brethren, we have suggested to us
-another reason for admitting an &ldquo;if&rdquo; into our
-counsels, and for allowing it to have its say, and for heeding
-well what it suggests.&nbsp; The Christian is allowed, and even
-required to follow a worldly calling, but still he has a higher
-calling, which he must not neglect, which he must most
-regard.&nbsp; Life was not given him only that he might eat and
-drink, and take his pleasure, and grow rich, and build palaces,
-and be filled with knowledge, and perfected in
-accomplishments.&nbsp; <a name="page38"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 38</span>These are but the lower employments
-of life, or its intermittent pastimes.&nbsp; Its business is
-religion&mdash;the laying hold on salvation, and following the
-holy service to which we are bound, wherein we are apprentices
-and probationers for eternal glory, and whereby we are allowed
-and enabled to lay up treasure in heaven&mdash;the dedication of
-ourselves to <span class="smcap">Christ</span> our Saviour, to
-live under His rule, and by His grace; to set forth His glory in
-all we do; to become qualified by unlearning and renouncing what
-is amiss, and acquiring new tastes, and inclinations, and powers,
-and fashioning ourselves after His glorious image for the state
-to which He will call us when this life is over.&nbsp; &ldquo;If
-the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> will I should live and do
-this or that.&rdquo;&nbsp; How does such a suggestion break in
-upon and check the presuming worldliness of the called of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>!&nbsp; &ldquo;Here am I,&rdquo; it makes
-him exclaim, &ldquo;actually laying myself out for the engrossing
-and long-continued pursuit of worldly ends.&nbsp; Yet <span
-class="smcap">God</span> may cut short my life in the midst of
-it, and if He does, without giving me time to resume my higher
-calling, to repair what is out of order, to fill up what is
-wanting, to make my peace with Him, to become fit for
-death&mdash;oh, to what in that case will my folly and my sin
-bring me!&nbsp; How shall I stand before Him at His awful
-Advent?&nbsp; <a name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-39</span>What account shall I render of my neglected
-stewardship?&nbsp; What will justify my presumption in His
-delay?&nbsp; What excuse my want of the wedding garment?&nbsp;
-Surely He will deal with me as with one who knew his
-Master&rsquo;s will, yet did it not; who refused the glory which
-he was created, and redeemed, and sanctified to render; who has
-preferred Mammon to <span class="smcap">God</span>, earth to
-heaven; who has contracted the worldliness from which <span
-class="smcap">God</span> shrinks, and despised the holiness which
-alone He will accept!&rdquo;&nbsp; It is an awakening, a
-sobering, a solemn suggestion.&nbsp; It reveals to him the
-anomaly, the folly, the sin, the peril of his condition, whatever
-the kind of worldliness which engrosses him.&nbsp; He a servant
-of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, a votary of religion, a
-worker for eternity, an heir of glory, forgetting his calling,
-neglecting his best hopes and interests, perverting his time and
-powers, and opportunities from their highest and most necessary
-use, to gratify self with childish pleasures, to heap up gold, to
-make to himself a name among the pigmies of the earth; to become
-admired or stared at for his appearance or accomplishments; to
-excel in knowledge of languages, or sciences, or history, or for
-any other earthly end; when not only what he seeks must soon be
-yielded up (even if he succeeds in getting it), but <a
-name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>also through
-the seeking he must neglect all that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> requires of him, and forfeit all that
-<span class="smcap">God</span> offers!&nbsp; Oh, how silly, how
-sinful, how awfully hazardous the course he is pursuing!</p>
-<p>What, then?&nbsp; Shall he abandon it all in terror?&nbsp;
-Shall he hate the world and flee from it?&nbsp; Shall he become a
-hermit, refusing to receive good, and to do good in his
-generation?&nbsp; Shall he give up his earthly calling, foregoing
-the temporal advantages which are held out to him; not exercising
-the powers which are entrusted to him; supposing that the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> who put him into this world, and
-qualified him to fill a place in it, and stimulated him by
-pressing necessities, or by indwelling desires to seek profit or
-pleasure, nevertheless meant him to have nothing to do with the
-world; that because presently he is to die, now he ought not to
-live; but to drag a sad, inactive, solitary, impatient
-existence.&nbsp; Surely not!&nbsp; His place now is in the world,
-his work is in the world; he refuses <span
-class="smcap">God</span> service in not exercising his worldly
-calling; he gives up the means of probation, and the
-opportunities of development and improvement in the highest
-powers and best graces, and disqualifies himself for heaven, if
-he fulfils not his destiny on earth.&nbsp; Let him abide in his
-calling; let him discharge its obligations; let him pursue its
-advantages, <a name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-41</span>and cull its pleasures, and perform all its bidding; but
-throughout all, let him remember, and act upon the remembrance
-that he is not a mere worldling; and to keep him from being
-absorbed in the world, or grovelling in its pursuits, to quicken
-him in concern for higher responsibilities and privileges, to
-impress upon him that all that is of the world is temporary and
-fleeting, that the world is passing away from him, and he from
-it, let him reflect frequently and seriously, &ldquo;What is my
-life?&nbsp; It is even a vapour, that appeareth for a little
-time, and then vanisheth away;&rdquo; and so let him temper the
-lower life (and raise himself above it), by piously resolving
-that its present occupations, its plans and hopes shall all be
-subject to the condition, &ldquo;If the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> will I should live, and do this or
-that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>That we all want to be influenced by such thoughts is too
-evident to need proof.&nbsp; The very best of us are wont
-practically to regard this earth as our abiding home, or the only
-stage upon which we shall ever act a part, and earthly pursuits
-and pleasures as the only aims and rewards of our being.&nbsp; We
-may write &ldquo;D. V.,&rdquo; or say, &ldquo;If the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> will,&rdquo; after every engagement,
-every proposed scheme.&nbsp; We may make our wills <a
-name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>and set our
-houses in order, and purchase a burial place, and carry about a
-shroud, and yet forget that we have to die.&nbsp; Grey hairs, or
-enfeebled frames, and the perceptible growth within us of the
-seeds of mortal disease, and sick beds, and sudden deaths around
-us, may cause us momentary misgivings, may make us perhaps
-permanently a little uneasy: but still we live on, as though
-there were no end of life; we put off preparation for death, and
-for another state after death, as though we could not die till we
-chose to do so.&nbsp; Not for want of knowledge, of constant
-testimonies and reminders of the contrary are we thus confident
-(for we all know that our life is but a vapour which the heat may
-presently dispel, or the wind of the next moment cause to
-vanish), but because we do not feel ourselves to be so entirely
-in the hands of an Omnipotent and mysteriously exercised
-Providence, as to need to be constantly depending upon it, and
-asking of it, &ldquo;If the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-will;&rdquo; and so presenting to ourselves, in all its force,
-the consideration that perhaps &ldquo;The <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> may <i>not</i> will.&rdquo;&nbsp; I
-speak to men, and women, and children, full of present
-occupations and future plans.&nbsp; I bid you consider your
-occupations and review your plans.&nbsp; Do you imagine that the
-first may be at any moment interrupted, <a
-name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>and the last
-never begun to be carried out?&nbsp; Some of you are almost
-exclusively pleasure seekers; others, careless creatures of the
-present; others intent upon business, or profit, upon obtaining
-power, or knowledge, or fame; either reaping a worldly harvest
-now, or sowing for a future worldly harvest.&nbsp; Others are
-divided in care and desire between this life and the next.&nbsp;
-Others are in theory, and in much practice, living above this
-world, using it but not abusing it, in it but not of it.&nbsp;
-Put the question to yourselves, all and each of you.&nbsp; Do you
-feel your life to be such a vapour, that it is in momentary risk
-of vanishing away; that only if the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> will, will it appear a little time;
-that possibly He may not will?&nbsp; You would say,
-&ldquo;yes,&rdquo; doubtless, if you were forced to answer aloud,
-as you sit in church, interrogated by the messenger of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> out of the Bible, just as to a
-question out of the Church Catechism, you would give an answer
-out of the Church Catechism.&nbsp; But do you <i>feel</i>
-&ldquo;yes&rdquo;?&nbsp; Is it your sure and strong
-conviction?&nbsp; Do your lives say &ldquo;yes&rdquo;?&nbsp; I
-shall not be unjust to you, if I say that I stand in doubt of
-many of you; that, alas! I have no doubt of some; that your
-hearts do not thus respond; that your lives give a manifest
-contradiction.</p>
-<p><a name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-44</span>Brethren, I am not here to accuse, but to admonish and
-help.&nbsp; Let me suggest, then, why you fail to realise such a
-palpable truth.&nbsp; It is, first, because you have an idea that
-the Advent is far off; and, secondly, because, as I have reminded
-you in so many ways lately, you shut <span
-class="smcap">God</span> too much out of this present
-world.&nbsp; The first disciples, as you may see from St.
-Paul&rsquo;s and St. Peter&rsquo;s Epistles, were filled with the
-conviction that the Advent was very near, that the next moment
-might reveal it.&nbsp; This did not take them out of the world,
-for they believed that <span class="smcap">Christ</span> would
-come to them in the world.&nbsp; Neither did it make them forsake
-their earthly calling, for they knew that it was in that calling
-that they were to serve <span class="smcap">God</span>, and to
-prepare for His coming.&nbsp; But it caused them always to have
-regard to the end, and it sanctified every pursuit and plan with
-the thought, &ldquo;The <span class="smcap">Lord</span> may
-come,&rdquo; and so constantly suggested the proviso, &ldquo;If
-the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> will.&rdquo;&nbsp; We have no
-such conviction of <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-nearness, and therefore have little reference to it, and are
-faintly impressed with it.&nbsp; We argue, the Judgment has
-tarried so many years, it may therefore tarry many more.&nbsp;
-Death has so long spared us, he will not come to us yet.&nbsp; We
-shall have time to finish our present <a name="page45"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 45</span>occupations, we can enter upon and
-execute many fresh plans.&nbsp; We need not raise a doubt,
-&ldquo;If the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> will.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But, secondly, we shut <span class="smcap">God</span> out of
-this present world.&nbsp; We forget that He is ever with us; that
-He is constantly exercising His providence over us; that He is
-not ignorant, or indifferent, much less distant, when we propose
-and proceed to execute; that it is by His exercised permission,
-by His actual letting us go in anger, that we fall into sin; by
-His inclining, and helping, and carrying us, that we think, and
-attempt, and perform what is good; that thus watching and caring
-for us, and surrounding us, He is at once the Witness, the Judge,
-the Rewarder of our every thought and way; that consequently,
-when He has tried us enough, or when we have long wearied Him, He
-is at hand to decide about us, and, deciding, to execute the
-decision.&nbsp; His forbearance and interference, the length of
-the probation, the numbers and kinds of trial, are different in
-different cases.&nbsp; He knows what is right and sufficient for
-each, and He applies it, and then He says, &ldquo;It is
-enough.&nbsp; Thy righteousness is as length of days.&nbsp; Well
-done, good and faithful servant;&rdquo; or, &ldquo;It is of no
-use that thou shouldst be stricken any more.&nbsp; Thou wilt
-revolt more and more.&nbsp; The <a name="page46"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 46</span>whole head is sick, and the whole
-heart faint.&nbsp; Depart from me!&rdquo;&nbsp; And in either
-case the vapour is dispelled&mdash;it vanisheth away.</p>
-<p>O for the full perception and realisation of this truth; that
-we are in the hands of a watching, proving, waiting, judging,
-visiting <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; It would be hard
-then to do or propose anything, without immediately adding,
-&ldquo;If the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> will.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Two concluding thoughts suggest themselves.</p>
-<p>First, that life is of such different duration in different
-cases, because we have individual capabilities and
-responsibilities, and some by many trials and length of days are
-proved, others quickly and easily made perfect, or wholly
-hardened; and because a discerning, ruling <span
-class="smcap">God</span> is ever at hand to close the trial at
-the fit moment.</p>
-<p>Secondly, that we are individually kept uncertain of the
-duration of our life, to counteract the sad proneness which
-belongs to us, of putting off eternal interests, and following
-our own ways to the uttermost; to give to every moment, and every
-act of life, such vital importance, that we may fear to squander
-or pervert it; to keep us ever mindful of our latter end, and
-always intent upon doing the <span
-class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s</span> work, and preparing ourselves
-for heaven; that the <span class="smcap">God</span> at hand may
-never be slighted, and the world be always so loosely held, <a
-name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>that we may
-easily and readily let go of it whenever the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> will.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go to now, ye that say, To-day or to-morrow we will go
-into such a city, and continue there a year, and buy and sell,
-and get gain: Whereas ye know not what shall be on the
-morrow.&nbsp; For what is your life?&nbsp; It is even a vapour,
-that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away.&nbsp;
-For that ye ought to say, If the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-will, we shall live, and do this, or that.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 48</span>SERMON
-IV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE UNKNOWN GOD.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Acts</span>, <span class="smcap">xvii</span>., 22,
-23.</p>
-<p><i>Ye men of Athens</i>, <i>I perceive that in all things ye
-are too superstitious</i>.&nbsp; <i>For as I passed by</i>,
-<i>and beheld your devotions</i>, <i>I found an altar with this
-inscription</i>, <span class="smcap">To the Unknown
-God</span>.&nbsp; <i>Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship</i>,
-<i>Him declare I unto you</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> city of Athens was wholly given
-to idolatry.&nbsp; It was crowded with altars, dedicated to the
-supposed superior deities, to deified men, to abstract virtues,
-Love, Truth, Mercy, and the like.&nbsp; Whatever new god was
-described and recommended to them was immediately recognised, and
-thenceforth worshipped; and, besides, the Athenians&rsquo; love
-of something new, led them to search out for and invent gods for
-themselves.&nbsp; Hence it came to pass, that there were more
-idols in that one city than in all the rest of Greece: so that
-Satirist did not much exaggerate when he said that in Athens you
-might more <a name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-49</span>easily find a god than a man.&nbsp; It belongs not to
-our present purpose to consider how this arose; to contemplate
-the strange coexistence of so much superstition and so much
-cultivation of intellect, or to strive to enter into the feelings
-which animated Paul, when his spirit was stirred within him at
-the sight of the city wholly given to idolatry.&nbsp; We pass on
-to the time when the Apostle stood on Mars&rsquo;s hill, in sight
-of many heathen altars, surrounded by Epicureans and Stoics and
-disciples of many other schools of philosophy, some striving to
-silence him, others intent upon hearing something new from
-him&mdash;to meet the contentious gainsayings of the one, to
-enlist the curiosity of the other; to make use of their various
-dispositions, of all that he saw and heard, in promoting the
-glory of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and, if it might be, in
-leading them to salvation.</p>
-<p>It must be borne in mind that some of these news-seeking
-Athenians inconsistently enough contended with him, because he
-taught what was novel; while others, on that very account, were
-favourable to him, hoping that he would set forth some strange
-gods&mdash;some additional objects of worship to whom they might
-erect altars.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ye men of Athens,&rdquo; he said,
-&ldquo;I perceive from actual observation that you, more than
-other people, <a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-50</span>have great regard for religion.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is the
-right meaning of the words translated: &ldquo;In all things ye
-are too superstitious.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is not likely that the
-Apostle would have commenced a speech intended to conciliate and
-enlighten them, with words that would at once affront them, and
-make them deaf to all else he had to say.&nbsp; Besides, it is
-clear from what follows, that he is not directly calling upon
-them to abandon what was false, but to understand and accept
-rightly a truth which they held in ignorance.&nbsp; &ldquo;I say
-nothing to you now upon the many gods whom you worship <i>by
-name</i>, but, pointing to an altar inscribed to the Unknown
-<span class="smcap">God</span> (it was probably in sight) I
-answer those who contend with me for speaking about the unknown,
-and gratify those who want to hear something new, by taking that
-altar as my text, and preaching to you about &lsquo;the Unknown
-<span class="smcap">God</span>&rsquo;&mdash;about no new god, for
-He is already the object of your worship; but still about one of
-whom much that is new to you may be said.&nbsp; Give ear to me,
-ye that are so full of reverence for the gods, while I describe
-to you an object indeed of your present reverence, but one of
-whose nature and operations and demands upon you, you know
-nothing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Respecting the existence of such an altar, we <a
-name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>are told that
-the Athenians through the very excess of their idolatry (which
-led them to look for gods in every place and circumstance, and to
-ascribe every event, good or ill, to the influence of some deity)
-had on more than one occasion, when an unusually severe
-pestilence had visited them, which they could not connect with
-any of their known gods, conjectured that it must be the doing of
-some god whom they did not propitiate with sacrifices, and,
-failing to find out who it was, and yet fearing to neglect his
-worship, had caused altars <i>without names</i> to be erected,
-and offerings to be made to the nameless being; and that in
-course of time these altars came to be described, and to bear a
-corresponding inscription, as severally the altars of an
-&ldquo;unknown god.&rdquo;&nbsp; There is no reason to suppose
-that they meant to exalt that god above the others, that they had
-any clearly defined ideas of the general operations of one
-unknown Being, much less that they meant under that title to
-worship the <span class="smcap">God</span> of the Jews; but with
-a kind of natural instinct, a very vague feeling that something
-beyond and above what they knew, existed, they had stumbled, as
-it were, in the dark, upon a real truth, which was now to be
-revealed to them.&nbsp; &ldquo;Whom therefore ye ignorantly
-worship&mdash;Whom you are right in worshipping, <a
-name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>but of Whose
-proper worship you know nothing, Him declare I, and reveal unto
-you.&rdquo;&nbsp; You know how St. Paul went on, meeting without
-mentioning the errors of the various sects of philosophers, that
-there was indeed a <span class="smcap">God</span> who made the
-world, and all things therein; that He was not a mere idol of
-wood and stone (&ldquo;dwelling not in temples made with
-hands&rdquo;), that He had no such passions, and no such needs as
-they ascribed to Jove and Mars and their deified men
-(&ldquo;Neither is worshipped with men&rsquo;s hands as though He
-needed anything&rdquo;), that He was not a sentiment&mdash;an
-ideal thing&mdash;a being bound by fate&mdash;an indifferent
-spectator of men&rsquo;s ways.&nbsp; &ldquo;He giveth to all life
-and breath and all things.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;In Him we live and
-move and have our being.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;He hath appointed a
-day in the which He will judge the world in righteousness by the
-man whom He hath chosen;&rdquo; to whom He has borne such signal
-testimony in raising Him from the dead; in whose name, and at
-whose command, I come to tell you of the resurrection from the
-dead, and to call you out of the ignorance which <span
-class="smcap">God</span> will no longer wink at, and to urge upon
-you repentance and preparation for judgment.&nbsp; So he spoke of
-the unknown <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Some mocked,
-and refused to understand; some were in doubt <a
-name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>and
-difficulty, and wished to hear more; others began to know Him who
-had hitherto been unknown, and clave unto the Apostle, and
-believed.&nbsp; And shortly after Paul departed from Athens,
-never, as far as we know, to visit again!</p>
-<p>It would be interesting to consider the strange rise and
-spread of ignorance which in course of time made the <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, Who had been seen and heard and walked
-with in Eden, and had never left Himself without witness, wholly
-unknown to the creatures of His hand, and the objects of His
-providential care; to contemplate the idolatry of ignorant
-heathen man, not seeing <span class="smcap">God</span> in all His
-works, not able to find Him even when looking for Him and
-desiring to worship Him, believing in every god but the true One,
-sometimes even offering sacrifices to devils; to discuss, too,
-how it is the world by wisdom knows not, and never has known
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, that intellect cannot search Him
-out, that intellect has even blinded many to whom the unknown
-<span class="smcap">God</span> was plainly exhibited; to ask how
-much of this is natural, how much unnatural, how much
-judicial&mdash;the punishment of pride, the reward of loving
-darkness rather than light, because of evil deeds.&nbsp; But
-interesting as would be the consideration of &ldquo;<span
-class="smcap">God</span> unknown in the world,&rdquo; there is a
-more important theme suggested <a name="page54"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 54</span>by the text for us to dwell on,
-namely, &ldquo;<span class="smcap">God</span> unknown in the
-Church.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;There standeth one among you Whom ye
-know not.&rdquo;&nbsp; Let me speak to you on this, brethren.</p>
-<p>Whatever may be the state and disposition of the people whom
-the clergyman has to deal with in his various daily ministrations
-and his intercourse with the world, once a week, at least, he
-addresses an assembly in some sense given to religion.&nbsp; As
-he stands in the pulpit on the Lord&rsquo;s Day he may adopt
-almost the words of St. Paul on the Areopagus: &ldquo;I perceive
-that you (and such as you) are more than the rest of mankind
-<span class="smcap">God</span>-fearing, taking an interest in
-religion, listening to its teaching, partaking of its ordinances,
-supplicating, praising, serving <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It may, indeed, occasionally be that some present themselves
-to see if there is anything in the church for them to object to,
-or ridicule; that others have come in conformity to the fashion,
-to hear something new, to see and be seen; to make a show of
-respectability, to wile away an idle time; and that many others,
-though proposing to themselves the observance of a religious
-duty, are so formal, so listless, so unreal, that it cannot be
-said of them that they are &ldquo;given to religion.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Nevertheless, I repeat that the clergyman, as he <a
-name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 55</span>stands in the
-pulpit, has before him the best, <i>i.e.</i>, the most religious
-of mankind; not mockers, and revilers, and persecutors; not
-gainsayers, and despisers, and forgetters; but real
-worshippers&mdash;more or less reverential and earnest, more or
-less enlightened&mdash;of the true <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; But has he not in these same
-persons (as St. Paul had in the Athenians) many worshippers of an
-unknown <span class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp; May he not venture
-to say to almost all, &ldquo;Whom ye ignorantly worship, Him
-declare I unto you.&rdquo;&nbsp; Christian worshippers, my
-brethren, often have many idols, who share almost equally with
-<span class="smcap">God</span> their interest and affections and
-service.&nbsp; They have, many of them, their &ldquo;ism,&rdquo;
-their Paul, their Cephas, or Apollos, their favourite dogma,
-their preferences and prejudices for some particular rites, and
-ceremonies, and modes of worship.&nbsp; In church, and out of
-church, their religion consists largely in giving heed to these
-things: <span class="smcap">God</span> is in their thoughts, but
-not in all their thoughts, or not the chief, the engrossing
-object of their thoughts; He is one of many objects.&nbsp; You
-find this out if you listen to their remarks after service.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Such a chant went well or badly; the preacher&rsquo;s
-manner was pleasing, or the contrary; his language very ornate,
-or very bald; the theme one they like, or one they do not like;
-<a name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 56</span>the rubric
-strictly observed, or strangely disregarded;&rdquo; and so
-on.&nbsp; Of course, as all these things are means to an end, and
-as the end is gained, or not gained, by their suitableness, or
-the opposite, it is lawful and right to give them some
-consideration: but I put it to you, brethren, whether they are
-not too often regarded as themselves the end; as though, provided
-they were satisfactory, there was nothing more wanting; as though
-they were rightly as much the objects of interest as the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> in Whose service they are used, or,
-rather, as though regarding them were regarding <span
-class="smcap">God</span>!</p>
-<p>O brethren, we are too attentive to the system&mdash;too
-regardless of the Centre!&nbsp; We want to know&mdash;(to feel, I
-mean, for the Christian&rsquo;s knowledge is of the
-heart)&mdash;that <span class="smcap">God</span> is above
-all&mdash;that where other objects have anything like an equal
-share of attention, where they hide Him from us in His pure
-essence and direct influence, there He is ignorantly
-worshipped&mdash;that He is a Spirit, not a chant, a voice, a
-figure of speech, a rubric, a turning east or west.&nbsp; Through
-these we may reach Him; many of them are steps and accessories to
-worship; but if in these we rest, then we set them up as idols,
-side by side with Him, and prove that to us He is but as the
-unknown god of the Athenians.</p>
-<p><a name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 57</span>See,
-dear brethren, I beseech you, if aught of this old error clings
-to you, and pray <span class="smcap">God</span> to clear you from
-it, and resolve henceforth to strive to keep clear.&nbsp; Treat
-means as means&mdash;value them; be glad that they are becomingly
-afforded you, and rejoice if they help you; but do not let the
-best of them beguile you, nor the worst of them hinder you, from
-finding and worshipping <span class="smcap">God</span> Himself;
-from going away filled with thoughts of Him.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
-prayed to <span class="smcap">God</span>; I praised Him; I held
-communion with Him; I heard the things of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> from His messenger, and have now to go
-and live by what I have done, and received, and
-heard.&rdquo;&nbsp; These are the thoughts to take away from
-church with you, and to prove to you that you wisely worship the
-known <span class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<p>I have dwelt much on this part of the subject, because of the
-general forgetfulness of it; a forgetfulness which prevents many
-from rendering acceptable service to <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and from obtaining the full help and
-comfort which religion affords to all who rightly use it.</p>
-<p>But there are many other kinds of ignorant worship.&nbsp; It
-is possible to cast down all idols, and worship <span
-class="smcap">God</span> alone, and yet err.&nbsp; The so-called
-spiritualist does this: the man who supposes that addressing
-himself directly to <span class="smcap">God</span>, is <a
-name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>sufficient,
-without the use of appointed forms and ordinances; who attaches
-no importance to baptism and holy communion; who thinks that no
-grace accompanies their use, or that he can have the grace
-without the sign; who says that praying at home is a good
-substitute for congregational worship; who boasts that he can
-read a sermon for himself, and a better one than he can hear in
-church; or that the Bible is sufficiently clear to him without an
-interpreter.</p>
-<p>Such an one ignorantly worships an unknown <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; He dictates, instead of obeying;
-he chooses, instead of submitting to what is appointed for him;
-he puts reason in the place of faith; he refuses to walk in <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> way of salvation; he disputes
-the Divine wisdom in requiring him to be baptised, and to partake
-of the Cup and Bread of Blessing; in warning not to forsake the
-assembling of ourselves together; in asking, &ldquo;How shall
-they hear without a preacher?&rdquo; in appointing a standing
-ministry; he rebels against <span class="smcap">God</span>, when
-he disregards these ordinances; he makes <span
-class="smcap">God</span> a liar when he presumes to deem them
-unnecessary.&nbsp; Oh, he has great need that the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> whom he ignorantly worships, should be
-plainly declared unto him!</p>
-<p>Again, that man ignorantly worships <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, who <a name="page59"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 59</span>substitutes the forms for the life of
-religion; who supposes that a sanctuary service atones for all
-want of service elsewhere; who prays in church, but not in his
-closet; who hears the Bible read or expounded, but does not
-search it diligently for himself; who receives sacraments, but
-does not foster, and use, and develop the sacramental grace,
-which is entrusted to him as an awful talent to be increased and
-accounted for; who balances the religion of Sunday against the
-worldliness of the whole week; who every seventh day eases his
-conscience of its sin, by sighing out the general confession, and
-forthwith takes to himself the comfort of the declaration of
-forgiveness, and then goes back to his old transgressions and
-omissions, till the holy day comes round again.&nbsp; Of course
-whoever does this, or any part of it deliberately, is grossly,
-culpably ignorant of the <span class="smcap">God</span> whom he
-professes to worship; but it is not of such that I speak
-now.&nbsp; I have in mind professing Christians, persons who busy
-themselves about religion, who are regular in their attendance on
-means of grace, who never wilfully desecrate the <span
-class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s</span> day, who knowing that
-unpardoned sin separates from <span class="smcap">God</span>, and
-that without grace, life is unblessed, are anxious for pardon and
-grace, and frequently seek them in <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> appointed ways; but yet, forget,
-<a name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 60</span>are not
-impressed with the danger of a relapse, and the sin of
-non-improvement, and so somehow or other, fall into a routine of
-formal religion on Sunday, which is not in their thoughts, except
-as a matter that belongs to next Sunday all through the
-week.&nbsp; This is to worship ignorantly an unknown <span
-class="smcap">God</span>&mdash;a <span class="smcap">God</span>
-Who does not accept intermittent worship, Who bestows pardon only
-on repentance and amendment of life, Who gives grace for use,
-Whose sacraments are meals to sustain life and strengthen for
-service, Whose Sabbath is a holy rest to refresh for holy work,
-in Whom we live, and move, and have our being, Whose glory is to
-be our constant aim, His presence our perpetual joy.&nbsp; But
-these, and many other ignorances&mdash;such as the disregard of
-particular attributes, the picturing for oneself what <span
-class="smcap">God</span> ought to be like, and so varying the
-picture according to the fancy of him who draws it, instead of
-searching how, and what manner of <span class="smcap">God</span>
-He has declared Himself to be, and what worship is appointed, and
-therefore acceptable&mdash;these, I say, are the faults of
-individuals, or of certain classes only.&nbsp; Let me now speak
-of an ignorance, a respect in which <span
-class="smcap">God</span> is more or less unknown, which concerns
-us all.&nbsp; And here, dear brethren, my object is not to
-censure, to blame you for <a name="page61"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 61</span>what you have not, but pointing out
-to you the <span class="smcap">God</span> whom Scripture reveals,
-to help you to correct what is amiss, to fill up what is wanting
-in your conceptions of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and so to
-attain to the blessedness of knowing Him fully, and to discharge
-the duty of worshipping Him in spirit and in truth.</p>
-<p>Observe St. Paul, while acknowledging the religious reverence
-of the Athenians, evidently deals with them as men who understood
-not the truths, the objects, the blessings of religion; as those
-who when they had built their altars, and celebrated their holy
-days, and offered their sacrifices, thought they had fulfilled
-all that religion required of them, and who expected to get
-nothing by their religion, but exemption from certain grievous
-pestilences, or help perhaps in war&mdash;mere occasional
-miraculous manifestations of dreadful power&mdash;who had no
-conceptions of sanctifying influence, of moral responsibility, of
-rewards of righteousness.&nbsp; To them he declares <span
-class="smcap">God</span> to be, One not far from them, One whom
-they might find, in Whom they then lived and moved, and had their
-being, Who henceforth would not wink at any ignorance, Who was at
-present treating them, and regarding them with a view to a coming
-judgment.&nbsp; Now we are better (thank <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, who <a name="page62"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 62</span>maketh us to differ!) than these
-Athenians; but still we want somewhat of the heart-knowledge
-which Paul would have impressed on them.&nbsp; We want to be more
-fully convinced that religion is not a pastime, but a business;
-that not only duty, but interest, momentous interest, is involved
-in it, especially that it is not a mere concern and preparation
-and provision for the future, but a present substantial reality;
-that <span class="smcap">God</span> is not the object of distant
-worship; that His wrath and His mercy are, not rarely, but
-constantly, being exercised here; that He is not a departed <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, Who has set us to do His work against
-His return, and will take no account of us till some far off day;
-that He has not left us unrewarded, unpunished, unhelped in the
-present, not caring what we are, what we do, what we suffer, so
-as when He comes back, we have either done what He appointed, or
-have assumed the position of penitents for offence, and
-supplicants of compassion.</p>
-<p>Is it not matter of experience that we are not sufficiently
-influenced by the hopes and fears of religion, that we do not
-adequately reverence <span class="smcap">God</span>, or seek Him,
-and rest on Him, because we suppose that He is afar off, and that
-all that we have to expect from Him, will only begin to be
-realised in the next world?&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-as a present <a name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-63</span><span class="smcap">God</span>, is too much unknown to
-us.&nbsp; We do not feel that He is now about us; that His eye is
-watching us, and His arm upraised over each of us at every moment
-of our lives; that He is a guest actually in us, to be honoured
-and waited on now.&nbsp; We do not know of His present closeness,
-of His immediate rewards and punishments, His pleasure or
-displeasure, His instant succour, or instant withdrawal from us,
-according to what He sees in us.&nbsp; We do all, and bear all in
-distant expectation, and therefore we do negligently, and bear
-feebly and impatiently.&nbsp; Could we realise the perpetual
-working, the instant retribution, the very touching of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> now, it would be easy to regard and
-serve Him, it would be all but impossible to neglect Him.&nbsp;
-No man could prefer dross to gold, misery to bliss, death to
-life, if they were both offered him at the same moment.&nbsp; No
-one could hesitate whom to obey, whom to trust, whom to fear,
-whom to love, if <span class="smcap">God</span> were seen on the
-one side, and fellow man on the other.&nbsp; It is because <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and the things of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, are supposed to be far off, that we
-first prefer the other, and then practically regard it as that
-which alone has real existence.</p>
-<p>Well, then, this is what we have to mend.&nbsp; I have been
-urging the mending on these Sundays <a name="page64"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 64</span>in Advent, in striving to show you
-that there is a <span class="smcap">God</span> present to
-superintend, and provide, and care for you in this life, and in
-every event and moment of this life; that there is an actual and
-immediate judgment of every deed, good and evil, and that there
-is a present business of religion, and a direct service of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> to be now attended to.&nbsp; It is not
-head-knowledge that you want, but heart-perception, and
-realisation.&nbsp; You want to feel what you must know (because
-the Bible has told you that <span class="smcap">God</span> is a
-<span class="smcap">God</span> at hand, and not a <span
-class="smcap">God</span> afar off); that godliness has the
-promise of the life that now is, as well as of that which is to
-come; that the irreligious is condemned already.&nbsp; No
-expectation, no delay, no vision.&nbsp; All fulfilled, immediate,
-and substantially real.&nbsp; You fancy, perhaps, that it cannot
-be so.&nbsp; You urge that it is contrary to your experience; you
-have served <span class="smcap">God</span>, and not been
-rewarded; you have trusted in Him, and not been supported; you
-have sinned against Him, and not been punished.&nbsp; Brethren,
-believe me, you have not.&nbsp; &ldquo;Experience&rdquo; means
-that which has been ascertained by trial.&nbsp; Make trial, and
-all will be proved.&nbsp; Devote yourselves now to <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, follow Him, give up for Him to-day, and
-you shall be rewarded to-day.&nbsp; Sin against Him to-day, and
-you shall be punished to-day.&nbsp; <a name="page65"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 65</span>Invoke His aid to-day, and you shall
-surely have it.&nbsp; Do not prescribe your own mode of
-visitation.&nbsp; Be sure that He will use His, and watch for it,
-and seek to know it, and then you will have an experience to
-quote.&nbsp; I only repeat to you what He has said.&nbsp; When
-you know Him, you will find that He is true.&nbsp; Then wait on
-Him, acquaint yourselves with Him, serve Him in the present, and
-look for Him in the present, and you will find Him in the
-present.</p>
-<h2><a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 66</span>SERMON
-V.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">FAITH AND ITS BLESSEDNESS.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">St.
