James W. Hood - The Negro in The Christian Pulpit (1884)
James W. Hood - The Negro in The Christian Pulpit (1884)
James W. Hood - The Negro in The Christian Pulpit (1884)
\s
MflJ<?xr^
T-ESCE
Negro
in
the
Christian Pulpit;
OR,
THE
DESTINIES,
By
J.
.sivop of tl^e
W. HOOD, u
.&.-
Cli.-o.rcli.
WITH AN APPENDIX,
CONTAINING SPECIMEN SERMONS BY OTHER BISHOPS OF THE SAME CHURCH.
O. O.,
"Our Brother
in BLAfiK^&ftgr*
JAN
2 !J^
by
W. Hood,
at
Washington, D. C.
INTRODUCTION
of Bishop
Hood,
brief introduction.
His long,
faithful, able
his people
commend him
to the respect
confidence of those
of him.
what I have learned of Sermons from the public Southern and Northern men
of
we understand a book better when we know something man who wrote it. It is in order to present at this
place a few facts concerning the
life
of the preacher
who
of Sermons. was born in Kennett township, Chester county, Pennsylvania, May 30, 1831. His father, the Rev. Levi Hood, and his mother, Harriet Hood, were Methodists, and were among the thirteen families that, in 1813, founded a separate colored Methodist church in Wilmington, Delaware. Some years after their marriage and settlement in Wilmington, the parents of the future Bishop moved to a farm nine miles from the city and situated on the line between Delaware and Pennsylvania. Here several of their twelve children were born among them the subject of this sketch. The farm belonged to Ephraim Jackson. The Jacksons were numerous in that neighborhood and several of the Hood children were brought up in their service. The preacher's father was opposed to '" binding " his children to service, as being too
speaks to us
in this
volume
James
Walker Hood
INTRODUCTION.
like slavery.
much
should work for "food, clothing and six week's schooling annually
son, into
till they were sixteen years old." The Jackwhose hands James Walker fell, retired from
The
out,
grew up with very limited educational advantages. New York the youth spent several of the following years, doing such work as opportunity allowed. He was fortunate enough to escape, during this period, an attempt to kidnap him; he was also brought under religious conviction, and at the age of eleven experienced, as he now believes, a true change of heart. The extravagant pretensions and superstitious conceits of many of his race, with whom he had religious association, had the effect of bringing the young convert into much doubt and spiritual distress. God's blessing on the common sense and steadfast piet}^ of his parents delivered him from the plague and peril of this sort of unbelief, and
In Philadelphia and
in his eighteenth year, " resting in the doctrine of justifi-
When
call
to preach,
work upon which he " licensed to preach," and was about to enter. But he was began to do what he could both to preach and to improve himself. These Sermons show that, considering his opportunities, he surpassed many who have had every
his unfitness for the
and
advantage.
In 1859 he was
"
New Eng-
INTRODUCTION.
Church.
In 1862 he returned to the was ordained Elder, and returned In 1863 he to the Nova Scotia Mission for another year. was stationed in Bridgeport, Connecticut. During this year he was sent to North Carolina " as the first one of
session of his Conference,
his race appointed as a regular Missionary to the freed-
men
in the South."
years,
this field
church buildings erected. Mr. Hood was elected a Bishop in his Church by the General Conference which met in Charlotte, N. C, in 1872. As one of the "General Superintendents" of his widely
extended Church, Bishop
tinent to and
fro.
Hood has
His ability, his eloquence, his zeal and have commanded the respect and confidence of the best people of both races. As one of the members of the Ecumenical Conference that met in London in 1881, Bishop Hood made a lasting impression. These sermons speak for themselves. Their naturalness,
his usefulness, their clearness, their force,
doctrine,
to
and their general soundness of and wholesomenessof sentiment, commend them sensible and pious people. I have found them as usestill question whether the negro in this capable of education and " uplifting," will
ful as interesting.
Those who
country
is
modify their opinions when they read these sermons, or else will conclude that their author is a very striking
INTRODUCTION.
is
a general rale.