-John</span>, <span class="smcap">xx</span>., 29.</p>
-<p><i>Thomas</i>, <i>because thou hast seen me</i>, <i>thou hast
-believed</i>: <i>blessed are they that have not seen</i>, <i>and
-yet have believed</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Does</span> our <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> mean to say that there was no
-blessedness in the sight which he then presented?&mdash;that it
-was not a precious privilege actually to see Him, to hear Him, to
-be perceptibly with Him?&nbsp; Would He, too, withdraw and
-reverse the blessing He had formerly
-pronounced&mdash;&ldquo;Blessed are the eyes which see the things
-that ye see&rdquo;?&nbsp; Would He tell us that the kings and
-prophets, who saw the promises only afar off, who fancied and
-conjectured, and died in hope, were more blessed than the hearers
-of the Sermon of the Mount, the spectators of the
-Transfiguration, the companions of that three years&rsquo;
-ministry, the guests at Emmaus, the disciple that reclined on His
-bosom?&nbsp; No, surely!&nbsp; <a name="page67"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 67</span>The blessedness of the Apostles, in
-certainly seeing, and being with <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> in the flesh, is, in its peace and
-joy, a blessedness which stands pre-eminent and alone, and must
-do till again He is seen in Heaven.&nbsp; But peace and joy are
-not the greatest blessings.&nbsp; That which calms, that which
-gladdens, is nothing in comparison with that which sanctifies and
-elevates; and there is a blessedness which does this; and which,
-therefore, is greater.&nbsp; It is the blessedness which faith
-produces.&nbsp; &ldquo;Blessed (<i>i.e.</i>, more blessed) are
-they that have not seen, and yet have believed.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Belief, faith&mdash;what is it?&nbsp; It may be described as the
-assent of the understanding, to that which is not proved to any
-of our senses, but which appears credible because of the
-testimony given to it.&nbsp; We all have this faith, in human
-affairs.&nbsp; We all of us accept as true&mdash;are convinced of
-their truth, and act upon the conviction&mdash;things which are
-not proved to us, but are supported by reliable statement.&nbsp;
-If you serve for wages, or sell goods on credit, or become surety
-for another, or go out to seek a new home in a distant land, you
-do it in faith.&nbsp; You cannot see into the heart, and be sure
-of the honesty of your employer, your customer, your friend; but
-what appears, from what you are told by others of him, you rely
-on him.&nbsp; And so <a name="page68"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 68</span>again, you do not actually know that
-there is such a land as you propose to seek, but you believe it,
-because of all that travellers have said of it, of the goods you
-have seen, the letters you have read, which are stated to have
-come from it.&nbsp; Of course, as the testimony varies in its
-credibility, this faith is of different degrees.&nbsp; You have
-such faith in your well-tried friend, in his integrity and his
-wisdom, that you know, you say, that he will not deceive you, and
-that he cannot be deceived himself.&nbsp; Others, of whom you
-know less, you believe more slowly.&nbsp; Some, you think, are
-not qualified to give testimony; they have the thing second-hand,
-or they were not competent to judge of what they saw, and heard,
-and felt; or they are not truthful, and may wilfully
-misrepresent: and even, in the best cases, faith is sometimes
-misplaced.&nbsp; Therefore, your faith in human things, has
-always, perhaps (and should have) a trace of doubt in
-it&mdash;sometimes is weak, sometimes fails altogether.&nbsp; It
-would be wrong and injurious to have equal faith in all; but, on
-the other hand, to be always doubting, to refuse to believe
-without seeing, would be misery, and folly, and mockery of
-self.&nbsp; Divine faith is different: the accepting (that is) of
-what is recommended to us by the testimony of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, by <a name="page69"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 69</span>well-proved miracles, by prophecies
-since fulfilled, by any other of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> witnesses.&nbsp; This is
-perfect.&nbsp; It admits of no doubts and qualifications.&nbsp;
-It is as sure of what it believes, as if it handled, and heard,
-and saw it: yea, surer, for its own judgment might be deceived;
-but <span class="smcap">God</span> knows all things and judges
-rightly, and <span class="smcap">God</span> cannot deceive.&nbsp;
-Therefore, when <span class="smcap">God</span> reveals, we may
-not question the plausibility of what is shown; we have no room
-for doubt as to His opportunities of knowing, His truthfulness in
-communicating what is narrated.&nbsp; All we may do, is to
-ask&mdash;Has <span class="smcap">God</span> spoken, are these
-things His testimony?&nbsp; And this we ought to do; for there is
-no blessing pronounced by the text on the credulous, who take
-everything as from <span class="smcap">God</span>, without
-examination.&nbsp; Thomas surely would have erred, if, simply
-because some one told him of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> resurrection, he had
-straightway believed it.&nbsp; We are exhorted not to believe
-every spirit, but to try the spirits whether they be of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; We have to examine miracles, to
-see whether they are real or pretended, and prophecies, to see
-that they were not written after the professed fulfilments, and
-all revelations, lest they should be spurious.&nbsp; Failing to
-do this, we might have followed Theudas, who came to nought, or
-Joan of Arc: we might become Mohammedans <a
-name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 70</span>or
-Mormonites.&nbsp; We have to guard against this; not to be
-credulous; to be sure that it is <span class="smcap">God</span>
-that speaks: but then, being sure, whatever He describes, however
-incomprehensible or improbable, whatever He commands, no matter
-how apparently unreasonable, whatever He promises, against
-experience, against opinion, against hope, to accept all, and
-rely on all, and lead the life of reliance.&nbsp; Yes, brethren,
-this is the believing which alone is blessed; the believing which
-leads to doing.&nbsp; Faith is the evidence by which we see
-things naturally unseen; it is the substance, the very handled
-reality, of things naturally only hoped for; and which, by its
-revelations of beauty and bliss, by its sanctions and
-persuasions, and by all that it shows us of the present, and
-promises or threatens in the future, makes us fly to <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and cling to Him, and depend on Him,
-and live for Him, and look for Him.&nbsp; Less than
-this&mdash;mere assent of the understanding, without
-heart-embracing, and life-demonstrating, and exercising&mdash;is
-not the belief that is blessed.&nbsp; Faith without works is
-dead, being alone.&nbsp; If then, brethren, you would be
-partakers of the blessedness promised in the text, you must have
-fully received, and be acting upon the form of religion which
-<span class="smcap">God</span> has given you.&nbsp; You must have
-implicit <a name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-71</span>trust in Him for help and support and peace and
-blessing.&nbsp; You must know that whatever He has described is
-real, whatever He has promised or threatened will surely be
-fulfilled, on the conditions He has laid down; and you must
-testify and act upon your knowledge by a corresponding
-life.&nbsp; I do not say that all this is demanded of you in
-perfection; that the hope of blessing is gone, if you fail of
-aught of it: but I do say that, if in anything you distrust <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, if you question or demand further proof
-of, or are indifferent to anything He has revealed, and
-deliberately do not live by it, then you cannot claim the
-benediction of the text.</p>
-<p>But it occurs to you to ask, perhaps, how it is that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> selects believing, rather than seeing,
-on any other way of reception for special blessing.</p>
-<p>Now, it is not necessary that <span class="smcap">God</span>
-should account to us for what He does or wills.&nbsp; Creatures
-of His hand, we are made for Him; dependents on His bounty, we
-must thankfully receive it in any way and form of bestowal.&nbsp;
-But still there are reasons which may be briefly suggested for
-the selection of faith.</p>
-<p>First, then, faith embodies the entire trustful devotion to
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, which, above any assent to what
-is proved, any following of what is seen or <a
-name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 72</span>heard,
-magnifies the honour of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and so
-sets forth His glory.&nbsp; It owns His truth, His providence,
-His love, and prompts to a free-will, spiritual, glorifying
-service of Him.&nbsp; Secondly, unless there are to be perpetual
-miracles, faith alone can be permanently and universally
-influential.&nbsp; If we are to be guided by sight, or hearing,
-or touching, then the revelations to one generation would have to
-be repeated to each following generation, and those of one
-country performed again in every other.&nbsp; Thus <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> would have had to continue on earth,
-to have visited every land, and been crucified and raised from
-the dead in every land, or to have gathered all nations into
-Judea to witness what was done; and this would have had to be
-repeated over and over again to our fathers, to us, to our
-children, or else some would have been without the necessary
-influence to serve, and love, and depend on Him.&nbsp; And more
-than this, since the sights we see and the sounds we hear, are
-soon over, and leave but a faint remembrance behind, we should be
-imperfectly influenced by them, when <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> ceased to speak; or when He passed
-into another place we should be without our object of worship,
-our instructor or hope.&nbsp; And even if these objections can be
-met, still the perpetuity of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> <a name="page73"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 73</span>visible presence, the beholding of
-His miracles, and hearing of His words, would necessarily put a
-stop to all worldly occupations; would make probation little more
-than a name; would constrain men by natural influences to a
-carnal or slavish adherence to Him, or would drive them into
-reckless rebellion, and instant and irrevocable condemnation.</p>
-<p>But again, faith is more blessed because it has greater
-privileges&mdash;because it reveals more clearly, brings nearer,
-than any sense could do.&nbsp; If you only hear a loved one, do
-you not desire to see him?&nbsp; If you see him, are you not
-unblessed unless you embrace him?&nbsp; And then, is there not an
-influence, a way of communicating, that surpasses this&mdash;a
-purer, a more spiritual influence, one which brings you together,
-and keeps you together, and makes you one&mdash;love, which
-surpasses, which is independent of, or only uses as accessories,
-the bodily senses?&nbsp; We are too apt, brethren, to talk of
-seeing as believing; to count sense above feeling; to exalt what
-belongs to the body, above what belongs to the mind or
-spirit.&nbsp; Doubtless, the error arises from the way in which
-we speak of faith giving way to sight in heaven, as though the
-eyes of the body only, and not the mind and spirit, were to
-behold <span class="smcap">Christ</span> then; as though <a
-name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 74</span>mental and
-spiritual perception were not better than bodily; as though there
-were no assurance that faith is an abiding gift, and that,
-therefore, while in heaven there will be much to gratify the eye
-of the body, there will still be much more which faith alone can
-realise.&nbsp; My brethren, the greatest eternal blessedness will
-be vouchsafed to faith, and the greatest blessedness of this
-state belongs to faith, because it is the exercise of man&rsquo;s
-noblest and best, and most reliable faculties, far superior in
-excellence, far more certain in ascertaining the truth, than
-ears, or eyes, or hands.</p>
-<p>Once more, faith is blessed above seeing, because it grasps a
-set of truths, and enjoys a class of pleasures which are
-different from those of the senses, and which the senses cannot
-touch.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span> the Father invisible
-for ever, <span class="smcap">God</span> the Holy Ghost, blowing
-like the wind where it listeth, so that you cannot see whence it
-cometh and whither it goes, ministering angels, spiritual
-influences, and consolations, and helps&mdash;what can ear, or
-eye, or hand know of these?&nbsp; But faith knows them, hears
-them, sees them, handles them, and joys in them.&nbsp; And this,
-brethren, exhibits the nature of faith&rsquo;s blessedness; that
-to it is revealed the whole spiritual world; that the evidence
-which it <a name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-75</span>needs, the object of its worship, its Saviour, its <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, its hopes and fears, and
-encouragements and promises are never absent, and never missed,
-(but by its own dimness or voluntary blindness) whatever may
-become of the outward signs and boding presences.&nbsp; Picture
-to yourselves, brethren, the scene of that chamber where the
-raised <span class="smcap">Christ</span> stood manifest, in the
-posture of blessing, before His adoring disciples.&nbsp; Imagine
-what Thomas had before felt, and what he now felt.&nbsp; Then
-hear <span class="smcap">Christ</span> say&mdash;&ldquo;The bliss
-of this moment might have been yours before, if you had sought to
-attain it by faith, and not by sight; and what you now see may be
-yours for ever, for in spirit I shall ever be with you, and by
-faith you may ever behold Me!&nbsp; Blessed are they that have
-not seen, and yet have believed&rdquo;; and that blessing,
-brethren, was for us, if we will have it.&nbsp; If we believe,
-then we are thus blessed.&nbsp; If we are not blessed, we may
-be.&nbsp; O let us lay hold on this truth, let us cultivate
-faith, let us pray to <span class="smcap">God</span> for an
-increase of it, and let us perpetually exercise it in beholding
-Him Who is ever with us, to pardon our faithless sins, to restore
-us to His company, to breathe upon us peace and blessing.</p>
-<h2><a name="page76"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 76</span>SERMON
-VI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">FAULTLESSNESS BEFORE GOD.</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">(INNOCENTS&rsquo; DAY.)</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Revelation</span>, <span class="smcap">xiv</span>.,
-5.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><i>They are without fault before
-the throne of</i> <span class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Job</span> declares that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> puts no trust in His saints; that He
-charges His angels with folly; that in His sight the very heavens
-are not clean.&nbsp; This language is, of course, figurative, and
-not to be taken literally; but it well describes to us the
-transcendent holiness of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and His
-utter abhorrence of all evil.&nbsp; In comparison of Him, heaven
-itself is not pure, and angels, endued with wisdom, swift and
-constant to obey, delighting in His will, even these are not
-perfect&mdash;fall far short of perfection before Him.&nbsp; Job
-would show us the distance between <span class="smcap">God</span>
-and man.&nbsp; St. John, however, in the chapter of my text,
-would exhibit another truth, not contradictory, but rather
-supplementary to Job&rsquo;s, namely, the nearness, through
-grace, of man to <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; The
-Apostle <a name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 77</span>is
-describing, for the comfort and encouragement of the tried and
-persecuted, a vision which he had seen of some of those who have
-passed away from this world, and, as a kind of first-fruits, are
-already with <span class="smcap">God</span> and the Lamb; and he
-says, that &ldquo;in their mouth is found no guile; for they are
-without fault before the throne of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Without fault,&rdquo; means here, without spot or
-blemish; not only free from actual transgression, but wholly
-untainted by corruption of sin&mdash;not wanting in anything that
-belongs to the perfect character of the approved of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<p>That man in his natural state is altogether faulty, that even
-in his redeemed, and spiritualised, and sanctified state, while
-here on earth, he has still many faults, are truths so plainly
-taught, so proved to our reason and experience, that it would be
-idle to enforce them.&nbsp; How, then, can he ever stand
-faultless before the throne of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp; Now some would answer, that for
-<span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> sake <span
-class="smcap">God</span> overlooks, that <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, by His merits, hides man&rsquo;s
-faults; and so that the redeemed in heaven are not really
-faultless, but that for <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-sake faultlessness is reckoned, imputed to them.&nbsp; This is
-what may be called the popular answer to our question.&nbsp; But,
-brethren, how utterly wrong it is seen to be, when we consider <a
-name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 78</span>that, in
-order to exalt <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> mercy and
-His wisdom in contriving justification, it sacrifices His truth
-and His holiness.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span> cannot
-call the faulty faultless.&nbsp; He Who is Truth cannot enter
-with His Holy Son (Who is also Truth) into a plan of deceit, by
-which, to Himself, to them, to angels, to the whole universe, sin
-shall be presented as holiness.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> may agree not to reckon with men for
-their sins, to forget the past, on certain conditions to deal
-with the faulty as if they were actually faultless; but He
-cannot&mdash;I say it advisedly, it is beyond the limits of His
-power, as regulated by His truth&mdash;He cannot call evil
-good.&nbsp; And, brethren, besides, even if it were possible that
-by some strange agreement with the Son, sinful man should be
-passed off as holy, still his sin, while it remained, hide it,
-disguise it, call it by what name you will, must separate from
-<span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Charity might forbear to
-punish it, or to make mention of it.&nbsp; Charity might even
-gild it over; but Holiness deals not with the name, but with the
-reality; and holiness must shrink from sin and thrust it
-away.&nbsp; This ought to be the most readily perceived and
-admitted of all Scripture truths, that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> cannot tolerate near iniquity;
-that&mdash;if I may venture reverently to use such
-words&mdash;even if <span class="smcap">God</span> were <a
-name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 79</span>willing to
-receive to Himself an unchanged sinner, the actual reception
-would be morally impossible; the same heaven could not contain
-holiness and sin!&nbsp; No, brethren, if the sinner is to enter
-heaven, it must be, not because his name is changed, but his
-nature; he must be actually without fault before <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; We see this to have been the case
-with those described in the text: for it is expressly said,
-&ldquo;In their mouth was found no guile.&rdquo;&nbsp; Observe,
-it is not, <span class="smcap">God</span> mercifully overlooked
-their guile for the sake of His dear Son, the Guileless One; He
-charitably called them guileless; but &ldquo;in their mouth was
-found (the testimony of truth to the searching of holiness) no
-guile: yea, for they are altogether blameless, without spot or
-blemish.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is an actual, not an imputed
-faultlessness that is thus described.&nbsp; Now, how is it to be
-attained by sinful men?&nbsp; And here comes in a second answer
-of popular theology.&nbsp; At or after death, <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> meets the departed, and by His
-resurrection-power quickens that which was dead, purifies that
-which was corrupt, spiritualises, sanctifies, and, as by a
-miracle, converts the sinner into a perfect saint.&nbsp; This is
-an answer only second in popularity to the one we have been
-considering.&nbsp; Those who urge it, believe that man is
-naturally depraved, <a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-80</span>that, under grace, he retains much, almost all, his old
-nature, that he is very faulty in deed, in will and
-affections.&nbsp; They know that he must be faultless to gain
-accession to heaven and dwell with <span class="smcap">God</span>
-and the Lamb, and this faultlessness they hope for and pray for;
-but there is no effort to acquire it; there is no concern for the
-absence, the continued absence of it; it is regarded as
-altogether a thing of the future; the free and perfect
-gift&mdash;perfect at once&mdash;to the released soul and the
-raised body.&nbsp; Men who hold this view, are often better than
-their creed requires them to be.&nbsp; In love of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> and devotion to Him, they strive to
-abandon sin and cultivate holiness; but they have no definite
-object in view of becoming faultless here, in order to be
-faultless in heaven.&nbsp; They seem to believe that they cannot
-get any nearer to faultlessness whatever they do, and that those
-who have made no efforts, ay, have even led ungodly lives, and,
-but for a few last sighs and ejaculations, would have died
-ungodly deaths, are just as qualified, just as fit in many cases,
-just as sure recipients of instantly converting and perfecting
-grace in the next world!</p>
-<p>But if this is so, why have we such solemn warnings, to the
-effect that as the tree falls, so shall it lie?&nbsp; &ldquo;He
-that is righteous, then, shall be <a name="page81"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 81</span>righteous still.&nbsp; He that is
-filthy then, shall be filthy still.&rdquo;&nbsp; Why is it that
-in the representations which we have of the Judgment, men are
-always dealt with according to what they were in life,
-&ldquo;Inasmuch as ye did it,&rdquo; &ldquo;Inasmuch as ye did it
-not&rdquo;?&nbsp; Why is the pound taken away from him that did
-not seek to increase it, and given to him who had gained ten
-pounds, and the commentary subjoined, &ldquo;Unto every one which
-hath shall be given, and from him that hath not, even that he
-hath shall be taken away from him&rdquo;?&nbsp; Why is the
-boaster of his privileges&mdash;&ldquo;In Thy name have I cast
-out devils&rdquo;&mdash;instantly dismissed with the words,
-&ldquo;Depart from me, I never knew you&rdquo;?&nbsp; Why are
-they reproved who called <span class="smcap">Christ Lord</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span>, but did not the things which He
-said?&nbsp; What did St. Peter mean when he exhorted &ldquo;Save
-yourselves;&rdquo; and Paul, &ldquo;Work out your own salvation
-with fear and trembling;&rdquo; &ldquo;Let him that thinketh he
-standeth, take heed lest he fall;&rdquo; and <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> Himself, &ldquo;Behold, I come
-quickly, and My reward is with Me, to give to every man according
-as his work shall be;&rdquo; &ldquo;Blessed are they that do His
-commandments that they may have right to the tree of life, and
-may enter in through the gates into the city&rdquo;?&nbsp; Surely
-all this, as with a voice from heaven, <a name="page82"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 82</span>calls on us to put away the delusion,
-that mortal life is not a probation, that man has not a fitness
-to acquire in this life, in order that he may be faultless in
-heaven.&nbsp; The answer of truth, brethren, to the question,
-&ldquo;How can man be faultless in heaven?&rdquo; is, briefly, By
-praying, and striving, through the blessing of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, the grace of the Spirit of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, and his own self-denial, and
-diligence, and cultivated holiness, to become less and less
-faulty here.&nbsp; After all, he will never, on this side of the
-grave, be without spot or blemish, and perfect in holiness.&nbsp;
-Whatever <span class="smcap">Christ</span> may do for him here,
-he will still have much to be purged away, much to be quickened,
-much to be glorified.&nbsp; But, be sure, there must be a
-seed-time here and a growing here, if there is to be a harvest
-hereafter.&nbsp; There must be a service, if there is to be a
-reward; we must be faithful in a little, before we are made
-rulers over much; there must be a fitness, a partial, a main
-fitness acquired here, or no admission there to the inheritance
-of the Saints in light.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> work in us hereafter is not a
-transforming, but a completing, a finishing, a perfecting
-work.&nbsp; &ldquo;To him that hath&rdquo;&mdash;that is, that
-has made use of and improved what he hath&mdash;&ldquo;to him
-more shall be given,&rdquo; and he shall abound.&nbsp; He who has
-traced <a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 83</span>in
-his soul and life the outline of the features of the blessed
-<span class="smcap">Jesus</span>, shall have the likeness filled
-up and finished by the Divine artist, and be wholly conformed to
-His image.&nbsp; He who has kept down the flesh, shall have the
-power of the flesh destroyed in him.&nbsp; He who has sought
-after holiness, shall be made perfect.&nbsp; A great change; much
-taken away, much added, but not a transformation.&nbsp; A great
-work, which can only be done then, and only by <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>; but which will fail to be done then
-if materials are not provided for it now; if the foundation has
-not been laid, and the walls have not been raised, and all made
-ready for the roof of <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>
-adding, and the capping of the tower of glory.&nbsp; Yes; this is
-the qualification, without which you cannot be received, but,
-having it, cannot be refused.&nbsp; Labour and pray to be
-faultless here, and <span class="smcap">Christ</span> shall at
-the end perfect your faultlessness, and shall present you
-faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding
-joy.&nbsp; But the text seems to speak not of those who had
-washed away defilements, had secured pardon of offences, had
-repaired faults and made up deficiencies, in short, had been
-sinners, but, under the operation of the spirit of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, were become saints; but of those who
-never had been faulty, spotted, or blemished <a
-name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>&ldquo;These
-are they which were not defiled with women, for they are
-virgins.&nbsp; These are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever
-He goeth.&rdquo;&nbsp; Of course, there must have been the spot
-and blemish of original sin; but, apart from this&mdash;which
-<span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> applied purifying power
-and all-sufficient merits would entirely remove&mdash;there seems
-to have been in the lives of these persons no actual sin, no
-omission of righteousness.&nbsp; Now, as there is no man that
-liveth and sinneth not, it has been conjectured that the vision
-here exhibits those who were taken away to <span
-class="smcap">God</span> in their infancy, before they had the
-power or the will to do good or evil, and who, therefore, as far
-as actual deeds and feelings are concerned, not by work, or
-grace, or conviction, but absolutely and from the first were
-faultless: and probably the selection of the description as the
-Gospel for this day, the festival of the Holy Innocents, has gone
-far to confirm this conjecture.&nbsp; But, brethren, this surely
-is not the meaning, at least the full meaning, of the
-words.&nbsp; They describe freedom from defilement and following
-of the Lamb as things that might have been otherwise.&nbsp; They
-hold up for the example and encouragement of those who were
-tempted to lust, and to depart from following the living <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, the praise and <a
-name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 85</span>happiness of
-those who are without fault in these respects; and therefore they
-suggest to us, I think, as the most profitable and foremost
-thought, the blessedness, the superior blessedness of those who
-never have contracted sin, nor failed in holiness.</p>
-<p>Men sometimes seem to fancy that the most glorious character
-in heaven, the object of <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>
-fondest love, will be the once deep-stained and wholly defiled,
-that have been washed in <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> blood till they are become
-whiter than snow, the reckless, and rebellious, and blaspheming,
-who have been subdued and converted; and that in comparison of
-these, the mainly regular righteous life will almost pass
-unnoticed.&nbsp; It is easy to account for the supposition.&nbsp;
-We read, without due consideration, of her that sinned much, and
-was forgiven much, and therefore loved much; of the returned
-prodigal rejoiced over more than the son who had remained at
-home; of the joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more
-than over ninety-nine just persons who need no repentance; of
-publicans and harlots going into the kingdom of heaven before
-priests and scribes.&nbsp; We forget that these things were said
-to men who were not really righteous, but self-sufficient; that
-they were an accommodation to their own kind of reasoning; that
-they were the justification <a name="page86"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 86</span>of special works and feelings, and
-peculiar demonstrations.&nbsp; Surely we are not to understand by
-them anything more than that sinners were <i>at times</i> more in
-<span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> thoughts than saints;
-that on the recovery of one lost sheep, the joy over that one
-caused the rest for the moment to be put out of
-remembrance.&nbsp; Surely we are not to understand that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has less love for, and shows less favour
-to those who have uniformly served and honoured Him, than to
-those whose life has been one of contempt and rebellion, who have
-refused to accept Him till they had made trial of all else; that
-<span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> power and glory are more
-magnified in the ultimate conversion of such a sinner, than in
-the steady control and improvement of a life-long saint; that in
-themselves the reformed drunkards and defiled are better than
-those who were always sober and pure; that their memories are
-more blissful, and their themes of praise more satisfactory; that
-they are even equal in favour, in bliss, in manifested honour to
-those who were undefiled and consistently obedient, whom Holy
-Scripture distinguishes on this very account, of whom it relates,
-that they sing a song which no other can learn, signifying that
-they have a peculiar privilege and a peculiar joy!&nbsp;
-Brethren, be sure it is not so.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> is abundantly <a name="page87"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 87</span>gracious to all who call upon Him,
-late as well as early.&nbsp; No one, whatever his past life,
-shall be refused who comes to Him through <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; In his late righteousness all
-his former sins shall be forgiven and forgotten; they shall not
-once be mentioned unto him.&nbsp; He shall have too, the joy of
-the righteous, and shall dwell with <span
-class="smcap">God</span> in heaven; but still He Who makes one
-star to differ from another in glory, Who bestows different
-measures of reward upon different capacities, and different
-attainments, has a special interest and a superior blessedness
-for those who have never been stained, who have always stayed in
-their father&rsquo;s house, and have obeyed His will and loved
-His voice.&nbsp; In themselves they are dearer to Him, as more
-like <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>; and for them, He has seats
-closer to the throne of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, and
-offices of honour near His person.</p>
-<p>If this is so, if &ldquo;faultlessness,&rdquo; in the sense of
-never blotted, never imperfect, is the state that is most
-blessed, then, brethren, we might perhaps be tempted to envy the
-fate of those whom we commemorate to-day, who suffered so early
-for <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> sake, and as soon
-almost as they were born, were put to death.&nbsp; We might
-judge, too, that the little ones whom <span
-class="smcap">God</span> so frequently takes away so soon after
-lending them, are summoned <a name="page88"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 88</span>to a higher blessedness than we can
-ever know; and therefore that not only would it have been gain to
-die in infancy, but that it is positive loss to live to years of
-discretion and responsibility.&nbsp; Let us not err herein.&nbsp;
-We believe that the dear innocents, whose first consciousness is
-of bliss in heaven, whose reason begins to develop, and their
-will to exercise itself, only when sin is impossible, are not
-only unspeakably blessed, but that <span class="smcap">God</span>
-specially loves them, and folds them to His bosom (as we did
-here), because of that innocence: no guile, no
-defilement&mdash;all simplicity and trust.&nbsp; Thankful then in
-their sober moments are all bereaved parents who are assured of
-their departed little ones&rsquo; eternal safety, and are spared
-the fears and anxieties, the heartrending realisation of
-self-will developed, and the world&rsquo;s evil example followed,
-and the devil triumphant.&nbsp; The <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> gave, and the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> hath taken away; and, in that He has
-taken away, from the evil to come, Oh! blessed be the name of the
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span>.</p>
-<p>But, brethren, it is only because we fear for the future, that
-we thankfully accept such a present.&nbsp; Could we be sure that
-our little ones would remain faultless, that they would not abuse
-the world, nor fall into great error or misery, that they would
-grow in grace, and in the <a name="page89"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 89</span>fear of the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, and at length surely attain to glory;
-then, not from selfishness, but for their sakes, we should covet
-length of days for them.&nbsp; And rightly, for there is a better
-faultlessness, and a correspondingly higher blessedness than that
-of infants, who were allowed no opportunity (and possessed no
-power) to contract fault: it is the faultlessness of those who
-shrink from the allowed opportunity, who restrain the possessed
-power, and overcome the persuading will, who pass through the
-fire without the smell of it being left on their garments, who
-make manifest by a life of self-denials, and resistances to
-temptations, and patience and perseverance in well-doing, their
-intelligent deliberate love of <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-and hatred of evil.&nbsp; These are the tried, the eagerly
-accepted, the specially loved.&nbsp; These do the <span
-class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s</span> work, and set forth the <span
-class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s</span> glory.&nbsp; These shall indeed
-be welcomed with a &ldquo;Well-done good and faithful
-servant,&rdquo; for them shall be reserved the best seats on the
-right hand of <span class="smcap">God</span>; and they shall joy
-in <span class="smcap">God</span>, and <span
-class="smcap">God</span> in them, with a peculiar joy, for they
-are likest unto <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, Whose
-spotlessness was preserved among so many defilements, Who with
-heart, and mind, and life, consistently, unceasingly served <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and Who therefore is highly exalted,
-and has a name which is above all other names.</p>
-<p><a name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>Oh it
-is no mean privilege, brethren, which you forego, when you leave
-the ranks of the faultless, when you shrink from duty, or yield
-to sinful pleasure, or contract any stain of ungodliness.&nbsp;
-Say not, &ldquo;It is only for once.&rdquo;&nbsp; It will surely
-be for more than once; but if it were not, still from being
-faultless that <i>once</i> makes you blotted and blemished.&nbsp;
-Say not, &ldquo;I can repent by and by, and <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of His mercy will accept me, and I shall
-be myself again.&rdquo;&nbsp; You may not live to repent.&nbsp;
-Sin may disincline, the Spirit provoked may leave you; but even
-if you do repent&mdash;though <span class="smcap">God</span> will
-undoubtedly forgive, and in a sense restore you&mdash;remember,
-you can never be as you were before.&nbsp; You may be cleansed,
-but not as at first clean; admitted to heaven, but not to the
-band of the one hundred and forty-four thousand of undefiled;
-joined to the glorious choir of the redeemed, but not allowed,
-not able to sing the peculiar song of the faultless.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But what,&rdquo; some would say, &ldquo;is the use of
-this preaching?&nbsp; We are all already faulty; we can none of
-us have a place among these choice first fruits of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> harvest.&rdquo;&nbsp; Brethren,
-faultlessness, pure faultlessness, is no longer ours; but
-comparative faultlessness (and Bible faultlessness, after all, is
-only comparative freedom from wilful <a name="page91"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 91</span>sin) may, and, I trust, does pertain
-to many of us; and for each degree of nearness to faultlessness,
-if I understand the Bible aright, there is its peculiar
-reward.&nbsp; I would put you on your guard against losing that
-reward, by sinking to a lower level.&nbsp; I would urge you to
-hold fast what you have, to subdue yourselves, to resist the
-world and the devil, to be ever on the watch against danger, and
-to flee speedily from temptation, if it is too strong to fight
-against, to seek strength and sanctification in means of grace,
-to pray constantly (and strive constantly to make good your
-prayer), that <span class="smcap">Christ</span> would keep you
-from falling, and finally present you faultless before the
-presence of His glory with exceeding joy.</p>
-<h2><a name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 92</span>SERMON
-VII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PAST MERCIES REVIEWED.</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">(NEW YEAR&rsquo;S EVE.)</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Genesis</span>, <span class="smcap">xxxii</span>.,
-10.</p>
-<p><i>I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies</i>, <i>and
-of all the truth</i>, <i>which thou hast showed unto Thy
-servant</i>; <i>for with my staff I passed over this Jordan</i>;
-<i>and now I am become two bands</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">These</span> are Jacob&rsquo;s
-words.&nbsp; They form part of the prayer which he offered to
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, when, on his return from Haran,
-he found that Esau was coming out against him with four hundred
-men.</p>
-<p>Mingled feelings must have possessed Jacob at this time;
-strange remembrances must have been his!&nbsp; Twenty years ago
-he had passed over that Jordan&mdash;near which he now
-stood&mdash;in flight from an enraged brother, meditating and
-preparing vengeance for an act of fraudulent injury.&nbsp; What a
-weary pilgrimage he had since followed; what <a
-name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 93</span>sorrows, what
-desolations had possessed his aching heart; how he had toiled and
-suffered wrong; even now was fleeing from it!&nbsp; Yet, those
-twenty years gone, he was coming back, not to the prospect of
-peace and happiness, not to the hope that his brother had
-forgotten his vengeance, or that he would easily be reconciled to
-him; but to face a mindful, aggravated avenger, strengthened by
-four hundred followers.&nbsp; Surely he had fled and been in
-exile to no purpose!&nbsp; Surely, by deferring it, he had
-increased his trouble!&nbsp; It must have been that Jacob now
-acutely remembered the cause of Esau&rsquo;s anger; that he
-meditated on the mean advantage that he had taken, the base fraud
-to which he had been a party, the lying, the profanity of his
-lips, the evil deeds which led to evil consequences.&nbsp; Ah!
-now he felt that man cannot sin with impunity, that transgression
-and punishment are bound together as cause and effect, that
-vengeance, though it tarry, though it slumber, though we run from
-it, and hide from it many, many days, will yet accomplish its
-purpose, will surely repay!&nbsp; Yes; and did he not feel that
-vengeance had even followed him; that he had been its victim all
-those twenty years; that the frauds of Laban, from first to last,
-and the strifes and dissensions of his own household <a
-name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 94</span>were the
-fruits of his deceit; that <span class="smcap">God</span> had
-allowed them, that in a way He had caused them in retaliation, in
-punishment of his sin!&nbsp; What an experience to him, what a
-proof to us, my brethren, that sin will surely find us out!</p>
-<p>But Jacob must have had other and different
-thoughts&mdash;thoughts which preponderated.&nbsp; As he called
-to mind his first passage over Jordan, did not he remember the
-wonderful vision that was vouchsafed him of angels descending to
-earth, ascending to heaven, in token of Divine providence, of the
-intercourse between man and <span class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp;
-Did he not remember the Voice which promised to be with him, to
-keep him in all places whither he went, to bring him again to
-this land, to give it to him and to his seed after him?&nbsp; Did
-he not look along those twenty years, and remember that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> had been with him, and that, by His
-command, he was now coming back; and did he not hope, yes, even
-against hope, that <span class="smcap">God</span> would be with
-him in the coming struggle, that He would crown His mercy and
-goodness with a present success, and with the establishment of
-himself and his seed in the promised land?&nbsp; And one other
-remembrance surely he had.&nbsp; He remembered the vow which in
-the fresh reverence of <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>
-presence, in glad and grateful acceptance of His <a
-name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 95</span>promises, he
-had solemnly made, &ldquo;The <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-shall be my <span class="smcap">God</span>;&rdquo; and he must
-have remembered how often he had forgotten that vow, how
-generally he had slightly regarded it.&nbsp; These I suppose to
-have been the feelings and remembrances which filled the breast
-of Jacob, when he uttered the prayer in which our text
-occurs.&nbsp; Observe how that prayer exhibits the right ordering
-of these feelings, making prominent, putting uppermost thoughts
-and acknowledgments of <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>
-goodness; and, in the moment of greatest peril, pausing to review
-mercies, and to give thanks!&nbsp; There is no bitter lamentation
-of his hard lot throughout those years of promised blessing;
-there is no pleading with <span class="smcap">God</span>, that if
-he had sinned he had surely been punished enough; there is no
-mention of the merits of his contrite heart and amended life;
-there is no angry feeling against Esau, no supplication that
-<span class="smcap">God</span> would smite and confound
-him.&nbsp; It is a godly, a model prayer.&nbsp; Betaking himself
-to <span class="smcap">God</span> in the hour of danger, as his
-only confidence and help, he humbly urges no personal claim,
-but&mdash;that he is in the place of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> commanding.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;&lsquo;Thou <span class="smcap">Lord</span> that saidst
-unto me Return unto thy country and unto thy kindred,&rsquo; I
-did not recklessly run into danger, I did not voluntarily <a
-name="page96"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 96</span>gratify the
-natural yearning of my poor heart.&nbsp; Thou broughtest me here,
-O <span class="smcap">Lord</span> protect me here;&rdquo; and
-then having put forth himself, though but such a little way, and
-coming to consider <span class="smcap">God</span>, Who had shown
-him such wondrous goodness, Who had fulfilled for him so
-truthfully all His promises, he exclaims, &ldquo;I am not worthy
-of the least of all the mercies, and of all the truth which thou
-hast showed unto Thy servant: for with my staff&mdash;as a
-solitary, poor individual&mdash;I passed over this Jordan, and
-now I am become two bands.&nbsp; Deliver me, I pray
-thee.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This seems to me, brethren, a fit theme for a sermon on New
-Year&rsquo;s Eve.&nbsp; Jacob, come back from Haran to Jordan,
-where he had made a covenant with <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-may well typify our return to-night to the sanctuary of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, whence we went forth refreshed and
-pledged last New Year&rsquo;s Eve.&nbsp; Jacob&rsquo;s
-reflections&mdash;he is the pattern of a mediator&mdash;may well
-provoke us to ask of the days that are past, to remember all the
-way which the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> our <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has led us.&nbsp; Jacob&rsquo;s prayer
-shows us how to speak to <span class="smcap">God</span>, what we
-should feel in His presence on such an occasion as this, how to
-propitiate Him, and to secure His defence and blessing in what
-lies before us.</p>
-<p>I will not attempt, brethren, to picture the <a
-name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 97</span>circumstances
-through which you have passed in the year which is now all but
-ended; many of them I could only guess at, many of them, to me,
-would be unimaginable.&nbsp; Recall them for yourselves and
-meditate on them.&nbsp; They will teach you much, and influence
-you much.&nbsp; I will address you simply as those who have made
-a halt in the journey of life, and who want now <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> blessing in the known and
-unknown dangers, anxieties, sufferings, and labours that lie
-before you in the coming year.</p>
-<p>Well: let your requests be made known unto <span
-class="smcap">God</span> with prayer; above all&mdash;yes! I mean
-it&mdash;<i>above all</i>, with thanksgiving.</p>
-<p>But, first, before you approach <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, to speak to Him, to ask of Him, to
-thank Him, be sure that you can say to Him, &ldquo;I am in the
-way of Thy commandments.&rdquo;&nbsp; If at this moment you are
-contentedly different from what you know He would have you to be;
-if you indulge, or do not resolutely renounce any besetting sin;
-if you deliberately neglect any positive duty; if in will and
-affections, and aims, you are worldly and selfish, and do not
-seek to be otherwise; if you are planning anything, or hoping for
-anything which <span class="smcap">God</span> does not approve;
-if you are shrinking from, desiring to avoid, what He appoints;
-if <a name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 98</span>you
-have not made up your minds to try to be holy, to walk in the way
-of righteousness; then, brethren, you are disqualified to pray to
-<span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; He hears not such.&nbsp; He
-has made no promises to them: they are not His.&nbsp; Go fashion
-yourselves (He will mercifully give you grace to do it) into the
-character that He loves; get you into the paths that He has
-marked out; turn your face towards the Holy Land, and then come
-to tell Him of your felt unworthiness, to speak His praise, to
-intreat Him to be with you, to defend and prosper you; and be
-sure you shall be welcomed and blessed.</p>
-<p>But, supposing you not disqualified to come, supposing you
-bent on coming, consider now your right posture and deportment
-before <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Ask nothing of
-right, ask all out of felt unworthiness, and that, not simply the
-unworthiness of the stranger, and alien, who want mercies which
-they have never known, and speak to a <span
-class="smcap">God</span> that has not hitherto been their <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, as the publican cried, &ldquo;<span
-class="smcap">God</span> be merciful to me a sinner;&rdquo; but
-such an unworthiness as belonged to the prodigal, such as he felt
-and groaned under, when, reflecting on all the love and
-blessedness which he had experienced in his father&rsquo;s house,
-and had despised, and sinned against, and seeing the Father <a
-name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 99</span>coming
-towards him, ready to pardon, ready to embrace, ready to lead him
-home again, he was humbled to the very dust before Him, on
-account of his goodness, and declared himself unworthy to be
-called His son.&nbsp; Oh, my brethren, if you do not feel
-unworthy, when you approach the all-good and all-holy <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and if the feeling is not one
-enlightened by, and full of the remembrances of blessings already
-received, you are unfit to ask for further blessings.&nbsp; Not
-to have used <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> blessings is
-great indignity; not to be thankful for them is base ingratitude;
-but not to feel, that whether used or not used, appreciated or
-not appreciated, they are many and undeserved&mdash;this is to
-deny that you ever received them, or, claiming them as a right,
-to defy <span class="smcap">God</span> to withhold them!&nbsp;
-Cultivate then, I pray you, this feeling of unworthiness; and,
-that you may do so the more readily, review the mercies, the
-promises made true which you have received; and tell out their
-number, their kind, and their magnitude to the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> Who gave them, and would have them
-acknowledged.&nbsp; &ldquo;With my staff I passed over this
-Jordan, and now I am become two bands.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now the
-argument of these words is, &ldquo;I do not come to Thee,
-professing that I am a fit person to be helped, but I claim Thee
-as a <span class="smcap">God</span> who are wont to help such as
-I <a name="page100"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-100</span>am.&nbsp; I am not worthy of the least of Thy mercies:
-but yet Thou hast shown me marvellous mercies.&nbsp; I possess
-now the evidences and pledges of Thy goodness.&nbsp; Therefore I
-pray for, I humbly count on further blessing, not because I am a
-holy man, but because Thou art a good <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and My good <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is an argument which
-prevails with <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; He is pleased
-to see that we recognise His former gifts, that we make
-<i>them</i>&mdash;and not ourselves, our love of Him, our
-obedience, our prayers, and fastings, and study of His Word, and
-use of His grace&mdash;the ground of application.&nbsp; He likes
-that His consistent faithfulness should be invoked; that since He
-has made a beginning, just on that very account, He should be
-looked to (so as it be humbly), to continue His work, and to
-accomplish it.&nbsp; When you go to <span
-class="smcap">God</span> to ask for fresh blessings, you cannot
-take with you better and more effectual words than those which
-make mention of, which exhibit as promises and pledges, what you
-have already received.</p>
-<p>But these words are not simply an argument for further help;
-they are, besides, a free acknowledgment, a pure praise of what
-has been given.&nbsp; They may be the plea of a beseeching heart,
-but they are besides the tribute of a grateful heart; <a
-name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 101</span>and it is
-in this sense, brethren, that I specially wish you to adopt them
-to-night, and to make them a thanksgiving to <span
-class="smcap">God</span> for past mercies reviewed.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;With my staff I passed over this Jordan, and now I am
-become two bands.&rdquo;&nbsp; Jacob might have found mercies
-enough to enlist his gratitude in any one year, or circumstance
-of his exile and pilgrimage, and doubtless he reviewed each and
-all particularly; but in his speech he comprehended all in a
-general mention of them, and summed them up, and demonstrated
-them by pointing to their effect.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now I am become
-two bands.&rdquo;&nbsp; Review your past mercies, consider how
-<span class="smcap">God</span> has been with you at all times,
-and has ever been doing you good.&nbsp; Call to mind what
-progress you have been able to make spiritual or temporal; what
-success has attended you; what friends have been given you; what
-dangers you have narrowly escaped; what sicknesses recovered
-from; what wounds been healed, what troubles overcome, what tears
-staunched.&nbsp; Have they not caused you, like Jacob, to
-increase from the solitariness and poverty of that passing over
-Jordan, to the riches and prosperity of the two bands?&nbsp;
-Perhaps you say, you cannot trace such progress; you are much the
-same outwardly and inwardly, as you have been from the time that
-you can first <a name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-102</span>remember.&nbsp; Then, brethren, you can furnish your
-own testimony, that <span class="smcap">God</span> has dealt
-better with you than He did with Jacob, that your first state,
-your continued state has been all like his last.&nbsp; O discern
-and bless <span class="smcap">God</span> for those least heeded
-but greatest mercies, the mercies which come to us at the
-beginning, and follow us all the days of our life&mdash;the
-continued prosperity of our family, the continued harmony and
-love, the bread always sure, the right understanding early
-implanted, the fear of the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> from
-our youth.&nbsp; There is a way of travelling in our days which
-is so smooth, that often we cannot tell that we are moving; and
-there is a manner of blessing, so uninterrupted, so uniform, so
-without roughnesses and stoppages and ups and downs, that if we
-be not on the lookout, we may fancy that we are not blessed at
-all.&nbsp; Let not this be your case.&nbsp; Do not refuse to be
-grateful, because all goes well with you, because there is
-nothing that needs to be supplied, because nothing is taken away
-from you.&nbsp; Rather, let the measure of your blessedness be
-also the measure of your praise and the strength of your
-resolution.&nbsp; &ldquo;Surely goodness and mercy have followed
-me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span> for ever.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But your object, perhaps, &ldquo;Mine has not been <a
-name="page103"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 103</span>this life
-of uninterrupted prosperity, but, on the contrary, one of
-continued adversity.&nbsp; It is Jacob&rsquo;s first, not his
-last estate, that has been always mine.&rdquo;&nbsp; What do you
-mean?&nbsp; That you were not born rich, nor influential, nor of
-honoured family?&nbsp; That you have not the wisdom of the
-philosopher, the dignity of the prince, the opulence of the
-successful merchant, the leisure of independent private
-life?&nbsp; That may be.&nbsp; Your state may be the reverse of
-all this, and yet be the state of the &ldquo;two
-bands.&rdquo;&nbsp; External prosperity in Jacob&rsquo;s time was
-commonly, yet not always, the sign of spiritual blessings; in
-Gospel days, with our better light, and greater power of
-appreciation of the reality, the sign is not so often afforded,
-frequently the most favoured are without it; yea, and often it
-abides with the unblessed as the mocking substitute for true
-blessedness.&nbsp; If you are without <span
-class="smcap">God</span> in the world; if you do not feel Him
-about your bed, and about your path; if you do not live in His
-fear, and hope for His mercies, and His rewards; if the thought
-of Him does not moderate your worldly joy, and direct your aims,
-and leaven your worldly work; if His comfort does not dry your
-tears, His strength support you, His grace sanctify you,
-then&mdash;no matter what your outward state, and <a
-name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 104</span>your
-possessions, your powers, your happiness&mdash;you are poor and
-unblessed.&nbsp; But if He is thus with you in all your ways, if
-you have resolved, and are keeping the resolution, &ldquo;The
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span> shall be my <span
-class="smcap">God</span>,&rdquo; then is yours the state, or it
-is growing towards the state of the &ldquo;two
-bands.&rdquo;&nbsp; One more objection somewhat akin to this
-last, must be answered.&nbsp; There are some who say, &ldquo;Mine
-was once the state of the two bands: it has long since
-been&mdash;or it is fast becoming&mdash;solitariness and the
-single staff.&nbsp; All thing are against me.&nbsp; Nothing that
-I put my hand to seems to prosper; I come into misfortune; the
-fountains of joy are dried up; my hope, my stay, are taken from
-me.&nbsp; When I look back upon the past, I look as it were up an
-incline down which I have rolled, or towards a pinnacle whence I
-have been cast down.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now, of course, my brethren,
-all this may be the result of the displeasure of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, consequent upon your sin, or neglect of
-Him.&nbsp; Outward adversity is sometimes the effect of His
-wrath, sometimes it is the chastisement of displeasure, and the
-discipline of correction.&nbsp; If then in your heart, you know
-that you deserve such wrath, or need such correction (even then
-it is a blessing, and you ought to praise <span
-class="smcap">God</span> for it, but still) you may be sure that
-<a name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 105</span>it is
-the mark of disapprobation, something for you to grieve over, and
-seek to have removed.&nbsp; But if the testimony of your
-conscience is that you walk with <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-then are these so-called reverses very blessings, not declines
-but advances, not hindrances but helps, tokens of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> love upraisings of you towards
-heaven.&nbsp; Oh be like Jacob; count all mercy, get rid of
-selfishness, and meditate as he did, and you will prove that all
-is mercy, and proclaim it!&nbsp; You will find, for instance,
-that the loss of wealth took away with it the idol of your
-worship, the minister of your excessive pleasure; that altered
-position broke down your pride; that worldly sorrow led you to
-seek heavenly comfort; that the perfidy of so-called friends made
-you cease to put your trust in man, and caused you to rely on the
-friend that sticketh closer than a brother; that sickness and
-infirmity reminded you of death, and stimulated you to
-preparation for judgment; that the loss of those you loved,
-uprooted your clingings to earth, linked you to heaven, revealed
-to you One whom you knew not; Whom above all you ought to love;
-Who is better to you than sons and daughters; Who is the true and
-abiding Father of the fatherless, and <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of the widow.&nbsp; No matter what your
-circumstances, how many <a name="page106"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 106</span>your troubles, I tell you on the
-authority of God&rsquo;s Word, that if you love Him, they all
-work together for your good; yea, they are all good in
-themselves.&nbsp; You will find them so, if you rightly review
-them, and each of you will be able to say, as truthfully as Jacob
-did, with much more meaning, because of your better knowledge and
-superior blessedness in <span class="smcap">Christ</span>,
-&ldquo;I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies and of all
-the truth, which Thou hast showed unto my servant . . . I am
-become two bands.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Try to feel this, brethren, and to express it this night to
-<span class="smcap">God</span>; to tell out your praises for the
-mercies of your past life, and, in the review of them, to pledge
-yourselves to Him, that you will strive henceforth to recognise
-blessings more quickly, to use them better, to be more grateful
-for them.&nbsp; Be these the thoughts and vows with which you
-consecrate the last hours of a dying year.&nbsp; But, knowing
-that so soon as you set out again, your enemy, whom sin has given
-the advantage over you, will come to meet you, to smite you, to
-turn you back from the Holy Land, forget not this night to cry,
-&ldquo;Deliver me, I pray Thee, O <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>.&nbsp; Take away from me the sin which
-exposes me to assaults, which makes me vulnerable.&nbsp; Give me
-Thy strength: go before <a name="page107"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 107</span>me with thy blessing.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Do this, brethren, persevere in it day after day, night after
-night: wrestle with God, refuse to let Him go&mdash;you shall
-surely prevail: <span class="smcap">God</span> will yield all you
-ask; and, in honour of your victory, He will change your name
-from Jacob to Israel, that is, you shall no longer be remembered
-by the name of your deceit and your sin.&nbsp; You shall be
-known, known to angels, known to Him, as princes, and prevailers
-with <span class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<h2><a name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-108</span>SERMON VIII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">WORKING FOR GOD.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">St.