Bishop
Hood
entertains
views as to
He
be-
They
thinks,
hang
together,
and he
is
persuaded
permanently and broadly in this country, they must largely " work out their own salvation." Men like Bishop Hood deserve encouragement in their good work. They have a great work to do in the United States. May we not believe that in doing that work they are being trained for the yet greater work of redeeming Africa?
his people are to succeed
ATTICUS
Emory College, Oxford,
October
Ga.,
)
G.
HAYGOOD.
16, 1884.
THE APOLOGY,
And why
should there be an apology for publishing a
book of sermons? New publications are continually appearing. It is, however, customary to give a reason for the appearance of a new work. There are extraordinary reasons for the appearance of this work First. The absolute absence of such a work from the pen of a colored Methodist minister. This class of min:
isters is
seems
form of a book
A single sermon
down
for
our
is in-
me
that
if
we ought to produce them. have been urged, for several years, by the ministers among whom I have labored to publish tny
Thirdly.
I
sermons.
pre-
book was selected. The harmony, therefore, of a course of sermons written upon a single topic may to not be expected, as they are selections from sermons prepared for ordinary
of the
THE APOLOGY.
effort.
pulpit
pect a
This
more frequent
repetition of the
same
illustration
and
would be expected in a
My
constant
my
much
care as I desired.
notice
some
errors
On page
ed
;
could "
is
erroneously repeat-
on page 40, sixth line from the bottom, " state " should be "change"; on page 56, line eight, "their friendship " should read " these friends," same page, 14th line, should read, " It was mysterious love " on page 61,. the first line of poetry should begin with "In," not
:
"And";
"
on page 83, line six, "of Luther" should read by Luther ".; on page 90, seventh line from the bottom,
of
instead
day which"; on page 101, ninth line from he' -bottom, "trembling " should. read " tumbling " on page 110, fifth line from the bottom, " light" should read "life"; on. page 150, after the word "torch." in line seveenteen, " for "should be inserted; on page 165, sixth line from the bottom, after speaker, "of "should read ''in "; on
"those
it
days"
should
read
l
"
page 1&% fifth line of poetry, instead of " unfathomless it shouldfread "unfathomable." These are some of the more vexing errors. Critical readers will discover others,
the true reading ofwhich will be apparent at a glance.
I
"
my colleagues,
threeof
whom
mons.
trine, of style
These productions present a rich variety of docand of thought which add much to the
;
THE APOLOGY.
I)
The introduction by
of the interest
Dr.
Haygood
is
another evidence
feels in
advancement of the interests of the Black Brother, by which he has placed us under lasting obligations. He has our best thanks. For suggesting the idea of soliciting Dr. Haygood to write the introduction, and for opening
correspondence on the subject,
C. Price,
am
indebted
to
Rev.
J.
M. A.
am
Burk-
W.
Tourgee of "The Continent/' published in New York, for letters to Dr. Haygood, commendatory of myself and work. These, with the Bishops who have furnished sermons, will please accept grateful thanks.
THE AUTHOR.
CONTENTS
Introduction By Rev. A. G. Brother in Black," &c,
Page.
Haygood, D.
D.,
Author of
"
Our
3
The
Author's Apology,
SERMON
The Claims
of the Gospel Message,
_
I.
9
II.
SERMON
Personal Consecration,
20
SERMON
Exemplified Attachment
to Christ
III.
33
SERMON
49
SERMON
Why was
the Rich
V.
61
Man
in
Torment,
SERMON
The Marvelous
Vitality of the Church,
VI.
.
79
SERMON
On
Easter,
VII.
90
SERMON
Creation's First-born, or the Earliest
VIII.
of the Gospel,
Symbol
IX.
105
SERMON
The
Soul's Anchor,
._
122
SERMON
The Loss The Two
of the Soul,
.
X.
136
SERMON
Characters and
XI.
148
Two
Destinies,
SERMON
Man's Natural Disinclination
XII.
Maker,.. 165
SERMON
The Streams which Gladden God's
Citv,
XIII.
1
73
12
CONTENTS.
SERMON
The
XIV.
Page.