-John</span>, <span class="smcap">ix</span>., 4.</p>
-<p><i>I must work the works of Him that sent me</i>, <i>while it
-is day</i>: <i>the night cometh</i>, <i>when no man can
-work</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>I <span class="smcap">dwell</span> not on these words in their
-relation to the context.&nbsp; I pause not to consider whether
-their utterance was a justification of the Sabbath-day miracle
-that was presently to be performed&mdash;&ldquo;no opportunity
-must be lost, no delay allowed of working the works of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>&rdquo;&mdash;or whether they were but
-the thinking and resolving aloud (so characteristic of our <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>), by which He kept ever in mind His
-great mission, by which He continually stimulated and pressed on
-that human nature of His; willing indeed, but yet weak, though
-not sinful; and made it vigorously industrious in the work of
-<span class="smcap">God</span>; or whether, once more, <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> here but personified Christians, and
-spoke not of Himself, not to keep Himself <a
-name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 109</span>mindful and
-intent upon His work, but as their example and representative, as
-though He had said, &ldquo;A work of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> will now be manifested in the
-restoration of this blind man.&nbsp; It will not be delayed till
-the Sabbath is over.&nbsp; See me serving <span
-class="smcap">God</span> and serving Him now, by instant doing of
-all possible work.&nbsp; Consider me your example.&nbsp; Let this
-be your resolution, &lsquo;I must work the works of Him that sent
-me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can
-work.&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; It matters little to us what feeling or
-motive immediately prompted our <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-to speak the text.&nbsp; His words at once commend themselves to
-us as those which we may, which we ought to adopt, even if they
-belong primarily to Him; which, rather, since they were the
-ruling maxim of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, must be the
-ruling maxim of Christians.</p>
-<p>Well, then, these are our words (and <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> has shown us how to fulfil them),
-&ldquo;I must work the works of Him that sent me, while it is
-day: the night cometh, when no man can work.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Him that sent me.&rdquo;&nbsp; Have we yet to learn, my
-brethren, that <span class="smcap">God</span> sent us into this
-world; that we came not here by chance, or on our own account;
-that we are not independent beings, free to wander about or
-linger to do, or forbear to do, as we please?&nbsp; By the
-will&mdash;for the accomplishment <a name="page110"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 110</span>of the purposes&mdash;of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, we are here on a mission, His
-messengers, His agents, workers for Him.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has made all things for His own use and
-glory.&nbsp; None of us liveth unto himself&mdash;He sent us
-forth.&nbsp; He gave us a charge.&nbsp; He watches to see what we
-do with it.&nbsp; He waits for our return; rather, He appoints,
-and, whensoever He will, enforces our return.&nbsp; And what is
-the mission?&nbsp; What has He sent us to do?&nbsp; To work the
-works of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and make them manifest,
-to promote, to show forth His glory, to become ourselves all that
-He would have us to be, and to light and guide others to the same
-end.&nbsp; Work for <span class="smcap">God</span>!&nbsp; How few
-ever think of such a thing!&nbsp; Work for themselves (and for
-others like themselves) for food to eat and raiment to put on,
-for money, for power, for fame, for pleasure; men understand
-this; they acknowledge the necessity of it, or the inviting,
-constraining desirableness of it, and they do it&mdash;do it
-generally, do it well, and heartily.&nbsp; A really idle man, a
-man that works not some works, is a rarity, an object of contempt
-when he is seen, a despiser of himself.&nbsp; But, work for <span
-class="smcap">God</span>!&nbsp; How many do that?&nbsp; Who does
-it heartily, and does it well?&nbsp; Whose thoughts are full of
-it, whose deeds accomplish it?&nbsp; What fruits come of
-it?&nbsp; There are some, not a few, <a name="page111"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 111</span>thank <span
-class="smcap">God</span>! who can give a satisfactory answer to
-such questions; whose lives continually give it, and whom <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, for their works&rsquo; sake in <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, greatly approves.&nbsp; But I speak
-now to the many, yea, I speak to all; for the work of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> so generally neglected, is by none
-perfectly performed.&nbsp; To all, then, I solemnly address the
-questions: &ldquo;Do you work for <span
-class="smcap">God</span>?&rdquo; and &ldquo;What work do you work
-for Him?&rdquo;&nbsp; You are tempted to justify
-yourselves.&nbsp; You are not the unbelieving, and rebellious,
-and profane of our race.&nbsp; You recognise a <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of providence and grace, a moral ruler
-of the world, a waiting Judge.&nbsp; To this <span
-class="smcap">God</span> you say your prayers, His word you read,
-and reverence, and receive.&nbsp; To Him you dedicate at least
-several hours of each seventh day; by His commandments you order
-your daily life.&nbsp; You do no wrong to your neighbour by word
-or deed; you strive to purify and sanctify your very feelings and
-thoughts; you believe in a Saviour; you accept His salvation; you
-try to love Him; you partake of His means of grace; you rest in
-Him, and look to Him for final redemption, and something you do
-occasionally by way of persuading others; and something you give
-for the furtherance of religious works.&nbsp; It is well,
-brethren, if you do this; if you go through the <a
-name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 112</span>form, and
-do not inwardly contradict what is outward, but rather incline to
-it.</p>
-<p>It is well, I say, because it is hopeful, it will, by grace,
-lead you farther; but if in your heart and soul you recognise
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, and believe in a Saviour, then I
-am sure that you will not adduce what I have mentioned as
-specimens of the works of <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp;
-Acknowledgments that <span class="smcap">God</span> ought to be
-served, pledges of service, they may be, but works they are
-not.&nbsp; And yet some, perhaps, would urge, &ldquo;When the
-question was put, &lsquo;What must we do that we may work the
-works of <span class="smcap">God</span>?&rsquo; did not <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> answer, &lsquo;This is the work of
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, that ye believe on Him whom He
-hath sent&rdquo;? and, say they, &ldquo;Does not this show that
-literal working, as we work in and for the world, is not what
-<span class="smcap">God</span> demands; that it is rather a
-mental assent, an entertaining and exercising of feelings, a
-believing, a thankful, a sanctifying remembrance of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> work; a trust in it, a
-carefulness to do nothing that will render it ineffectual for our
-salvation, that is required of us?&nbsp; Surely, <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> has done the work Himself; we have
-but to accept it thankfully, and wait for it faithfully and
-holily.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Now, my brethren, it may be easily shown that this is not
-believing in Him whom <span class="smcap">God</span> hath
-sent.&nbsp; <a name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-113</span>To believe in Him is to embrace Him as the Author, and
-Finisher, and Giver of Salvation; to be assured that salvation
-can only be had from Him, in Him, and on His terms; to learn of
-Him, therefore&mdash;and, of course, of His Apostles and
-Evangelists after Him, for to them even clearer teaching was
-intrusted&mdash;what are the terms, and then to fulfil them
-resolutely and precisely.&nbsp; Do you need that I should quote
-the actual words, the chapter, and verse, in which <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, through the Spirit, tells us, that
-He has redeemed us to Himself; that He has purchased us for a
-peculiar people zealous of good works; that He has left us a
-definite work to do against His return; that on His return He
-will judge and reward us by our works; that He will condemn as
-workers against Him those who have not worked for Him; that it is
-vain to acknowledge Him and not do the things that He bids; that
-He has left us an example that we should follow His steps, in
-that He fulfilled all righteousness, and went about doing good,
-and proposed to Himself, as that which must be done, and done
-heartily and without delay, the works and the manifesting of the
-works of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and made it His meat and
-drink to do the Father&rsquo;s will; that He has said plainly,
-that whosoever would not take up the cross and <a
-name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 114</span>follow Him
-could not be His disciple.&nbsp; O wo to those who dare to say
-this means: Sit still in worldliness, and look at and admire Him
-doing the labour and pursuing the path of godliness&mdash;that He
-has attached all His promises to certain deeds; that He is ever
-represented as judging, not what men have thought and felt, but
-what they have done and become by doing; that by the Spirit He
-has commanded &ldquo;Work out your own salvation with fear and
-trembling;&rdquo; and &ldquo;Whether ye eat or drink, or
-whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>;&rdquo; and &ldquo;He that gathereth
-not, scattereth abroad&rdquo;?&nbsp; Oh, my brethren, let us be
-honest; we know, we dare not deny it, that a work, rather that
-many works are imposed upon us by <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-and that it will not do for us merely to think of them, to sigh
-over them, to approach them carelessly, reluctantly, to call
-preferred employments by their name; but that with clear
-understanding with heart-devotion, with constant application and
-real labour, we must do the works of Him that sent us.</p>
-<p>And, now, what are the works?</p>
-<p>The first, and most vitally important, is, to &ldquo;work out
-our own salvation;&rdquo; not to attempt of ourselves to undo
-what Adam did; not by any <a name="page115"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 115</span>course of zealous doing to seek to
-recommend ourselves to <span class="smcap">God</span> as
-deserving a reward, to propose to purchase heaven, to go to <span
-class="smcap">God</span> the Father directly for it, and expect
-to get it from Him, either as a right or as a gift of compassion:
-but, knowing that it is only to be had of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, to seek it from <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> in appointed ways, in the measure, on
-the conditions which He has prescribed for all, and to fulfil the
-conditions.&nbsp; We are not naturally born in grace; we do not
-naturally inherit glory.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Christ</span>,
-by right, the Saviour of all men, is, in fact,
-&ldquo;specially&rdquo; only the Saviour of them that believe; of
-them who actually apply to Him and depend on Him, and remain in
-communion with Him for grace; who serve Him by fulfilling His
-commands and copying His example, who use His grace and grow in
-it, and by its power transform themselves into the character
-which alone can dwell in heaven.&nbsp; Now, all this is
-work&mdash;real, anxious, laborious work; this obeying of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, this imitation of His example, and
-following in His steps, this putting off of the old man and
-putting on of the new man.&nbsp; Are you intent upon it?&nbsp; Do
-you perform it?&nbsp; Consider the means of grace, prayer,
-praise, divine instruction, holy communion; do you faithfully and
-diligently use them?&nbsp; Read the Decalogue <a
-name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 116</span>with the
-commentary of the Sermon on the Mount.&nbsp; Can you honestly
-say, All this I keep and do?&nbsp; Study the life of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>&mdash;is your life like it: like it
-in humility, in self-denial, in labour, in fact, in hope, in
-aim?&nbsp; Examine yourselves.&nbsp; Are you cleansed from evil
-propensities&mdash;are you adorned with Christian
-graces&mdash;are you fit in person, in will, in desire, for a
-heaven full of holiness, whose employment will be the doing of
-<span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> work, as angels do it,
-whose relaxation, if I may so speak, will be the contemplation
-and the praise of <span class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp; What do
-you leave undone, what do you transgress of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> will?&nbsp; What covetousness do
-you root out, what evil tempers do you subdue, what rash zeal do
-you curb, what indolence do you overcome?&nbsp; Are you worldly,
-sensual, ill-natured, proud, self-seeking?&nbsp; Have you any
-trace of these stains upon you?&nbsp; Are you wanting in
-obedience, in patience, in holiness, in love of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp; You cannot enter heaven, it would
-close its gates against you, you would flee from it as a place of
-torment, while you are in such a state.&nbsp; Now, what are you
-doing, or attempting to appropriate <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> salvation, to secure <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> approbation, to qualify
-yourselves in character, in taste and desire for a purely
-spiritual, a gloriously holy heaven?&nbsp; You know <a
-name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 117</span>what
-concentrated thought, what single aim, what diligent, anxious,
-persevering labour are necessary to make you good scholars, able
-statesmen, accomplished members of society, successful tradesmen,
-apt mechanics; or, to descend lower, ordinary earners of daily
-bread.&nbsp; You may guess, then, what measure of these things is
-needed to perfect you in saintliness, and therefore you are able
-to answer the question&mdash;oh, how must you answer
-it?&mdash;whether you fulfil the acknowledged requirement of the
-text, &ldquo;I must work the works of Him that sent
-me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But, besides this, so to speak, selfish work, you have a work
-to do for and upon others.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span>
-Who wills to inform, and persuade, and save the world, appoints
-men, appoints you to accomplish His will.&nbsp; Like as <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, besides qualifying Himself to be the
-Saviour, had also to proclaim, and recommend, and bestow
-salvation, so have you, while putting yourselves in the way of
-salvation, and diligently pursuing it, to be lights, and voices,
-and helping hands to others.&nbsp; You are lights of the world;
-you are ambassadors for <span class="smcap">Christ</span>; you
-are your brothers&rsquo; keepers; you are teachers of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> Word, and advocates of His
-cause, and treasurers of His gifts; you are under shepherds of
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span>; you are fellow <a
-name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 118</span>workers
-with Him, and dispensers of His manifold grace.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has given you these offices, and He has
-placed you where you may exercise them.&nbsp; He has given you
-authority over your children, and servants, and dependents.&nbsp;
-He has lent you influence over friends and associates.&nbsp; He
-has planted you in the midst of crowds of ignorant, indifferent,
-ungodly, that you may work for Him, in guiding, and persuading,
-and leading to salvation, in making manifest His glory.&nbsp; He
-has put into your power to contribute something&mdash;into the
-power of some to contribute much&mdash;to the various
-associations (which are, in fact, your agents), for doing the
-work of <span class="smcap">God</span> in building and endowing
-additional churches, in providing more clergymen at home, in
-sending missionaries to the colonist and the heathen.&nbsp; You
-think, perhaps, that in the chief part of what I have said, I
-have been describing the clergy, and not the laity.&nbsp; But,
-brethren, the clergy are nothing but representatives,
-representatives, on the one hand, of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, teaching, exhorting, ministering grace
-in His name, by and from Him; representatives, on the other hand,
-of your prayers, and praises, and your works.&nbsp; You know
-whose would be the blame, and how great the blame, and how
-terrible the consequences, if the minister only confessed <a
-name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>to <span
-class="smcap">God</span> and praised Him, and partook of His
-sacraments.&nbsp; It is just the same, if he only teaches, and
-exhorts, and visits, and tends, and relieves; an empty sign, a
-mockery, a provocation of wrath, which will surely descend on
-those who cause it to be unreal, on those who do not make it
-real.&nbsp; Ministers we are, coming from <span
-class="smcap">God</span> to you, going to <span
-class="smcap">God</span> from you.&nbsp; Oh, you cannot suppose
-that if you leave two or three clergymen to deal with thousands
-of people, to inform them, to persuade them, to become acquainted
-with their wants, to relieve them out of their own poor means,
-you cannot suppose I say that in so doing, you are working the
-works of <span class="smcap">God</span>, that when you have said
-your prayers, and listened to the sermon, and paid your pew
-rents, and dropped a superfluous coin into the plate of an
-occasional collection, you have obeyed and imitated <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; No, brethren, you are under no
-such delusion of Satan.&nbsp; An awful responsibility is indeed
-upon the clergy.&nbsp; We have sworn to give ourselves wholly to
-a work in which your part is to support, and succour, and enable
-us.&nbsp; We are pledged to forego opportunities of acquiring
-fame, and gaining wealth and power, and taking pleasure.&nbsp; Wo
-to us, if we disregard the oath, if we cling to the things which
-we profess to have <a name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-120</span>renounced!&nbsp; But if we fail, that will not excuse
-you; and if we are faithful without your adherence, the reward
-will be ours, the blood guiltily shed, or guiltily unstaunched,
-will be upon your heads.&nbsp; It is a solemn theme which I am
-discussing this morning, and I dare not but speak plainly upon
-it.&nbsp; Our fidelity will not profit you if you are not helpers
-of us.&nbsp; Our unfaithfulness, though we perish in it, will be
-visited on you, if you do not enable us, if you do not constrain
-us, by the power with which you should endow us, by the jealous
-concern which you should have for our work, by the diligent
-co-operation which you should exercise with us.&nbsp; It is easy
-to say, that you are not qualified for this, that your time is
-all engaged in your worldly calling, that you cannot spare from
-the means of your support, from the capital of your business, the
-money which the Church calls for.&nbsp; But, brethren, consider,
-that though <span class="smcap">God</span> requires you to
-maintain yourselves and your families, though your worldly
-callings are appointed for you by <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-though He allows you to give much time to them, to advance and
-enrich yourselves by them, yet all this is on the condition that
-you do not withhold from Him the direct service and offerings
-which constitute the one thing needful, the reward of which is
-all that <a name="page121"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-121</span>shall survive this life, and this world!&nbsp; It was
-the fashion once among religionists to despise, to pronounce
-unclean (unfitting for the Christian), the use of the world, its
-callings, its profits, its pleasures.&nbsp; There is much danger
-of an opposite fashion prevailing in our days.&nbsp; The
-confining of religious service and worship to the honest,
-respectable, intellectual, liberal pursuit of some worldly
-vocation, &ldquo;the religion of common life&rdquo; as it is
-called, being regarded, not as the companion,&mdash;rather the
-handmaid&mdash;but the substitute (and a very good one, too) for
-pure spiritual religion.&nbsp; Both are wrong.&nbsp; The
-Christian may use the world, and in the right use of it he may be
-serving <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; But he must not
-abuse it; and he does abuse it, if he allows himself to be
-engrossed by it; if he brings himself to a state, if he continues
-willingly in a state, where he is obliged to say, &ldquo;I cannot
-spare any time or any money, my first thought, and concern, and
-provision must be for this life.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>You have heard, or read, perhaps, that a contented,
-conscientious, and cheerful abiding in and following of our
-worldly occupations, that even the housemaid&rsquo;s sweeping and
-cleaning may be religious worship; and there is truth in the
-statement, otherwise the Apostle could not have exhorted <a
-name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-122</span>&ldquo;Whether ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do
-all to the glory of <span class="smcap">God</span>;&rdquo; but,
-the Scriptural injunction means, &ldquo;Prolong the remembrance
-of your spiritual worship: testify your yearning to get back to
-it: keep the face shining, when you come down from the glorious
-mount, so that while the world demands your bodies, your souls,
-your hearts and spirits may still be given to <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and even the bodily acts spiritualised
-by doing them in submission, in holy observance of the will of
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, in thankful use of the means of
-support and helps to usefulness, which He thus affords
-you.&rdquo;&nbsp; Worldly occupations and worldly goods are to
-the Christian what meals, and recreations, and sleep are to men
-generally: necessaries, supports of the lower life, refreshments,
-and invigorators for something better.&nbsp; Give yourselves
-wholly to these and you become sensualists, idlers, sluggards;
-and give yourselves wholly to the world and you are followers of
-Mammon and forsakers of <span class="smcap">God</span>!&nbsp; You
-see the right use of the world, as far as this life is concerned,
-when the son toils to support an aged parent, when the young man
-struggles to get on, that he may establish a home, when the
-father seeks through his profession to provide for his family,
-when the lover of literature diligently tries to make his calling
-afford <a name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-123</span>him money for books and time to read them.&nbsp; This
-is employing the world as a necessary means to a desired
-end.&nbsp; And so you see the right use of the world, in regard
-to a better life, in him who labours and perseveres, and advances
-in it with the view of getting as much out of it as he can for
-<span class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<p>Be sure that there are none so busy but, in the midst of their
-business, they can think of what they like better; none so
-pressed for time, but they can spare some of it, if they have a
-mind to; none so poor as to have nothing to spend on what they
-covet.&nbsp; So use the world, and, in using it, you will work
-the works of <span class="smcap">God</span>, because you will
-often take from it, and often come out from it, for the direct
-and more purely spiritual works of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<p>But <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, our pattern, said not
-merely &ldquo;I must work the works of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>,&rdquo; but I must do them &ldquo;while
-it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-We know what that meant in His case.&nbsp; He had taken human
-nature in its weakness, and He had to bring it to its full
-strength, to fit it for glory and exaltation to the throne of
-<span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; He had in His life to speak
-the word of <span class="smcap">God</span> to many people, and in
-many places, and each opportunity must be seized, or others <a
-name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 124</span>would be
-forfeited.&nbsp; He had to relieve present sufferings, and to
-supply present wants; to meet necessities while they were
-pressing.&nbsp; Soon the time would come for Him to go to the
-Father: then He must be perfect; then He would have no more
-opportunity in the flesh for benefitting man and glorifying <span
-class="smcap">God</span>; then He could make no more preparation
-for the setting up of His Church.</p>
-<p>The words have a similar meaning with regard to us; but in our
-cases the necessity is more urgent, the delay more awful, because
-we have no fixed time allotted us&mdash;&ldquo;to-day, and
-to-morrow, and the third day I must be perfected.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Our life is to be taken from us without our consent, and may be
-taken at any moment; we have not power to lay it down when we
-will, and power to keep it as long as we will.&nbsp; And,
-besides, we have not been using each year, each day, each hour,
-to the best advantage.&nbsp; We have left undone much which we
-ought to have done, we have done much which we ought not to have
-done.&nbsp; We have all this to correct, and yet to give full
-attention to the works yet remaining.</p>
-<p>Look we in at ourselves, brethren, and see what requires to be
-done in us before we are fit for heaven.&nbsp; Listen to the
-cries of spiritual distress, <a name="page125"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 125</span>and consider what has to be
-supplied.&nbsp; Think of the souls that are dying, and will soon
-be dead, if we do not revive them.&nbsp; Remember we what frail,
-short-continuing, dying creatures we are; how soon at the latest,
-how suddenly, it may be abruptly, without a moment&rsquo;s
-warning, we may be called to present ourselves, to be dealt with
-according to our fitness, to give account of our works for <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<p>Let the arrival of a new year set us reviewing the past year,
-with its catalogue of offences, of neglects, of things to be
-wiped out, debts to be paid, progress to be quickened.&nbsp; Let
-us heed well its injunction and its warning, &ldquo;Whatsoever
-thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might, for there is no
-work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom in the grave whither
-thou goest.&rdquo;&nbsp; Let us look up for the opening clouds
-and listen for the Advent voice, &ldquo;Behold, I come quickly,
-and My reward is with Me to give to every man according as his
-works shall be;&rdquo; and let us instantly resolve and instantly
-begin to perform our resolution and persevere in it, nor dare to
-forget it: &ldquo;I must work the works of Him that sent me,
-while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can
-work.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-126</span>SERMON IX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">CHRIST&rsquo;S TRUEST
-MANIFESTATION.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">St.
-John</span>, <span class="smcap">xiv</span>., 22.</p>
-<p><i>Lord</i>, <i>how is it that Thou wilt manifest Thyself unto
-us</i>, <i>and not unto the world</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">On</span> the festival of the Epiphany,
-and on several Sundays afterwards, we commemorate what are called
-manifestations of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>; revelations
-and exhibitions of Him, in His nature, His person, His might, His
-wisdom, His various offices.&nbsp; In one sense, <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> whole life, from the manger
-in Bethlehem to the Mount of the Ascension, was a
-manifestation.&nbsp; It was not possible to see or hear Him,
-without becoming convinced&mdash;if open to conviction&mdash;that
-He was different from all other men, and superior to them.&nbsp;
-His every deed, His every word, His every look, designedly or
-undesignedly proclaimed &ldquo;This is <span
-class="smcap">God</span> manifest in the flesh!&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Still, there were some particular exhibitions of Himself, which,
-from <a name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 127</span>the
-special circumstances attending them, the preparation made for
-them, their peculiar importance, their wonderful effects, or
-their relations to certain classes or individuals, are entitled
-to be distinguished from the rest of that life-long Epiphany, and
-to be called <i>par excellence</i> the manifestations of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.</p>
-<p>Of this kind, was the exhibition to the shepherds, and again,
-that to the wise men of the East&mdash;prefiguring, commencing
-the manifestation to the Gentiles; the declaration that He must
-be about His Father&rsquo;s business, the baptism by John, the
-show of His power in converting water into wine, in cleansing the
-leper, in calming the troubled sea, in casting out devils; the
-unfolding of His wisdom in speaking parables, the preaching of
-judgment by the Son of Man&mdash;all of which are in turn
-commemorated at this season.&nbsp; Of this kind, again, were the
-teaching on the Mount, all the miracles, the Transfiguration, the
-appearances after the Resurrection, the Ascension, the wonders of
-Pentecost, the light that shone from heaven on Saul journeying to
-Damascus, and the voice that said &ldquo;I am <span
-class="smcap">Jesus</span> whom thou persecutest.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-These were all pre-eminent manifestations, as being designedly
-full of significance, making special revelations to special
-persons; <a name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-128</span>displaying, so to speak, the chief features of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, and teaching most important
-lessons.&nbsp; Nevertheless, they were rather preludes and signs
-of <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> truest
-manifestation, than that manifestation itself&mdash;faint
-glimmers of coming light, rustlings, warning movements, scarcely
-upliftings of the curtain that hung between things spiritual and
-the would-be spectators of them&mdash;parables, and
-prophecies.&nbsp; They left not those who saw them where they
-were, but they carried them not whither they would be or should
-be.&nbsp; They bade them look and listen; but they revealed not
-the sight, nor spake the word.&nbsp; Strange as it may seem,
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span> was not truly manifested till
-the clouds of heaven hid Him, and, in the flesh, He ceased to
-appear and speak till judgment-time.&nbsp; The truth was, as yet,
-not taught, but only hinted at, and men were not yet ready for
-it, and could not receive it.&nbsp; It is not in what we call the
-Gospels, but in the Epistles, that the truth as it is in <span
-class="smcap">Jesus</span> is revealed.&nbsp; It is not in the
-miracles of His earthly ministry, but in the spiritual wonders
-which, after Pentecost, the Apostles wrought in His name; that
-the real power of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, the power to
-bless, is seen and felt.&nbsp; All before was but a type, a
-shadow, a dream.&nbsp; The antitype, the reality, the waking
-vision, belong to apostolic <a name="page129"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 129</span>days, and to the days after
-them.&nbsp; Then was the Gospel revealed, which before was only
-brought nigh.&nbsp; Then was the kingdom of Heaven opened.&nbsp;
-Then did <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>, through the Spirit,
-begin to speak and show Himself openly and plainly to Jews and
-Gentiles, and to draw all men to Him.&nbsp; Then did spiritual
-wisdom begin to enlighten, and spiritual power begin to enable
-the hitherto blind and helpless.&nbsp; Then first, even to the
-Apostles, and then, by them, to the world, began to be displayed
-<span class="smcap">God</span> manifest in the flesh.&nbsp; Up to
-that time, though He was in the world, the world knew Him
-not.&nbsp; He stood among them, but they did not see Him; He
-spoke, but they did not hear: yea, though He had come to His own,
-they did not receive Him, till the Pentecostal light made all
-clear, and the voice of the Spirit declared &ldquo;This is the
-beloved Son of the Father,&rdquo; and the power of Divine grace,
-enabled and constrained to believe on His name, to receive Him
-intelligently and heartily, and through Him, and in a measure
-like Him, to become sons of <span class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<p>Then and thus was <span class="smcap">Christ</span> truly
-manifested, as it were in these last times.</p>
-<p>But there is even yet a better manifestation, one more really
-worthy of the name&mdash;that, namely, <a
-name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 130</span>which is
-made to the Disciples, but not to the world.</p>
-<p>In a sense, all that has hitherto been described was an
-external manifestation&mdash;a manifestation to the world.&nbsp;
-The Gospel was preached openly, the credentials of its heralds
-were publicly exhibited, whosoever would might hear and see; and
-only when they refused, and judged themselves unworthy of eternal
-life, did the Apostles turn away from them, or pass on to another
-place, shaking the dust off their feet as a testimony against
-them.&nbsp; Even the inward grace, the power to see spiritually,
-to believe, and to accept <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, was
-so far manifested to the world, that it was offered to all, and
-was within the reach of all.&nbsp; The Apostles, who taught men
-their need of salvation, and exhorted them to save themselves,
-both showed them the way and promised them the grace of
-salvation; and thus, therefore, was <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> openly, and with power, manifested to
-the world.&nbsp; But, in the chapter of the text, <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> makes it a special promise to those
-that love Him, that He will manifest Himself to them.&nbsp; Judas
-(not Iscariot) rightly concludes that this is a manifestation
-which shall be made to none but approved disciples; and,
-accepting the promise, he ventures to ask, respecting its <a
-name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 131</span>fulfilment,
-&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Lord</span>, how is it that Thou wilt
-manifest Thyself unto us, and not unto the world?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It must be borne in mind that the Jewish notion, a notion
-shared by the disciples, was that the <span
-class="smcap">Messiah</span> would manifest Himself in all the
-pomp and power of a triumphant earthly prince, exhibiting Himself
-to the whole world, ruling all the nations of the earth, and
-demanding the homage and adoration of all men.&nbsp; They waited
-in expectation that the kingdom of Israel would be restored, that
-Jerusalem would become the capital of the world, that <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> would sit visibly on a splendid
-throne, in the midst of her, and that they would occupy the
-nearest places to Him of honour and power.&nbsp; This notion was
-still theirs, as we know, when <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-led them out to the Mount of the Ascension; and we can well
-understand, therefore, that Judas, and those with him, must at
-this time have been greatly perplexed by the intimation, which
-<span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> promise conveyed, that
-He was only to be manifested to those that love Him.&nbsp; It is
-out of this perplexity&mdash;not, as I said before, questioning
-the fact of a partial manifestation, but unable to understand it,
-and seeking enlightenment&mdash;that Judas asks, &ldquo;<span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, how is it that <a
-name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 132</span>Thou wilt
-manifest Thyself unto us, and not unto the world?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The words translated &ldquo;How is it,&rdquo; render possible
-a threefold interpretation of this question. 1st. <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, what has happened&mdash;how is it come
-to pass that the original design (at least, what we suppose to be
-the original design) of an universal manifestation is altered,
-and now only a partial manifestation to be afforded?&nbsp; 2ndly.
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span>, what has been done by us, what
-special merits have we, whence is it that we are to be so
-signally favoured, and others passed over?&nbsp; 3rdly. <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, what kind of manifestation will that
-be which some eyes only shall perceive?&nbsp; In what way wilt
-Thou reveal Thy presence to us, so that the world, in the midst
-of which we dwell, into the midst of which, therefore, Thou must
-come to us, shall not partake with us of the vision.&nbsp; It is
-scarcely profitable, perhaps, to consider whether or no the first
-interpretation is admissible; nor need we attempt to decide
-between the second and the third.&nbsp; Let us rather combine
-them; and taking the question out of Judas&rsquo;s mouth, and
-adopting it as our own, let us reverently and teachably ask, as
-we need, of Him who giveth wisdom liberally, &ldquo;<span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, how is it, on what account, and in
-what way, that Thou wilt manifest <a name="page133"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 133</span>Thyself unto us, and not unto the
-world?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I.&nbsp; On what account is He partial?&nbsp; Why does He make
-us to differ?&nbsp; Not then, for any recommendation we had to
-His favour&mdash;for we were all concluded under sin, and all
-guilty before <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Not again,
-for any merits or deserts in His service, for at the best, if we
-have done all that He set us to do (and who has?) we are yet but
-unprofitable servants.&nbsp; No! there was nothing which should
-make <span class="smcap">God</span> respect and choose us before
-others; and we have done no work for which we can claim
-reward.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span> is no respecter of
-persons.&nbsp; It is impossible, by any mere natural deeds or
-efforts to please Him.&nbsp; We have all sinned and come short of
-His glory.&nbsp; We all sin, and deserve wrath every day.&nbsp;
-But <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, Who would have all men to
-be saved, Who has died for all, and risen again for all, and sent
-down His Holy Spirit ready to justify, to sanctify, to bless all,
-has nevertheless made the bestowal of His grace
-conditional.&nbsp; He requires a certain
-&ldquo;receptivity&rdquo; for it.&nbsp; It is not thrust upon
-all, willing or unwilling, proud or humble, <span
-class="smcap">God</span>-fearing or <span
-class="smcap">God</span>-despising.&nbsp; Men must feel their
-need of it; and, feeling their need, they must express it, at
-least to Him, and must go to Him in His appointed <a
-name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 134</span>ways to
-obtain it.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Christ</span> in
-sufficiency, in desire, the Saviour of all men, is, in fact,
-specially only the Saviour of them that believe&mdash;believe
-with that impelling desire, and that active faith, which make
-them flee to Him to be saved, and earnestly ask of Him,
-&ldquo;What must I do to be saved?&rdquo;&nbsp; And next, having
-this fitness, this receptivity for grace, and so receiving it,
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span> requires men to treasure up the
-grace with reverence and godly fear; to use it with diligence,
-with zealous effort, to improve it, to grow in it; to strengthen
-it constantly by all appointed means of sustenance and exercise;
-to accomplish with it all that He wills and directs to be done;
-to be heartily grateful to the Author, the Sustainer, the
-Finisher of Salvation.&nbsp; &ldquo;He that hath my commandments,
-and keepeth them, he it is that loveth Me, and he that loveth Me
-shall be loved of My Father, and I will love him, and will
-manifest Myself to him.&rdquo;&nbsp; So then it is only to love
-that the manifestation is made; and love is proved by obedience,
-and obedience is the hearty faithful performance, in the spirit
-as well as the letter, of the expressed will of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.</p>
-<p>And here, brethren, before we go further, let us see in the
-light of these conditions, why it is that religious influences
-affect so little the vast <a name="page135"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 135</span>mass of mankind.&nbsp; There is a
-manifestation of <span class="smcap">Christ</span> to the
-world.&nbsp; He is ever speaking in their ears and showing
-Himself to their eyes.&nbsp; His Church, with its Bible, its
-means of grace and ministry, its duration and extension, besides
-being a standing miracle, the infallible credential of His divine
-authority, the proof of His wisdom and His power, is a very
-exhibition of Himself, mighty and eager to save.&nbsp; The
-Spirit, which is with and in that Church, declares Himself to be
-able and ready to enlighten, and persuade, and strengthen all,
-without exception, without delay, if only they will come to
-Him.&nbsp; And yet how many, not only of the recklessly profane,
-the grossly carnal, the resolutely blind and deaf, but of the
-well-disposed, the moral, the albut exemplary, have no perception
-whatever of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>!&nbsp; How many
-so-called Christians, not only in their business or their
-pleasure, when they turn away their eyes from the manifested
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, but even when they come up to the
-sanctuary, when they read the Bible, when they kneel in prayer or
-stand to praise, when they look Zionwards, when they are all
-attent, eyes and ears, yet see no sight, and hear no sound of
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span>!&nbsp; The world which they
-have left is remembered, and stands before them in a life-like
-picture.&nbsp; The sights they would not see, the <a
-name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 136</span>sounds they
-would not hear, they cannot escape from; but <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, the object of their worship, in some
-sense the desire of their eyes, they look for but cannot find; if
-He stands in the midst of them, they know it not!</p>
-<p>Is not this, brethren, the experience of many of you?&nbsp;
-You do not, of course, ever expect open visions, perceptions with
-natural eyes and ears of a spiritually manifested Saviour; but do
-you not often fail to obtain what you think (and rightly) you
-ought to aim at obtaining, a real, though spiritual, a
-convincing, constraining, sanctifying, and cheering manifestation
-of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>?&nbsp; Do you not often, do
-you not almost always find just that wanting, which should make
-religion real?&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; you exclaim, &ldquo;would
-that when I kneel down in church, to make solemn confessions, to
-utter supplications, to pray for pardon, for favour, for
-grace&mdash;oh! that such a vision of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> were afforded me, that I were
-possessed with such feeling of His presence, as would prevent my
-turning away so readily from the solemnity, to see who is coming
-into church, to admire or criticise the dress or appearance of
-those beside me, to remember the worldliness of yesterday, to
-anticipate the worldliness of to-morrow.&nbsp; Oh! that when I
-sit with open Bible before me, and slight and slur <a
-name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 137</span>over its
-difficult parts, and give little heed to the personal application
-of its histories, and treat albut with indifference its
-exhortations, its warnings, its promises, its threats&mdash;Oh!
-that some voice would recall me from my wandering, and dispel my
-irreverence, and concentrate my devout attention with its heard
-command, &lsquo;Thus, saith the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>,
-Hear what the Spirit saith.&rsquo;&nbsp; Oh! that when I go about
-the world, and neglect my religious duty here, and transgress it
-there, yielding readily to temptation, hankering after, following
-worldliness, led by the persuasions, awed by the frowns,
-constrained by the demands of the world, oh! that <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> would stand at least before my
-spiritual vision, and utter to the ears of my soul,
-&lsquo;Forbear.&nbsp; Take up thy cross.&nbsp; Follow
-me.&rsquo;&nbsp; Oh, that He would do all this for others too:
-for those whom I love, who go farther out of the way, for the
-carnal, for the godless, for the souls that are carelessly, that
-are deliberately perishing!&nbsp; Oh! that for His own
-honour&rsquo;s sake He would openly show Himself and
-dispute&mdash;with the Devil, with Mammon, with Pleasure, with
-Folly&mdash;the possession of the souls which He has purchased
-for Himself!&nbsp; Why does He not give some proof, why does He
-not exercise some persuasion which must be felt, which could not
-be <a name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-138</span>disregarded?&nbsp; Oh! that He would rend the heavens
-and come down; that He would cheer the saint; that He would
-confound and convert the sinner by His manifested
-presence.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It is thus, if I mistake not, that we sometimes think and
-wish.&nbsp; But, brethren, the words which prompted Judas to
-speak, reprove our thoughts.&nbsp; They show us that it is not by
-oversight, by defect, by mismanagement, by any failure to
-accomplish what was intended, but by deliberate design, by exact
-fulfilment of what <span class="smcap">God</span> proposed, that
-the real, the strong influences of Christianity are not brought
-to bear upon men generally.</p>
-<p><span class="smcap">Christ</span> manifests not Himself fully
-to the world.&nbsp; He never meant to do it.&nbsp; He never will
-do it, till he comes to judgment.</p>
-<p><span class="smcap">God</span>, we are told, &ldquo;will have
-mercy on whom He will have mercy, and whom He will He
-hardeneth.&rdquo;&nbsp; These awful words do not mean what some
-attempt to make out of them&mdash;that there is an arbitrary
-election to salvation, and so for all others an inevitable
-destruction.&nbsp; They mean rather that while His mercy is ready
-to flow, and is always flowing, if you desire it, you must go to
-the fountain for it.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span> is
-under no necessity to save all men.&nbsp; We do not confer a
-favour on Him by consenting to be saved.&nbsp; His glory will be
-<a name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-139</span>manifested in destruction as in salvation.&nbsp; He
-desires to save us.&nbsp; He will save us, and rejoice in our
-salvation, if we seek to be saved: but if we are rebellious, or
-indifferent, if we will not comply with the conditions on which
-only He will manifest His best presence to us, then we must not
-complain, if He makes good His declaration, and proves it by
-withholding Himself from us, that whom He wills (and in what way
-He wills) on them He has mercy, and all others, though He long
-bears with them, and gives them much time and opportunity for
-conforming to His will, yet is He content, yea, determined to
-leave them in their hardness, to confirm them in their hardness,
-because they will not be softened in the way which He has chosen
-to prescribe.</p>
-<p>Oh! my brethren, do not suppose that it is the weakness, the
-impotence of Christianity, the frustration of the will of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> that is demonstrated in the
-world&rsquo;s ungodliness, in the perdition of so many immortal
-souls.&nbsp; No!&nbsp; It is rather the power of Christianity to
-keep its own for its own: it is the glorious vindication of the
-sovereign will of Jehovah to save whom He will; it is the
-corroboration of <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> word,
-that none should come to the Father but by Him; it is the
-terrible, deliberately-inflicted punishment of those that will <a
-name="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 140</span>not come
-unto Him that they might have life; it is the manifestation, so
-to speak, of His non-manifestation: &ldquo;If ye will not love
-me, holding my commandments and keeping them, then you cannot be
-loved of My Father, and so cannot be loved of Me, and I will not
-manifest myself to you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It is ourselves, brethren, and not <span
-class="smcap">God</span> that must be changed.&nbsp; The seed is
-scattered over all the field, but it grows only in the good
-ground.&nbsp; If <span class="smcap">Christ</span> is not
-manifest to us, it is because we have not complied with the
-conditions of manifestation.&nbsp; He is faithful to His promise,
-but we have not closed with the promise.&nbsp; Realising, then,
-that it is not binding on <span class="smcap">God</span> to save
-us&mdash;excepting on the terms which He has Himself laid
-down&mdash;and presenting to ourselves the momentous interests at
-stake, let us comply with <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>
-terms, and let us strive to do so gratefully.&nbsp; Let us be at
-pains to ascertain <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-will; let us diligently and scrupulously keep it, endeavouring
-all the while to follow it, not as mere routine of morality, but
-as active direct service of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-Himself, and proposing to ourselves, as the motive to its
-observance, gratitude for <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> salvation, and as the reward
-of observance, the manifestation of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; So doing, <a
-name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 141</span>we shall
-soon find that there is a real, an unequalled power in
-Christianity to attract and constrain us; we shall soon know how
-it is that <span class="smcap">Christ</span> will manifest
-Himself to His disciples, while He is hidden from the world.</p>
-<p>II.&nbsp; I have left but little time for the consideration of
-the second form of our question, namely, in what way <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> will manifest Himself only to the
-chosen.&nbsp; There is no need of a lengthy discussion of this
-subject, because, with all our spiritual short-sightedness, we
-are not like the Jews, we can have no difficulty in understanding
-the possibility of <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-manifestation of Himself to whom He will, and at the same time
-His hiding of Himself from all others.&nbsp; We know that like as
-ghosts are sometimes said to appear to but one of a roomful, so
-if it pleased <span class="smcap">Christ</span>&mdash;and in any
-other way which He pleased&mdash;He could stand visibly at this
-moment before any one of us, and utter to that favoured ear
-distinctly audible words, while the rest of us saw and heard
-nothing of Him.</p>
-<p>And there is no use in the discussion of the nature of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> truest manifestation, because
-even if the preacher had realised it in all its perfect
-blessedness, his words would fail to describe what he had felt;
-yea, the best possible description <a name="page142"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 142</span>would be wholly unintelligible to
-the natural man who perceives not, and cannot perceive, the
-things of <span class="smcap">God</span>, while it would be
-wholly unnecessary, rather would be solemn trifling with those
-who have actually partaken of the blessedness.&nbsp; No,
-brethren, it cannot be spoken&mdash;and if it could, I believe,
-it might not be&mdash;how <span class="smcap">Christ</span> shows
-Himself to those who love Him and keep His commandments.&nbsp; It
-is only in its realisation that you can understand what the
-promise means: &ldquo;We will come unto Him and make our abode
-with Him.&rdquo;&nbsp; Go, fulfil the conditions, and you shall
-receive the promise; and it shall disclose to you its own
-wonders, and its own transcendent bliss, and its own constraining
-power.</p>
-<p>But though we may not describe the manifestation itself, we
-may observe and recount the effects it produces.&nbsp; The
-Israelites might not come up to <span class="smcap">God</span>
-and see Him face to face in the Mount, but they were allowed, and
-it was good for them, to behold the shining of Moses&rsquo;s face
-when he returned from the Divine presence.&nbsp; Doubtless, to
-many, it was an additional proof of the being of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>; to not a few it may have been an
-incentive to seek the blessing of His favour.&nbsp; And so,
-brethren, it may be with us.&nbsp; Taking knowledge of those who
-have been with <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>, we may see <a
-name="page143"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 143</span>on them
-some reflection of His glorious self, some marks of a bliss which
-we shall covet to share, which may stimulate us both to believe
-better in its reality and to strive more earnestly for its
-fruition.&nbsp; Yes! and comparing ourselves with them very
-humbly, with unceasing prayer and watching against false
-confidence, we may even discern on ourselves the faint dawn, the
-first streaks of the Divine twilight, which tell (oh! how
-unspeakable the bliss!) that the dayspring is about to mount
-above our horizon; that the Sun of righteousness is about to
-shine into our hearts with all His glory.</p>
-<p>Consider, then, such as Abraham, who, after He had seen <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>&mdash;for <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> was often manifest before the
-Incarnation&mdash;could himself resolutely destroy his best
-earthly hope if <span class="smcap">God</span> required it; Job,
-who, after the vision of perfect holiness, abhorred himself and
-repented; Jacob, who felt (and felt throughout his life, we may
-be sure) how dreadful, how consecrated was the place where <span
-class="smcap">God</span> was met; Joseph, who possessed a power
-to resist effectually the sin, which so many dare to say there is
-no resisting (&ldquo;How can I do this great wickedness and sin
-against <span class="smcap">God</span>?&rdquo;); Daniel, who
-entered courageously into a den of lions; Simeon, who longed for
-death, and the enjoyment <a name="page144"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 144</span>of the permanent vision, after he
-had once seen <span class="smcap">Christ</span>; Stephen, who
-died, almost like his Master, &ldquo;<span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>
-receive my spirit;&rdquo; and the many others, who endured and
-laboured, and resisted, and persevered, and rejoiced in
-tribulation, and hoped against hope, as seeing Him who is
-invisible.&nbsp; Yes, brethren, consider these.&nbsp; Think what
-they were, men of the same flesh and blood, of like infirmities,
-and like sin with yourselves.&nbsp; Think how they secured the
-favour of <span class="smcap">God</span>, by the same simple
-means which are within the power of the least of you, yea, and
-more within your power than theirs, at least of most of them,
-because of the clearer light, and the better grace of Gospel
-times.&nbsp; Think what a reflection they showed of the visions
-of <span class="smcap">Christ</span> which they enjoyed.&nbsp;
-Think how real must have been their religious life; how enviable
-their peace and bliss; what a glorious light they afforded for
-the example and encouragement of other men; and be no longer
-content that with all your faculties and opportunities, all your
-knowledge and invitations, all your proffers of Divine grace, all
-the perpetual revelations of <span class="smcap">Christ</span> to
-those who desire Him, you yet should never see Him; but
-resolutely accepting His terms, hold and keep His commandments,
-and pray, and meditate, and labour to love Him.</p>
-<p><a name="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 145</span>Then
-plead and watch&mdash;you shall not plead in vain, nor watch very
-long&mdash;and the Father, and the Son, and the Spirit will
-surely come unto you and make their abode manifestly within you,
-cheering you with the light of the Divine countenance,
-strengthening you with the strength of Divine grace, moulding you
-more and more into the image of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-(which must be yours in perfection before you can partake of His
-fullest manifestation), abiding with you here, and shining
-clearly even in the deepest darkness, and by and by transplanting
-you, perfected in grace and spiritual perception, to the place
-where <span class="smcap">Christ</span> is always seen, with an
-eye that shall never be dim, with a delight which, however it
-grows in desire, shall be more than satisfied, as you behold His
-face in righteousness, and are filled to overflowing with the
-fulness of His presence.</p>
-<h2><a name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-146</span>SERMON X.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">BLESSING ACCORDING TO PRAYER.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">St.