Perfect Felicity of the Resurrected Saints a Result of Conformity to the Divine Likeness, ._ 190
SERMON
The Doom
of the Hypocrit's
XV.
205
Hope,
SERMON
The Glory Revealed
XVI.
222
SERMON
A
Desirable Consummation,
XVII.
XVIII.
-.
236
SERMON
Loss of First Love,
247
SERMON
The Helplessness
The
of
XIX.
262
Human
Nature,
SERMON
Christian Characteristics,
XX.
_ - - -
27S
SERMON XXL
David's Root and Offspring, or Venus in the Apocalypse,
290
APPENDIX.
SERMON
The Unpardonable
The
Sin,
I.
by Bishop
J. J.
Moore, D.
II.
307
SERMON
First Pair Banished,
by Bishop
J. P.
Thompson, M. D.,_.
III.
315
SERMON
The Love of God H. Lomax,
Its
Thomas
-'-
322
SERMON
A
,
IV.
AN ADDRESS,
Samaritan, by Bishop S. J. Jones, D. D.,.._ Electrotypes of Bishops contributing Sermons, in a group,
The Good
353
304
SERMON
"Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the we have heard, lest at any time we should let them slip." Heb. ii, 1.
The
to
Hebrews seems
confirm the faith of those who had embraced the Gospel, to prevent them from being drawn
have been,
away, and apostatizing therefrom, and to convince the unbelieving of the importance of the Gospel message.
The
opening of his discourse, set forth economy was more excellent than the Jewish, which it was wholly to supersede, and that it was a more complete revelation of the mind and will of God, than he had ever before communicated to man a revelation which proclaims, in all its richness, fulness and efficiency, the plan of salvation, secured through the suffering of the Son of God, for the perishing
apostle, at the
millions of the
human
race.
important than
God
all
to
man,
it
Being more excellent and more sent from demands more earnest heed. The
the
10
this
end he urged that they should give it the necessary -that they should grasp, and hang on to the subject, as one upon which their eternal interests hinged. He unites himself with them to avoid appearing invidious, or suspicious of any special indifference on their part It has been remarked that people are not so ready to receive exhortations, which they suspect are urged upon the ground of undeserved blame. He therefore
attention
w ay
T
duty urged was of general concern, and not singular to them but because the Son of God, by whom the Father
;
human
race,
a person so infinitely
any by
whom
man
before; because
any former message communicated to man, and because this great and glorious messenger suffered so much to
secure to us the blessings offered in this message, "there-
more any former message, yea, more than former messages (which were less important) deserved, and more than we have hitherto given to this. Not being duly impressed with its importance, we have not, hitherto, given it the attention we should. Let us, therefore, cease this indifference and heedlessness, call in the wanderings of our minds, and turn them to the contemplation of this great and all important subject of the soul's eternal salvation, contained in the words spoken by the Son of God. Such in brief is the ser.se of the text.
fore
to
we ought
give"
it "
to
make
it
our own.
There
is
no sab-
11
much importance
will
to us, as this,
which has
to all,
so strong a claim
upon
us.
The Gospel
who
embrace
it,
blessings rich,
abundant and
eternal.
Our theme
is,
The Claims
first
And
our thoughts
rest.
upon which
ought we to give heed to the things which we have heard respecting the Guspel mes~ sage ? There are several points from which we may urge
these claims
Why
author.
it is
The message
at
divine,
is
the point
was necessary for him to settle this point, else he could not hope to induce the Hebrews to embrace it. Hence, he starts off with the following declaration " God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son." Thus he shows that the Gospel message is from God, the only living and true God, the same who spoke to the fathers by the prophets, the God of Abraham, of Moses and JDlijah. This was the first great fact to which the apostle admonished the Hebrews to give heed. He was not calling upon them to renounce the God of their fathers, nor to embrace a new religion, but declares that the same God, who had for ages been revealing his will unto the fathers at sundry times and in divers manners, had now at one time, by one whole message, in a more complete manner, and by a more glorious meesenger than was ever before employed, revealed himself to the sons of inen in a new and living way. It was, therefore, not lab
Indeed
it
12
purpose to lead them away from the God of their fathers, but to lead them to him, by his own better way of ap^proach, which he had revealed by his Son. By this we are reminded that as to authority, the Gospel message is
fully equal to
it is
1.
as
we
shall see,
superior in
completeness.
mind
man
before.