-Matthew</span>, <span class="smcap">viii</span>., 13.</p>
-<p><i>And</i> <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> <i>said unto the
-centurion</i>, <i>Go thy way</i>; <i>and as thou hast
-believed</i>, <i>so be it done unto thee</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> must compare the narrative
-contained in St. Matthew&rsquo;s Gospel with its parallel in the
-7th chapter of St. Luke, to obtain a clear and full idea of the
-circumstances which preceded the healing of the centurion&rsquo;s
-servant.&nbsp; St. Matthew records just so much of the history as
-would illustrate the teaching that the Gentiles from afar should
-be received, and many of the children of the kingdom cast out:
-St. Luke sets forth in order all the particulars, small and
-great, which he had been able to obtain from those who were
-eye-witnesses and ministers of the word.</p>
-<p>From the harmonised accounts we gather that a certain
-centurion, who had renounced the worship of the &ldquo;gods
-many,&rdquo; and become a proselyte <a name="page147"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 147</span>of the gate, hearing of the miracles
-of <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>, sent certain elders of the
-Jews to beseech the exercise of His healing power upon a
-favourite servant, who was grievously tormented, and at the point
-of death.&nbsp; He does not seem to have come at all
-himself.&nbsp; The deep sense which he entertained of personal
-unworthiness would alone have deterred him; and, besides, he knew
-that there was a middle wall of partition between Jews and
-Gentiles, and that as yet <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> was
-not sent but unto the house of Israel.&nbsp; The elders, come to
-<span class="smcap">Jesus</span>, seek to enlist His sympathy and
-active interest, by pleading that the centurion, though not
-actually a Jew, was a friend of Jews, and had done much for the
-support of the Jewish worship.&nbsp; &ldquo;He is worthy for whom
-Thou shouldst do this, for he loveth our nation, and himself hath
-built us a synagogue.&nbsp; Come, then, and heal his
-servant.&rdquo;&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> replies,
-&ldquo;I will come and heal him;&rdquo; and straightway sets out
-with them.&nbsp; But when He was not far from the house, the
-centurion, alarmed at the temerity of his former request, and
-shrinking instinctively from One so high and so holy, sent some
-of those around him to prevent further condescension and trouble,
-on behalf of one so unworthy, and to suggest that <span
-class="smcap">Jesus</span> should but express His will (which he
-felt <a name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-148</span>must be omnipotent) from the spot where He stood:
-&ldquo;Say in a word and my servant shall be healed.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-The centurion had arrived at the knowledge of a great truth,
-namely, that <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> power was
-not confined to the scene of His bodily presence: and he
-described the process of reasoning by which he had arrived at
-it.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am but a man, myself under authority, yet I
-have but to say, Go, come, do this, and, lo! it is done by my
-servants here, there, or wherever else I appoint, while I remain
-still.&nbsp; How much more shalt <i>Thou</i> speak and be obeyed,
-Thou who art Absolute and Supreme in authority, Whose will all
-the spiritual armies of heaven observe, and are prompt and eager
-to perform.&nbsp; &lsquo;Speak the word only, and my servant
-shall be healed.&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; When <span
-class="smcap">Jesus</span> heard it, He marvelled and said to
-them that followed, &ldquo;Verily, I say unto you, I have not
-found so great faith, no, not in Israel.&rdquo;&nbsp; Twice we
-read that our <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-marvelled&mdash;once at unbelief, and once at belief.&nbsp; And
-this is no mere figurative statement.&nbsp; Our <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> literally marvelled.&nbsp; His human
-nature, much as He knew of what was in man, was taken aback by
-the unexpected and extraordinary display, in the one case of
-perverse blindness, in the other of clear spiritual
-perception.&nbsp; &ldquo;Verily, I say unto you, I <a
-name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 149</span>have not
-found so great faith.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is remarkable that our
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span> selects the centurion&rsquo;s
-<i>faith</i> for admiration.&nbsp; He dwells not on his care and
-anxiety for his slave, on his general good will and good deeds,
-on his consciousness of unworthiness, his resolute humility,
-&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Lord</span>, I am not worthy that thou
-shouldst come under my roof.&rdquo;&nbsp; No! it is his faith, to
-which <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> gives this highest
-praise.&nbsp; That while he walked among His own people, who were
-taught of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and was haughtily and
-indignantly treated, yea, despised; that while Jews saw and albut
-felt His power, and refused to acknowledge it, a Gentile, at a
-distance, should be filled with reverential awe of Him, should
-assert so confidently the fulness of His power, should have such
-an insight into its spiritual working, should find and adduce
-proofs of that power and its working, to satisfy himself, to
-plead to <span class="smcap">Christ</span>&mdash;this was,
-indeed, worthy of note; this was, as yet, unparalleled.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;I have not found so great faith.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We need not, however, suppose&mdash;in fact we must not
-suppose&mdash;that our <span class="smcap">Lord</span> meant to
-omit the commendation of the centurion&rsquo;s other good
-qualities: rather as they were all the fruits of faith, were they
-all praised in the praise of faith.&nbsp; Why did he love the
-Jews&mdash;why did he build them a <a name="page150"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 150</span>synagogue&mdash;why did he seek
-miraculous healing for his servant&mdash;why did he employ Jewish
-elders as his intercessors&mdash;why did he, an important Roman
-officer, feel unworthy of the company of a wandering Jewish
-peasant?&nbsp; Was it not through faith? faith in the true <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, faith in the laws of His worship, faith
-in His awful holiness, and no less in His merciful goodness,
-faith in His manifestation in <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> of
-Nazareth?&nbsp; Yes, it was all of faith, and it was all admired
-and praised when <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> marvelled and
-said, &ldquo;I have not found so great faith.&rdquo;&nbsp; But
-still the highest faith&mdash;the thing most marvelled at and
-chiefly commended, was the spiritual perception of a bodily
-unseen <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, the belief in His
-unlimited, and, under all circumstances, available power.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;I have never seen Thee: yet I know Thee who Thou
-art.&nbsp; Thou art not here, yet with a word Thou canst cause
-Thy power to be here, and to accomplish here all Thy
-will.&rdquo;&nbsp; Blessed are they that have not seen and yet
-have believed: and blessed are they precisely in the way of their
-own wise choice, &ldquo;Go thy way; and as thou hast believed, so
-be it done unto thee.&rdquo;&nbsp; It was great honour given to
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; It was the opportunity
-of a wondrous manifestation, and so we read, &ldquo;The servant
-was healed in the selfsame hour.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 151</span>But
-shall we suppose that the centurion, by his humility and his
-faith, deprived himself of the bliss of receiving <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, that <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, <i>therefore</i>, turned away, and
-thought no more of him?&nbsp; Even in that case he would not have
-been without his reward.&nbsp; The servant, who was dear to him,
-was preserved and healed, the Jews, whom he loved, must have
-honoured and loved him, when he had thus prevailed with <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and, besides, what a conviction was his
-of the power of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, what a token
-of approval, in the fact that he had, as it were, proposed his
-own conditions for a miracle, and those conditions had been
-graciously accepted and fulfilled!&nbsp; He needed no vision
-after this to prove to him that <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>
-was the Son of <span class="smcap">God</span>; no voice from
-heaven to speak to him comfort and assurance of hope.&nbsp; He
-had sought <span class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; He had found
-Him and been found of Him.&nbsp; Great was his reward; and his
-joy such as could not be taken away.&nbsp; He would have been
-greatly blessed, then, had no more been done for him.&nbsp; But
-did that <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, Who bestows such
-honour on humility, Who so loves them that love Him and His, Who
-has made the best of His promises, yea, all of them to faith, did
-He, think you, give no further token, no higher blessedness to
-that centurion?&nbsp; Did He <a name="page152"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 152</span>not rather prove to him, that he had
-made a wise choice, that he had chosen the best kind of blessing,
-in asking for spiritual presence rather than bodily
-presence?&nbsp; Did He not manifest Himself to him, in that
-peculiar way of which the world knows, and can know
-nothing?&nbsp; Did He not go, He and the Father, and make
-spiritual and permanent abode with him?&nbsp; Yes, surely, this
-is all implied in the words, &ldquo;Go thy way; and as thou hast
-believed, so be it done unto thee.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This view of the subject has its evident lessons and promises
-for us.&nbsp; Be it ours, brethren, to learn and practice the
-lessons, and doubt not but <span class="smcap">God</span> will
-fulfil to us the promises.</p>
-<p>In dismissing now the general subject, and attempting only to
-deduce practical instruction from the words of the text, I would
-ask you to notice first, the kind of answer which prayer gets; it
-is blessed in the way it asks to be blessed.&nbsp; When the
-elders besought our <span class="smcap">Lord</span> that He would
-come and heal the servant, then we read, He went with them.&nbsp;
-When presently the centurion, through his friends, urges,
-&ldquo;Speak the word only, and my servant shall be
-healed,&rdquo; then <span class="smcap">Christ</span> stays His
-own progress, and sends on His grace.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go thy way;
-and as thou hast believed, so be it done unto thee.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 153</span>It is
-thus that prayer is generally answered: what we ask for, that we
-obtain.&nbsp; <i>Generally</i>, I say, yet not always; for our
-wise and good <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, when, in our
-ignorance, we prefer a wrong or a foolish request, sends us
-rather what He knows us to need, than what we ask.&nbsp; A father
-does not give his beloved son stone for bread, nor a scorpion
-instead of a fish.&nbsp; And it may be, yea, it often is the
-case, that we ask <span class="smcap">God</span> for what we
-think would support us, or be of some other benefit to us, when
-its bestowal would cause us to stumble, or, perhaps, crush our
-spiritual strength, or poison our spiritual life.&nbsp; And then,
-I say, of His wisdom and goodness, He sends us away <i>not
-empty</i>&mdash;oh, no! none ask of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> and obtain not, if they ask with right
-feeling&mdash;but blessed in a different way from that we
-ventured to prescribe.&nbsp; This truth is worth a little more
-thought.&nbsp; There are many of you, brethren, I doubt not, who
-have again and again prayed to <span class="smcap">God</span>
-(and very earnestly) to continue to you some blessing which you
-were in danger of losing, or to confer upon you something which
-you felt you wanted, and who yet were not answered according to
-the prayer.&nbsp; Perhaps, you were failing in business, or your
-influence was being diminished, or your health breaking down, or
-your child dying.&nbsp; <a name="page154"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 154</span>Well, you earnestly, humbly, with
-faith and strong tears deprecated the calamity again and again;
-but still it came upon you as though you had never prayed; or you
-asked to be lifted out of your poverty or your misery, to be
-endowed with wisdom, to be made influential; you loved, and
-prayed <span class="smcap">God</span> to make you loved again;
-you struggled to get a situation which was just what you needed,
-you prayed continually that you might succeed.&nbsp; It was all
-without avail.&nbsp; &ldquo;No answer came.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>No answer came!&nbsp; Say not that, brethren.&nbsp; Assuredly,
-an answer did come, if you prayed aright.&nbsp; It may be that
-you did not get what you wanted, or keep what was departing; for
-<span class="smcap">God</span> knew your choice was an unwise
-one, and therefore of His love would not grant it.&nbsp; But He
-gave you a compensation, and more than a compensation.&nbsp; Just
-as when <span class="smcap">Christ</span> prayed that the cup of
-His last agony might pass from Him.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> rather strengthened Him from heaven to
-endure the agony, and made it His way to glory&mdash;so, when you
-have deprecated, or besought, against the will of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> choosing for you, He has enabled you to
-bear the calamity, to do without the thing coveted, and has made
-all to work for your good.&nbsp; What He does it may be you know
-<a name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 155</span>not now,
-but you shall know hereafter.&nbsp; And when in heaven&rsquo;s
-light you see that the continued or bestowed prosperity would
-have made you proud and ungodly, that power or influence (though
-you meant it not) would have been perverted by you to your ruin,
-that the child taken away, had it remained, would have destroyed
-itself, and been a curse to you, that the disappointment, and the
-toil, and the suffering, which you so prayed against, were just
-the things that planted and nurtured in you Christian graces, and
-worked out for your glory&mdash;oh! then you will see that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> did answer your prayers, and you will
-bless him fervently for sending His own answer instead of the one
-you dictated.</p>
-<p>Meantime, in the light of this hope, remember always to add to
-your prayers for specific blessings the holy proviso,
-&ldquo;Nevertheless not as I will, but as Thou wilt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But I said that generally, whenever, that is, there is no harm
-to ourselves in what we ask, <span class="smcap">God</span> gives
-us what we pray for; and I produced proofs, which might be
-multiplied manifold that it is so.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go thy way; and
-as thou hast believed, so be it done unto thee.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Surely this is worth a thought; not only, or chiefly, as showing
-us <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> marvellous
-condescension and the efficacy <a name="page156"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 156</span>of prayer, but as admonishing us
-that the height, the amount, the nature of our blessedness,
-depends upon ourselves, upon what we ask in prayer.&nbsp; What a
-solemn consideration is this!&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> sits upon His heavenly throne, with
-listening ear and outstretched hands; angels wait to waft our
-supplications to His presence, the Holy Spirit to make
-intercession for us, the blessed Son to present our cause and
-plead it!&nbsp; It only remains for us to ask.&nbsp; Whatever we
-ask, if we are faithful, if it is good, we shall receive.&nbsp;
-What we ask not, that we shall not receive.&nbsp; Think of that,
-brethren!&nbsp; Call to mind, as far as you can, what kind of
-prayers you have been wont to make.&nbsp; Review your past and
-present state.&nbsp; In anything are you spiritually
-unblessed?&nbsp; Have you only an inferior blessedness?&nbsp; Ah!
-have you not all that you prayed for?&nbsp; Lack you not just
-that, which you never faithfully sought?&nbsp; This life, and the
-things of this life, have been often in your thoughts, and in
-your prayers, for yourselves and for others.&nbsp; You have
-prayed that <span class="smcap">God</span> would preserve you,
-that He would defend you from danger and gross temptation, that
-He would give you health, and comfort, and earthly blessing, that
-He would protect and prosper those you love.&nbsp; You have not
-prayed much for spiritual blessings, or you <a
-name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 157</span>have been
-content with supplicating inferior spiritual blessings.&nbsp; A
-clean heart, a renewed mind, lively faith, heavenly peace, joy in
-the Holy Ghost,&mdash;if these are not yours, do you not know
-why?&nbsp; It is because you never asked for them, or, at least,
-never asked with that appreciation, that earnestness which alone
-prevails with <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> is willing to give them.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has promised to give them.&nbsp; He
-stands ever ready to fulfil His promise.&nbsp; But, nevertheless,
-for these things he will be inquired of.&nbsp; The measure of the
-expressed desire is the measure of the supply.&nbsp; Nothing
-less, in most cases nothing different, and always nothing more,
-may you expect from <span class="smcap">God</span>, than that
-which you ask.&nbsp; O let the knowledge of this truth kindle in
-you desires, and teach you words wherewith to approach <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Miss not His choicest gifts for
-want of asking.&nbsp; Prefer not for yourselves that which is
-earthy, and poor, and fleeting.&nbsp; Thrust not away&mdash;and
-you do thrust away, if you do not woo&mdash;perfect spiritual
-blessedness.&nbsp; When next you kneel before <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, whenever henceforth you kneel before
-Him, remember that while He is the owner and ready-giver of all
-good gifts, it is yet only what you ask that you will receive of
-Him.&nbsp; As thou hast believed, so shall it be done unto
-thee.</p>
-<p><a name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 158</span>But,
-secondly, it is faith we see which gives force to prayer.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;As thou hast believed.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Whatsoever ye
-ask, believing, ye shall receive.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Let him ask
-in faith, nothing wavering.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Let not him that
-wavereth think that he shall receive anything of the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> would have us wait on Him, with
-confidence in His sufficiency, with sure expectation that He will
-give what we ask.&nbsp; If we lack this confidence and this
-expectation; if we make formal, rather than eager and hopeful
-requests; if we have any misgivings as to the answer; if we
-secretly resolve what we will do, if there is no answer; if we
-wait not, and watch not, for the answer, then, brethren, we
-forfeit the blessing.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span>
-heareth not such&mdash;we virtually ask Him not to answer
-us.&nbsp; We mock Him with the idle form of prayer.&nbsp; O ye
-who ask <span class="smcap">God</span> for guidance, at the same
-time questioning yourselves as to what ye shall do&mdash;ye that
-pray against temptation, and forthwith yield to it&mdash;ye that
-profess to cast care upon <span class="smcap">God</span>, all the
-while being full of cares&mdash;ye that beseech Him to help you,
-yet go on helping yourselves&mdash;ye that pray, and live as
-though you had not prayed, that call upon <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, but wait not for his answer&mdash;ye
-that are not certain, that feel not the certainty, and act not,
-or forbear from acting upon it, that what you ask <a
-name="page159"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 159</span>you shall
-obtain, be sure that you shall go empty away, and that because of
-your unbelief.&nbsp; It is hollow formalism, it is fearful
-trifling, it is blasphemous mockery, to ask without faith,
-without sure calculation upon receiving.&nbsp; You dare not treat
-an earthly friend so.&nbsp; You shall not, with impunity, treat
-<span class="smcap">God</span> so!&nbsp; Ah! here is the
-explanation of unanswered prayer&mdash;prayer for that which is
-desirable and right&mdash;it was not offered in faith; the answer
-was not expected, and relied on; the life did not manifest
-expectation and reliance!&nbsp; Would you indeed receive anything
-from <span class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp; Prefer your request,
-in full acknowledgment of <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>
-ability, in faithful trust in His performance of all that you ask
-according to His will, and show your faith by utter renunciation
-of all self-guidance and self-dependence, by patient waiting, by
-steadfast resistance of all that <span class="smcap">God</span>
-forbids, and persevering pursuit of all that He commands.&nbsp;
-Impress this upon yourselves as the spirit of your prayer, and
-the rule of your lives.&nbsp; Make yourselves such as <span
-class="smcap">God</span> hears.&nbsp; Cleanse yourselves by the
-power of His grace from sin, that you may be allowed to approach
-Him.&nbsp; Arm yourselves with the godly resolution that, come
-what will, you will serve the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>;
-and seek, above all, His kingdom and the righteousness <a
-name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-160</span>thereof.&nbsp; Examine yourselves, your peculiar wants
-and difficulties, that you may inform your prayers, and make them
-pointed and particular, expressing what you need and
-desire.&nbsp; Then offer them, with felt unworthiness, with holy
-adoration, in the certain conviction that He hears you, that He
-can supply your need, that He will supply it; and take to
-yourselves such just consolation and assurance, and let your life
-manifest them, as if <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, Who
-cannot lie and cannot fail, had audibly declared to you,
-&ldquo;Go thy way; and as thou hast believed, so be it done unto
-thee.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-161</span>SERMON XI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">CHRIST STILLING THE STORM.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">St.
-Matthew</span>, <span class="smcap">viii</span>., 26.</p>
-<p><i>And He saith unto them</i>, <i>Why are ye fearful</i>, <i>O
-ye of little faith</i>?&nbsp; <i>Then He arose</i>, <i>and
-rebuked the winds and the sea</i>; <i>and there was a great
-calm</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was after a day of laborious
-teaching, that our <span class="smcap">Lord</span> to escape for
-a time from the crowds that thronged Him, to obtain rest and
-quiet, perhaps to exercise His ministry in other places,
-commanded the disciples to steer the ship, in which He had been
-teaching, across the sea of Galilee, and to convey Him to the
-other side.&nbsp; Immediately, it would appear, that they set
-out, He laid Himself down and fell asleep.&nbsp; Partaking of
-human nature in its infirmity, though not in its sin, He was worn
-out with labour, and absolutely required, yea, hastened to
-rest.&nbsp; He sunk into a deep sleep, then, as soon as He
-assumed the posture of repose.&nbsp; But anon, a storm
-arose.&nbsp; One of those squalls (which so often come down upon
-lakes surrounded <a name="page162"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-162</span>by mountains) suddenly filled the air with boisterous
-wind, and so upraised and agitated the waves, that they dashed
-over the ship, and threatened it with destruction.&nbsp; The
-disciples, many of whom were fishermen, and others accustomed to
-occupy their business upon or beside the water, must have been
-too familiar with storms to be easily frightened.&nbsp; The
-darkening clouds, the howling wind, the troubled water, would, of
-course, arouse them to energy, warning them that they were in
-danger, and requiring them to watch and labour to save
-themselves; and so we can well imagine them running hither and
-thither, with anxious looks, loosing or furling the sails, as
-might be necessary; avoiding quicksands, and rocks, and shallow
-places; lightening the ship of dangerous burthens; directing
-their course by the safest way, to the haven where they would
-be.&nbsp; But either they must have been sorry sailors, with
-coward hearts, which we are not willing to believe, or their
-courage must have been overcome by very unusual and imminent
-danger, ere they would have rushed to their Master, and cried to
-Him, in terror, &ldquo;<span class="smcap">Lord</span>, save us,
-we perish!&rdquo; or, in rash reproach, &ldquo;Carest thou not,
-that we perish?&rdquo;&nbsp; Yes!&nbsp; I say, there must have
-been unusual and imminent danger, <a name="page163"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 163</span>and even something more&mdash;some
-supernatural portent&mdash;thus to strike with terror, thus to
-fill with despair.</p>
-<p>However this may be, they cried unto the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, and the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> heard them.&nbsp; He had slept calmly
-through the roar of the wind&mdash;yea, even while the waves
-washed over Him; but the cry of distress entered quickly into His
-ear, and He awoke to answer it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why are ye fearful,
-O ye of little faith?&rdquo; were His awakening words.&nbsp; This
-is not a rebuke for coming to Him; they had done right
-therein.&nbsp; He would presently prove it by the miracle He
-would work for them.&nbsp; Neither is it an assertion that there
-was no real danger, that they had been too easily alarmed: for an
-inspired Evangelist, St. Luke, writing long afterwards, in the
-light of what <span class="smcap">Christ</span> now said and did,
-expressly states that the vessel was filled with water, and that
-they were in danger.&nbsp; No; it is an acknowledgment of the
-danger, but it is also a pledge that it should be averted, and it
-is a tender reproach for not being confident of
-deliverance.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why are ye fearful, O ye of little
-faith?&rdquo;&nbsp; Am not I with you?&nbsp; Do not I know your
-wants?&nbsp; Have I not power and will to relieve them?&nbsp;
-Where is your faith, in the prophecies of what I have yet to do,
-that you suppose <a name="page164"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-164</span>I am now to perish?&nbsp; Where is the confidence which
-becomes my followers?&mdash;which others, with less knowledge and
-encouragement, less ground of hope, have so fully shown.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I
-will fear no evil, for Thou art with me.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yea, though
-He slay me, yet will I trust in Him!&nbsp; Thus He reproves, and
-calms, and assures them in their trouble, and then He proceeds to
-deliver them out of it.&nbsp; &ldquo;He arose&rdquo;&mdash;we
-read&mdash;&ldquo;and rebuked the winds and the sea, and there
-was a great calm.&rdquo;&nbsp; It was a wondrous manifestation of
-His Majesty.&nbsp; It was a gracious condescension to
-infirmity.&nbsp; It was a proof, too palpable to be resisted, too
-marvellous to be forgotten, that He is able to keep, and that He
-will keep, in safety and in peace, those whose minds are staid on
-Him, who commit themselves to His keeping.&nbsp; Well may the
-disciples, in the awful stillness of that calm, have been filled
-as much with reverential fear as with admiration.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;They feared exceedingly, and said one to another, What
-manner of man is this, that even the wind and the sea obey
-Him?&rdquo;&nbsp; They had witnessed several of His epiphanies:
-they had tasted of the water made wine; they had seen the leper
-cleansed; and had, at least, heard on reliable testimony, that <a
-name="page165"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 165</span>the
-centurion&rsquo;s servant was restored&mdash;yea, in the early
-evening of this very day, just before they left the shore, <span
-class="smcap">Jesus</span> had been casting out evil spirits,
-with His word, and had healed all the sick that were brought to
-Him: but in their eyes (whether they were right or wrong concerns
-us not now) this was a greater miracle, greater in extent,
-greater in power, greater in the suddenness, the certainty (felt
-by themselves, remember, as no other had been) and the peace and
-joy of its effect.&nbsp; Much must it have informed their
-worship, much must it have increased their faith.&nbsp; Power did
-it give them to proclaim hereafter that they knew in whom they
-had believed, patience to endure for His sake, in His strength;
-peace in persecution, comfort in sorrow, hope amidst otherwise
-confounding terrors and dismay, that they had actually
-experienced <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> salvation
-from destruction; that the experience had been vouchsafed them as
-a pledge of His constant care; that they had been told, on its
-account, to trust&mdash;never henceforth to be fearful, and of
-little faith!</p>
-<p>Of great importance, then, was that miracle of the Stilling of
-the Storm, if it meant no more, and accomplished no more than
-this: if it only showed, that on a large, as on a small scale,
-over <a name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-166</span>elements, as well as over diseases, on the sea no less
-than on the land, <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> was
-&ldquo;mighty to save&rdquo;; if it only furnished the
-eye-witnesses of His ministry with a great instance of His
-gracious power; if it only prepared them for their life of storms
-and difficulties, and supported them in their dangers and
-distresses, and kept them faithful and joyful.</p>
-<p>But, surely, it has more meaning, and more worth, than
-this.</p>
-<p>First, it reveals to us, if I mistake not, a contention
-between spiritual powers (the Son of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> on the one side, the Devil on the
-other), followed by a victory of the good, and a conspicuous
-defeat of the evil.&nbsp; That was no accidental raging of wind
-and waves, that was no operation of the <span
-class="smcap">God</span> of providence using the elements to
-accomplish good purposes which was rebuked by the voice of the
-Son of <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Rebuke would be
-meaningless addressed to mere wind and wave: it would be
-blasphemous addressed to <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; It
-is only when speaking to the Devil, to fevers and distempers, the
-effects of demoniacal possession, to Peter or others, prompted by
-Satan, speaking his words, doing his work, that <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> uses rebuke.&nbsp; Here then, surely,
-Satan was at work, and here he was confounded!&nbsp; The enemy of
-<a name="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 167</span>souls
-had never ceased to watch and seek to destroy the Saviour.&nbsp;
-He had stirred up Herod against Him in His infancy.&nbsp; He had
-personally assailed Him in the wilderness.&nbsp; He was now using
-the elements, over which much power is often allowed him, as we
-see in Job&rsquo;s case, as his agents of evil.&nbsp; But with
-all his wisdom and perception, he knew not what was in <span
-class="smcap">Jesus</span>.&nbsp; He thought once that he could
-as easily have made Him sceptical as he did Eve, &ldquo;hath
-<span class="smcap">God</span> said,&rdquo; &ldquo;If Thou be the
-Son of Man.&rdquo;&nbsp; He thought now that while the Son of Man
-slept he was unconscious and powerless.&nbsp; And so in his folly
-he sought to wreck the vessel, and overwhelm Him whom it carried
-in the depths of the sea.&nbsp; Attempting this, he did but give
-occasion for an additional manifestation of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> mission and power to destroy
-him and his works.&nbsp; On the shore, before He started, <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> had cast out devils.&nbsp; On the
-shore for which He was making He would again cast them out.&nbsp;
-On the sea He now meets them, and confounds them.&nbsp; O what a
-mighty, what a galling conquest!&nbsp; Satan had let loose all
-the powers of the winds, he had lashed the waves into utmost
-fury, the disciples were dismayed, the Saviour was asleep, the
-ship was sinking.&nbsp; &ldquo;Only a few moments,&rdquo;
-doubtless, he <a name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-168</span>exultingly thought, &ldquo;and there shall be a second
-destruction of man, the kingdom shall surely become mine, for
-there will be none to dispute it&rdquo;&mdash;when, lo! the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> arose, and, with a word, made him undo
-the work he had done.&nbsp; &ldquo;Peace be still;&rdquo; and the
-wind ceased, and there was a great calm!&nbsp; O signal
-defeat!&nbsp; O earnest of the promise that the head of the
-serpent shall be bruised, that Satan himself shall be bound and
-trodden under foot, and cast into the lake of fire, and shall
-deceive and vex no more.&nbsp; Surely, this is one of the chief
-scenes, one of the most mysterious and important events, one of
-the most glorious manifestations of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> life on earth.</p>
-<p>But this is not all its significance.&nbsp; The miracles of
-our <span class="smcap">Lord</span> were acted
-parables&mdash;types of spiritual things&mdash;rather outward
-signs, not themselves to be given up, but thereafter to be
-accompanied by inward grace.</p>
-<p>The ship on the sea of Galilee represents the Christian
-Church, or the individual member of it.&nbsp; The sea is the
-world; the storm, with its adverse wind and difficult waves,
-figures the trials, the buffetings, the persecutions, the fears
-of this mortal life; the disciples are the types of weak yet
-willing human nature&mdash;both our warnings and our examples;
-and <span class="smcap">Christ</span> is Himself, yet, so to <a
-name="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 169</span>speak, but
-a figure of the true, dwelling in His Church in each faithful
-member, often apparently unheeding, unconscious, yet always our
-sure defence and deliverer, prompt to hear when called upon, able
-to comfort, mighty to save.</p>
-<p>That entry into the ship, and sailing forth into the sea,
-represents our first journey, and each renewed journey to <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, in Baptism, in Confirmation, in Holy
-Communion, in every fresh repentance, every vow, every act of
-worship.&nbsp; Forth we go with Him.&nbsp; All is calm and
-hopeful.&nbsp; We seem to have to journey over quiet
-waters.&nbsp; The shore of Heaven is straight before us, and we
-are making for it.&nbsp; But, as soon as we set out, our envious,
-deadly enemy, hating our <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, and
-hating us, plots our destruction, and assays its
-accomplishment.&nbsp; Soon trouble takes the place of peace,
-winds of adversity toss and try us, hope begins to pale, terror
-to dismay, the waters go even over our soul, and He who should
-calm us, and sustain and cheer us, seems to have fallen asleep,
-to help us not, to take no notice of us.&nbsp; It is the hour of
-<span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> trial, of the
-Devil&rsquo;s temptation!&nbsp; What shall we do?&nbsp; If we are
-wise sailors, like as I have supposed the disciples to have done,
-we shall meet the occasion with well-directed energy; we shall
-keep the vessel away <a name="page170"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 170</span>from the quicksands of pleasure, the
-shallows of pride, the rocks of offence, and the whirlpools of
-sin.&nbsp; We shall cast out the weight that drags us down,
-sloth, indifference, besetting sin.&nbsp; We shall bear up
-against the boisterous winds of adversity.&nbsp; We shall
-resolutely and perseveringly pursue the straight course through
-the waters, making for, looking for the shore.&nbsp; Unless we do
-all this, we have no right to hope.&nbsp; But we must take care,
-lest in, ay, even by doing it, we lose our hope.&nbsp; Satan
-destroys many because they make no effort to save themselves; but
-he destroys quite as many because they rely on their own
-efforts.&nbsp; It is a fact that we can do nothing by ourselves;
-that human wisdom, self-reliant, is sure to be confounded, and
-human effort, independent, to be paralysed.&nbsp; But even if for
-the time we see what is right, and are successful in doing it, he
-will enshroud us in such horrible darkness, he will fill our ears
-with such dismal sounds, he will so toss and bewilder and
-overwhelm us, that presently weariness, perplexity, and despair
-will cause us to give up, to consent to our own
-destruction.&nbsp; The disciples in that storm-tossed ship seem
-to have been bringing themselves well nigh into this ruin, first
-to have relied on themselves, and then to have despaired of
-themselves, all the while forgetting <a name="page171"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 171</span>Who was with them, Who should have
-been their guide, Who was their sure protector, when, all at
-once, before it was too late, they remembered and aroused Him,
-and called Him to their aid.&nbsp; It was their bliss to find
-that &ldquo;the saint&rsquo;s extremity is <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> opportunity;&rdquo; that it is
-never too late, before destruction, to call upon Him and be
-saved; but they were not allowed to enjoy this bliss unmixed with
-reproach for self-confidence and for want of confidence in
-Him.&nbsp; In all the storms and dangers which beset us on the
-sea of life, let us take example from the disciples to call upon
-Him who can save us, and let us also take warning from them, not
-to forget His company, or to suppose that He forgets us.</p>
-<p>Such seems to be a sketch of the interpretation of the meaning
-and instruction for us of this acted parable.</p>
-<p>And now, brethren, having learnt the general truth, let us
-pick out and dwell upon some of its particulars.</p>
-<p>And first, in setting out with <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, expect storms and dangers.&nbsp; We
-are too apt to suppose that the war of life is to be waged only
-with men, that the storms of life are only encountered in
-temporal things.&nbsp; We can well understand that it was
-otherwise, that it must have been otherwise, <a
-name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 172</span>with the
-first founders of the Church, with confessors in the face of
-unbelieving Jews and heathen Romans, with the Reformers, with
-missionaries now: but in our own case we calculate on a smooth
-and safe journey over the sea of time to the shore of eternity,
-ay, and after many days, experience, we say, confirms our
-calculation.&nbsp; No sore temptations try us; no conflict of
-good and evil principles tosses and tears us; no despair
-threatens to drown us.&nbsp; We have trouble enough in the world,
-in earning our daily bread, in claiming and maintaining our own,
-in becoming rich, or powerful, or famous, in ruling those who
-rebel against our just authority, who would gainsay our words,
-and frustrate our efforts.&nbsp; But in spiritual things this is
-not the case.&nbsp; We find it easy (I speak that which the
-manifest lives and apparent feelings of what are called
-respectable men justify my speaking) to follow the course which
-we would in religion&mdash;we worship in church, we read the
-Bible and pray at home without opposition.&nbsp; It costs us no
-trouble to keep the letter of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> chief commandments.&nbsp; We
-know nothing of spiritual wrestling, spiritual fear, spiritual
-despondency.&nbsp; Why should we?&nbsp; Our ways are mainly
-upright; our consciences not afraid, our duty plain and simple;
-and in <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, therefore, our <a
-name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 173</span>hope
-sure.&nbsp; I know that men think this (at least they do not
-think otherwise), and in their lives they act it, even if they
-dare not shape it into words.&nbsp; But, brethren, if it is so
-with you, look to it, for the calm is more deadly than the
-storm.&nbsp; The Devil is the inveterate enemy and the untiring
-assailant of <span class="smcap">Christ</span> and
-Christians.&nbsp; His whole being and energy are concentrated in
-the aim and effort to bury the ark of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> in the sea of eternal
-destruction.&nbsp; If, then, you pass over that sea, and are
-enshrouded by no darkness, beaten by no winds, tossed by no
-billows, be sure that it is because <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> is not in your company.&nbsp; That
-Church has had its candlestick removed, which dwells in security,
-peaceful and prosperous; and that individual has not <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> for the tenant of his heart who
-experiences not what the storm-tossed vessel typified.&nbsp;
-Satan is intent upon destroying every one that is <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>.&nbsp; If he attempts not
-your destruction, it is because he does not consider you <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>&mdash;and, remember, though
-he is not all-wise, he is as an angel, and an archangel in
-perception&mdash;because your vessel bears not <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>; because you are on no journey with
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span> to cast out evil spirits and
-drive them over steep places into the sea.&nbsp; O, my brethren,
-it is an awful sign, a death-boding distinction, <a
-name="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 174</span>when Satan
-lets us alone in this sea of life, and deems it unnecessary to
-keep us by violent efforts from reaching heaven.&nbsp; It is the
-expression of his informed and deliberate judgment that we are
-not going thither!&nbsp; O ye who dwell at ease and glide
-smoothly along the journey of life, put back, take <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> on board, and joy when you find in
-yourselves the signs of His presence, the assaults of Satan, the
-warring within you of good and evil, the stirrings of conscience,
-the flutterings of spiritual fear.&nbsp; I do not mean become
-morbid, and delight in what is mournful and terrible; but suspect
-and refuse the peace which Satan offers without contest, and
-determine to have only that which in <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> strength you win and
-maintain.</p>
-<p>Next, consider the meaning of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> lying asleep in the storm,
-and interfering not to control it, till so earnestly called
-up.</p>
-<p>In providence and in grace <span class="smcap">God</span>
-delights, so to speak, to hide Himself, though He exhibits the
-results of His works.&nbsp; He is the Author of every gift, and
-the Ruler and Promoter of its use; but He puts it into our hands
-as His agents, and bids us with it accomplish His will.&nbsp; As
-the heart is the fountain of the blood which flows through our
-members, as it is bone and muscle that give <a
-name="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 175</span>strength to
-the arm, so is <span class="smcap">God</span> the Source of grace
-to the soul, and the prevailing Power of our efforts.&nbsp;
-Still, it is not Himself prominently and foremost that does the
-work in the world, but we from and by Him.&nbsp; The explanation
-of this economy seems to be, first, that He would have us walk by
-faith&mdash;remembering Him, relying on Him, working for
-Him&mdash;rather than by right, constrained, whether we will or
-not, without feeling or desire, or dependence, to see, and admit,
-and feel His power.&nbsp; And, secondly, that He would give us an
-individuality, a certain dependent independence, which shall make
-us feel personal responsibility, and allow us to deserve (in a
-sense) the recompense of personal effort.&nbsp; Thus, He leaves
-the fool to say, There is no <span class="smcap">God</span>, and
-rewards the faithful by revealing Himself to belief.&nbsp; Thus,
-while there is a <span class="smcap">God</span>, while He is not
-far from us, while in Him we live and move and have our being, we
-are required and stimulated to seek Him, to feel after Him, and
-find Him.&nbsp; Besides, or more properly <i>therefore</i>, we
-have to call upon Him before He answers.&nbsp; Even when He had
-determined, and declared His determination, to bless the
-Israelites, He made the condition, &ldquo;Nevertheless, for these
-things I will be inquired of.&rdquo;&nbsp; He would have us live
-by spiritual <a name="page176"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-176</span>dependence.&nbsp; He would have us communicate to Him
-our wants.&nbsp; He would have us draw down by prayer the
-supply.&nbsp; And this He effects by making it a law, that He
-will know nothing of us, at least know nothing so as to heed for
-our good, but what we tell Him, and will give us nothing but what
-we ask.&nbsp; I have so lately enlarged upon this subject that I
-will add nothing upon it now, but to bid you remember the
-necessity and the power of prayer.</p>
-<p>Lastly, consider what is taught by that remonstrance, spoken
-in the interval between awaking and acting, &ldquo;Why are ye
-fearful, O ye of little faith?&rdquo;&nbsp; I have already said
-that <span class="smcap">Christ</span> did not disapprove the
-prayer, but only the fear which had preceded it, the poverty of
-the faith which accompanied it.&nbsp; Neither did He demand of
-the disciples the impossibility of being undisturbed in the midst
-of such perturbation.&nbsp; It is natural&mdash;natural even to
-the Christian full of grace, to be affected by the circumstances
-which attend him.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Christ</span> was so
-affected Himself, as His prayers, and shrinkings, and watchings,
-and open teaching assure us.&nbsp; He, who wept at human misery,
-though He was just going to put it to flight; He, who shrank from
-the trial which He had deliberately and of choice encountered,
-has sanctioned and recommended (shall I <a
-name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 177</span>say
-enforced?) by His example the same feelings in His
-disciples.&nbsp; He does not forbid us to be human, but only
-requires us to leaven humanity with godliness.&nbsp; Trials we
-are to have, and trials we ought to feel.&nbsp; To be stolid and
-callous is to be unchristian, for none ever felt trials as <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> did.&nbsp; But in our trials, while
-we feel, and weep, and shrink, we are not to be
-faint-hearted.&nbsp; We are to know in Whom we have
-believed.&nbsp; We are, therefore, to bear them, and submit to
-them; but we are not to be overpowered by them.&nbsp; We are not
-to allow them to exercise such an influence as to make us forget
-that there is One greater than the storm, Who rules it even in
-its wildest raging, Who will cause it to cease when it is
-fitting, Who will not allow it to overwhelm us if we are
-dependent on Him in its continuance, if we hope in Him to stay
-it.&nbsp; Terrible is the darkness of the sky, powerful is the
-violence of the wind, drenching are the waves, but the ship shall
-not sink, for <span class="smcap">Christ</span> is in it.&nbsp;
-Whatever, then, the terrors and the trouble of the present, we
-have hope, we have confidence in the future.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why art
-thou so cast down O my soul, and why art thou so disquieted
-within me?&nbsp; Hope in <span class="smcap">God</span> for I
-shall yet praise Him, Who is the health of my countenance and my
-<span class="smcap">God</span>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 178</span>Such
-is the teaching of <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-remonstrance.&nbsp; And the time of its utterance, the delay to
-assuage the storm, teaches this further lesson, that in this life
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span> will give us comfort in
-trouble, but not necessarily deliverance out of trouble.&nbsp; By
-and by He will indeed deliver us.&nbsp; But the best blessing
-here is not immunity, but trust and support.&nbsp; There is a
-peace in war, a joy in sorrow, a strength in weakness, with which
-the world and the Devil cannot intermeddle.&nbsp; Seek we this,
-and be sure we are wanting in what <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> delights to afford, if we have it
-not.&nbsp; But having it, bear we patiently, thankfully, all
-outward commotion, faithfully expecting the time, when openly, as
-already inwardly, <span class="smcap">Christ</span> shall arise
-and command &ldquo;Peace be still,&rdquo; and there shall be a
-great and abiding calm.</p>
-<h2><a name="page179"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-179</span>SERMON XII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">UNITY WITH PEACE.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Ephesians</span>, <span class="smcap">iv</span>.,
-1, 2, 3.</p>
-<p><i>I</i>, <i>therefore</i>, <i>the prisoner of the</i> <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, <i>beseech you that ye walk worthy of
-the calling wherewith ye are called</i>, <i>With all lowliness
-and meekness</i>, <i>with longsuffering</i>, <i>forbearing one
-another in love</i>; <i>Endeavouring to keep the unity of the
-Spirit in the bond of peace</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was the prayer of our Blessed
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span>&mdash;what an earnest prayer it
-was, delivered in what solemn and affecting
-circumstances&mdash;that all His disciples might be one, even as
-He and the Father were one.&nbsp; He had laboured to secure this
-oneness, by teaching them that there was the same truth for all
-to receive, and the same work for all to do.&nbsp; Individual
-fancies and theories were not to be indulged, where the whole
-teaching was of <span class="smcap">God</span>; pride was not to
-exercise itself where everything was received, and nothing
-earned; ambition was checked, by being told that, by seeking, it
-<a name="page180"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 180</span>should
-lose, that he who would be first should be last.&nbsp; All were
-equal in position, all equal in privileges.&nbsp; In serving one
-another, in preferring one another&mdash;by this alone could they
-please <span class="smcap">God</span>; in this way only could
-they reach unto eminence.&nbsp; Devoted to a common <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, directed by a common revelation,
-enabled by a common grace, exercised in a common work, cheered by
-a common hope, surrounded with common trials and
-difficulties&mdash;what could there be within, without, past,
-present, or future, which should prevent them from all thinking
-the same thoughts and doing the same works, sinking the
-individual in the company, clinging to one another, labouring
-together, knit together in a holy bond&mdash;&ldquo;One <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, one faith, one baptism, one <span
-class="smcap">God</span> and Father of all, Who is above all, and
-through all, and in all.&rdquo;&nbsp; To think for oneself, what
-was it but to reject <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>
-truth; to act independently, but to forsake their appointed work;
-not to serve and love the brethren, not to serve and love the
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span>; to separate from the Christian
-company, to go away from <span class="smcap">Christ</span>?</p>
-<p>Even if the Spirit had not been given to effect this unity, if
-the Gospel had not enforced it by the plainest denunciation of
-heresies and schisms&mdash;crimes classed by it with the worst
-and lowest, <a name="page181"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-181</span>and most certain to exclude from heaven; even if <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> had never prayed for their union, nor
-taught them that they were to be united, still, if the disciples
-of religion were like the followers of any other cause, it might
-have been expected&mdash;it would have seemed morally impossible
-that it should be otherwise&mdash;that the remembrance and love
-of their Master, the cause which they had taken up, the knowledge
-of the way in which alone it could be furthered, their common
-relationship, and interests, and aims, and hopes, would have kept
-them in one body, would have bound them fast to each other in the
-bonds of peace.&nbsp; And, doubtless, it would have been so, but
-for the influence and machinations of the evil one.&nbsp; There
-could have been no other fruit from such seed, but that the enemy
-sowed tares in the same field.&nbsp; In <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, self had been denied and
-destroyed.&nbsp; His Church was to be the embodiment and
-propagator of self-denial, self-submission, self-devotion.&nbsp;
-Such a Church threatened antichrist with certain destruction: for
-antichrist is the spirit of self&mdash;and selfishness destroyed,
-where would be sin?&nbsp; Therefore, the Devil sought to break up
-or mar and impair the Church; and, to accomplish his object,
-infused into as many of its members as he could, the very spirit
-of self, <a name="page182"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-182</span>which it was commissioned to destroy.&nbsp; Alas! he
-was too successful in his fell work.&nbsp; Soon self began to
-ask, &ldquo;Why should I not choose what to believe&mdash;what to
-do?&nbsp; Why should I not make to myself a name, and claim for
-myself authority, and power, and reverence?&nbsp; Why should I
-not have private views, and seek private ends?&nbsp; Why should I
-suffer, and forbear, and seek another&rsquo;s good, rather than
-my own?&rdquo;&nbsp; The selfish question was father to the
-selfish determination; and so, even in the Apostles&rsquo; time,
-the faith was mutilated here and denied there&mdash;there were
-heresies, and schisms, and strifes, and boastings of spiritual
-gifts, and withholding of temporal substance from <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and indulgence of lusts, and hatings,
-and revengings, and backbitings, and fightings, and denying of
-one another, among those who were all called with one calling,
-enlightened and sanctified by one Spirit, appointed to
-&ldquo;keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of
-peace.&rdquo;&nbsp; And so it has continued to the present
-time.&nbsp; There is no such reasoning, and questioning, and
-quibbling, and deciding for oneself what to believe, about any
-other subject, as about the truth, which <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has plainly taught and has clearly
-defined.&nbsp; There are no other divisions so numerous, so
-lamentable, so strife-begotten, and strife-engendering, <a
-name="page183"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 183</span>as in the
-one body of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; Pride, and
-ambition, and self-seeking, in all its worst forms; evil
-suspicions, revilings, hatred, persecutions, have abounded, and
-do abound, and boldly manifest themselves in that very community
-whence self was to be expelled!&nbsp; Many antichrists are in the
-world, but as many in the Church.&nbsp; The very heathen repel
-our attempts to convert them, by bidding us first agree what to
-believe ourselves.&nbsp; The worst of men say they have a right
-to despise us for our bitter jealousies and disliking of one
-another; and the taunt is common, and has been in some measure
-provoked, that religion is only a mask, a cloak to hide
-men&rsquo;s basest passions and worst deeds.</p>
-<p>It may be urged&mdash;it ought to be urged&mdash;that this is
-not altogether the fault of Christians.&nbsp; It was the will of
-<span class="smcap">God</span> that the goats should be allowed
-to mingle with the sheep, that the tares should not be rooted out
-from among the wheat, that the net should contain small as well
-as great, worthless as well as good fishes.&nbsp; Hence they are
-&ldquo;not all Israel, who are of Israel.&rdquo;&nbsp; And so the
-bad feelings and deeds, the things which are an offence and a
-reproach in Christendom, are to be charged not altogether to
-<span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> true followers, but to
-those who only in name are <a name="page184"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 184</span>Christians&mdash;to the world, in
-fact, intruding into, and mixing itself up with, the Church.</p>
-<p>Yes; this is so.&nbsp; The world has sought and found scope in
-the Church for the wild exercise of its reason, for profane
-speculations, and whimsical fancies; for self-indulgence, too, in
-all its forms; for lusts, and strifes, and false accusations, and
-enmities, and wickedness, of every hue and measure.&nbsp; The
-worst heretics and schismatics, the fiercest persecutors, the
-bitterest accusers of the brethren, are evidently not true
-followers, even in intention, of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>; they are not rebels and traitors,
-&ldquo;they are not of us,&rdquo; they belong to the enemy, and
-have stolen into our camp; and are now mixing themselves with us,
-and confounding, and harassing, and misguiding us, as part of the
-subtle warfare which is being waged by Satan against us.&nbsp;
-But still, alas! we are not clear.&nbsp; Too many who deserve to
-be called something better than nominal Christians, too
-many&mdash;ay, even of the best of us&mdash;make no
-endeavour&mdash;that is worthy of the name&mdash;to keep the
-unity of the Spirit; or, if they strive for unity, forget the
-bond of peace.</p>
-<p>It is very common to find a man who has been at much pains to
-find out for himself the doctrines and requirements of
-Christianity, who heartily <a name="page185"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 185</span>accepts every article of the creed,
-who is scrupulously exact in keeping all the ordinances, who
-would think himself guilty of no ordinary sin, if he frequented
-the place of worship of another sect, or contributed of his
-substance to their cause, who is yet all the while utterly
-indifferent to the fact that almost every article of his creed,
-and every ordinance of his Church, is ignored, and even denounced
-by some one or other of the many bodies of men calling themselves
-Christian communities.&nbsp; He thinks it no business of his to
-defend the faith, or to vindicate the ordinances.&nbsp; Let every
-man look to himself, is his maxim, and leave others alone; or,
-perhaps, if he is momentarily interested in the matter, if a wish
-springs up that it were otherwise, he soothes himself, and spares
-himself further anxiety and labour, by suggesting that Christian
-charity would not interfere with another&rsquo;s liberty.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;These others,&rdquo; he reasons, &ldquo;have a religion,
-and follow it.&nbsp; It is not altogether the same as mine, but
-it is in many respects like it, perhaps in all essentials.&nbsp;
-At any rate, it is better than none; it would be presumptuous to
-suppose that they may not be saved by it.&nbsp; Therefore, if I
-must help in proselytizing any, it shall not be these mainly
-right, but the godless, the followers of no religion!&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 186</span>Now,
-brethren, such a man is utterly in fault: he is incurring the
-Apostle&rsquo;s reproach of being carnal, in allowing divisions;
-he is offending against the very Christian charity which he
-thinks he is exercising; he is unconcerned about the due honour
-of <span class="smcap">God</span>; he is disobeying the
-injunction to endeavour &ldquo;to keep the unity of the
-Spirit.&rdquo;&nbsp; The question is not, whether a man can be
-saved in heresy or schism, but whether any Christian, who honours
-<span class="smcap">God</span> and loves the brethren, ought to
-wink at heresy or schism?&nbsp; And the answer is plain&mdash;he
-ought not!&nbsp; Is <span class="smcap">God</span> honoured, is
-He pleased, when the creature, to whom He reveals Himself, says,
-in effect, Thus much of the Divine account I will accept; the
-rest I do not like, cannot reconcile with my private
-pre-conceived notions, cannot see to be reasonable, therefore, I
-reject it?&nbsp; Is <span class="smcap">God</span> obeyed, when
-His servant, instead of fulfilling His whole will, sets aside
-capriciously, or for some selfish reason, certain positive
-precepts of that will?&nbsp; Is any Christian in a certainly
-accepted and safe state, or in the way to it, who does not use,
-who ignores the need of, prescribed means of cleansing and
-sanctifying?&nbsp; And if he is not, how far is it charitable, to
-let him remain as he is, without concern?&nbsp; My brethren, we
-all recognise it as the <a name="page187"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 187</span>duty of every Christian to promote
-the knowledge and acceptance of the truth.&nbsp; Can we be said
-to discharge this duty, if we care not about the mutilation or
-distortion of the truth?&nbsp; We all acknowledge that we ought
-to love one another, to have fervent charity among
-ourselves.&nbsp; Is it charitable&mdash;is it not culpably
-selfish&mdash;to have, as we believe, the best, if not the only,
-right faith&mdash;and not to be concerned that others have it
-not?&nbsp; Is it not, too, strangely perverse to admit, that
-those in separation are brethren, fellow-pilgrims, fellow-heirs,
-to hope to meet them in heaven, and to think, and feel, and live
-in perfect harmony with them for ever; and yet here not to be
-concerned that we never can give them the right hand of
-fellowship&mdash;cannot journey with them, and help, and make for
-the inheritance together&mdash;can never even meet them in prayer
-and communion&mdash;must let them be as utter strangers?&nbsp; In
-earthly matters none of this would be tolerated, could possibly
-be.&nbsp; Why, then, can it be&mdash;why is it in religion?&nbsp;
-Because we are not jealous enough for the honour of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, because we do not truly love the
-brethren, because we do not endeavour to keep the unity of the
-Spirit!</p>
-<p>But it is possible to err&mdash;there are many who do
-err&mdash;on the other side; who, in their zeal for <a
-name="page188"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 188</span>the faith,
-insist that all shall think and do precisely as they do, or shall
-forego the name of brethren: who have been at no pains to search
-out the ground of their own faith, and see how much of it is
-derived from <span class="smcap">God</span>, and how much from
-man; who make no distinction between important and unimportant
-misconceptions; who class together the wilful teacher of error
-and the misguided learner, the originators of schism and the
-inheritors of it; who blame for their faults those whom they
-should rather pity for their misfortune; who would make the path
-of orthodoxy as narrow as possible, and excommunicate all whom
-they could detect treading on its borders; who not only see
-nothing right beyond their own Church, but are impatient of much
-that is within it; who split the Church up into parties, and
-bring about the worst of schisms&mdash;divisions, misgivings, and
-oppositions, among members of the same household, continuing in
-the same house; who would have undue prominence given to certain
-doctrines; who fight for or against certain ceremonies and
-vestments, and certain kinds of music; who are ever looking for
-something to protest against, to blame, or to pity, in their
-fellow-worshippers or their ministers.&nbsp; These men think that
-they do <span class="smcap">God</span> service (for I speak <a
-name="page189"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 189</span>not now of
-the wilful); they are intent upon serving Him; but it is like
-Saul before his conversion, with an ignorant and persecuting
-zeal.&nbsp; They want to establish and keep, what they think, the
-unity of the Spirit, but they care not for the bond of
-peace.&nbsp; If a member of their own communion does not think as
-they do, they quarrel with him, they bid him go, they would
-thrust him out: while, as for members of other Christian bodies,
-they think worse of them, they speak worse of them, they shun
-them more than they would an infidel or a reprobate!&nbsp; Let
-not this be thought exaggeration; not always, nor very often, let
-us hope, do they come to this growth; but of this kind, alas! too
-nearly of this measure there are not a few among both High
-Churchmen and Low Churchmen; and in this direction works all zeal
-that is not fully enlightened by <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-that is not warmed with love for <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, and love for those whom <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> died to save and win.&nbsp; Zeal is
-good, earnest contention for the faith is imperatively required
-of every Christian, but so is right knowledge and love.&nbsp;
-Right knowledge, I venture to say, while condemning actual heresy
-and schism, would often be content with creeds in general terms,
-and would make much easier, than many strict religionists
-conceive, the terms of communion, <a name="page190"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 190</span>so as to include as many as were
-really desirous of being included; and love, Christian love,
-would sigh and sorrow over differences, and yearn after
-separatists; and would labour, and persuade, and spend, and be
-spent, and wrestle in prayer, to cement, to convert, to bring
-in.&nbsp; O it is <i>self</i> that is so stern and strict in
-defining what is correct theology; it is antichrist in his worst
-mood, that would thrust out or cut off a brother sinner!</p>
-<p>My brethren, understand clearly that you are most solemnly
-bound to accept yourselves, and to urge upon others, the whole
-teaching of <span class="smcap">God</span>, nothing less and
-nothing more; to render yourselves, to persuade others to render,
-precise and perfect obedience.&nbsp; You may not be indifferent
-about others, but you must not be overbearing.&nbsp; You are
-keepers and helpers of the brethren, but you are not judges and
-avengers.&nbsp; It is your duty to honour <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and to maintain His honour; it is your
-mission to persuade others to honour Him also.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> is honoured in unity, in agreement, in
-faith, in union, in practice, and service, and worship.&nbsp; You
-have then to promote this unity; but, as a pre-qualification, you
-must have so entered into the mind of the Spirit, as to
-know&mdash;specially for <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>
-missionary work&mdash;what <a name="page191"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 191</span>liberty is allowed, and to feel,
-after your poor measure, what <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-feels of love for each individual soul.&nbsp; In the prosecution
-of your work, the text directs you&mdash;You are called with one
-calling, the Gentile is included with the Jew; the aim is union,
-not separation, that all may be saved.&nbsp; By all means, save
-whom you can.&nbsp; Be lowly, let not self intrude, where <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> should be put forward; be meek, let
-not self recoil where <span class="smcap">Christ</span> would
-suffer; be patient, enduring, long-suffering, slow to take
-offence, determined not to give offence, bent upon returning good
-for evil, forbearing one another in love, making every allowance
-for wrong training, for natural prejudices, for individual
-infirmities&mdash;ay, and even perversities.&nbsp; Be very
-zealous for the unity of the Spirit; but be sure that you are
-breaking, not promoting, that unity, wherever you sever or
-endanger the bond of peace.&nbsp; Follow this advice&mdash;and I
-do not say you will root out heresy, and heal divisions, but you
-will do much towards it.&nbsp; Argument, and censure, and
-ridicule, and remonstrance, and denunciation, and persecution,
-have been trying, ever since the Christian era, to establish the
-unity of the Spirit, and have rather destroyed it.&nbsp; Try you,
-whether he was not enlightened and sanctified by the Spirit, who
-said, <a name="page192"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-192</span>and acted upon it, &ldquo;that one ounce of love could
-do more than many pounds of controversy.&rdquo;&nbsp; Men may be
-repelled from you, by your orthodoxy, your zeal, your reasoning,
-your stout remonstrance.&nbsp; They will be subdued by your
-forbearance, and will come after you for your love!</p>
-<p>To the best of you, I say, there is some indifference which
-you ought to shake off.&nbsp; To the best of you, I say, get
-farther from bigotry and the spirit of self.</p>
-<h2><a name="page193"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-193</span>SERMON XIII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">THE LAW IN THE GOSPEL.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">St.
-Luke</span>, <span class="smcap">x</span>., 25.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><i>What shall I do to inherit
-eternal life</i>?</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have here the question of a
-Jewish lawyer, who is said, in propounding it, to have tempted
-our <span class="smcap">Lord</span>.&nbsp; This does not
-necessarily, or even probably, mean, that his object was simply
-to ensnare and entangle <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> in his
-speech: but rather that he was putting Him to the test, that he
-might judge of the qualifications and orthodoxy of the New
-Teacher.&nbsp; But, besides this, he seems, from the commendation
-presently passed on him, to have had a better motive; to have
-been like the scribe who was not far from the kingdom of heaven,
-to have felt personal anxiety about salvation, and to have sought
-from our <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, in an honest, though
-somewhat professional and self-sufficient manner, the resolution
-of a real doubt.&nbsp; <a name="page194"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 194</span>&ldquo;What shall I do to inherit
-eternal life?&rdquo;&nbsp; He had listened to the words in which
-<span class="smcap">Jesus</span> reminded His hearers, that they
-had greater privileges than those who lived before them
-(&ldquo;Blessed are the eyes which see the things that ye
-see.&nbsp; For I tell you that many prophets and kings have
-desired to see those things which ye see, and have not seen them,
-and to hear those things which ye hear and have not heard
-them&rdquo;), and rightly concluding that they were an
-announcement of the arrival of Gospel times, and the setting
-forth of their speaker as the Great Gospel Teacher, he asked,
-what was there <i>new</i> for him to hear and learn, and what
-consequently remained for him to do, that he might inherit
-eternal life.&nbsp; The reply of our <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> is remarkable.&nbsp; &ldquo;What is
-written in the law? how readest thou?&rdquo;&nbsp; There is
-nothing new, nothing taken away, nothing added or altered.&nbsp;
-I come, to fulfil the ceremonial law, to enforce the moral law,
-what does that bind upon thee?&nbsp; And he answering said, with
-much wisdom&mdash;much spiritual discernment, &ldquo;Thou shalt
-love the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> thy <span
-class="smcap">God</span> with all thy heart, and with all thy
-soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind: and thy
-neighbour as thyself.&nbsp; And <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>
-said unto him, Thou hast answered right: this do, and thou shalt
-live:&rdquo; <i>i.e.</i>, shalt have <a name="page195"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 195</span>eternal life.&nbsp; Observe,
-throughout this lawyer&rsquo;s speech, how correct is his
-theology.&nbsp; &ldquo;What shall I do to <i>inherit</i> eternal
-life?&rdquo; not to gain, to purchase, to earn it, but to inherit
-it.&nbsp; &ldquo;I do not claim it as a profitable servant, I am
-not so foolish as to suppose that I can procure it by any
-surrender, or exchange, or labour.&nbsp; It comes (to those to
-whom it comes at all) as an inheritance, to the children of the
-covenant, the heirs of faithful Abraham.&nbsp; And this heirship
-is not a natural, but a spiritual one.&nbsp; I am a Jew
-outwardly, but I do not therefore claim to be certainly a Jew
-inwardly.&nbsp; They are not all Israel who are of Israel.&nbsp;
-Abraham&rsquo;s child according to the flesh, I would also be,
-what I am not necessarily, what indeed I am not at all of mere
-natural birthright, Abraham&rsquo;s child according to the
-promise.&rdquo;&nbsp; And next observe, how he seeks to secure
-the inheritance.&nbsp; &ldquo;What shall I
-<i>do</i>?&rdquo;&nbsp; Eternal life is not the reward of
-service, it is not the fruit of labour, it is the privilege of a
-spiritual relationship; but still it cannot be enjoyed by those
-who are indifferent about it, or by those who only desire
-it.&nbsp; It must be laid hold on by real active efforts; it must
-be maintained by a particular course of conduct; salvation must
-be worked out.&nbsp; &ldquo;What must I do&rdquo; to secure
-it?&nbsp; Truly he is an <a name="page196"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 196</span>enlightened scribe!&nbsp; He knows
-that eternal life is the free gift of a <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, Who is no respecter of persons; Who
-recognises no birthright, no personal merits; Who will have mercy
-on Whom He will have mercy: but that yet grace does not fall, as
-the rain from heaven, alike upon the barren and the fertile, the
-thankless and the thankful, the careless and the anxious, the
-indolent and the active; but is ever guided by a discerning and
-distinguishing hand, is ever bestowed upon righteousness.&nbsp;
-And so he asks, What is the righteousness that inherits grace:
-knowing well what was the prescribed righteousness of the law,
-how men were to be saved in times past; but expecting that under
-the Gospel, an additional, perhaps a different course was to be
-followed.</p>
-<p>We have already seen that <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-referred him back to the law, as revealing and enacting all that
-was necessary.&nbsp; &ldquo;What is written in the law?&nbsp; How
-readest thou?&rdquo;&nbsp; It is in his answer to this question
-that we see chiefly the perfection of his religious theory and
-his great intellectual superiority to the scribes
-generally.&nbsp; For, observe, he does not reply &ldquo;We must
-be circumcised; we must be sprinkled with the blood of goats and
-heifers; we must keep the Passover; we must wait on the
-temple-services; we must give tithes <a name="page197"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 197</span>of all that we possess.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Nor, again, does he say, &ldquo;We must observe all moral
-precepts; we must refrain from all idolatry; we must do justice
-and love mercy; obeying implicitly the commandments of the two
-tables.&rdquo;&nbsp; No! in theory he is wiser than that: he has
-no reliance on external rights and ceremonies: he is sure that
-<span class="smcap">God</span> demands something better than a
-servile conformity with certain precepts and restrictions.&nbsp;
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, he knows, looks to the heart,
-requires the spirit rather than, <i>i.e.</i>, beyond the
-letter.&nbsp; The law has taught him this: Moses gave him from
-heaven ceremonies to perform, and moral commandments to keep; but
-Moses told him, that mere outward conformity with these things
-was not righteousness; that the law was spiritual; that the acts
-done and refrained from under it were only exhibitions of a
-principle which must reign within: &ldquo;Thou shalt love the
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span> thy <span
-class="smcap">God</span> with all thy heart and with all thy
-soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind, and thy
-neighbour as thyself.&rdquo;&nbsp; Even so, &ldquo;Thou hast
-answered right,&rdquo; said <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; &ldquo;Thou hast learnt under
-the law, all that the Gospel would teach.&nbsp; To exhibit this
-is the bent of My life on earth, to enforce it will be the
-mission of My Church.&nbsp; Love is the fulfilling of the
-law.&nbsp; This do, and thou shalt live.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page198"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 198</span>It
-appears to me, brethren, that in this conversation, carefully
-considered, we may find a clue to the satisfactory interpretation
-of those perplexing sayings about the differences between the law
-and the Gospel: &ldquo;The letter killeth, but the spirit giveth
-life.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Ye are not under the law,&rdquo;
-&ldquo;the ministration of condemnation;&rdquo; &ldquo;The
-covenant that was confirmed before of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> in <span class="smcap">Christ</span>,
-the law which was 430 years after cannot disannul.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-&ldquo;The Law and the Prophets were until John.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-&ldquo;I am not come to destroy the law.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;This
-do and thou shalt live.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It is a common notion that there is an essential difference,
-amounting even to a contradiction between the law and the
-Gospel.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span> is supposed&mdash;as
-if He were an imperfect Being changing His ways
-capriciously&mdash;to have suspended the Covenant of Grace which
-He had made with Abraham, from the time of Moses to that of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, and to have given the Jews in its
-stead a Covenant of Works, which He well knew they could not
-keep, and under which, therefore, they were sure to be destroyed:
-or, if He accepted any of them under the law, then, it is said,
-that inasmuch as their obedience was of course imperfect, He must
-have been content with less than He had required, and have
-disregarded His own <a name="page199"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 199</span>decree, &ldquo;The soul that sinneth
-it shall die.&rdquo;&nbsp; Nay, more than this: that He dispensed
-for a time with the merits of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> atonement and the finding of
-salvation through Him, and dealt with man on his own merits, and
-rewarded him for an imperfect obedience.&nbsp; But now, it is
-urged, all this is once more changed.&nbsp; The law, having
-served its purpose of showing men that they could not obey <span
-class="smcap">God</span> in the letter, having concluded them all
-under sin by disallowing the things they were prone to, and
-requiring what they could not do, having disappointed and balked
-them in their efforts to obtain salvation by it, and so caused
-them to abandon its observance in despair, and to inquire for
-another way of salvation&mdash;thus being a schoolmaster to lead
-them to <span class="smcap">Christ</span>&mdash;has now been
-wholly repealed; so that we have nothing more to do with it,
-being brought out of bondage into liberty, and what we find
-forbidden or required by it, is not forbidden or required by us
-<i>because it is in the law</i>, but may be done or left undone,
-notwithstanding what the law says, unless some eternally moral
-principle, independent of Jewish sanctions and restrictions,
-would be thereby violated!&nbsp; I have put this in plainer and
-stronger words than any of yourselves probably would use, or are
-accustomed to hear: but I have not exaggerated <a
-name="page200"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 200</span>the
-matter.&nbsp; In proof, let me ask, Are there not many who think
-the rehearsal of the Decalogue out of place in the Communion
-service? who object to moral preaching as savouring of the
-obsolete law? who talk about the &ldquo;filthy rags&rdquo; of
-their own righteousness, as if they were something wrong in
-keeping in the law? who believe that <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> is glorified most when they do least?
-who boast of a liberty to use or use not ordinances and means of
-grace? who reproach others with being, for instance,
-Sabbatarians? who speak of the <span class="smcap">God</span> of
-the New Testament almost as if the <span class="smcap">God</span>
-of the Old Testament were another Being, of different attributes,
-enacting different laws?&nbsp; And even among those who have not
-distinctly set the law and the Gospel in opposition, is there not
-a vague notion that somehow the Old Testament does not concern us
-Christians, and that our way of salvation is different from that
-of the Jews, and much easier to follow?&nbsp; O how do such
-persons reconcile with their notions <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> teaching of the lawyer, whom
-He not only told to look for the way of salvation in the law, but
-commended for finding it there, and enjoined to keep it as the
-condition of salvation: &ldquo;This do, and thou shalt
-live.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The fact is, the way of salvation has always <a
-name="page201"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 201</span>been the
-same, since man became a sinner.&nbsp; Eternal life has always
-been a free gift in <span class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; Not
-for their merits or deservings does <span
-class="smcap">God</span> love men; not by their own inventions or
-labours do they procure acceptance.&nbsp; The precious blood of
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span> shed (in effect) before the
-foundation of the world, has ever been the fountain for sin; the
-intercession of <span class="smcap">Christ</span> has ever been
-the means of reconciliation; the grace of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> sanctified human nature
-applied by the Holy Spirit has ever been the leaven of
-regeneration, of conversion, of perfection in holiness and
-fitness for the inheritance of the saints in light.&nbsp; But
-<span class="smcap">God</span> has never been indifferent to the
-way in which men receive His free gifts.&nbsp; He at first
-created man for His own glory, and He has redeemed, and would
-sanctify him for His glory.&nbsp; He made man to love Him, to
-depend on Him, to render Him the grateful homage of a free-will
-service, to reflect His own glorious attributes of holiness and
-love.&nbsp; The sin of Adam and Eve was not that they ate of a
-particular fruit reserved from them, but that they frustrated the
-end for which they were created; that they found not their
-delight in the way of <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>
-will; that they chose for themselves out of Him; that they
-doubted His truth, gave themselves over to the influence and
-dominion <a name="page202"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-202</span>of another lord.&nbsp; They would have sinned as
-greatly, as hatefully, had they scrupulously refrained from the
-deed of sin, but in their hearts longed after it, and in their
-hearts murmured against the restriction, and disputed the
-importance or the justice of it.&nbsp; And so the holiness of
-pardoned man does not consist in the mere mechanical, servile, or
-selfish rendering of outward obedience, in the number of enjoined
-things which he does, and the number of forbidden things which he
-avoids; but in the inward love and gratitude which he feels
-towards <span class="smcap">God</span>, in his filial reverence
-of his Heavenly Father, in his delight to carry out <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> known will, and his anxiety to
-learn more, that he may do more of it, in his heart&rsquo;s
-beating, so to speak, in unison with <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> heart, and his life&rsquo;s
-reflecting <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> light and
-love.</p>
-<p>To bring men to this state, that He may delight in them, that
-they may glorify Him in all things, is the purpose and aim of
-<span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> great scheme of salvation;
-and, to forward that scheme, is, and has been, the object of all
-His dealings with men of all times (when they have not been
-judgments of wrath, because mercy was refused), whether they have
-been encouragements or remonstrances, pleadings or rebukes,
-blessings or chastisements, the promulgations of moral laws, the
-laying on or <a name="page203"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-203</span>taking off of positive or ceremonial
-commandments.&nbsp; None of these things could in themselves have
-made men what <span class="smcap">God</span> willed them to be,
-loving children of a loving Father; yet they had, or were
-designed to have, their effect in bringing them back little by
-little to a right mind, and a right life.&nbsp; But being used by
-a wise and discerning <span class="smcap">God</span>, though
-their object was always uniform, the use of them has varied, one
-being employed in this case, another in that, according to the
-state of those on whom they were to operate.&nbsp; Thus Adam,
-fresh from the hand of <span class="smcap">God</span>, full of
-knowledge and intelligence, and holiness and love, was left, it
-would appear&mdash;but with one commandment, the test of his
-integrity&mdash;to worship and glorify <span
-class="smcap">God</span> as his own heart and mind dictated;
-while the Jews, coming out of Egypt, sunk in ignorance, given to
-idolatry, perverse in will and affections, were dealt with as
-babes, albut without mind and without heart.&nbsp; To them it was
-necessary to declare, that there was but one <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, to command them to worship Him, to
-prescribe every particular of the worship, to bid them not
-blaspheme Him, to hedge them in by numerous restrictions, to
-write down every item of their duty, to encourage their obedience
-by immediate rewards, to check their transgressions by instant <a
-name="page204"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-204</span>punishments!&nbsp; They were treated, in fact, just as
-wise and fond parents treat little children: their minds taught
-by pictures&mdash;brazen serpents, pillars of light and fire,
-gorgeous tabernacles, sacrifices of bulls, and goats, and lambs,
-burnings of incense, and the like&mdash;and their hearts and
-lives trained by a course of discipline suited to their
-comprehension, and a system of rewards and punishments which they
-could appreciate.&nbsp; These things were means to an end.&nbsp;
-They impressed upon the Jews, that reverence and obedience were
-due to <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; They taught them to
-look to Him for reward and punishment, to love and fear
-Him.&nbsp; But like the arbitrary discipline we use with
-children, and the toys which we give or take away from them
-according to their conduct, they were to be set aside (as far as
-they were childish) so soon as more intelligent and better
-influences could be employed, and the children be taught to use
-their minds and hearts, in exercising reverence, and love, and
-fear, not in little observances and restrictions, not in mere
-literal compliance with some particular expressed laws, but
-according to the principle of love which would devote itself
-entirely, and which uses all its powers to find out what is
-devotion, and to practice it.</p>
-<p>Thus, I say, the Jews were dealt with from <a
-name="page205"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 205</span>Moses to
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span>, and then men were bidden to
-put away childish things&mdash;the Spirit being given to raise
-them above childishness&mdash;and henceforth to render enlarged,
-enlightened, loving service to <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; They were not released from
-reverence and submission: very few commandments hitherto observed
-were repealed, save those that were typical and ceremonial, and
-which, of course, gave way to the antitype and to the new ritual
-of Christianity; but henceforth, they were told, <span
-class="smcap">God</span> would not be pleased with mere literal
-obedience: Do what you did before, but do it in the spirit, and
-carry it farther, and search about to see whether your own hearts
-and minds cannot regulate your lives in things not
-prescribed.</p>
-<p>Indeed, all this had been told them before, as the quotation
-of the lawyer from Deuteronomy alone would suffice to show; but
-it was not so strictly required of them as it is of us, because
-allowance was made for their childish want of spiritual
-comprehension, and because the perfection of obedience was
-postponed till the full strength was given to render it, as well
-as the enlightened mind to understand it.</p>
-<p>In Gospel times the law is spiritualised, the observance of
-the commandments is extended beyond the outward life, to the very
-thoughts and <a name="page206"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-206</span>desires.&nbsp; To covet is to steal, to lust is to
-commit adultery, to hate is to murder!&nbsp; Hence, while in one
-sense, our obedience is easier, because we render it under the
-influence of enlightened minds and kindled feelings, of love and
-gratitude&mdash;whereas, the Jew was perpetually crossing and
-driving himself to keep a law which had no other recommendation
-to him than that its observance preserved him from immediate
-chastisement&mdash;in other respects, our obedience is not only
-more imperatively necessary, because our privileges and
-responsibilities are greater, but it must be more precise,
-because any wilful deviation from it&mdash;in us who are of a
-mature and enlightened age&mdash;will surely indicate an unloving
-heart; and he that has no love has no spiritual life!</p>
-<p>This, after all, is the distinction between the good works of
-the Jew and those of the Christian; not that the former sought
-salvation on account of them, while the latter makes them but the
-tribute of praise and love for salvation&mdash;for the Jew
-believed that he was saved by ordinances, not by works&mdash;but
-that the Jew&rsquo;s was the enforced obedience of slavish fear,
-while the Christian&rsquo;s is the spontaneous expression of
-filial love.&nbsp; If the Christian were perfect in moral
-perception, he would be a law to himself, and would need but <a
-name="page207"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 207</span>little of a
-written law; but not being thus perfect, he finds his greatest
-help to glorify <span class="smcap">God</span>, in the studying
-and following of the Mosaic laws, which are samples and specimens
-furnished by <span class="smcap">God</span>, of acceptable works,
-and which, moreover, are a standard whereby he may measure, not
-so much how near, as how far he is, from doing the whole will of
-<span class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<p>This purpose, then, the law serves to Christians: it points
-out the ways in which love should exercise itself; and so, by
-confronting the negligent or transgressing, proves to them the
-absence or the imperfection of their love.&nbsp; The Christian is
-not free from the observance of one jot or one tittle of it,
-though he is no longer under the law, but under grace; but even
-if he has kept it all, he is not necessarily accepted: he has not
-rendered service pleasing to <span class="smcap">God</span>, if
-his will is not better than his power, his heart larger than his
-deeds!&nbsp; This the lawyer knew theoretically; and yet, against
-his knowledge, he sinned.&nbsp; When asked what the law required
-him to do, he answered rightly, that the law required, above and
-beyond particular deeds, an impelling principle of love for <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and, for His sake, for man also.&nbsp;
-But then, when his answer was commended, we are told that he,
-willing to justify himself (which <a name="page208"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 208</span>means, either to excuse himself for
-past imperfection, or to attain presently unto the condition of
-the just, without becoming all that was required of him)
-demanded, &ldquo;And who is my neighbour?&rdquo; showing thereby,
-how much his heart was behind his mind; betraying the fact, that
-while he professed entire devotion to <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, he was really trying to find out with
-how stinted and formal an obedience, he could win and keep his
-favour.</p>
-<p>In review of this history, let me suggest to you, in very few
-words, some important truths.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What shall I do to inherit eternal life?&rdquo; is a
-momentous question for each of you to ask of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, through His revealed word.&nbsp; For
-the inheritance never shall be yours, unless you observe the
-conditions upon which it was promised; and one of those
-conditions (a most important one), is, that you should pursue
-constantly a course of righteousness, both to glorify <span
-class="smcap">God</span> by prescribed service, and to acquire by
-spiritual exercise the necessary character for heaven, without
-which none can enter it.</p>
-<p>To do righteousness&mdash;not simply to feel, or think, or
-speak righteously&mdash;is what is plainly enjoined upon
-you.&nbsp; Still, you must remember that you are not to propose
-to yourselves, as the approved course, the observance only of
-particular <a name="page209"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-209</span>laws, the confining of religion to special times, and
-places, and objects, and deeds; the mere walking in a clearly
-marked out path, as though hands, and feet, and ears, and lips,
-without heart or mind, could work out salvation; as though, too,
-it were not practicable or desirable, that you should offer unto
-<span class="smcap">God</span> any free-will service, something
-besides what He has asked you to do!&nbsp; Above all, having come
-to understand, that while the fruit of religion is in the life,
-the germ of it is in the heart; that without faith, and hope, and
-love, it is impossible to please <span class="smcap">God</span>;
-that the law to you is spiritualised; that you are brought out of
-the bondage of servants into the glorious liberty of sons; that
-not the mere letter of the law, but the spirit of it is to be
-your guide; that outward deeds are not of themselves acceptable
-to <span class="smcap">God</span>, but only as signs of
-enlightened hearty feeling&mdash;things done in faith and love;
-that worship in the temple is nothing, unless you worship out of
-the temple likewise; that bowing the knee, and praising with the
-lips, are an abomination, unless the spirit, too, is bowed and
-the soul upraised; that bodily sacrifice alone is no sacrifice,
-that it needs the broken and contrite heart, and the devoted
-spirit&mdash;while understanding, I say, all this, and rejoicing
-in the <a name="page210"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-210</span>reasonable, heart-sprung, spiritual service of the
-Christian, beware lest you separate what <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has joined, or substitute free-will for
-commanded service, using your liberty otherwise than as servants
-of <span class="smcap">God</span>; carrying out, as you suppose,
-the spirit of the law wholly in your own way, instead of keeping,
-while you spiritualise the letter of the law.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
-time is come when, neither in Jerusalem nor in this mountain,
-shall ye worship the Father,&rdquo; does not mean that appointed
-places of worship shall not be resorted to, but that, besides,
-<span class="smcap">God</span> shall be worshipped
-everywhere.&nbsp; A yearly celebration of the Passover is no
-longer necessary; but a continual feast is substituted for
-it.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span> seeks now to be
-worshipped in spirit and truth&mdash;that is, not without the
-body, but in addition to the body, with the spirit.&nbsp; The
-letter by itself killeth, because it is formal, and leaves the
-noblest powers and feelings of man unengaged for <span
-class="smcap">God</span>; but the letter, as the carrying out of
-the Spirit, is still so imperative, so vital, that he who does
-not observe it foregoes the promise, &ldquo;This do, and thou
-shalt live!&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page211"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-211</span>SERMON XIV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PRESENT SALVATION.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">II. <span
-class="smcap">Corinthians</span>, <span class="smcap">vi</span>.,
-2.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><i>Behold</i>, <i>now is the day of
-salvation</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">St. Paul</span>, having just quoted a
-prophecy of Isaiah, which relates to an accepted time and a day
-of salvation, in the text declares the fulfilment of that
-prophecy: &ldquo;Now is the accepted time; now is the day of
-salvation.&rdquo;&nbsp; That which was then promised, is now
-performed; that which was formerly but anticipated, and only
-embraced by faith, while yet afar off, is now realised and
-brought near.&nbsp; But the prophecy itself was mentioned by the
-Apostle, to enforce an entreaty, &ldquo;We then as workers
-together with Him, beseech you also that ye receive not the grace
-of <span class="smcap">God</span> in vain.&nbsp; For He saith, I
-have heard thee in a time accepted, and in the day of salvation
-have I succoured thee.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is evident, then, that <a
-name="page212"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 212</span>St. Paul
-would impress upon the Corinthians that men are in danger of
-receiving the grace of <span class="smcap">God</span> in vain, of
-not benefitting by all the merciful and bountiful provision made
-through <span class="smcap">Christ</span> for their redemption,
-and justification, and sanctification, by not recognising that
-this is the day of salvation, and so, not looking and preparing
-for, and receiving a present salvation.</p>
-<p>Salvation is, as you know, the result&mdash;possible in all
-cases; certain, wherever the conditions are observed&mdash;of
-redemption by <span class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; In its
-perfection, it is absolute freedom from the guilt, the taint, and
-the power of sin, and complete, effectual, and abiding holiness
-of heart and life.&nbsp; It belongs not to our proposed subject
-to consider at any length the destruction from which this is a
-salvation, nor the manner in which it was wrought out for lost
-sinners by <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, nor the blessedness
-of its perfect possession and fruition, which can only be had in
-heaven.&nbsp; We have rather to do with what is present, than
-with the past and the future.&nbsp; We inquire not now, What has
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span> done, or, What shall we reach
-by and by, but, What ought we to do now?&nbsp; What have we, or
-may we have now?&nbsp; In what respects, to what extent, is
-salvation a thing of the present?</p>
-<p>First, then, it is present in the offer to bestow <a
-name="page213"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 213</span>it, and the
-exhortations and influences to lay hold on it.&nbsp; When <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> rose victorious from the tomb, having
-paid the ransom for all the prisoners of the law, and purchased
-the right and power of being their Saviour, He did not
-immediately make all the men of His time actual partakers of the
-privileges, nor did He provide that all who should thereafter be
-born, should from their birth inherit the blessing, as from Adam
-they had inherited the curse.&nbsp; No man might say,
-&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Christ</span> has died and risen
-again, therefore, I am certainly saved, without any reserve or
-delay on His part, without any effort, almost without any desire,
-on my part.&rdquo;&nbsp; Salvation was then provided; rather, the
-fountain was then opened, and began to flow; but each man in his
-turn, at the call of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and in the
-way of <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> appointment, was,
-so to speak, to help himself to salvation.&nbsp; In other words,
-what <span class="smcap">Christ</span> did, was not to take all
-who were then living into an ark, and to cause all that sprung
-from them to be born and brought up in that ark; but simply to
-build an ark, and leave it open for all ages, and to offer helps
-to reach it, and to urge an entrance into it upon all men, by the
-entreaties and promises of His love, and the threats of His
-wrath.</p>
-<p>We want to be impressed with this.&nbsp; We are <a
-name="page214"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 214</span>too apt to
-look upon salvation as an accomplished fact, belonging to the
-past; to speak of the blessedness of being born after the
-atonement has been made; to take for granted that we are actually
-saved, rather than that we have a present offer of salvation; and
-even to regard the ordinances of religion, as Baptism and Holy
-Communion, more as ceremonies of thankful faith, acknowledgments
-of obligation for past favours, than as means of laying hold on a
-now offered, and, as yet, unattained blessing.</p>
-<p>Think a moment, brethren: look into your ways and thoughts
-about religion, and you will, perhaps, find that it is so with
-you; that, whatever may be your theory, your practice does not
-assent to the truth, that &ldquo;Now is the day of
-salvation&rdquo;; that you have now to be saved, yet to be washed
-from sin, to have its power destroyed in you, to be qualified for
-salvation, to lay hold on it, to work it out with fear and
-trembling, as that which, though commenced, is not certain to be
-completed&mdash;which, even when got, may again be lost.&nbsp; It
-may occur to you, as an objection to this statement, that you use
-means of grace, and somewhat diligently; that you exercise
-yourselves in prayer, and by Christian discipline; that you
-depend continually upon the ever-present grace of <a
-name="page215"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 215</span><span
-class="smcap">God</span>; that you count not yourselves to have
-attained; that you seek to go on unto perfection.&nbsp; All this
-may be true, and yet&mdash;I beseech you ask yourselves whether
-it is not so with you&mdash;the latent feeling may be, that
-salvation is a thing inherited, already, in a measure, attained;
-and that what religion requires of you, and what you render, is
-gratitude to the Giver, and a due appreciation of the gift,
-sought to be testified and developed by a becoming life, and an
-enlarging of the spiritual faculties, which by and by will have
-so much more to exercise themselves upon.</p>
-<p>But, secondly, is not this, it may be urged, a right view and
-feeling?&nbsp; Is not this what the ministers of religion should
-labour to impress upon the baptized: that they have received
-salvation&mdash;the grace of <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-which bringeth salvation?&nbsp; Are we not taught by the Church,
-and by the Bible, that in baptism we were born again, that we
-then became children of <span class="smcap">God</span>&mdash;and
-if children, then heirs, joint heirs with <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>; that we are, therefore, from that
-new birth as actually the inheritors of a blessing, as naturally
-we were inheritors of a curse; and that, thenceforth, it is
-proper for us to say, &ldquo;I heartily thank my Heavenly Father
-that he hath called me to this state of salvation through <span
-class="smcap">Jesus Christ</span>&rdquo;?&nbsp; It is even <a
-name="page216"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 216</span>so,
-brethren.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now is the day of salvation,&rdquo; may
-mean to us Christians, &ldquo;now we <i>have</i>
-salvation,&rdquo; rather than &ldquo;now it is only offered to
-us.&rdquo;&nbsp; It may be intended to stir us up to a
-consideration of our high calling, to an appreciation of the
-great gift already bestowed, to a remembrance of what <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has already done for us, to a sense of
-His abiding presence.&nbsp; There is no doubt&mdash;whether this
-text teaches it or no is another question&mdash;that the
-disciples of <span class="smcap">Christ</span> have a present
-possession, as well as a present offer of salvation; and what I
-meant in the first part, was not to hide this truth, but to guard
-against the error, to correct whatever amount you might have of
-the feeling, that we have already a final gift, so complete that
-nothing can be added to it, so altogether of the past, that we
-can do nothing in the present, but acknowledge the goodness of
-<span class="smcap">God</span> in bestowing it, and wait on Him
-patiently and holily till He is pleased to reveal to us the full
-excellencies of the gift, and to enable us to enjoy them in the
-eternal heaven.&nbsp; Above all, I meant to protest against, to
-awaken from the fearful delusion, that <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> has conferred absolutely on mankind,
-or upon any chosen number&mdash;the elect&mdash;the salvation
-which, by His precious merits, He procured; that it is ours
-independently <a name="page217"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-217</span>of means of grace, without closing with present offers
-of it, and making present exertions, and showing present
-appreciation of it; that it can be ours at all, without earnest
-seeking and praying for it, and strivings, and workings, and
-self-denials, and crucifyings of evil, and growth in grace, and
-perseverance unto the end.&nbsp; &ldquo;By grace are ye saved,
-and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Work out your own
-salvation, each individual of you; make that your own which was
-once procured for all that would have it; work out your own
-salvation with fear and trembling.&nbsp; Your salvation (I speak
-to the baptized) is <i>begun</i>, you have <i>present</i>
-salvation&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, you are in the way which leads to
-salvation.&nbsp; You have guaranteed to you, on conditions, the
-helps necessary to attain perfect salvation.&nbsp; You may
-derive, and should be deriving, present benefits from your
-salvation, and you should experience present joy in it.</p>
-<p>You have, I say, present salvation.&nbsp; You have been made
-members of that One Body, which was sanctified, and which is able
-to sanctify all other bodies that are joined to it: you are
-branches of that glorious tree, whose sap, pervading every
-healthy branch, gives it present strength and develops its
-beautiful growth, and by and by will <a name="page218"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 218</span>produce the fruit of everlasting
-life.&nbsp; You have the life of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> kindled in your souls.&nbsp; Your
-bodies are the temple of the Holy Ghost.&nbsp; Now is the day of
-salvation, and <i>present</i> salvation, too; not merely past
-salvation applied, not that you are washed in a lake whose waters
-<i>once</i> flowed from a glorious Fountain; not that you partake
-of a store of sanctification, long ago laid up; but that now each
-individual of you is operated upon by a present influence,
-deriving directly from the source, the water of life, having
-sanctification produced in you by the now-working and influencing
-Spirit.&nbsp; Creatures of the present, there is a present
-salvation for you; and that does not mean merely that you have
-for yourselves to seek and lay hold of a ready salvation, but
-that a merciful and grace-giving <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-a loving Saviour, an indwelling Spirit, are present with you, and
-personally operating upon you for your salvation.</p>
-<p>Dear brethren, try to understand and feel this.&nbsp; Do not
-suppose that <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> gifts are in
-any way separated from the Giver by time or by distance.&nbsp;
-Once for all, He resolved to give, but severally as each needs
-and rightly seeks, He gives; and when He gives, it is not by
-messengers, through long mediums, <i>but out of His own
-hand</i>.&nbsp; The bread which we break and the cup which we
-bless, <a name="page219"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-219</span>are the communion of the Body and Blood of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; The bread is not the Body, nor
-the wine the Blood, nor is the reception of them the way of
-applying to us any stored up blessings; but when we keep the
-ordinance which <span class="smcap">Christ</span> has appointed,
-then He fulfils His promise of blessing us, and, with the sign,
-Himself the reality enters into our souls.</p>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">There present in the
-heart,<br />
-Not in the hands, th&rsquo; eternal Priest<br />
-Will His true self impart.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>And so of all other ordinances.&nbsp; They are nothing, and
-give nothing of themselves.&nbsp; Their whole value&mdash;but
-what an unspeakable value it is&mdash;consists in their being
-appointed ways of bringing us into direct communication with a
-present <span class="smcap">God</span>, our Father, our Saviour,
-our Sanctifier!</p>
-<p>But there is another view to take of present
-salvation&mdash;namely, that from its very nature, it cannot be
-received at any one time in perfection, in such a state as to
-need no care to preserve it, no sustentation and renewal, no
-constant direction and blessing from the Author, and Regulator,
-and Finisher of it.&nbsp; It is spiritual life.&nbsp; Who does
-not know to what hazards life may be exposed, and how, from its
-very nature, it requires to be fed with proper food, and kept in
-health, and exercised, <a name="page220"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 220</span>and developed?&nbsp; It is a
-spiritual sap.&nbsp; And what a mockery of life and support to
-the branch, would be one single, separated, unrenewed imparting
-from the vine, of the sap, which indeed ceases to be sap when the
-flow from the trunk is interrupted!&nbsp; The work of salvation
-is <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> work, begun by Him,
-continued by Him, and to be completed by Him&mdash;therefore, it
-must have His continued personal superintendence.&nbsp; He must
-work in us to will and to do of His good pleasure.</p>
-<p>Thus is salvation <i>present</i> as distinguished from the
-<i>past</i>.</p>
-<p>But in another sense it is now the day of salvation.&nbsp; We
-have not to expect it as a thing wholly future, we must not delay
-to close with it as though there were a better time and way of
-doing that to be afforded hereafter.&nbsp; Salvation is present
-in its rewards and effects.</p>
-<p>This, again, is a truth we need to be impressed with.&nbsp; We
-are wont to look too much to the future, to <i>hope</i> to be
-with <span class="smcap">God</span> hereafter, to <i>long</i> for
-salvation, to sigh for the season of sanctification.&nbsp; By and
-by we shall be comforted.&nbsp; By and by we shall be
-strengthened.&nbsp; By and by we shall be holy and happy!&nbsp;
-Thus it is that we only expect salvation, that we persuade
-ourselves that <a name="page221"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-221</span>we are not to receive anything here by way of real
-spiritual joy and blessing, and that we are not required to reach
-any high degree of spiritual excellence here!&nbsp; But,
-brethren, how unreasonable is this persuasion.&nbsp; To believe
-that <span class="smcap">God</span> is present with us and
-operating upon us, and pouring out His benefits upon us all our
-lives, and yet that we are none the better, that we do not derive
-any blessedness from Him: or, again, to believe that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has given us spiritual life, that He
-imparts to us, and constantly superintends, the grace which
-justifies and sanctifies; and yet that we can, or at least need
-make no use of this grace, not grow in it, not become purer, and
-holier, that it is ineffectual, that we may consent to its being
-ineffectual till life is over&mdash;O is not such a persuasion
-unreasonable, are we not ashamed of it?&nbsp; Imagine a mother
-not feeding or taking care of her infant, and yet counting on its
-thriving! or, fondly and diligently tending, taking care of her
-infant, and continuing to do so year after year, yet perfectly
-satisfied though it gained no strength, did not grow, nor walk,
-nor speak, nor show the slightest sign of getting out of
-babyhood!&nbsp; Imagine, I say, satisfaction with such a state,
-and hope all the while, yea, conviction, that presently, when the
-usual number of years were <a name="page222"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 222</span>over the child would somehow be a
-man!&nbsp; Or, imagine the husbandman expecting a harvest without
-sowing, or ploughing; or planting his field diligently, and
-rejoicing in refreshing rains, and ripening suns, yet not
-disappointed if the ear did not ripen, or even if the blade did
-not spring up; not concerned about it, not expecting it, sure of
-harvest at the usual time, even if that usual time should be next
-week, and there were yet no sign of a crop!&nbsp; Imagine this!