He had
benevolent purposes, but had not fully revealed the mystery of redemption, in any of the messages'given by the prophets to the fathers.
The former revelations were given by degrees, a part time "at sundry times." The order and extent of creation was revealed in Adam's time. The general judgment and future rewards and punishments were made known to Enoch. To Adam, it was also made known that victory over the enemy of man should be obtained by the seed of the woman. To Abraham, it was made known that in his seed ail the nations of the earth should be blessed. Jacob, looking down the line of the tribe of
at a
Judah, saw the promised seed of the woman and of Abraham, as a peaceful prince, to whom should the gathering
To Moses, it was revealed that Messiah should be a prophet, whose predictions would claim uni^
of the people be.
versal attention. To Isaiah and other prophets, many important truths were revealed. Among other visions of Isaiah, he saw the world's Redeemer as a mighty con*
queror,
single
coming up from Bozrah, meeting man's enemy, handed and alone, and vanquishing him, staining his gaiinejits with the blood of the vanquished, and e&*
13
by
his suffering and triumph, he secured man's redemption, and obtained victory over death. Thus gradually and in parts, had God formerly revealed his mind and will, and the progress, triumph and victory of his kingdom, unto men. Not only had he given his former revelations at sundry times, but in divers manners, by dreams, by visions, by audible voices, and by the appearance of angels. Now the Gospel is God's last message to man, complete in itself, and delivered in all its fulness and
completeness, by one messenger.; not in dreamsor visions, not in types, shadows or dark sayings, as in the past, but
in plain
carries conviction
to the heart,
and
quake, and filled the Israelites with mortal dread, so that they desired u that God should
infilife.
" Therefore,
we ought
to
give
"
it
" the
more earnest
heed."
2.
But
the
apostle refers
to us, the
to the
message comes
ii,
exalted character of
the sacrifice he
man's redemption.
"
By
his Son."
This
is
he would have us view the importance of the Gospel, namely, that God regarded it so highly, that he would entrust it to no less person than his Son. That which is
of
little
The necessary
14
conclusion
God regarded
so
The
up
to
the loftiest
its
gran-
momen-
Son from
all
and
co-
He is
honor
of the
"To which
my
to
right
hand
make
Jesus, as the
sit
Son
of God, has
by inheritance a right
fact
at God's
right hand.
in
15
which the apostle had especially resacrifice made by the Son of God, to meet all the exigencies of tho sinner's case. That man might enjoy the benefits of the Gospel economy, much needed to be done for him. He had lost the power to do anything toward delivering himself, as completely as a man shut up in an iron prison, or in a grave, hence he is said to be dead and buried therefore he that brought to him the message of mercy, had also to give him power Man by disobedience had dishonored God, to receive it. broken his law, and made himself a transgressor. This separated him from the divine favor, involved him in spiritual death, and condemned him to natural and To meet man's condition, and deliver him eternal death. therefrom, Jesus offered himself a sacrifice. For man's disgraceful conduct, he deserved to be put to shame, and for his transgression to suffer pain hence Jesus, as his ransom, suffered both shame and agony on the cross. But man also deserved death, and Jesus died for him. Thus Jesus met all the necessities of man's helpless condition, and hence it is written, " the chastisement of our peace was upon him, and by his stripes we are healed." He rendered unto God an acceptable sacrifice, God himself
namely, the
;
bearing witness
to
down
"
at
acceptance by sitting him at his when ho had by himself purged our the right hand of the majesty on high."
its
"
He
For His
me
all
to intercede,
redeeming
love,
to plead
:
cry,
Nor
let
16
II.
are exhorted to give heed, earnest heed, yea "more earnest heed " to the things that we heard respecting the
We
its
peace,
from us, or, in other words, avoid the danger of loosing our interest in them. Thoughtlessness and heedlessness are most prevalent, and also most dangerous Those misquote God's word, who say, "he that evils. runs may read." They put it wrong end foremost. It should be, " he that reads may run." You must stop and You cannot read while running. read, and then run. Coming to the point at which two roads meet, if you rush
you are as likely to take the wrong road as the right you stop and read the direction on the signpost, and thus learn the right way, you may then go forward with all possible speed. That saying, " Be sure you are right, and then go ahead," is a wise one. The admonitions to take heed are numerous, and are found in almost every part of the sacred volume. Moses thus writes: "Only take heed to thyself, and keep thy soul diligently, lest thou forget the things which thine eyes have seen, and lest they depart from thy heart all
on,
one, but if
life."
Deut.
iv, 9.
unto yourselves, lest ye forget the covenant of the Lord your God, which, he made with you." Verse 23. Solomon admonishes us to ponder the paths of our feet, and Jesus frequently gives this solemn injunction, " He that hath an ear to hear, let him hear." To his disciples, after he had explained the parable of he sower, he said, "Take heed what ye hear," Mark iv, 24 and in another place
i
17
Take heed,
therefore,
how ye
hear."
These
is
a prevalent evil, and that the tendency of the mind to drift away from the things that pertain to our eternal interests is so strong, that it needs to be held up to them, as a ship needs to be held up by its helm, in order to make head against a contrary wind. When the wind is contrary, but little head is made, if the man at the helm In our voyage across is careless or neglectful of dut} time's billows, the wind is always contrary, and nothing but the most caieful attention to duty, the most ceaseless energy and watchfulness, will enable us to make head. This steadiness of purpose, energy of soul, unceasing watchfulness, and constant holding of the mind and attention up to the things which most concern us is, what Many are so many, even professing christians lack. wholly thoughtless, heedless and indifferent. They are warned that they are in the broad road to ruin, that but they don't take their way is dark and leads to hell heed. The charming sound of the Gospel fills their ears, the wrath and indignation of Almighty God is proclaimed in thunder tones, the brink upon which they stand is pointed out by the solemn and sorrowful warning voice of faithful ministers, but all to no effect; they don't take heed along the downward road they pursue heedless mortal we appeal their dark and woful way. Sabbath morning in the new year. to you on this first stop and think! Give heed and hear, turn to God, and your souls shall live. But the text is especially addressed to those who are not wholly heedless those who have heard. It is to the
r
.
18
things that
heed,
lest
we have heard,
that
duty
to
we are exhorted to give let them slip. It is our but by heedlessness we let go
to.
that which
sion of the
we ought
to
hold on
it
New Testament
is
rendered,
Lest haply
we drift away from them." The sense is about the same. The idea is, that if the things are not retained, it is our own fault. Mr. Benson thinks "run out" would be a
better rendering, that
lets
it
many
ways, which
is
way.
as
Preaching
is
represented as watering
is
drawing water from the wells oi salvation. If we do not retain what is poured into us by preaching, and received through faith, we may be charged with letting it run out, or slip from us. But our attention is called to time. " Lest at any time." Some persons would hold on to and reap the full 'benefit of what they have heard, if all seasons were favorable. When they have no cross nor vexation, and are enjoying the flood tide of divine blessings, both spiritual and temporal, they run well. But we shall not reach a state here on earth that is free from vexations. Vexations are the natural products of time's soil, and so long as we are
creatures of time,
we
ing seasons and circumstances, and therefore in danger of letting the good things we have heard slip from us,
away from them. Some drift away under the soft and balmy breezes of worldly prosperity, some are driven by the storms of adversity, some are the subjects of peculiar temptation
or of drifting
'THE CLAIMS 01
19
God sometimes
that they
tion,
suffers bis
Jesus himself
was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness that he might be tempted b}^ the devil, and no mortal can tell, or even conceive, what he endured during those forty days. We are taught to pray, " Lead us not into temptation.' While God tempts no man, yet he leads us in the path of duty, and Satan lays his snares in that very path, and unless we can prevail with the Lord to lead us to duty by some other path, we shall have sore trial. In these trying times many are drawn away from their steadfast7
out,
make shipwreck
of faith
all
the
good
effect of the
Such is the result of heedlessness. This evil effect is sometimes suddenly produced, but more frequently like water from a leaky vessel, the good effect of the word gradually runs out of the soul, till it becomes empty.