-you say.&nbsp; Such imagination is idle; it is a mockery of
-common sense to suppose such a thing possible.&nbsp; Well, then,
-my brethren, what is to be said of the spiritual nurses of the
-new life of <span class="smcap">God</span> in the soul, of the
-spiritual husbandman of the seed of grace in the heart, who do
-nothing towards, or who expect nothing of present
-salvation?&nbsp; Brethren, <span class="GutSmall">NOW</span> is
-the day of salvation, the day in which salvation is offered, in
-which it is actually conferred, in which it should be working and
-growing, yea, and bestowing its joy and peace.&nbsp; If in aught
-of this it fails, be sure there is some fault in
-yourselves&mdash;it is not that grace is of itself unreal, or
-unproductive, but that you receive it in vain, that you do not
-sufficiently heed and reverence it, that you do not sufficiently
-guard it, and sustain and refresh it, that you do not
-sufficiently use it.</p>
-<p><a name="page223"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 223</span>There
-ought to be in every baptized Christian, a gradual, steady, and
-even perceptible Christian progress.&nbsp; Our salvation ought to
-be ever nearer and nearer than when we believed, not only in the
-expectation of our complete adoption and removal to glory, but in
-our fitness for glory, and desire and hope of it.&nbsp; If we
-have the same evil tendencies, are as easily overcome by the same
-temptations, have the same dislike or imperfect taste for
-spiritual occupations, the same poor appreciation of religious
-privileges and hopes as we had a year, a month, a week ago, then
-assuredly our salvation stagnates, we are not using what <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has given us, we are not yielding to, we
-are resisting His living influence!&nbsp; Grace, my brethren, is
-an useless gift, if it is to effect nothing: a time of probation
-is an idle space, if there is no trial.&nbsp; Faith is little
-entitled to be called &ldquo;the substance of things hoped for,
-the evidence of things not seen,&rdquo; if it produces no
-spiritual conviction: and as for hope&mdash;what kind of anchor
-is it to the soul, if it is ever shifting, if it grasps
-nothing?</p>
-<p>If any man is in <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, he is a
-new creature, that is, he is becoming a new creature, with new
-life, and powers, and energies, and tastes, and aims, and
-hopes.&nbsp; He will grow in grace if he <a
-name="page224"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 224</span>has rightly
-received it, and in the knowledge and love of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; He will manifestly (at least
-to himself manifestly) be putting off the old man with his
-affections and lusts, and putting on the new man, which after
-<span class="smcap">God</span> is created in righteousness and
-true holiness.&nbsp; He will endure trials more and more
-patiently, as seeing more clearly Him who is invisible.&nbsp; He
-will resist temptations more easily, and do good more
-consistently and gladly, and be more pained and more penitent
-after every sin.&nbsp; He will have a growing love of searching
-<span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> word, and speaking to Him
-in prayer and praise, and receiving Him in Holy Communion.&nbsp;
-He will gradually be raised above the world, and will soar higher
-in imagination and affection and hope towards heaven.&nbsp; Each
-day will have witnessed some advance&mdash;or some more than
-recovery if there has been a relapse.&nbsp; And when the night
-cometh, the end of the day of attaining salvation, he will want
-but little to complete his resemblance to <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, his pattern, and to perfect his
-salvation.</p>
-<p>If, then, brethren, you would obtain an answer to the
-momentous question, Whether you shall be saved, whether there is
-a good hope that you are in the way of salvation, I would bid you
-not so much look back to your Baptism and Confirmation, <a
-name="page225"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 225</span>and count
-the number of your attendances on Holy Communion, of the sermons
-you have heard, the prayers and praises you have
-offered&mdash;though these are all great things&mdash;but rather,
-I would say, ascertain whether you have present salvation, for
-the future depends on the present; and to ascertain this, examine
-well whether you are putting off the old man and putting on the
-new, as I have just described.&nbsp; As another test&mdash;and a
-very great help in godliness, to which there is no equal in
-feelings and exercises&mdash;inquire into your hope of future
-salvation (by which I do not mean only your expectation, but also
-your eager desire), and into your joy for present salvation.</p>
-<p>If religion is a reality, it is a great reality.&nbsp; Its
-immediate blessings are so precious, and its prospects so
-transcendently glorious, that the man who is not filled with joy
-and desire on their account, has no part or lot in them, or is
-strangely culpably ignorant of his privileges and his
-hopes.&nbsp; No wonder that he easily yields to sin, that he
-finds spiritual employments wearisome, that he makes no progress
-in salvation.&nbsp; If <span class="smcap">God</span> touches him
-and he feels not, if heaven has come down to him and he knows it
-not, if glory is revealed to him, and he does not burn for it, if
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span> has put him in the ark and he
-is not comforted by the <a name="page226"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 226</span>immediate deliverance and counting
-on the perfect salvation&mdash;then, surely, he has received the
-grace of <span class="smcap">God</span> to little sanctifying,
-and so to little saving purpose!</p>
-<p>O let him beseech <span class="smcap">God</span> earnestly and
-perseveringly to give him spiritual sight and feeling, to fill
-him with joy and peace in believing, to make him rejoice, not
-only for what he has, but for what he expects of salvation;
-working, like St. Paul, in view of the crown laid up, confident
-that, whether absent or present, he is accepted by <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, knowing that to depart is to be with
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span>.</p>
-<p>But, lastly, let him guard and pray against mistaking
-<i>present</i> for perfect salvation, the road and discipline and
-growth for heaven, for heaven itself.&nbsp; The possession which
-he has, precious as it is, is not a perfect one; and, moreover,
-he may lose it.&nbsp; Remember Paul&rsquo;s care, lest he should
-be a castaway, his caution to take heed lest we fall, his fearful
-sayings about forfeited grace.&nbsp; O brethren, seek as the best
-immediate blessing and the best stimulus to godliness, an
-assurance of hope in perfect salvation.&nbsp; But be sure that it
-is founded upon the reception and right use and evident growth of
-grace, upon present salvation; and, withal, be not high-minded,
-but fear.&nbsp; You know your own frailties, the influences of
-the <a name="page227"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-227</span>world, the subtlety and tremendous power of
-Satan&rsquo;s temptations.&nbsp; Any of these is sufficient to
-make you wander out of the right way, or stand still, or turn
-back, or to cause you to faint in your spiritual course, and even
-to threaten the destruction of your spiritual life.&nbsp; You are
-sure of <span class="smcap">God</span>, of His favour, of His
-upholding, of His preserving you unto the day of perfect
-redemption; but you are not sure of your observance of the
-conditions on which only you may count on Him.&nbsp; And if you
-disregard these conditions, then are you plainly taught, by
-precept and example, that a neglected <span
-class="smcap">God</span> will not abide with you, and a resisted
-Spirit will not strive with you, and that grace received in vain
-will be taken away.&nbsp; Remember this, let it keep you from
-presumption, make you watchful against temptation, always clothed
-in the armour of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and wielding the
-sword of the Spirit, and abounding in the work of the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>; praying, too, always, that the present
-may be an earnest of the future, that the Spirit will sustain,
-and sanctify, and perfect you, and that <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, Who has begun a good work in you, will
-perform it until the day of <span class="smcap">Jesus
-Christ</span>.</p>
-<h2><a name="page228"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-228</span>SERMON XV.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">CHRIST TOUCHED.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">St.
-Mark</span>, <span class="smcap">v</span>., 30.</p>
-<p><i>And</i> <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>, <i>immediately
-knowing in Himself that virtue had gone out of Him</i>, <i>turned
-Him about in the press</i>, <i>and said</i>, <i>Who touched my
-clothes</i>?</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>A <span class="smcap">crowd</span> always waited on our <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> when He taught or walked openly.&nbsp;
-In this case, there was an unusually great crowd following and
-thronging Him, because it had become known that He was on His way
-to work the miracle of raising up a child from the point of
-death.&nbsp; It is not hard to guess what were the elements of
-this crowd.&nbsp; First, there were the idle, curious multitude
-ever to be found where novelty or excitement is promised.&nbsp;
-Then there were those who knew not why they were come together,
-who were there because others were, who had no mind or interest
-in the matter.&nbsp; (There are always <a
-name="page229"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 229</span>many of
-these in every crowd.)&nbsp; Then there were the scribes and
-lawyers, always talking about, listening to, or disputing
-religious truths&mdash;never coming, or caring to come, to the
-knowledge and practice of the truth.&nbsp; Then there were the
-seekers after loaves and fishes, who hoped to get something by
-coming.&nbsp; Then there were the entrappers and enemies of our
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span>, seeking for witness against Him,
-hoping to see some work done, to hear some word said which might
-form the ground of accusation against Him.&nbsp; And, lastly,
-there were some&mdash;a few only&mdash;whom faith impelled to
-seek from Him the healing of their diseases, the relief of their
-burthens; and whom love drew after Him, to see Him, to serve Him,
-to dwell upon the gracious words that proceeded out of His
-mouth.&nbsp; Of the last class was a woman who had been afflicted
-with a grievous malady for twelve years, who had tried all
-earthly means of relief, and had grown worse under them, who was
-despised and shut out from the company of mankind by reason of
-her visitation, who had become destitute in seeking cure.&nbsp;
-All things were against her.&nbsp; Her misfortunes were what many
-would describe as more than could be borne.&nbsp; Her case was
-hopeless.&nbsp; Nothing seemed left to her but to succumb to
-helpless misery, and wait in groans <a name="page230"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 230</span>and tears for death&mdash;when, lo!
-a sudden gleam of brightest hope burst upon her, there was a
-Physician Who could cure all diseases, and His remedy was to be
-had without price!&nbsp; It does not appear whether the fame of
-<span class="smcap">Jesus</span> had reached her in some remote
-place, whence she had dragged her poor afflicted body, sighing
-and groaning, wandering many days, searching in many places; or
-whether, being &ldquo;accidentally,&rdquo; as men say, near where
-the crowd passed, she had now heard, for the first time, of the
-new Prophet; and, gathering from the passers-by that He was going
-to restore a dying damsel, concluded that the possessor of such
-power, so graciously exercised, could and would heal her
-too.&nbsp; Be that as it may, she had full faith in His ability:
-&ldquo;If I may but touch his clothes I shall be
-whole.&rdquo;&nbsp; And, having such faith, she resolved to act
-upon it, making her way through the crowd, and doing that,
-through which her faith suggested the power would be
-transmitted.&nbsp; How she came to propose to herself, or who
-proposed to her, such a course, how much of ignorance and
-superstition there was in it, is beside our present
-consideration.&nbsp; Her faith, her perseverance, her humility,
-are rather the things to be noted.&nbsp; Her faith, which was so
-strongly convinced of the existence in <span
-class="smcap">Jesus</span>, and the <a name="page231"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 231</span>certainty of being able to obtain
-from Him the grace of healing.&nbsp; Her perseverance, poor,
-feeble, tottering woman! which was not overawed by the greatness
-of the crowd, and did not give up when she was dragged hither and
-thither, hard pressed here, shut out there&mdash;perhaps even
-thrown down and trampled on more than once.&nbsp; Her humility,
-which&mdash;eager as she was for cure, bent, too, as she was upon
-having it&mdash;made her fear the eyes of the crowd, though she
-cared nothing for their thrusts and hard usage, which dared not
-face her Healer; which caused her to shrink back from the first
-touch, and seek to hide herself, and steal away with the
-blessing.</p>
-<p>Pausing here for a moment, brethren, to consider that this
-woman, in her malady, is a type of all who are affected with the
-disease of sin; that in the fruitless issue of her recourse to
-earthly physicians, she allegorises the vanity, the mockery, of
-all human expedients to restore or ameliorate moral distempers;
-showing that such &ldquo;remedies&rdquo; do but cause to suffer
-more, and make worse&mdash;pausing, I say, to consider this, and
-to reflect that herein we have a representation of ourselves as
-sinners, of our helplessness but for <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, of our greater suffering and sure
-deterioration, through our very efforts to become better without
-<a name="page232"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 232</span><span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>; reflecting on this, realising it,
-and feeling it, are we able to go on and see in her discovering
-of the right Healer, in her efforts to be healed by Him, in her
-faith, and perseverance, and humility, what we have discovered,
-what we believe, and what we do, and what we feel?&nbsp; O what a
-pitiable sufferer is that, who hears with indifference or with
-lukewarm inactive belief, that there is a Physician that can make
-well; who knows that He is ready, that restoration is to be had,
-and yet does not seek it; who even pleads infirmity as a reason
-for not striving to be cured; who is deterred by the sight of a
-crowd that must be got through; who is discouraged by the first
-obstacle, and gets up and goes back after the first fall!&nbsp;
-And how blinded are the senses, and how dead the feelings of the
-sinner, who does not feel the degradation of his state, but makes
-open display of himself before the crowd, and with a bold front
-and unshrinking touch, comes to the All-pure and All-holy to be
-healed!&nbsp; Learn, fellow sinners, from this poor woman, what
-your sin is, how defiling, how miserable, how sure to grow worse
-under human treatment.&nbsp; Learn, too, by Whom alone it can be
-healed, and with what efforts, and what feelings, you must seek
-the healing.&nbsp; For, consider how the All-seeing eye and the
-All <a name="page233"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-233</span>sympathising heart beheld and loved that woman, for her
-deeds and feelings.&nbsp; <i>Before</i> she touched Him, the
-virtue, the power of healing, was made ready to flow; and, as
-soon as she had touched, she was called forth, and commended, and
-owned, and further blessed: &ldquo;Daughter, thy faith hath made
-thee whole; go in peace, and be whole of thy plague.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Partly, no doubt, for the sake of others, this manifestation
-and speech were made.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Jesus</span>
-generally hid His wondrous works from the gaze of the masses, and
-forbade that they should even hear of them by the hearing of the
-ear: just as He concealed the meaning of His speech by veiling it
-in parables, hard to be understood, that mere curiosity might not
-be indulged, that faith might have some privilege over want of
-faith, that needless provocation of His enemies might be avoided,
-and witness against Him withheld, that those who He knew would
-see and hear in vain, might be spared the greater condemnation of
-beholding and despising.&nbsp; Sometimes, however, an exception
-was made, and <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> spoke and acted
-openly; that those present might see, and those absent might hear
-of Him, and so come unto Him and be saved.&nbsp; This may have
-been the case here.&nbsp; Or, more probably, the manifestation
-was not so <a name="page234"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-234</span>much for the multitude, it was for the inner circle;
-for Jairus, whose faith needed to be prepared, for the shock of
-the coming announcement&mdash;&ldquo;Thy daughter is dead, why
-troublest thou the Master any more?&rdquo; or for better heeding
-of the injunction, &ldquo;Be not afraid, only believe;&rdquo; for
-the disciples, too, whom He would thus confirm in the faith, and
-prepare for their mission and sufferings, whom He would thus
-enable to record for our instruction and comfort, the things
-which <span class="smcap">Jesus</span> has done, which He is ever
-ready to do again.&nbsp; But, specially, it was for the woman
-herself; that she might not suppose that she had obtained
-<i>unknown</i> possession of a blessing, or that it was the mere
-touch which cured her, and not the All-knowing Healer, pleased by
-her faith and so making effectual an otherwise useless act; that
-she might become acquainted with Him, and so learn to love Him,
-and gratefully remember Him, and by and by, when she came to know
-his will, might delight to do it; that she might have something
-more than she sought&mdash;this is ever the rule of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> giving&mdash;the &ldquo;Go in
-peace,&rdquo; as well as the &ldquo;Be whole of thy
-plague;&rdquo; that she might be taught, and we, through her,
-that Divine mercy is ever to be acknowledged, and open glory to
-be given to <span class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<p><a name="page235"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 235</span>The
-history is replete with profitable suggestions&mdash;lessons of
-faith and practice.&nbsp; Let us select three for present
-consideration.</p>
-<p>First, let us observe, that we may throng and press <span
-class="smcap">Jesus</span>, and yet not touch Him.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Thou seest the multitude thronging Thee, and sayest Thou
-who touched me?&rdquo;&nbsp; Even so!&nbsp; The idle, curious,
-controversial, captious thronging is nothing accounted of: it is
-the touch of eager desire and humble faith which alone is
-noticed.&nbsp; At first, brethren, we are tempted to think, that
-the most strangely indifferent, the most unblessed of men, are
-those who do not join the throng, and press about the <span
-class="smcap">Lord Jesus</span>.&nbsp; That He is in the
-sanctuary, and men do not enter into His presence there; that He
-is teaching the way of life, and men will not hear sermons nor
-read the Bible; that He may be conversed with, and yet men will
-not pray; that He may be touched, and yet sacraments are not
-received: this, we think, is as strange as it is sad.&nbsp; And
-so, indeed, it is.&nbsp; But it is stranger and sadder, that any
-should come into the Sanctuary, and not perceive <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> presence; that they should
-hear and read without learning; that they should use words of
-prayer and yet not be heard; that they should press and throng
-<span class="smcap">Jesus</span> in ordinances, and never touch
-Him; <a name="page236"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-236</span>deriving no benefit from Him, because they seek it not
-aright; being beneath His eye, and yet unnoticed; crowding around
-Him, and upon Him, and yet unfelt!&nbsp; But assuredly, as of old
-it was, so it is now.&nbsp; If mere idleness brings men to the
-Sanctuary, mere observance of a decent fashion, if they come only
-to hear and see something new, to wile away the time which hangs
-wearily upon them, to gain themselves a good name as respectable
-and pious, if they are watching to see, what may be criticised,
-what may be talked about and condemned, if they are rendering
-merely a formal obedience, and offering only an outward
-service&mdash;then, I was going to say, <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> takes no more notice of them than if
-they were not present; but I should rather say, He is wrathful
-against them for being present.&nbsp; He blinds their eyes, and
-turns away His own.&nbsp; He is dumb to them; they deaf to
-Him.&nbsp; He yields nothing to them, though they seem like Moses
-to have cleft the rock.&nbsp; He feels them not, though they
-squeeze and press!&nbsp; My brethren, it may be that some of you
-have long been in the company of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, have missed very few opportunities
-of public worship, have become very familiar with the Scriptures,
-have often repeated prayers and psalms, have been frequent
-communicants, and yet are none the <a name="page237"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 237</span>better in feeling and desire, have
-experienced no spiritual relief, have no more love or perception
-of the truth, than if you had been utter strangers to <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, and never been near Him nor heard of
-Him.&nbsp; Hence it may be that religion is to you but a name: it
-profits you not, it affords you no delight, it exercises no
-influence upon you.&nbsp; Would you know why?&nbsp; Because you
-have been but thronging and pressing, because you have had no
-real sense of your misery, have entertained no real desire to be
-relieved and blessed, and so have made no well-directed,
-persevering effort to touch <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>!&nbsp; You are, as you feel, no
-better, no wiser, than if there were no <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, or you had never been near
-Him!&nbsp; And you will never be wiser and better, however much
-you press and throng, till you realise your want, and are
-convinced that <span class="smcap">Christ</span> alone can
-relieve it, and come to Him faithfully, resolutely, humbly, to
-touch the hem of His garment, and be healed of your plague.&nbsp;
-First, then, strive to know what you want, and to be convinced
-that <span class="smcap">Christ</span> can and will grant it;
-and, then, feeling the desire of it, being sure from Whom alone
-it can be had, and how it must be sought, draw near&mdash;with
-the feeling of necessity, with the perseverance of desire, with
-the consciousness of unworthiness&mdash;and effect the <a
-name="page238"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 238</span>touch of
-faith.&nbsp; You shall not, in that case, remain unblessed; your
-plague shall be stayed, your faith shall be commended, your
-effort crowned, your humility exalted; you shall have more than
-you sought; enlarge your desire as you will, it shall be more
-than satisfied: and He whom you would but touch, and then shrink
-away, shall call you forth, and own, and bless you, and give you
-everlasting peace and perfect salvation.</p>
-<p>Next, let us observe, that nothing can keep back and nothing
-hide from <span class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; We are
-sometimes tempted, in the deep sense of our unworthiness, in
-review of the distance between us and the Healer, of the many
-obstacles which intervene, to give up in despair, and say to
-ourselves, &ldquo;It is of no use trying, I am not fit for such a
-blessing, and if I were, I cannot reach it.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now,
-consider, who could be more unfit, and who more unable to
-approach <span class="smcap">Christ</span> than this poor
-woman.&nbsp; There was a positive law which forbade her coming;
-her touch was pollution: yet <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-reproached her not with disregarding that law, nor refused her
-because of it; and when she touched He did not recoil, but
-encouraged her.&nbsp; For <i>us</i> there is no excommunicating
-law.&nbsp; From us <span class="smcap">Christ</span> is pledged
-not to recoil.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come unto me all ye that labour and
-are heavy laden,&rdquo; is an <a name="page239"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 239</span>invitation, a positive
-command.&nbsp; &ldquo;Him that cometh unto Me I will in no wise
-cast out,&rdquo; is a most solemn pledge.&nbsp; Why, then, should
-we shrink?&nbsp; What shall we fear?&nbsp; And as for
-difficulties and hindrances, our own infirmities, the opposition
-of the world or the Devil, the sneers of despisers, the distance,
-the crowd, the hurrying on, can aught compare with what
-threatened this woman, and what she overcame?&nbsp; O are we not
-ashamed to forego salvation, to keep away from <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, to desist from determination to
-reach Him, by any plea of personal infirmity, or of difficulty in
-the way?&nbsp; What in ourselves is worse than the twelve
-years&rsquo; growing, enfeebling, overwhelming malady of this
-woman?&nbsp; What in aught around us is more impenetrable than
-the great crowd? and whenever was <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> as distant from us as He was from
-her?&nbsp; And then as to the discouragement which Satan would
-suggest to us, that in our age we cannot, like this poor woman,
-get anything from <span class="smcap">Christ</span> by stealth;
-that the power to heal flows not unconsciously; that He must see,
-and approve, and stay for us, and even anticipate us; and that by
-reason of our insignificance and the wide extent of His dominion,
-it is not reasonable to suppose that we shall be
-observed&mdash;brethren, are we not assured, by the <a
-name="page240"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 240</span>fact that
-<i>she</i> was discerned, and watched for, and singled out from
-the great multitude, that the gaze which is comprehensive enough
-to include all is particular enough to distinguish each; that
-there is nothing beneath His notice; that He can get through, and
-will get through, all that stands between us and Him: that He who
-keeps vast globes in their orbits, takes thought even for
-sparrows; that He counts the hairs of each individual&rsquo;s
-head; that He hears each sigh, and feels each sorrow; that the
-roar of the universe is not louder in His ear than the feeblest
-cry of distress from the lowest of His creatures?&nbsp; O it is a
-blessed assurance, and one for which we should be heartily
-thankful, that it was always when there was most to distract,
-that <span class="smcap">Christ</span> was most closely
-attentive; that it was in the most dazzling glare that He saw
-most clearly; that it was when He seemed most absorbed in other
-aims, that His notice and help were most readily secured; that in
-the way to raise the daughter of Jairus, He was so easily stopped
-to heal and bless the woman with the issue of blood!&nbsp; No
-sight too insignificant to escape His eye; no sound too faint to
-reach His ear; no crowd so great as to hide the individual; no
-object so engrossing as to exclude from notice, or to hurry on
-from concern for the least, the unworthiest of other objects!</p>
-<p><a name="page241"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-241</span>Lastly, let us observe that power to heal was ready to
-flow wherever there was a channel made for it.&nbsp; We are not,
-of course, to understand that <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-healed unconsciously; that any mere formal touch secured, as it
-were, without the violation of His will, the grace which He was
-anointed to bestow; but we are to understand, that such is the
-law of grace, that where there is a demand there is a supply;
-that like as the thirsty sand surely drinks in the rising wave,
-like as a sponge absorbs the water into which it is plunged, so
-the sensibly void heart, the yearning desire, the faithful
-effort, the moral fitness, is sure of what it wants and seeks, if
-it is found in the place where what it wants exists.&nbsp; It is
-one of the most wonderful, most mysterious, and at the same time
-most sure effects of <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-incarnation that human nature, needing and desiring, put into
-communion with Him, possessing, overflowing, shall have by the
-necessary operation of an invariable law, the thing which it
-wants, and which He has to bestow.&nbsp; There is no chance, no
-mere probability in the case: <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-is the ever-flowing fountain; if you stand beneath, the water
-must come over you.&nbsp; He is the root full of sap, if you are
-one of the branches joined to Him, the sap shall flow into and
-permeate you.</p>
-<p><a name="page242"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 242</span>It is
-this which makes ordinances effectual signs of grace; means, not
-by which grace may <i>perhaps</i> be bestowed, but by which it is
-<i>sure</i> to be bestowed, if they are rightly used.&nbsp; The
-woman, whose history we have been considering, might have been
-disappointed in her hope: for <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-had not taught her, nor made her any promise, nor prescribed to
-her any course; but He has so enlightened <i>us</i> in the
-mystery of His Incarnation; He has so pledged to us His grace; He
-has so shown us how to obtain it, that we may most confidently
-say, &ldquo;If I may but touch, I shall be whole.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Grace, the manifold grace of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> glorified body&mdash;the
-source of sanctification and every blessing, is ready to flow,
-and will flow as soon as He is touched.&nbsp; Of course, as we
-have seen, this touch must be directed by right feeling; but
-still, observe, there must be a touch.&nbsp; &ldquo;Thy faith
-hath saved thee.&rdquo;&nbsp; Not because it kept thee still,
-sighing for, talking of, waiting for Me, but because it roused
-thee, and made thee encounter so much, and do so much to come and
-touch Me.&nbsp; Faith gives quality to the touch, but, after all,
-the touch secures the blessing.&nbsp; So it ever is.&nbsp; The
-touch necessary, and the touch effectual.&nbsp; &ldquo;He that
-believeth <i>and is baptized</i> shall be saved.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Except ye eat the flesh of the <a name="page243"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 243</span>Son of man and drink His blood, ye
-have no life in you.&rdquo;&nbsp; The water of Baptism is the
-laver of regeneration.&nbsp; The bread which we break, and the
-cup which we bless, are the Communion of the Body and Blood of
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; Using the outward part
-rightly, you do certainly receive the inward grace: for as soon
-as <span class="smcap">Christ</span> is rightly touched, and
-these are appointed ways of touching, immediately&mdash;as it
-were, spontaneously&mdash;virtue to heal goes out of Him.</p>
-<p>Let it not, however, be supposed, that this view of the way of
-healing and sanctifying makes <span class="smcap">Christ</span> a
-servant of grace instead of the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-of grace; that it directs us to a mere storehouse to help
-ourselves, instead of sending us to a living, loving, discerning
-Saviour, of Whom we are to crave the help and blessing which are
-His to give as He will.&nbsp; No, brethren, it exalts ordinances,
-but only because they are <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> ordinances, the clothes in
-which He is clad, as He walks among us, the garments through
-which power to heal is transmitted from Him to us.&nbsp; The use
-of these things without a sense of unworthiness, without humility
-and faith, is like the thronging of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> by the crowd, not only unprofitable,
-but rude and profane; and this sense of unworthiness, this
-humility and faith, together <a name="page244"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 244</span>with the power and perseverance to
-act upon them, are all the gifts of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, seed sown, increase given by Him
-according to His will.&nbsp; Look, then, to the Physician, as
-well as to the remedy, to the Giver of grace as well as to the
-Channel of grace; and, knowing that without Him you can do
-nothing, and except from Him receive nothing, beseech Him to
-enable you to seek grace rightly, and then to bestow it freely,
-not for any worthiness, for any feeling, for any deed; but simply
-because of your necessity, out of His boundless love.</p>
-<h2><a name="page245"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-245</span>SERMON XVI.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">PREACHING PARABLES.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Ezekiel</span>, <span class="smcap">xx</span>.,
-49.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><i>Ah</i> <span class="smcap">Lord
-God</span>! <i>they say of me</i>, <i>Doth he not speak
-parables</i>?</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Ezekiel</span> had been commissioned with
-the utterance of a warning, in figurative but very intelligible
-language, that <span class="smcap">God</span> was about to bring
-a great calamity upon Jerusalem and all Judah; that young and
-old, good and bad, should be affected by it&mdash;&ldquo;I will
-kindle a fire in thee, and it shall devour every green tree and
-every dry tree&rdquo;; that the judgment should be irresistible
-&ldquo;the flaming flame shall not be quenched,&rdquo; and the
-destruction universal; &ldquo;all faces from the south to the
-north shall be burned therein.&rdquo;&nbsp; According to some
-expositors, as soon as he received this commission, concluding
-from his past experience that the Jews would profess not to
-understand his message, or would say, that it was an <a
-name="page246"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-246</span>exaggeration, or that it did not apply to them, and so
-disregard it, he entreated of <span class="smcap">God</span>, in
-the words of the text, that such an excuse might be taken away by
-the delivery instead of a plain and unmistakeable warning:
-&ldquo;O <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, not a parable.&nbsp;
-Thy people will not heed parables.&rdquo;&nbsp; Whereupon <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, in gracious condescension to His
-prophet, in determination to be heard and understood by the
-people, substituted for this first message, not indeed wholly
-unfigurative language, but a simpler parable, which carried with
-it to all its own interpretation.&nbsp; But it is better, I
-think, to suppose, that Ezekiel does not here anticipate the
-people&rsquo;s perversity, and so persuade <span
-class="smcap">God</span> at once to withdraw His words; but that
-he narrates and grieves over the actual reception which the
-message, faithfully delivered, had encountered.&nbsp; The people
-would not hear it.&nbsp; They said it was obscure: a parable, an
-enigma, a poetical exaggeration.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> did not speak to them by it; or, if He
-did, they could not tell what He said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah! <span
-class="smcap">Lord God</span>&mdash;alas! it is the old
-tale&mdash;I told them Thy words, but they would not hear; they
-turned away from me, saying, Surely we cannot understand
-him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Whichever was the case, whether Ezekiel only expected, or
-actually experienced this treatment, <a name="page247"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 247</span>we are sure that it was not wholly
-on account of special obscurities which veiled the matters he had
-to declare, nor on account of any special deafness and hardness
-of heart which belonged to that people.&nbsp; For every Christian
-teacher has had reason to anticipate, has actually endured the
-like from Christian congregations.</p>
-<p>Often and often in preparing for the pulpit, is the preacher
-tempted to set aside some important theme, to withhold some
-wonderful truth, to forbear even to suggest some glorious
-consolation, because he believes that in uttering it, he will not
-have the ears, or, if he has the ears, he will not have the minds
-of his hearers; that they will not understand his saying; and so,
-of course, will not receive it.&nbsp; Often and often, too, when
-having used the full liberty of a Christian prophet and whatever
-ability <span class="smcap">God</span> has given him, of
-simplifying to the utmost, and recommending with all his energy,
-the Gospel message, he is constrained to feel, he is made,
-perhaps, by men&rsquo;s open speech to know, that he is regarded
-as the setter-forth of unmeaning, extravagant, or inapplicable
-words.&nbsp; Of course, this charge is not always
-unfounded.&nbsp; We are not inspired: we often speak our own
-words; our minds may not have rightly conceived the subject we
-would discuss, or we may be wanting <a name="page248"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 248</span>in ability to express clearly what
-we understand.&nbsp; Under various influences we do, too, at
-times speak more or less extravagantly, and our knowledge and
-discretion are not so complete, that we invariably select what is
-precisely suited to our hearers.&nbsp; In such cases, we ought to
-expect, we have no right to complain of, the rejection, the
-disregard, or the fruitlessness of our preaching.&nbsp; But,
-brethren, when we are sure that the fault lies not in the
-preacher, when he has taken pains to enter into and reveal the
-mind of the Spirit, to teach what he knows <span
-class="smcap">God</span> would have you understand and believe,
-to urge what he knows <span class="smcap">God</span> would have
-you do, to describe and recommend what he knows <span
-class="smcap">God</span> would have you love and seek&mdash;when
-he has done this, and you receive not his words, excusing
-yourselves by saying that he is obscure, or over-strict, or
-fanciful, or enthusiastic, or anything else&mdash;oh! then has he
-not a right to complain to <span class="smcap">God</span>? yea;
-and is it not his duty to remonstrate with you?&nbsp; Brethren,
-we charge not such as you who are here assembled with the
-wilfulness of Ezekiel&rsquo;s hearers.&nbsp; In you we do not
-suppose there is any actual unbelief, or deliberate dislike of
-the truth.&nbsp; It is not forced in your case upon unwilling
-ears: for you come to hear it.&nbsp; It is not rejected because
-<a name="page249"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 249</span>you hate
-it.&nbsp; Nevertheless, we have somewhat against many of you of
-Ezekiel&rsquo;s complaint, respecting your treatment of the read
-or preached Word of <span class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<p>We have to complain, brethren, that many of you are under the
-mistaken notion that you have almost a right to select the
-preacher&rsquo;s theme, at least to dictate its mode of
-treatment; and that if your right is disregarded, then you are
-justified in excusing yourselves for not profiting or
-heeding.&nbsp; Bear with me, beloved.&nbsp; Is it not the case,
-that you sometimes find fault with the subject of the
-sermon?&nbsp; You do not want to hear so much about man&rsquo;s
-depravity: you do not like the preacher to make such a point of
-observing religious ordinances: what a high standard of morality
-he sets up; how strict is the holiness he describes; why will he
-discourse of the horrors of hell?&nbsp; So, again, of the manner
-of treatment.&nbsp; You do not care for argument; you cannot
-enter upon theories; you are weary of quotations of historical
-illustrations; the style is too florid, or too bald: it is
-poetical; or it is commonplace; or somehow it is not what you
-like; and therefore&mdash;I would not say you turn away from it,
-but you do not try, as much as you ought, to heed it; and you
-excuse yourselves for not improving under it by blaming the
-preacher.</p>
-<p><a name="page250"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 250</span>The
-fact is, there is too often a great forgetfulness of the fact,
-that when the preacher speaks to you it is your part to be as
-listeners and learners of <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp;
-It is not for you to choose the subjects, nor to dictate the
-method of teaching.&nbsp; It is true, perhaps, that your taste
-and aptitude are greater for some subjects than others: it is
-true that you are more easily enlightened, and impressed, and
-influenced in some ways than in others.&nbsp; It is natural, and
-I would not say it is wrong, for you to prefer those subjects and
-ways; but be sure nevertheless, that it is the very contrary of
-wisdom and humility, of reverence for <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, of regard for duty and interest, not to
-give the most earnest heed to whatever <span
-class="smcap">God</span> says to you through His servant, to dare
-to treat it lightly, because either of the topic or the way of
-handling it.&nbsp; When a message comes to you from <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, surely it is no reason for not
-receiving it, that you would prefer a message about something
-else!&nbsp; And if the diction in which that message is clothed
-is hard or distasteful to you, while you may lament it, may ask
-for an explanation, may solicit consideration for your taste, or
-help in overcoming your distaste, you may not on any account
-disregard what has been said.&nbsp; The word gone forth shall not
-return.&nbsp; Where the seed has been sown, increase <a
-name="page251"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 251</span>shall be
-expected.&nbsp; The day is coming, when all your opportunities
-and means of knowing <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> will,
-and all your incentives to serve Him, shall be taken account of
-by Him Who has afforded them, and then shall the worst preacher,
-the most apparently obscure and inapplicable sermon you ever
-heard be a witness for or against you, to testify what regard you
-had for <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> message, what
-humility, what teachableness, what readiness to receive and to do
-what was clear, what anxious diligence and pains to understand
-what was obscure.</p>
-<p>Brethren, you may choose what subjects you will hear discussed
-in the secular lecture-hall, and if you do not like the
-entertainment you may refuse to be entertained by it, and resolve
-to hear no more of it, to dismiss it altogether from your
-thoughts.&nbsp; But you do not come to church to be entertained;
-you have no option there of selecting or rejecting.&nbsp; It is
-your misfortune (though it may be his fault) if the preacher does
-not interest you, or the sermon immediately commend itself to
-your mind, and to your heart; but, being there, you must hear
-whatever is said, and however it is said; and having heard, be
-sure you must give account to <span class="smcap">God</span> of
-the hearing!&nbsp; Settle this in your minds, impress yourselves
-with the solemn <a name="page252"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-252</span>authority of the preacher, and with the importance and
-responsibility of heeding him, and it will be very seldom that
-you will object even in thought, &ldquo;Doth he not speak
-parables?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But there are particular complaints, about which I would say a
-few words specially.</p>
-<p>First, there is a complaint against the preaching of
-mysterious and profound truths.&nbsp; If the preacher dwells upon
-such a subject as the Incarnation of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, the nature of <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> presence with His Church, of
-the Spirit&rsquo;s indwelling, or the rationale of the efficacy
-of the means of grace; or if he attempts to explain any difficult
-text, no matter what pains he may take to simplify the subject,
-how he may labour to show its importance and to recommend its
-consideration, he is met at once with the objection that he
-speaks parables, and so with a tacit refusal to heed.&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Why puzzle one&rsquo;s brains,&rdquo; it is urged,
-&ldquo;with such matters, when there are so many simple themes
-and easy lessons in the Gospel.&nbsp; I cannot understand such
-things.&nbsp; They are too profound.&nbsp; The preaching of them
-may be clever, but it is thrown away upon me.&nbsp; I do not want
-to work and task my mind, but to warm my feelings.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Such is the reward the preacher often gets for taking unusual
-pains to edify his hearers!&nbsp; Such is the wilful, <a
-name="page253"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 253</span>the
-determined ignorance of many of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> people respecting those truths,
-the understanding of which most concerns them, and honours
-Him.&nbsp; It ought to be sufficient to correct these unwise and
-unwilling, to remind them that whatever <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has revealed He requires to be accepted,
-and that as there can be no acceptance of that which is not
-understood, it is a foremost duty of the Christian preacher and
-the Christian learner to employ themselves in the solution of
-Scripture difficulties, and the comprehension of revealed
-mysteries.&nbsp; Such objectors do not intend it, but they
-grievously slight <span class="smcap">God</span> when they refuse
-to heed so much of His teaching, yea, they even cast a slur upon
-His wisdom in striving to teach what, according to them, cannot
-be learnt.&nbsp; And are they not unjust to themselves?&nbsp;
-Have they really such narrow and shallow understandings, so
-impossible to widen and deepen?&nbsp; Would they confess to such
-incapacity if they were listening to a scientific lecture? would
-they complain if the lecturer introduced them to new facts,
-showed them fresh experiments, suggested to them explanatory
-theories, sought to make them wiser than they were?&nbsp; Would
-they shut their ears at the sound of the first new term: would
-they shrink back at the first invitation to tread upon unfamiliar
-ground; <a name="page254"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-254</span>would they protect themselves against being
-enlightened, by claiming to be hopelessly ignorant?&nbsp; Would
-they not rather make the most of the opportunity, opening ear and
-stretching mind to catch all they could, finding pleasure in
-being carried beyond and above themselves, resenting indignantly
-a hint that the thing was out of their reach, professing,
-somewhat ostentatiously pretending a greater delight and fuller
-understanding than they really had?&nbsp; O why is it the fashion
-to claim to be so wise in secular matters, to boast of ignorance
-in religion?&nbsp; It is well, indeed, that men should not sham
-to be wise in <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> presence,
-but it is ill, very ill, that they sham to be ignorant, or that
-they should be content to be ignorant when they might be wise,
-ignoring and disowning the powers which <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has given them!</p>
-<p>Take these remarks, dear brethren, into your serious
-consideration.&nbsp; Remember that <span class="smcap">God</span>
-has given you intelligent minds, in order that you might think of
-and serve Him with understanding.&nbsp; Much, indeed, about Him
-is absolutely incomprehensible; much has He designedly withheld;
-before many mysteries, has He put up the warning, &ldquo;Draw not
-nigh hither;&rdquo; but much has He told you plainly, and much
-has He propounded in sufficiently obscure or difficult terms, to
-task <a name="page255"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 255</span>and
-exercise your minds in their necessary unravelling.&nbsp; With
-respect to these things, as it is only by much resistance that
-you can withstand the temptations to which you are exposed; as it
-is only by great efforts that you can acquire the holiness
-without which no man shall see the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, so is it, only by real and often hard
-study, that you can attain unto the knowledge of which <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has made you capable, and in which He
-bids you grow.&nbsp; The elementary, the vitally necessary truths
-of the Gospel are, it may be, within the immediate comprehension
-of the simplest and most uncultivated understanding; but shall
-it, therefore, be said to you, shall you be allowed to say of
-yourselves, that you need not be concerned about anything
-beyond?&nbsp; Would you be satisfied if you had only so much
-secular education as would enable you to spell out sign-post
-directions?&nbsp; Would it be no reproach to you, having so many
-faculties and opportunities, only to be able to read and
-count?&nbsp; Would you miss nothing of duty, of interest, of
-pleasure, if your intellect were uncultivated, if you were wholly
-unacquainted and totally unable to appreciate arts and sciences,
-poetry, music, literature, or any facts or theories not connected
-with your worldly calling, not necessary to procure your daily
-bread?&nbsp; Would <a name="page256"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-256</span>not life be irksome and intolerable, if held only on
-such terms?&nbsp; Would you not be ashamed of attempting to hold
-it on these terms?&nbsp; Would you not consider that you were
-robbing yourselves of all that was worth having?&nbsp; Would you
-not admit that you had missed and ignored your high calling, your
-power to be enlightened and wise beings, and had sunk shamelessly
-and guiltily to the level, below the level&mdash;for he answers
-the end of his creation&mdash;of the irrational brute?&nbsp; And
-shall you who feel such shame for worldly ignorance, shall you
-who make such efforts to gain secular knowledge, who are ever
-widening your minds, and storing up in them as much as they will
-hold, who delight in growing wiser and more learned, who will
-study unwearily, and exercise all your intellect, and consume I
-know not what time, in unravelling the worthless mystery of some
-enigmatical line in a poem of fiction&mdash;shall you contentedly
-pass over the difficulties, and remain ignorant of the mysteries
-which meet you in nearly every verse of the Word of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp; Shall you be otherwise than glad
-and attentive when the preacher draws your attention to
-them?&nbsp; Shall you even unfairly and ungratefully charge him
-with <i>speaking</i> parables, when he is really
-<i>explaining</i> parables?</p>
-<p><a name="page257"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 257</span>Dear
-brethren, it is rarely that the public preacher, who has to take
-thought for the simpler ones of the flock, can enlarge upon
-profound truths.&nbsp; When he does, take care that you make the
-most of the rare occurrence, and compensate for the forbidden
-frequency, by diligent private study, by ready use of that
-individual aid which the clergyman is as rejoiced, as he is
-bound, to afford you.&nbsp; Acquaint yourselves now, as far as
-may be, with <span class="smcap">God</span>, and the things of
-<span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Furnish yourselves with the
-answer, the want of which was such a reproach to Nicodemus, to
-the question&mdash;&ldquo;How can these things be?&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Show, at least, as much interest in salvation, in sanctification,
-in heaven, in eternal bliss, as will lead you to inquire what
-they are, and require, and promise.&nbsp; Get now the germ of
-that knowledge, which is to expand hereafter albut to an infinite
-grasp, and is to revel in spiritual science.&nbsp; Cast away the
-reproach of knowing not; provide against the doom which awaits
-him that improves not the talents entrusted him: &ldquo;From him
-that hath not, shall be taken away even that he seemeth to
-have.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There is another class of objectors&mdash;to another kind of
-preaching.&nbsp; Those, namely, who resist the force of plain
-exhortations to repentance, self-denial, <a
-name="page258"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 258</span>submission,
-obedience, holiness, and the like; by persuading themselves that
-the preacher urges these severely and unduly.&nbsp; Doth he not
-speak parables, they say, exaggerating&mdash;describing ideal
-duties?&nbsp; Surely, what he urges is not the thing really
-required of us; surely, if we escape not with impunity, yet some
-allowance will be made for our want of it.&nbsp; Would he bring
-in all guilty?&nbsp; Would he cross every delight and desire of
-our life?&nbsp; Would he expect us so to subdue the spirit, so to
-overcome natural impatience, as never to resent, to shrink, to
-murmur?&nbsp; Must obedience be so uncompromising, so constant,
-so perfect, to be obedience at all?&nbsp; Is holiness so
-imperatively necessary?&nbsp; Surely the preacher is
-unreasonable, he is extravagant, he speaks parables.&nbsp; These
-objectors are easily answered.&nbsp; In this matter no teaching
-of our own can be more explicit, more exacting, more positive,
-and more unsparing, than that of the New Testament.&nbsp; When we
-enforce these things, we are backed by an authority which cannot
-be questioned; and are able to prove that our words are those of
-soberness and truth.&nbsp; &ldquo;Except ye repent, ye shall all
-likewise perish.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;If any man will come after
-me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow
-me.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Whosoever doth <a
-name="page259"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 259</span>not this,
-cannot be my disciple.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Whosoever loveth me,
-keepeth my commandments.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;If any man love not
-the <span class="smcap">Lord Jesus</span>, let him be anathema
-maranatha.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Without holiness no man shall see
-the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Are these words
-parables, are they untrue, figurative, extravagant?&nbsp; And if
-not, what that we say, or can say, on this head, may be resisted
-or slighted, under the plea, that is a parable?</p>
-<p>Once more.&nbsp; When we discourse from the pulpit, on a
-living and near Saviour, an indwelling Sanctifier, a surrounding
-spiritual tempter, on heaven or hell, on enduring as seeing Him
-who is invisible, on having our conversation in heaven, on the
-evidence of things unseen, on the feeling and grasping, so to
-speak, as though they were substantial and at hand, of things
-hoped for&mdash;oh! then, how many there are who hear us as
-though we were dreamers or narrators of fables, speakers who
-should be allowed some poetic license; who, to make their speech
-attractive, or perhaps from the spontaneous dictation of their
-enthusiasm, use figures of rhetoric and speak parables!&nbsp; I
-do not mean that these persons wilfully take up this position,
-that they are intentionally, or in desire, gainsayers of the
-truth, but merely that they do <a name="page260"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 260</span>not enter into its conception, and
-cannot rise to its height.&nbsp; They lag behind, they are
-earthy, they see only the visible, feel only the tangible to
-bodily senses.&nbsp; The temporal to them is real; the spiritual,
-not through unbelief, nor obstinacy, nor moral blindness, but
-from infirmity, and earthly-mindedness, and unspirituality, is
-regarded too nearly as unreal; and, therefore, when it is
-discoursed upon, they seem to be listening to empty dreams, and
-the preacher to be displaying flights of fancy.</p>
-<p>Dear brethren&mdash;I speak to such&mdash;I know that many of
-you wish it were otherwise; you would that your mind could
-conceive, and that your heart could feel, these truths.&nbsp; In
-your best moments, you more than suspect that the preacher is
-right after all, and you are wrong; that <i>you</i> are dreaming,
-and not he; that his words are a parable only to those who will
-not see and hear.&nbsp; It is not in man to afford you much help,
-in coming to a right state.&nbsp; If I refer you to the Bible,
-which we do but echo from the pulpit, you will still say, Ah! but
-does not this, too, speak parables?&nbsp; If I bid you go and
-exercise your reason, or consult others who have done so, it is
-more than possible that you will come away from the
-consultation&mdash;alas! many do&mdash;more convinced <a
-name="page261"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 261</span>than before
-that we <i>do</i> speak parables, that each one is a <span
-class="smcap">God</span> to himself, that there is no other devil
-than a man&rsquo;s own evil passions, that there is no hell but
-in a remorseful conscience, that eternity does not mean
-&ldquo;for ever!&rdquo;&nbsp; No; there is no help for you in
-man, in yourselves, or in others.&nbsp; You must, indeed, purify
-and elevate your affections, so that they may wish for better
-things; you must bring down your reason from the high seat where
-it sits, and speculates, and dictates; you must try to accept the
-truth that the natural man cannot receive nor judge of spiritual
-things; but, then, you must go to <span class="smcap">God</span>
-Himself, and humbly, teachably, earnestly ask for that spiritual
-discernment which alone can see, and feel, and love the things of
-<span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Do this, not once, but
-often; not negligently or hastily, but earnestly and
-perseveringly; and presently, if not all at once, yet gradually,
-most surely, your spiritual eyes shall be opened, you shall see
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, you shall love <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, you shall perceive the motions of
-the Holy Spirit.&nbsp; The invisible world shall be unveiled, and
-shall be found to contain all the beauties, all the horrors, and
-to hold out all the hopes and fears, to be as real, as near, as
-sure to be ours, for weal or woe, according as we are, or are
-not, Christians, as the preacher or the <a
-name="page262"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 262</span>Bible, of
-which he is the expounder, asserts.&nbsp; Thenceforth you will
-not complain of spiritual teaching that it is parabolic, of
-strong assertions of the obligation of Christian graces, that
-they are immoderate, too exacting, too severe.&nbsp; No! heart
-and mind will testify, and life will approve, &ldquo;Lo, now
-speakest thou plainly, and speakest no proverb.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yes;
-and knowing somewhat of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and your
-relation to Him, and desiring to know more, whenever in your
-private reading of the Bible a difficulty meets you, or whenever
-the preacher discourses, as it seems, in parables, you will give
-the most earnest and interested heed, to see if you cannot divine
-the mystery; and failing that, instead of remaining in willing
-ignorance, you will use all the means placed within your reach,
-the comparing of parallel places, your commentaries, and the
-private instructions of your clergyman, pleading all the while
-with <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, and urgently beseeching
-of Him, &ldquo;<span class="smcap">Lord</span>, thou knowest all
-things, declare unto me this parable.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Thus doing, you will soon find that to you it is given to know
-the mysteries of religion; and the knowledge, sanctified by the
-Spirit, will assuredly work in you a greater love of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, a more consistent and more successful
-pursuit of holiness, a <a name="page263"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 263</span>growing taste and eagerness for that
-better state, whence ignorance, in all its degrees, shall be
-banished for ever, and where we shall know even as now we are
-known.</p>
-<h2><a name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-264</span>SERMON XVII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">LIVING AND DYING UNTO GOD.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">II. <span
-class="smcap">Corinthians</span>, <span class="smcap">v</span>.,
-8, 9.</p>
-<p><i>We are confident and willing rather to be absent from the
-body</i>, <i>and to be present with the</i> <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>.&nbsp; <i>Wherefore we labour</i>,
-<i>that</i>, <i>whether present or absent</i>, <i>we may be
-accepted of Him</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> apostle had been speaking, in
-the preceding chapter, of the troubles and persecutions which he
-daily endured, and of the hopes and consolations&mdash;the life
-by faith rather than by right&mdash;which made their endurance
-easy.&nbsp; Having touched upon the theme, he could not but
-enlarge upon it; and doing so, his ardent expectations carried
-him out of the present, and made him covet and attempt to grasp
-the future.&nbsp; Before his enlightened eye and spiritualised
-heart, his affliction was light and its continuance brief; the
-present state was but as a tent, quickly to be <a
-name="page265"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 265</span>taken down,
-and then in its place should be digged the deep foundation and
-reared the abiding edifice of a building of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> eternal in the heavens.&nbsp;
-Outstretched, then, were his thoughts, and desires, and earnest
-were his prayers, not so much to get rid of what he had, as to
-attain what he hoped for and was promised.&nbsp; He knew indeed
-that the tabernacle must be removed; that his present state must
-cease&mdash;either by actual death or by a change, which the
-quick at <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> coming must
-undergo, much the same as death; he felt the burthen which was
-upon him; he yearned and groaned to be rid of it; but looking to
-the end he disregarded the way; dwelling, not upon the change but
-what was to come after it, he sought not death, but life.&nbsp;
-He longed, not to be unclothed, but clothed upon.&nbsp; Nay,
-recognising the good, and so the desirableness of this life,
-shrinking too naturally from the thought of dissolution, he would
-keep the present till he had the future, he would have what he
-wanted <i>added</i> to what he possessed, rather than
-<i>substituted</i> for it.&nbsp; Present life was in many
-respects dear to him; he would that the evil were purged away
-from it, and the good left; and then that the good were
-augmented, enfolded, absorbed by the transcendent, satisfying
-perfect blessedness which <span class="smcap">God</span> had <a
-name="page266"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 266</span>promised,
-and for the attaining whereof He had bestowed His effectually
-working Spirit.</p>
-<p>At this point he seems to have sobered himself, or perhaps
-rather to have designedly exhibited the latent soberness and
-contentedness which had guided him all along.&nbsp; &ldquo;We are
-confident,&rdquo; he says, that is, of good cheer, well
-comforted, easily bearing what is, patiently waiting for the
-future; preferring, indeed (if a preference be allowed), to be
-absent from the body and fully present with the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>; but still chiefly animated, not by a
-selfish yearning for the quickest attainment of peace and glory,
-but by the noble, <span class="smcap">God</span>-adoring
-ambition, of being and doing that which is divinely
-approved.&nbsp; &ldquo;Wherefore, in view of all that is and
-shall be, we make it our chief aim, we devote ourselves, not so
-much to reach heaven, to gratify self, as whether on earth or in
-heaven, to enjoy the approval and favour of God.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Be silent,&rdquo; he would say, &ldquo;ye groans for
-deliverance; check yourselves, ye eager aspirations for glory;
-let principle rule rather than desire, and let the principle be,
-whether we live let us live unto the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, whether we die let us die unto the
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span>.&nbsp; Let not dying or living be
-the engrossing thought, but that whether we live or die we may be
-the <span class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s</span>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In this, as in so many other respects, our bright <a
-name="page267"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 267</span>exemplar,
-Paul, shows us both what we may allow and what we should aim
-at.</p>
-<p>And first he shows us that even the saint&mdash;the approved
-of <span class="smcap">God</span>&mdash;may shrink from the
-thought of dissolution.&nbsp; &ldquo;We groan, being burthened,
-because&rdquo; (this is the right translation) &ldquo;we would
-not be unclothed,&rdquo; we would not die.&nbsp; I envy not the
-man&mdash;there is something unnatural, yea, and unspiritual,
-too, in him&mdash;who does not shrink from the first thought of
-death coming to himself or to those whom he loves.&nbsp; For
-death, in its best form, is a remembrancer of the wrath of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> against the sinner, and it is in a sense
-a triumph&mdash;no matter that it is short&mdash;it is a defiling
-and withering touch&mdash;no matter that it shall soon be wiped
-away, and its blasting undone&mdash;of the foul and fierce enemy
-of <span class="smcap">God</span> and holy man.&nbsp; It is that,
-too, which cuts asunder the ties which we are allowed and
-encouraged to fasten here between ourselves and loved friends and
-delightful pursuits and pleasing possessions.&nbsp; It is that,
-too, which abruptly closes the period of probation and
-preparation for heaven; which stays all cleansing and perfecting,
-which says imperatively to us, &ldquo;No more shall you remove,
-no more shall you acquire&mdash;as you are shall you face <span
-class="smcap">God</span>&mdash;stereotyped are you for
-eternity.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is that, too, which enthrals <a
-name="page268"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 268</span>and deadens
-the one half of us, though it liberates and quickens the other,
-which separates the body from <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-while it joins the spirit to Him, which, while it exalts the
-latter to Paradise, consigns the former to the grave, to
-corruption, to temporary annihilation.&nbsp; Terrible is death to
-many, awful to all&mdash;undesirable even to the saint&mdash;and
-only tolerable because not so much of the soul&rsquo;s immediate
-gain as of the body&rsquo;s future hope.&nbsp; For if it were
-proposed to us to choose for eternity between perfect disembodied
-bliss, and very imperfect bliss in the body, there is no one, I
-conceive, who knows the capabilities of the body, both of
-rendering to <span class="smcap">God</span> and receiving of Him,
-who would not prefer, and I think rightly, life in the flesh to
-life out of it.</p>
-<p>The words of St. Paul exhibit in himself, and seem to allow in
-others, this shrinking from dissolution, this desire to keep the
-body, albeit changed, perfected, caught up into the heavens; to
-be spared the pulling down of the earthly tabernacle, even to
-make way for the heavenly eternal building.</p>
-<p>But St. Paul goes on to show that this desire was secondary to
-that of exchanging faith for sight, imperfection for
-perfection.&nbsp; He would not on any account remain earthy: he
-longed for the <a name="page269"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-269</span>fullest and most glorious presence of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and if it needs must be that the
-desired change and attainment could only be brought about by
-dissolution, oh, then he was ready, he was willing rather to be
-absent from the body.&nbsp; He returned from the shrinking; he
-rallied from the fear; he was confident, well content, and
-desirous to die.</p>
-<p>And herein he is the pattern of a true Christian.&nbsp; He is
-not so in love with death that he can see nothing in it to shrink
-from or fear, nothing to disturb him.&nbsp; He does not so hate
-this life as to hurry to be quit of it.&nbsp; With all its
-trials, and disappointments, and hindrances, and miseries, there
-is much in it which is dear to him, in which he finds delight,
-from which he is loth to part.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, too, is felt here, and seen by faith,
-and bestows appreciable blessings; here <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> work is to be done, here <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> glory to be promoted.&nbsp;
-Therefore &ldquo;to live is <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; But still there are
-greater and better things beyond.&nbsp; There is a place where
-trouble never comes, where happiness is perfect, whose company,
-and possessions, and pleasures, are such, that nought on earth is
-worth having or thinking of in comparison of them.&nbsp; There is
-a state in which <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> work may
-be done as angels do it, without hindrance <a
-name="page270"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 270</span>from within
-or without; in which glory to <span class="smcap">God</span> is
-easily, and fully, and delightfully rendered.&nbsp; There is a
-presence of <span class="smcap">God</span> which is visible and
-palpable, where His voice is clearly heard, where He is beheld
-face to face, where the everlasting arms are substantially felt
-as they embrace and uphold, where His love is perfectly realised
-and enjoyed, and perfectly reciprocated.</p>
-<p>What can be valued, or can interest in comparison of all
-this?&nbsp; What can content that is short of this?&nbsp; What
-can deter from the seeking of this? what valley seem dark and
-uninviting at the end of which this glory shines? what way be
-dreary and lonely, along which <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> rod and staff are offered as
-supporters and comforters?&nbsp; This being the end and the aim,
-if to attain it death must be passed through, then welcome
-death!&nbsp; We are confident, full of cheer at the prospect,
-eager to set out&mdash;&ldquo;To die is gain.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But the best feature of the Christian, as exhibited in St.
-Paul, remains for us to gaze on.&nbsp; After all, it is not the
-holiest ambition to aspire to heaven; it is not the highest
-vocation to enrich and perfect self.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> has made us capable of heavenly
-bliss.&nbsp; He offers it to us.&nbsp; He would have us seek it;
-He blesses and will reward the <a name="page271"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 271</span>seeking.&nbsp; But still He did not
-make and redeem us, He does not sanctify us only or chiefly for
-this.&nbsp; The Christian&rsquo;s vocation is the service of
-<span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; The end of his being is the
-glory of <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; And so our chief
-thoughts, and aspirations, and endeavours, are not to be
-deliverance from troubles, perfection in joy, getting out of the
-present into the future, exchanging earth for heaven; but, being
-and doing what <span class="smcap">God</span> approves, wherever,
-in whatever circumstances, <span class="smcap">God</span>
-appoints.&nbsp; &ldquo;Wherefore we labour, that whether present
-or absent we may be accepted of Him;&rdquo; that whether it
-pleases <span class="smcap">God</span> to come to us while we are
-in the body, or to call us to Him out of the body, He may find us
-prepared for what in either case awaits us; &ldquo;for we must
-all appear before the judgment-seat of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, that every one may receive according
-to the things done in the body.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Christian may shrink from the first thought of death, and
-wish not to be unclothed.&nbsp; He ought to aspire to heaven, and
-that he may reach it, be well content, willing rather, to be
-absent from the body.&nbsp; But above all he must labour in
-whatever state he is, therein so to be serving <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, as to have His present acceptance and
-always to be prepared for His coming judgment.</p>
-<p><a name="page272"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 272</span>We
-want to feel this and to act upon it.&nbsp; To put self with even
-its most innocent instincts and best interests and noblest
-aspirations somewhat aside, that <span class="smcap">God</span>
-may be more nearly all in all; to be less filled with groaning
-and coveting on our own account and more occupied in serving and
-glorifying <span class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; It is well
-not to love this world, to have realised its vanity and misery,
-to have broken the links that would bind us to it, to refuse to
-find our perfect joy in aught that belongs to it.&nbsp; It is
-well to yearn for deliverance from all that vexes and hinders and
-hurts; to desire ardently&mdash;even to pray earnestly and
-continually for&mdash;presence with the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, and all that that presence implies, in
-Paradise, in Heaven.&nbsp; But when by <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> grace we have come to this
-state, we are not perfect, we have not <i>begun</i> to be
-perfect.&nbsp; No! we have only qualified ourselves in mind and
-heart for the commencement of that which is demanded of us in
-life, the single, contented, glad, immediate, and constant
-service of <span class="smcap">God</span> in the state and
-circumstances in which He has placed us.</p>
-<p>Brethren, we are all dwelling in tabernacles, tents that have
-no firm foundation; which are to be taken down and soon.&nbsp;
-The general judgment may tarry, <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-may not come in His <a name="page273"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 273</span>glorious majesty, and meet us while
-in the body: but if not then <i>death</i> will surely come, and
-out of the body we must go to meet <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.&nbsp; How soon shall that be?&nbsp;
-How soon shall we meet Him?&nbsp; Do you ever give these things a
-serious thought?&nbsp; Do you ever consider that the apparently
-capricious last enemy is wont to take the young and strong as
-often as the old and feeble, and, <i>as</i> he chooses, sometimes
-to sound the warning note from afar off, sometimes to come
-silently, suddenly as a thief in the night?&nbsp; Do you
-feel&mdash;I single out each man, each woman, each child that
-hears me, and in <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> name I
-ask that individual&mdash;Do you feel that <i>you</i> may be
-Death&rsquo;s next victim, that ere the day is over you may be
-gone to your account, or at least the seeds of mortal disease may
-be beginning to grow in you?&nbsp; Oh, do not resist this appeal
-by persuading yourselves that the thing is improbable.&nbsp; Let
-it be enough that you know (and you do know) that it is possible,
-and, if possible, that you ought to entertain the
-possibility.</p>
-<p>Well now, let me farther ask, Are you prepared, are you
-preparing to die?&nbsp; Are you going to leave the vast concerns
-of an eternal state to the consideration of a moment, a moment
-too which may be denied you, if not by the instant <a
-name="page274"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 274</span>cutting of
-life&rsquo;s thread, by mortal fears and lingerings, and
-recoilings, by the engrossing pains of the body, by the locking
-up of the senses in stupor or delirium?&nbsp; Are you putting off
-concern; heedless of thought and preparation for meeting <span
-class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp; Are you calculating upon being
-able to think and feel aright when you will, to ask and obtain
-pardon for all that is wrong, to be excused for all deficiencies
-in a moment, to do the work of life on a sick-bed, to satisfy
-<span class="smcap">God</span> with the dregs of the cup of life,
-to become a passive recipient of the necessary holiness which
-<span class="smcap">God</span> bids all acquire actively?&nbsp;
-Do you suppose it will suffice to think of these things when the
-doctor tells you you cannot recover; to send for the clergyman to
-teach and move you when the faculty of heeding is well nigh gone,
-to pray for you, if you are unable to pray for yourself, to sigh
-over your body, if, alas! the soul has fled?&nbsp; Or are you now
-more or less possessed with religious thought and feeling,
-sitting loose to this world, weaning yourselves more and more
-from it, nerving yourselves for the last hour, sighing over and
-confessing your sins, trusting to <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> mercy, aspiring to heaven,
-praying for acceptance?&nbsp; Whether you are indifferent to or
-merely postponing concern, for self&rsquo;s best interests, or
-whether you are already <a name="page275"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 275</span>absorbed by self&rsquo;s best
-interests, let me remind you&mdash;without presuming to set any
-bounds to <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> mercy, without
-disputing that <span class="smcap">God</span> has sometimes
-received those who first turned to Him on a death-bed, without
-caring to satisfy those who want to know how little religion will
-save a man&mdash;let me remind you, I say, and do not be weary of
-the repetition, that to be truly acceptable to <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, it is not enough that you entertain
-some religious thoughts, and go through some religious forms at
-the last, or even that you are filled with religious thoughts and
-feelings all your life long, you must be serving <span
-class="smcap">God</span> now, in the day of your ability, at the
-call of every opportunity, in whatever state and circumstances
-you are placed, doing it as so much work set you to do and
-presently to be scrutinised and accounted for, rendering it as
-the faithful, grateful homage of a pardoned and sanctified and
-loving sinner.&nbsp; Let this be your rule, a rule to be observed
-not only in theory but in practice also; not only in the
-rendering of obedience, but in the treating of all that you have,
-and the accepting of all that happens to you, as from the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>&mdash;&ldquo;Whether we live, we live
-unto the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, or whether we die, we
-die unto the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page276"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-276</span>SERMON XVIII.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">RELIGIOUS ZEAL.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">II. <span
-class="smcap">Kings</span>, <span class="smcap">x</span>.,
-16.</p>
-<p><i>Come with me</i>, <i>and see my zeal for the</i> <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Jehu</span>, the son of Nimshi, one of the
-captains of Israel, had been selected and anointed by Divine
-command, to supplant King Joram, to smite the whole house of
-Ahab, and to avenge the poured-out blood of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> servants, the prophets.&nbsp; It
-is easy to account for the choice of such an agent.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, we believe, performs no miracle
-unnecessarily.&nbsp; When what He wants exists already, He
-searches it out and uses it; instead of making a new creation, or
-changing and converting what, so to speak, comes first to
-hand.&nbsp; At this time He had need, for His purposes respecting
-Israel, of a man bold, impetuous, full of vigour, prompt to
-undertake, resolute, courageous, uncompromising to perform.&nbsp;
-Such an one pre-eminently, <a name="page277"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 277</span>was Jehu; and therefore, said the
-<span class="smcap">Lord</span>, &ldquo;I have anointed thee king
-over the people of the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, even over
-Israel, and thou shalt smite the house of Ahab thy master, that I
-may avenge the blood of My servants the prophets, and the blood
-of all the servants of the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, at
-the hand of Jezebel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We know with what alacrity Jehu assumed his office, and set
-about the discharge of its stern and bloody duties; how he drove
-furiously to slay Joram, assailing him the while with loud
-reproaches for tolerating the wicked doings of Jezebel; how he
-caused Ahaziah, king of Judah, to be slain; how he commanded
-Jezebel to be thrown from the window, and trod her under foot;
-how he effected the wholesale slaughter of seventy persons of
-King Ahab&rsquo;s sons, of all his great men, and his kinsfolks,
-and his priests, until he left him none remaining; and how, too,
-returning from this destruction, he met forty-two of the brethren
-of King Ahaziah, and caused them all to be slain at the pit of
-the shearing house.&nbsp; The words of the text introduce us to
-his last recorded deed of this kind, namely, the destruction by
-subtlety of all the followers of Baal, and the suppression of his
-worship throughout the land of Israel.</p>
-<p>In reading this narrative, the questions naturally <a
-name="page278"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 278</span>arise, How
-far were the deeds of Jehu a performance of the Divine
-will?&nbsp; Was Jehu in any respect, and if so, in what, a holy
-character?&nbsp; Under what influence did he act, and forbear to
-act?&nbsp; May we consider these questions rightly, and learn
-from them lessons of wisdom by <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> grace to be carried out into
-holy practice!</p>
-<p>There is, then, no doubt, because we may read the command for
-it, in plain words, that <span class="smcap">God</span> willed
-the destruction of Ahab&rsquo;s whole house and the extermination
-of the abominable idolatry of the Zidonians.&nbsp; Jehu seems,
-indeed, to have been unnaturally ready for the
-executioner&rsquo;s office, to have discharged it savagely, and
-to have availed himself of what is never needed or allowed in
-<span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> service, of subtlety,
-fraud, lying: but still, making allowance for excesses, arising
-from his natural disposition, from his professional familiarity
-with deeds of blood, and probably from a proud misconception of
-the authority under which he acted, it must be admitted that, in
-the main, Jehu so far did the will of the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>.</p>
-<p>Under what influence, prompted by what feelings, he did it, is
-a question less easy to answer decidedly.&nbsp; There are
-some&mdash;and not a few&mdash;who say that his animus was
-altogether bad; that carnage was his delight; and that he
-wickedly, <a name="page279"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-279</span>and for his own pleasure and private ends, availed
-himself of the Divine commission, and served himself under the
-pretence of serving <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; That
-Jehu was selfish there is great reason to believe, and something
-shall be said on that head presently; but that he was a
-hypocrite, that his principle, the motive under which he acted,
-was wholly bad, is proved not to be the case by the inspired
-commendation of him.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span> has
-made even the wicked for Himself, He uses them to accomplish His
-purposes (as He did the Assyrians to punish the Israelites, Satan
-to try Job, Judas to betray our <span class="smcap">Lord</span>);
-but in such cases as they do of freely devised wickedness, what
-He overrules for His own good purposes, He condemns and punishes
-them for their offence, though He makes use of it.&nbsp; Now, in
-Jehu&rsquo;s case, He praised and rewarded, and so there must
-have been something right in him: &ldquo;And the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> said unto Jehu, Because thou hast done
-well in executing that which is right in mine eyes and hast done
-unto the house of Ahab according to all that was in mine heart,
-thy children of the fourth generation shall sit on the throne of
-Israel.&rdquo;&nbsp; And the promise was fully realised.</p>
-<p>It seems clear, then, that Jehu&rsquo;s deeds not only
-accomplished the Divine will, but that they were <a
-name="page280"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 280</span>done with
-that design; in obedience and in zeal.&nbsp; They were a
-soldier&rsquo;s exact observance of orders, they were the fruits
-of a servant&rsquo;s devotion to his master.</p>
-<p>We should be able to leave this statement without
-qualification were it not for two passages in the chapter of the
-text: the one, that in which Jehu makes such boastful mention of
-his doings, &ldquo;Come with me, and see my zeal for the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>;&rdquo; the other, that in which the
-inspired writer records, &ldquo;Howbeit from the sins of Jeroboam
-the son of Nebat, who made Israel to sin, Jehu departed not from
-after them, to wit, the golden calves that were in Bethel, and
-that were in Dan.&rdquo;&nbsp; From the first of these we are
-compelled to infer that there was an evil leaven pervading his
-best obedience; and from the last, that other feelings often
-influenced him beside zeal for <span class="smcap">God</span>,
-and other lords had dominion over him; so that he wilfully
-desisted or was deterred from doing all that was required of
-him.&nbsp; Hence it is plain that we must revise our estimate of
-his character, to account both for his zeal and want of zeal.</p>
-<p>The most satisfactory way of viewing him, to make him at all
-consistent, is to suppose that, after all he was not a changed
-and converted man, and did not act from spiritual feelings; but
-that <a name="page281"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 281</span>he
-was hitherto employed in pursuits congenial to his natural taste,
-and so found his own pleasure in doing the <span
-class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s</span>.&nbsp; In the destruction of
-Ahab&rsquo;s race and the overthrow of Baal, the soldier
-exercised the profession which he had chosen and loved.&nbsp; In
-daring exploits and deeds of blood, he found a carnal
-gratification.&nbsp; Moreover, he was all the while strengthening
-and advancing his own cause.&nbsp; His throne was unsafe while
-any of Ahab&rsquo;s posterity survived to dispute it with him,
-his people&rsquo;s allegiance was not sure while there was any
-link with the Zidonians remaining; and the <span
-class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s</span> displeasure at the idolatry of
-Israel, he well knew, would show itself again, as it had done
-before, in the withholding of prosperity from them, and allowing
-them to be harassed by their enemies.&nbsp; It was, then, a
-congenial and politic course which he had hitherto
-followed.&nbsp; It may have been done with greater ardour and
-satisfaction, because it was the <span
-class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s</span> will; Jehu may not at the time
-have had any distinct perception of the workings of a lower
-motive, but still he would, doubtless, have done all, and done it
-as readily and effectually had he owned no allegiance to <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, and received no Divine command.&nbsp;
-This view of Jehu seems to be corroborated by the fact, that when
-the time was <a name="page282"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-282</span>come for him to serve <span class="smcap">God</span> in
-comparative quietness, he served Him not; and when the
-performance of the Divine will in rooting out schism, threatened
-to break up the separation of Israel from Judah, by restoring the
-worship at Jerusalem, then he not only desisted from the work of
-reformation, but gave his countenance to the old error, and
-encouraged the people to go after the golden calves, that were in
-Bethel and that were in Dan.&nbsp; And so that which he would
-have others consider, and which, perhaps, he even believed
-himself, was zeal for <span class="smcap">God</span>, was chiefly
-the indulgence of his own passions and the service of self; and
-it came to pass, that he who had done well, even according to all
-that was in <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> heart,
-henceforth took no heed to walk in the law of the <span
-class="smcap">Lord God</span> of Israel.</p>
-<p>Such was Jehu&rsquo;s zeal&mdash;a natural, or mixed, is not
-wholly selfish zeal, the zeal of Saul who sought to slay the
-Gibeonites, but spared Agag alive; the zeal of the chief priests
-and Pharisees who put <span class="smcap">Christ</span> to death,
-and demanded Barabbas to be released; not the zeal of Phinehas,
-of Josiah, of Him who was always straitened till He did His
-Father&rsquo;s will; zeal not so much immoderate or blind, as
-blemished and partial; not being always zealously affected in a
-good work.</p>
-<p><a name="page283"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 283</span>The
-review of such a character may be very profitable.&nbsp; How many
-of us, my brethren, are very warm, very exact in serving <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, in the things to which we are naturally
-inclined?&nbsp; How many of us, if we bid not others (as we too
-often do), &ldquo;Come with me, and see my zeal for the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>,&rdquo; at least flatter, and puff up
-ourselves, in the contemplation of the service which we are
-rendering to <span class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp; How many of us
-have only just as much zeal as squares with our own desires or
-interests; and in all else, either desist when <span
-class="smcap">God</span> urges &ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; or persevere
-when He cries &ldquo;Forbear!&rdquo;&nbsp; The zealous man has
-been advised, by a great moralist, always to suspect that pride,
-or interest, or ill temper, is at the bottom of his zeal.&nbsp;
-Provided we guard against the grave error, so prevalent in the
-last century, of despising and condemning all religious zeal, it
-is well to entertain this suspicion&mdash;of ourselves, I
-mean&mdash;till we have proved it to be false, or by repentance
-and amendment have made it false.&nbsp; For who does not know how
-much a proud, carnal, selfish, ill-tempered man or woman may do
-in the service of self, which has the appearance of zeal for
-<span class="smcap">God</span>?&nbsp; What pious labours men will
-undertake, if they happen to be in the path of their natural
-inclinations!&nbsp; What warfare they will wage against <a
-name="page284"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 284</span>sins that
-they have no mind to!&nbsp; What platform speeches they will
-make, what pamphlets or letters publish, against the disciples of
-a religious school to which they do not belong!&nbsp; They are
-zealously affected; they come out and are separate; they are
-enthusiastic, energetic, noisy; they put forth all their own
-strength; they invoke the civil power; they would have authority
-from the synagogue, if it were to be had, to punish all who do
-not conform; they smite with the sharp sword of a bitter
-persecuting tongue or pen; they work, they speak, they give, they
-fight, they endure&mdash;all, they say, in zeal for the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>; and yet, if you follow them into the
-quiet scenes of life, if you come upon them where self has
-nothing to gain or enjoy, or where it has anything to lose or
-fear losing, to all appearance they take no heed to walk in the
-law of the <span class="smcap">Lord God</span>.&nbsp; It is very
-likely that they are not communicants; that they are irregular in
-their attendance at Church, or greatly wanting in proper
-demeanour and devotion when there; that they aid but seldom, and
-slenderly, in the spread of religion around them, and the relief
-of <span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> poor; that they are
-rarely seen to open the Bible; not men of prayer; exhibiting
-tempers, and following ways which belong not to the holily
-zealous; tolerating beneath their own <a name="page285"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 285</span>roof, or within the reach of their
-influence, something as hateful in the sight of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> as the calves that were in Bethel and
-that were in Dan.</p>
-<p>O how many who are zealous at one time, are without zeal at
-another!&nbsp; How many who make a great show of religion, and
-talk much about it, and contend in public for it, are utter
-strangers to its real influence, are wholly without love for
-it!&nbsp; How many, too, who honestly consider themselves zealous
-for <span class="smcap">God</span>, are only serving Him in the
-bent of their natural inclinations, and taking no heed to Him,
-where self must be denied; like men of cold temperament,
-despising bodily indulgence, yet making a god of mammon;
-prodigals, inveighing against covetousness; destroyers of the
-temple of Baal, restorers of the calves of Bethel and Dan; saints
-in some things, devils in others!</p>
-<p>O ye who boast of zeal, or claim to have it, take care that ye
-have it towards <span class="smcap">God</span>, and that ye are
-constant in it!&nbsp; Distrust the energy which works only at
-times, and in some directions.&nbsp; Suspect the feeling which
-excites and fills with ardour to-day, but is listless and dead
-to-morrow; which chooses for itself what to do for <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, what to think of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, what truth to meditate on chiefly, what
-practice alone to follow.&nbsp; Zeal for <span
-class="smcap">God</span> is entire, <a name="page286"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 286</span>regular, consistent devotion to
-Him.&nbsp; It fills the whole man with all spiritual desires and
-feelings; it works out in the whole life; albeit, it is generally
-calm, and sober, and quiet, not boasting nor thrusting itself
-forward, not making much ado.</p>
-<p>Do not suppose, brethren, that in speaking thus on the subject
-of zeal, I would discourage, in any degree, the entertaining of a
-fervent spirit, or would allow, for a moment, that strong feeling
-and strong expression of it, and manifested earnest activity,
-are, in the slightest degree, incompatible with real
-religion.&nbsp; On the contrary, I would maintain that there is
-no religion at all in the man or woman who is not&mdash;allowing
-for the differences of temperament&mdash;stirred within by it,
-and impelled to speak of and act upon it; who is afraid, or
-unwilling, or negligent, to show it.&nbsp; Zeal, I maintain, is
-good&mdash;nay, is necessary; zeal, which makes one burn with the
-glowing thought of immortality, which rouses one to ardent work
-and holy contention; which finds, and <i>must have</i>, its vent
-in the speech; which shows itself designedly, that it may impress
-others, and set forth the glory of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Only, I would have you judge of
-that zeal in others, and find it in yourselves; not in what Jehu
-did, but in what he omitted, and ought to have done; not in that
-which indulges natural <a name="page287"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 287</span>desires, but in that which crosses
-them; not in that which secures worldly advantages, but in that
-which disregards, and even sacrifices them; not in that which
-exists, or is quickened only in times and places of excitement,
-but which burns brightest and highest, and spreads farthest, in
-solitude and silence; not where there is immediate praise, or
-glory, or notoriety, in the sight of men, but in that which is
-seen alone by <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Seek to be
-zealous, rest not till you are zealous, for there is no service
-of <span class="smcap">God</span>, no acceptance with Him but
-through zeal: but expect to find your zeal, know that there only
-<span class="smcap">God</span> will find it, in your deep
-conviction of sin, in the fervour of your penitence, in the
-uncompromising persecution of your own lusts, in the crossing of
-your own will, in the refraining from that you would naturally
-choose to do, and the performance of that you shrink from through
-worldly motives, in the earnestness of your prayers, in the
-frequency of your acts of communion, in the diligence of your
-searching of the Scriptures, in the munificence of your private
-charities, in the strenuousness of your efforts to do good to
-others, in the secret contemplation and desire of heaven, in the
-soul&rsquo;s appreciation of your high calling, in faithful love
-of <span class="smcap">God</span> in your hearts!&nbsp; Have such
-zeal, and manifest and exercise <a name="page288"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 288</span>it as often and as consistently as
-the Holy Spirit enables you, and then the whole of your life,
-within and without, from first to last, shall have the
-commendation which Jehu&rsquo;s at the beginning had; and an
-infinitely better promise shall be fulfilled to you, Ye shall sit
-on the throne of heaven with <span class="smcap">Christ</span>,
-and reign with Him for ever and ever.</p>
-<h2><a name="page289"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-289</span>SERMON XIX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">CHRIST&rsquo;S COMING DESIRED.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Revelation</span>, <span
-class="smcap">xxii</span>., 20.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><i>Even so</i>, <i>come</i>, <span
-class="smcap">Lord Jesus</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">As</span> it was the common belief of the
-early disciples that <span class="smcap">Christ</span> was to
-come in His glorious Majesty, to render unto every man according
-to his works, so was it a common desire, a frequent prayer, that
-He would come quickly.&nbsp; They were not content with being
-merely mindful of the fact that He would come at some time, they
-were not merely anxious to be prepared, lest He should come soon;
-but they looked for His coming, they hasted towards it, they
-loved the thought of His appearing.&nbsp; Some of them, expecting
-that they should not taste of death till He had actually appeared
-to them in His fullest glory, looked ever with eager eyes for the
-opening of the heavens, and the revelation of the Son of <a
-name="page290"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 290</span>Man:
-others, believing that it was through the gates of death that
-they should enter into <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-presence and realise His Second Advent, wished to die, courted
-death, yea, hardly resigned themselves to the Divine will, that
-they should as yet continue in the flesh.</p>
-<p>Perhaps you may think that this was a natural rather than a
-spiritual frame of mind.&nbsp; On earth their portion had all
-along been one of sorrow and suffering, and evil reproach; and
-prophecy bade them look on for aggravations of what they already
-endured, and for many additional and greater troubles.&nbsp; What
-wonder, then, that they struggled to escape from the present,
-that they shrunk from the future, that they prayed that <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> would speedily come to them, or that
-He would speedily take them to Himself!&nbsp; What wonder that
-St. Paul, for instance, amid his toils, and perils, and
-sufferings, and revilings, and failures, and disappointments,
-with the prospect of nothing on earth but sorer persecution and
-greater trials, should desire to be absent from the body, and to
-be present with the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>!&nbsp; What
-wonder that St. John, so cruelly entreated by foes, so
-disregarded by should-be friends, when in the isle of his
-banishment the voice of his <span class="smcap">Lord</span> told
-of His speedy coming, should promptly and <a
-name="page291"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 291</span>ardently
-respond to Him, &ldquo;Even so, come, <span class="smcap">Lord
-Jesus</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Having nothing, and expecting nothing
-that flesh could desire; enduring much, anticipating more that
-was undesirable, grievous, hateful, what wonder, you would ask,
-that they yearned in their hearts to be delivered from such
-bondage, and to be transferred to the abode of peace and glory:
-that they offered frequently and fervently those Advent prayers,
-&ldquo;Thy kingdom come,&rdquo; &ldquo;<span class="smcap">Lord
-Jesus</span> receive my Spirit,&rdquo; &ldquo;Even so, come,
-<span class="smcap">Lord Jesus</span>&rdquo;!&nbsp; Even had they
-expected no hereafter, had they supposed that the coming Judge
-would annihilate them, or that the grave would bury them in
-eternal forgetfulness, it would still have been natural for them
-to have courted and prayed for the cessation of toil and the end
-of suffering.</p>
-<p>So some persons are wont to reason.&nbsp; It is natural, they
-say, for those to whom this world is a blank or a sea of
-troubles, to set their hopes on another world.&nbsp; It is
-natural for those whose life here is all weariness, to be
-desirous to give up that life, even though they shall have no
-life hereafter.</p>
-<p>But is it really natural?&nbsp; Does affliction naturally make
-us look heavenwards?&nbsp; Does a troubled life naturally
-reconcile us to the thought of <a name="page292"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 292</span>speedy death, yea, and cause us to
-desire it, to pray for it?</p>
-<p>On the contrary, do we not often find persons unspiritualised
-by affliction?&nbsp; Do not many maintain that their worldly
-troubles are the hindrance of religious thought and
-practice?&nbsp; Is not death by very instinct shrunk from by
-well-nigh all, and most by those whose circumstances seem to
-recommend it as naturally the greatest good?</p>
-<p>You hear those who are vexed or thwarted, or oppressed, or
-wearied, exclaim in some moment of impatience or despondency,
-&ldquo;I am weary of my life.&rdquo;&nbsp; You find some so worn
-out, like Job, by long and accumulated troubles, that they
-continually sigh, and from the heart, &ldquo;Oh! that I had given
-up the ghost!&rdquo;&nbsp; You hear the thoughtless, the proud,
-the obstinate, protest &ldquo;I had rather die.&rdquo;&nbsp; But
-let them be taken at their word, let Death show himself to be
-really close at hand, to be coming to them, and they will recoil
-with horror from his touch, and piteously cry to be spared.&nbsp;
-Occasionally one is found who, lacking patience and perseverance
-to extricate himself lawfully from pressing difficulties, or, mad
-with vexation because he cannot accomplish some worldly scheme,
-or because he has been frustrated in some wickedness: or because
-having <a name="page293"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-293</span>done the wickedness, he fears to face the worldly
-consequences of his deed, not merely says that he wishes to die,
-and prays for death; but then and there ministers it to
-himself.&nbsp; Yet even in such cases, while he would escape from
-life, he does not deliberately seek death.&nbsp; Nay, when he
-finds he is encountering death, he often desists from his
-half-done deed, or, if it be too late for that, shrieks
-frantically for others to rescue him.</p>
-<p>There are exceptions to all these rules, when men really wish
-to die, when they deliberately court and procure death; but they
-are sufficiently rare to vindicate the truth, that they are not
-natural.</p>
-<p>Certainly the desire and prayer of the first disciples to be
-removed from this world were not natural.&nbsp; They did not
-despair in difficulties.&nbsp; They were not unwilling to endure
-continued trials and sufferings.&nbsp; They were not disgusted
-with life.&nbsp; All that <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-required of them they burned to do; all that He laid upon them
-they rejoiced to bear; and while aught was undone or unsuffered,
-they chose and desired to remain; and even then, it was not
-exhausted nature asking for rest, it was not weariness or dislike
-of life&rsquo;s lot which prompted the prayer, &ldquo;Even so,
-come, <span class="smcap">Lord Jesus</span>:&rdquo; they gloried
-in their then vocation, they <a name="page294"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 294</span>loved their appointed work; they
-would not relinquish it, they would not be unclothed, but clothed
-upon, advanced, and perfected: they loved <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, and so yearned to see Him; they
-loved His service, and so coveted a state in which it could be
-more fully and uninterruptedly rendered; they loved other men,
-the alien and the outcast, and so longed for the day when all the
-kingdoms of the world should become the kingdoms of the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> and of His <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, when every soul should be subject to
-and rejoice in His rule!&nbsp; They looked for <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> coming, not because they
-supposed it would release them from His service, and transfer
-them to an abode of luxurious immunity and rest and glory; but
-because they thought it was the necessary prelude to full
-usefulness, to entire submission to His will, to unremitted,
-glorious service under His perceived eye, and in the perfection
-of His strength.&nbsp; They thought death was gain, and they
-desired it, not as the time of sleep, the chamber of inactivity
-and oblivion, but as the door, the short passage, which led into
-a world wherein the kingdom of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>
-was fully set up, and wherein they should unceasingly experience
-His rule, and act as its agents.&nbsp; They prayed that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> would shortly accomplish the number of
-His elect, not with the carnal desire <a name="page295"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 295</span>that their enemies might be
-confounded, and that those then without might be kept without:
-nor yet with selfish impatience for their own promised reward;
-but that the work of grace might be effectual, where now it
-seemed to be received in vain; that the darkness which
-encompassed so many might be dispelled, that all Israel might be
-saved, and might join them in glorifying <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.</p>
-<p>This was the feeling which prompted their Advent prayers; this
-was the feeling which they laboured to arouse in those to whom
-they spoke, and in us, for whom they wrote.&nbsp; When St. Paul
-tells us, that to him to live was <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, and to die was gain, that he desired
-to depart and be with <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, though
-he was content to remain, he shows one of the many respects in
-which we are to be followers of him.&nbsp; When St. John records,
-that he replied to <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-announcement, &ldquo;Behold, I come quickly,&rdquo; &ldquo;Even
-so, come, <span class="smcap">Lord Jesus</span>,&rdquo; he
-personates the Church and every acceptable member of it, and
-shows us the attitude and the feeling which becomes each one of
-those who wait for the <span class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s</span>
-appearing; even as St. Peter does in direct appeal: &ldquo;What
-manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and
-godliness, looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of
-<span class="smcap">God</span>?&rdquo;</p>
-<p><a name="page296"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 296</span>Alas!
-brethren, how far are we below the appointed standard of
-acceptable discipleship!&nbsp; How little is <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> Second Advent in our minds,
-even as a mere doctrine, a truth of Scripture!&nbsp; How small is
-the influence which it is allowed to exercise on our thoughts and
-affections, and lives!&nbsp; How seldom do we suggest to
-ourselves the possibility of its nearness!&nbsp; How faintly, if
-at all, in what mere words&mdash;words, which do not spring from
-feelings, and are not illustrated by actions&mdash;do we pray for
-its speedy arrival!</p>
-<p>Even those among us, who are rightly mindful, who study to be
-prepared at all times, lest speedily and suddenly the Son of Man
-should come forth to judgment, or should send forth the angel of
-death to bring them to His bar&mdash;even these can scarcely be
-said to desire the coming, which they think of and prepare for:
-much less to pray for it, and to do what in them lies to hasten
-it.&nbsp; Even if we are faithful servants, able to render a
-right account whenever it shall be called for, we dread rather
-than hope for the day of our <span
-class="smcap">Lord&rsquo;s</span> return.&nbsp; Even if we have
-our lamps trimmed and oil with us in our vessels, if instead of
-slumbering, we are watching, would it not still be to us an
-unwelcome cry, &ldquo;Behold the bridegroom cometh, go ye out to
-meet Him&rdquo;?&nbsp; <a name="page297"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 297</span>What would be the first feeling of
-the best of us, if at this moment an angel stood revealed, and
-announced &ldquo;The day of the <span class="smcap">Lord</span>
-is come&rdquo;? which of us can honestly, heartily say now,
-&ldquo;I would not live always.&nbsp; I would not live till
-to-morrow, if <span class="smcap">God</span> graciously willed
-that I might die to-day?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Of course there are many reasons why we should shrink from an
-immediate advent.&nbsp; We all of us need to cast off some works
-of darkness: something is wanting in the spiritual armour of the
-best accoutred.&nbsp; We feel that we have much work to do for
-<span class="smcap">God</span> before the night cometh; we have
-many graces to cultivate and many others to acquire, before we
-shall be fit for <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-coming; and, besides, naturally, the unprovided for, the
-unprotected, the unguided, that will be left behind, if we go,
-tempt us to linger, with eyes earthwards; and fashion chains to
-bind us down.&nbsp; But setting aside all this, supposing it all
-changed, so that we were fit in all other respects for heaven,
-and nothing and no one on earth really required us, does not
-conscience convince us that still we would rather not go yet,
-that we shall be the better pleased the longer we are allowed to
-stay, that our real prayer (that which our feelings suggest,
-though our mouths dare not utter it, nor our <a
-name="page298"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 298</span>minds dwell
-on it) is &ldquo;<span class="smcap">Lord Jesus</span>, come
-<i>not</i> quickly.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Why is this?&nbsp; I do not mean why is it in the case of the
-wilful, the sensual, the worldly&mdash;there is no need to ask
-the question of them; <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span>
-coming will be their utter confusion, and the immediate
-forerunner of their destruction.&nbsp; It is easy to understand
-why <i>they</i> wish him to delay.&nbsp; But why is it in the
-case of the truly penitent, the reformed, the faithful, the holy,
-the comparatively ready for <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> kingdom of glory?&nbsp; The
-foremost reason seems to be that they have never had the courage
-to meditate calmly and sufficiently on death.&nbsp; The first
-thought of death alarms them.&nbsp; And this is natural, for
-death is part of the punishment of sin, and all that reminds of
-sin should alarm.&nbsp; But it is only the <i>first</i> thought
-that alarms.&nbsp; If they would give it further consideration,
-they would see that death is deprived of his sting, that, monster
-as he appears, to them he is harmless.&nbsp; &ldquo;There is no
-condemnation for them that are in <span class="smcap">Christ
-Jesus</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Death is not their enemy, but their
-friend.&nbsp; In fact, he is death no longer.&nbsp; He is an
-appointed minister to take them out of what might be more
-properly called death&mdash;this mortal life&mdash;and introduce
-them into real life.&nbsp; He does not separate them from <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, but joins them <a
-name="page299"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 299</span>more truly
-to Him.&nbsp; It is not a dark, bottomless pit, with sides that
-cannot be climbed, to which he brings them, but a short valley
-leading from the plain of this world to the city of glory, which
-he that enters passes through in a moment, ay, and less than a
-moment, and is new born for eternity.&nbsp; Bring yourselves,
-brethren, to believe this, to feel the reality of it, to be sure
-that the moment your body falls asleep in <span
-class="smcap">Jesus</span> your spirit is wafted to Paradise, and
-begins to rest consciously on <span class="smcap">Christ</span>,
-and to company with the spirits of the just departed.&nbsp; Then,
-though the nearness of death may for the moment awe
-you&mdash;because it is the antechamber which leads directly into
-the presence of so much holiness and glory&mdash;it will have no
-power to fill you with dismay, no undesirableness to make you
-shrink from it.&nbsp; No, brethren, you will think much of it,
-you will patiently hope for it, you will anticipate it and watch
-for it, and when it draws nigh, you will welcome it with joy, and
-hasten to be transferred by it from mortal life to immortal!</p>
-<p>Another fault is, that <span class="smcap">Christ</span> is
-not sufficiently in all our thoughts.&nbsp; Our religion is too
-much of mere routine; our obedience is mechanical, unintelligent;
-our holiness is acquired, because of an imposed necessity; our
-faith is but historical.&nbsp; <a name="page300"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 300</span>We do not feel what St. Paul felt
-when he said, &ldquo;To me to live is <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>.&rdquo;&nbsp; By which it is clear he
-meant much more than that <span
-class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> service was his one
-employment, <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> rewards his
-one expectation, <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> grace
-his only strength.&nbsp; He did not simply look back to a
-crucified Saviour, nor forward to a coming Judge, believing
-himself to be made a servant, and to have by and by to render an
-account, to be liable to a judgment of his service; but meanwhile
-to have no <span class="smcap">Lord</span> near and over
-him.&nbsp; No! the <span class="smcap">Christ</span> that had
-departed in the flesh was felt to have come back in the
-spirit.&nbsp; St. Paul saw Him by faith, knew Him, walked side by
-side with Him, served Him personally, derived constant grace from
-Him, loved Him, and felt His love.&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> was the Alpha and Omega of his being,
-the beginning, the motive power of all his thoughts, and words,
-and deeds, the companion of all his ways, the object of all his
-aims: <span class="smcap">Christ</span> the power of <span
-class="smcap">God</span> unto salvation, <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> a very present help and comfort,
-<span class="smcap">Christ</span> the hope of glory.&nbsp; Life
-was full of <span class="smcap">Christ</span> in its experiences,
-its aims, its delights, and hopes.&nbsp; Gladly, therefore, would
-he retain it as long as <span class="smcap">God</span> willed;
-but knowing that death was gain, that after death <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> would be more palpably with him, that
-he would be more able <a name="page301"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 301</span>to appreciate <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, that heavenly joys would then be
-added to the joys he had on earth, he still longed for his
-departure, he desired ardently to be clothed upon, he loved the
-thought of <span class="smcap">Christ&rsquo;s</span> final
-appearing, and his whole life acted the prayer which St. John
-uttered, &ldquo;Come, <span class="smcap">Lord
-Jesus</span>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Brethren, you must live as Paul did, you must appreciate life
-as he did, if you would desire death as he did.&nbsp; You must
-acquaint yourselves with <span class="smcap">Christ</span> by
-study and meditation, by the Spirit&rsquo;s invoked aid.&nbsp;
-You must think of a living <span class="smcap">Lord</span> as
-well as of a dead Saviour.&nbsp; You must have reference in all
-your ways, not only to the first advent and to the last, but,
-also, and I would even say chiefly, to the constant advent.&nbsp;
-You must have come to perceive that the promise is fulfilled,
-&ldquo;Lo, I am with you alway.&rdquo;&nbsp; You must endure as
-seeing Him who is invisible.&nbsp; You must carry <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> about with you.&nbsp; You must do all
-to the glory of Him, felt to be near, to be served and
-glorified.&nbsp; When you would go anywhither, your first thought
-must be, &ldquo;Will <span class="smcap">Christ</span> accompany
-me?&nbsp; Except thy presence go with me, O <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, carry me not up hence.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-When you have aught to do or suffer, your realisation of a near
-and available helper must make you begin with <a
-name="page302"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 302</span>the prayer,
-&ldquo;O <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, raise up thy power and
-come among us, and with great might succour us.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-Gratitude for benefits provided so long ago will never prompt you
-to render due Christian service, vague expectation of
-inconceivable joys will never quicken your steps Zionwards.&nbsp;
-You must know <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, feel Him,
-converse with Him, depend on Him, and then, while you enjoy the
-life here, you will yet yearn for a place and a condition where
-you can have perfectly and uninterruptedly what now for so many
-reasons you have but in small part, and, &ldquo;Thy kingdom
-come,&rdquo; &ldquo;Even so, come, <span class="smcap">Lord
-Jesus</span>,&rdquo; will be your fervent and frequent
-prayers.</p>
-<p>I have spoken all along as if what we call &ldquo;death&rdquo;
-were the coming of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, which you
-ought to desire and pray for, because we have all come to take
-for granted that in our several cases death will surely precede
-judgment, that <span class="smcap">Christ</span> will not be
-revealed in our time.&nbsp; I need scarcely remind you, that we
-do not know that; that at any moment the final advent might take
-place, and so each one of us be caught up alive&mdash;and never
-see death.&nbsp; If then, when you desire more of <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span>, you think that through the gate of
-death is the probable way of gaining it, and so look for death,
-you must not forget that there is another <a
-name="page303"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 303</span>way, and
-that you may possibly first meet <span
-class="smcap">Christ</span> face to face there.&nbsp; Be your
-desire to be more fully with <span class="smcap">Christ</span>,
-and submissively leave to Him to decide how that desire shall be
-accomplished, through death or without death.&nbsp; But in either
-case remember that your ultimate thought should rest upon the
-final advent, and your most fervent prayers be for it.&nbsp;
-Though you gain much by dying, being freed from many hindrances
-of perception of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, being made
-more fit for His presence, seeing Him more clearly, feeling, and
-hearing, and loving Him better, your state and privileges will
-still be imperfect.&nbsp; You must stand before Him in glorified
-bodies before you are capable of being and receiving all that He
-graciously designs; and all the elect must stand there with you
-before His perfect gifts shall be bestowed.&nbsp; God does not
-will that we, without them, should be made perfect.&nbsp; The
-final advent, then, is to be the frequent subject of our prayers;
-the speedy completion of all God&rsquo;s preparatory measures,
-the swiftest communication, far and wide, of the knowledge of His
-name and will, the quick filling up of the number of the
-elect.</p>
-<p>This we are to pray for, and this we are to aid in
-accomplishing.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Christ</span> will come
-when all is ready, and He has left us to make ready.&nbsp; First
-<a name="page304"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 304</span>to
-prepare ourselves, then to prepare others.&nbsp; When this work
-of the forerunner has been done, the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> Whom ye seek will come.&nbsp; He does
-but tarry till men be told of His coming, and persuaded to look
-for and desire it.&nbsp; When we tell them, when we persuade
-them, we hasten His coming&mdash;that coming in perfect glory to
-bestow in perfection on us, on all, that which, till then, at the
-best must be imperfect.</p>
-<p>Should not this quicken our own growth in spiritual things?
-should it not prompt us to admonish, and persuade, and help
-others? should it not impel us to give more substantial aid to,
-to interest ourselves more about, to pray more frequently and
-really for the success of missionary enterprise, that those who
-have heard of <span class="smcap">Christ</span> may be found out
-in their forgetfulness, and reminded of Him, that those who are
-as yet strangers and aliens may be brought into His household,
-and made fellow heirs with us, and expectants of His coming?</p>
-<h2><a name="page305"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-305</span>SERMON XX.<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">TRUE PROSPERITY.</span></h2>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="smcap">Genesis</span>, <span class="smcap">xxxix</span>.,
-2.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><i>The</i> <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> <i>was with Joseph</i>, <i>and he was a
-prosperous man</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">If</span> you were asked, brethren, to
-make a list of what you consider prosperous men, what kind of
-persons what you put into it?&nbsp; Those, I doubt not, with whom
-all goes smoothly, who come in no misfortune like other folk, who
-have riches in possession, acquire fame, are exalted in honour;
-whose wishes are largely gratified, whose every project succeeds;
-who, in short, experience no reverse, no temporary withdrawal or
-suspension of good fortune, and peace, and pleasure.&nbsp; What
-is the first prosperous man that comes into your mind?&nbsp;
-Perhaps, a successful speculator, who years ago made what is
-called a &ldquo;lucky hit,&rdquo; and has gone on repeating it,
-till he has become a <a name="page306"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 306</span>millionaire.&nbsp; Perhaps, a
-professional man, whom fortune took by the hand as soon as he set
-out, and who has been hurried along with giant strides, favoured,
-flattered, well remunerated, till he has reached the summit of
-success.&nbsp; Perhaps, some uniformly thriving, respectable,
-happy tradesman, whose business prospers, who is always able to
-pay his way, can afford time and money for pleasure, and has good
-heart and health to enjoy it; in whose household there is no
-strife or division, no sickness, no vacated place; all present
-success, or bright hope.&nbsp; Or, perhaps, you fasten on an
-artisan, who is never out of work, who always meets with
-considerate and liberal employers, whose sobriety and
-uprightness, and other good qualities, are recognised and
-respected abroad, and rewarded by comfort, and affection, and
-well-doing at home.</p>
-<p>But it is a clergyman who bids you select: so you must look
-about with a religious eye.&nbsp; Then you pick out, perhaps,
-those who are naturally endowed with good will and resolution,
-and are strong to perform it; who have been early trained in the
-right way, so that doing good has become habitual and
-comparatively easy; who have no overwhelming concern about the
-support of their lower life, are not distracted by worldly cares
-or <a name="page307"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 307</span>by
-the claims of society upon them, nor much exposed to unspiritual
-influence; who have no immoderate passions, encounter no sore
-temptations, but <i>can</i>, without hindrance, and <i>do</i>,
-from desire, live calm, and easy, and creditable lives.&nbsp;
-These, you would say, are prosperous men, and so, in a sense,
-they are&mdash;very prosperous&mdash;and far be it from me to
-say, wrongly, or unhappily prosperous.&nbsp; We know, indeed,
-what snares riches bring with them, how many grave
-responsibilities are imposed upon all to whom much has been
-given, how dizzy one becomes through standing on a great height,
-and how easy and dangerous it is to fall from it.&nbsp; We know,
-too, that constant success is apt to make us self-reliant,
-forgetful of <span class="smcap">God</span>, proud, imperious,
-uncharitable; and that uninterrupted peace and happiness in this
-world too often beguile us, softly indeed, but surely, out of all
-thought of heaven.&nbsp; And once more, we know that an even
-temperament and an untempted life may easily lead to
-routine-religion, to self-righteousness, to spiritual apathy and
-deadness.&nbsp; On these accounts, we must not count them
-<i>surely</i> happy who prosper in the world; but, on the other
-hand, we may not judge their state certainly unhappy; nor deem
-the desire to be like them necessarily wrong or unwise.&nbsp;
-<i>If</i> we can make <a name="page308"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 308</span>sure of both worlds; <i>if</i> we
-can have the best of this, and not lose the other; <i>if</i> no
-harm will happen to our spiritual state, and no fitness for it be
-unattained and unkept; <i>if</i> <span class="smcap">God</span>
-will be surely with us, while we <i>thus</i> prosper&mdash;then
-religion does not require, rather forbids, that we should give up
-our good things, that we should forbear to seek them, to use
-them, and to rejoice in them.&nbsp; All these various states may,
-or may not be, truly prosperous.&nbsp; Wherefore be not rashly
-carried away with admiration and desire of any of them; be slow
-to judge unfavourably of them, or to refuse, if you be called to
-any of them.</p>
-<p>But what I would have you chiefly note now is that there are
-other kinds of true prosperity; rather, that if you would find
-out who truly prosper, and whether you yourselves are truly
-prosperous, you must look for other signs than those of worldly
-success and happiness; you must not conclude that the inward
-part, the very substance of prosperity, is wanting, because the
-outward life is sorely tried, and thwarted, and deprived, and
-saddened.</p>
-<p>The Spirit of Truth describes, in the chapter of the text, a
-truly prosperous man.&nbsp; Three several times, in a few verses,
-is Joseph&rsquo;s prosperity put prominently forward.&nbsp; Now
-just think what his <a name="page309"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 309</span>life had been, and was, and was yet
-to be!&nbsp; He had been motherless from an early age; his
-father&rsquo;s love made him the object of his brothers&rsquo;
-envy and hatred.&nbsp; He was thrown into a pit to die, and only
-escaped death to become a slave in a foreign land to a heathen
-master.&nbsp; Ere long he was made the victim of a foul
-accusation; he was thrust into prison, and there detained many
-long years; and when, at last, a hope of deliverance dawned upon
-him, he was cruelly disappointed by the king&rsquo;s servant,
-whom he had kindly tended and reassured in trouble, and another
-two years of incarceration, of suspense worse than despair, had
-to be endured!&nbsp; Yet was he <i>all the while</i>&mdash;mark
-that!&mdash;a prosperous man.&nbsp; The Scripture does not say or
-mean that <i>by and by</i> he attained to a prosperity, in which
-all his former adversity was forgotten.&nbsp; It is of the
-present, not of the future, that prosperity is predicated.&nbsp;
-Nor may we suppose that there was but a <i>show</i> of adversity,
-that Joseph was really what we call prosperous all the while, in
-that he enjoyed many advantages, that he made steady way towards
-greatness, that his troubles were but as the toils and
-difficulties which, in a measure, the most successful have to
-encounter; or the just merits of misdeeds and the correction of
-faults.&nbsp; Up to the time of his release <a
-name="page310"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 310</span>from
-prison, all through the years which Scripture says were
-prosperous, every hope and aim had been frustrated.&nbsp; It was
-not that he had difficulty in entering upon his work, that he had
-much to resist and suffer from its pursuit; but that after it was
-done, the reward of it was denied him: he only climbed the hill,
-to be rolled back, just as he reached the summit.&nbsp; His
-child&rsquo;s life commended him to the love of his father,
-<i>therefore</i> he was thrust out.&nbsp; He won the good-will of
-his master, was diligent in his work, which prospered in his
-hand; was trustworthy and trusted, rose to be overseer of the
-house, and <i>then</i>, when he had good hope of his freedom and
-of returning to his yearned-for home, without any fault of his,
-he was degraded, branded with infamy, and cast into prison.&nbsp;
-Here, again, he deserved prosperity: the very jailor acknowledged
-it, and honoured and well treated him.&nbsp; The door, too,
-seemed to be opening for his deliverance, when a fellow-prisoner
-went forth full of his praise, an eye-witness of his sorrow, to
-make mention of him to Pharaoh&mdash;but alas! the most strange
-forgetfulness took possession of the butler, and for two years
-the name of Joseph never crossed his lips, nor thought of him
-entered his mind.&nbsp; And even when delivered out of prison,
-and exalted by Pharaoh, he became but <a name="page311"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 311</span>a chief <i>slave</i>, next the
-throne in dignity, second to the king in power, but still not
-free to return to his home, still kept ignorant whether his
-father was yet alive!&nbsp; Was this what we can call, by any
-stretch or limitation, &ldquo;prosperity&rdquo;?&nbsp; And mark,
-that all his trouble came upon him, not only <i>in</i>, but
-<i>for</i>, his well-doing.&nbsp; In obedience to his father, he
-went to visit his brethren, and thus afforded the occasion of
-selling him into bondage; because he did his duty to Potiphar, he
-was put into circumstances of danger; by refusing to sin against
-<span class="smcap">God</span>, he incurred the reproach and
-punishment of sin; by honestly asserting before Pharaoh,
-&ldquo;It is not in me, I am nothing but a servant,&rdquo; he
-lost the opportunity of obtaining what the king would have been
-most ready to give him, and afraid to refuse, absolute
-freedom.</p>
-<p>My brethren, you and I can hardly bear with trials, and
-sufferings, and reproaches, and ill-treatment, when we dimly
-suspect, or are actually conscious, that we have deserved
-them.&nbsp; How should we murmur, and cry out, and kick, and
-rebel, if we were thus treated for well-doing!&nbsp; With what
-words should we answer him who sought to calm and comfort us in
-such trouble, by assuring us that we did wrong to count it
-adversity, that it was indeed prosperity!</p>
-<p><a name="page312"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 312</span>Yet
-<span class="smcap">God</span> says that Joseph was a prosperous
-man.&nbsp; It is evident, therefore, that we know not the meaning
-of prosperity, and must search in His dictionary for the
-interpretation of it.&nbsp; It is soon found: the first part of
-the text supplies it&mdash;&ldquo;<i>The</i> <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span> <i>was with him</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ah! here is light from heaven.&nbsp; Prosperity does not mean
-the state of careless independence; being what we will, having
-what we desire, accomplishing what we propose: it means, the
-state of dependence, of being kept and ordered by <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> providence, treated as He wills,
-used in accomplishing His purposes.&nbsp; <i>By right</i>, we are
-<span class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>, by creation, and
-redemption, and sanctification, sent into this world, reconciled
-and restored after defection, enabled and commissioned to do the
-will of <span class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; We are as much the
-agents of His purposes as the elements, or any other of His
-creatures; and it would be just as reasonable, were it possible,
-for the sun to complain that it is sometimes covered with clouds;
-the rain, that it has to descend and be absorbed in the earth, or
-lost in the sea, or scattered in snow; the wind, that it must
-blow when and where He pleases, as for us to say of any state
-into which we are brought, of any work to which we are put, or of
-any calling off from it, &ldquo;I like not this; I am <a
-name="page313"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 313</span>not
-prospered.&nbsp; All these things are against me&rdquo;!&nbsp; We
-have no right to independence; we ought not to be independent,
-and if we are, it is either because we have forsaken our
-appointed service, or because <span class="smcap">God</span>
-deems us unfit for it, and, therefore, uses us not!&nbsp; A chief
-part of Joseph&rsquo;s prosperity, remember, consisted not in the
-advancement of himself, but in the accomplishment of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> work: &ldquo;<i>That which he
-did</i>, the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> made it to
-prosper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But <i>by privilege</i>, as well as by right, are we <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span>.&nbsp; We are not mere tools in
-His hand: we are living agents, intelligent to understand His
-will, free to do it or decline it, capable of loving it.&nbsp; We
-are, therefore, taken into His counsel, made fellow-workers with
-Him, treated all along by Him according to our merits, finally
-rewarded according to our work; not, however, in the way of our
-own choice, but of His.&nbsp; O if we realised this, and did our
-part according to the belief, we should never murmur at, or
-question anything that is appointed us, or befals us.&nbsp; For
-what does such questioning amount to, but an assertion that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> does not make the right use of us, or
-that He does not treat us worthily?&nbsp; And what is that, but
-to deny His wisdom, His justice, and His love?&nbsp; No man, who
-is worth a thought, counts it <a name="page314"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 314</span>adversity, that he is bound by the
-conditions, and must accept the trials, and do the work of his
-chosen earthly calling, that he is obliged, for instance, to
-serve in his shop, or pore over his books, or risk storms at sea,
-or face the dangers of war; that, in short, he cannot be and do
-what he will, but must obey the law of circumstances&mdash;why,
-then, should he reverse all this in his divine mission and
-heavenly calling, and demand a liberty, an immunity, a choice,
-which common sense would tell him should not and could not be
-granted?</p>
-<p>But there is another, a chief consideration, which should
-incline us to be sure that the ordering of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> providence is the conferring of
-True Prosperity.&nbsp; <span class="smcap">God</span> uses us,
-indeed, as servants, and appoints us our individual work out of
-the several circumstances around us.&nbsp; But He likewise makes
-us His friends, and uses the circumstances around us, as
-ministers to us.&nbsp; It is in them that He speaks to us and
-visits us; it is by them, that He rewards and punishes us now; it
-is through them that He disciplines and trains us, and perfects
-us for heaven.&nbsp; We were not made for them, but they for
-us.&nbsp; And what shall we be saying of the Artificer and the
-Superintendent of their use if we question their general fitness,
-or the special application of them to ourselves?&nbsp; <a
-name="page315"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-315</span>&ldquo;Sorrow is not good for me.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I
-am ruined by that disappointment.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Through
-taking that stay from me, I am become helpless.&rdquo;&nbsp;
-&ldquo;Removing me thither is overwhelming me with
-adversity.&rdquo;&nbsp; These, my brethren, are not only the
-expressions of ingratitude, and the reasonings of unbelief, they
-are the dictations of arrogant presumption dethroning the wisdom
-of <span class="smcap">God</span>, and putting our folly in its
-place.&nbsp; We have no right to choose for ourselves: and if we
-had, how could we do it?&nbsp; Is not <span
-class="smcap">God</span> wise to know what is best for us?&nbsp;
-Is not He good to apply it?&nbsp; Should we not fear the
-fulfilment of any hope, the accomplishment of any purpose of our
-own, and cry, &ldquo;O <span class="smcap">Lord</span>, not as I
-will, but as Thou wilt.&nbsp; Except Thy presence go with me,
-carry me not up hence&rdquo;!&nbsp; Should we not accept with
-full resignation, with heartfelt gratitude, any imposed
-condition, and say, &ldquo;It is the <span
-class="smcap">Lord</span>, let Him do what seemeth Him
-good,&rdquo; &ldquo;It is good for me to be here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We may reason this out, and the example of others proves it,
-and our own experience confirms it.&nbsp; Admit the fact, that
-the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> was with Joseph, <i>i.e.</i>,
-that He used him as His agent, that He loved him, and designed to
-deliver him from evil, and to bless him to the uttermost; and
-then look along his life to see whether wisdom and love <a
-name="page316"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 316</span>did not
-guide all his circumstances to this end.&nbsp; It was <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> will that Joseph should cause
-Jacob to come into Egypt, and should sustain him there.&nbsp; How
-every step of his seeming adversity helped to accomplish this
-will!&nbsp; The telling of his dream engendered the hatred of his
-brethren; that hatred sold him to the Midianites, the Midianites
-brought him to Potiphar, the false accusation cast him into
-prison, in the prison he interpreted the king&rsquo;s
-butler&rsquo;s dream, and therefore he was summoned to interpret
-the king&rsquo;s dream, and for so doing made the ruler of Egypt,
-and the dispenser of corn to the famished nations.&nbsp; This
-brought the sons of Jacob to him: this enabled him to dispose of
-them according to the will of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>.&nbsp; Thus, &ldquo;that which he did
-the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> made it to
-prosper.&rdquo;&nbsp; And then of his personal prosperity.&nbsp;
-Was not his father&rsquo;s preference likely to spoil him?&nbsp;
-Did he not run daily risks from the hatred of his brethren?&nbsp;
-Was his best state that of an honoured slave in Potiphar&rsquo;s
-household?&nbsp; Was it well that he should daily encounter the
-temptations of his mistress?&nbsp; Was there no good discipline
-in that prison-life?&nbsp; Did not deliverance come at the
-fitting moment, rightly so late, under such circumstances?&nbsp;
-Supposing he had chosen for himself, what else could he have
-chosen that <a name="page317"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-317</span>would have been better, or as good as <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> choice for Him?&nbsp; And if,
-brethren, we look along <i>our</i> lives in the light of <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> providence, is it not just so
-with us?&nbsp; Supposing us to be faithful servants of <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, has not all that has happened to us
-been for our good?&nbsp; Was it not well for us that we were
-removed from the state in which we were being spoiled, becoming
-selfish and proud?&nbsp; Was it not good for us to be
-afflicted?&nbsp; Did not some earthly loss make us seek to fill
-the void with heavenly consolation?&nbsp; Are we not now
-better&mdash;better in fact&mdash;better in hope&mdash;because
-<span class="smcap">God</span> has prospered us in His own way,
-than if we had had what <i>we</i> thought prosperity?&nbsp; Yes,
-surely; and had we been wise, in the hour of our worst trial, we
-should have known that we were truly prosperous, in that <span
-class="smcap">God</span> was with us, that His jealous love had
-taken us from the foolish fondness that was spoiling us, from the
-bitter envy that would not rest till it had destroyed us, from
-the secular prosperity that would soon have made us forget our
-birthright, from the temptation that sought to defile us!</p>
-<p>If we have been wanting in this wisdom hitherto, let us fill
-ourselves with it now.&nbsp; Let us accept everything that befals
-us in the path of faith and obedience as true prosperity; true
-prosperity, <a name="page318"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-318</span>not only because it is accomplishing by us <span
-class="smcap">God&rsquo;s</span> wise purposes, not only because
-it is advancing us to glory, but because, it is the felt, the
-immediate, wise, loving operation on us of a present <span
-class="smcap">God</span>, present to sustain, to comfort, to
-sanctify, to bless, present under a better covenant than that
-with Joseph, present more graciously, and more effectually; <span
-class="smcap">God</span> the Father of our <span
-class="smcap">Lord Jesus Christ</span>, <span
-class="smcap">God</span> the Son, who has given Himself for us,
-and has promised to be with us always even to the end of the
-world, <span class="smcap">God</span> the Holy Ghost, proceeding
-from the Father and the Son, bringing near and applying true
-prosperity, and fitting us for it, and enlightening us to see it,
-and causing us to rejoice in it.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Glory be unto
-God</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">F. Shoberl,
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