The only
heed.
"
is
to take
Therefore we ought
things which
to
heed
to the
we have heard,
any time
we should
let
them
slip."
20
PERSONAL CONSECRATION,
SERMON
II,
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
11
tinto the
da^
Our
text
is
Solomon
was ordained to erect. It was in David's heart to build this house himself, but it was not God's will that There was no objection, however, to his he should. gathering together such materials as he could, and David was quite content to do such part of the work, as it pleased the Lord that he should do. There are some men who, if they can't do what they choose, won't do anything. Not so with David, he was so deeply interested in the Lord's work, that he was ready to do whatever part God would permit him. Finding that it v/as notGod's pleasure that he should erect the building, nor even know the plan of it, yet being permitted to do so, he went to work, with all
his might, to collect the materials
;
some
of his collections
costly, jpf which that magnificent structure was composed, namely, silver, gold, even the gold of Ophir, and stones most precious. In collecting the ma-
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
terials,
21
own
private resources,
and
he
Yet
all of
this
much importance should be engaged in by all people. He therefore made a personal appeal,
language of the
it
of the
in the
text, to
each individual.
He
prefaced
was made:
(1).
The youthfulness
of his son,
(2).
to
(3).
The
associated with
ace was not for man, but for the Lord God,
work worthy of their best effort, to push it forward. The more rich, costly and abundant their gifts, the more splendid would be the adornment, and the more suitable would be the house for its divine occuHe pant. (4). He referred them to his own example. had contributed of his most costly and precious possessions, had given the best he had, not for show or any vain or selfish motive, but from love toward's God's house. " Moreover, because I have set my affection to the house of my God, I have of mine own proper good, of gold and silver, which I have given to the house of my God, over and above all that I have prepared for the holy house." When what we do for God springs from
r
w as
therefore a
we may be sure
his ap-
Who
then
is
willing to con-
22
PERSONAL- CONSECRATION.
day unto the Lord?'' I repeat, was direct and personal. It went directly home to each and every one, to whom it was addressed. No one could feel that he was not included, that it did not mean him but each one must have felt that he was required to respond for himself. There could have been no looking about to see who was referred to, but each must have felt a personal responsibility, that he could could not shirk or shake off. In like manner, direct and personal, does the text come home to each of us to-day. I wish that each one present would regard the text as a personal appeal to himself. " Who then is willing to consecrate his service this day unto the Lord?" Not merely a little seriousness, which might be produced by a thunder-storm, a hurricane, or a sudden death not a little amendment of our ways, the breaking off of our viler habits merely but a consecration is called for a consecration of our service unto the Lord. Consecrate is from the Latin con and sacra, to make or declare sacred, to separate from a common to a sacred purpose, to set apart, to dedicate, to devote to the service and worship
secrate his service this
this appeal
;
of God.
It carries
with
it
He
come with
'
'
his
mind
fully
made
The covenant
I'll
I this
moment make,
I will
no more
cast his
my God forsake,
word behind."
Nor
There
is
!:
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
sure to feel the divine displeasure.
23
The ark
of
God
so
to get rid of
and Belshazzar was punished with death, for profaning the sacred vessels taken from the temple of the Lord
at
Jerusalem.
Now we
the Lord
;
are called
to
upon
to consecrate
do
it
this day.
"
To-day " and " this day " is the language inwhich appeals are made. Such is the language of the Psalmist, " To-day if ye wiil hear his voice," Psa. xcv, 7. And Paul reminds us that this was not merely the language of David, but of the Holy Ghost " Wherefore as the Holy Ghost saith, To-day if ye will hear his voice." Heb. iii, 7. Joshua thus addressed Israel, " Choose ye this day." Joshua xxiv, 15. Likewise Moses said unto Israel, " See, I have set before thee this day life and good." There is no intimation that another day
put in the present tense.
will be given, or that this offer will ever be
made
again.
The
is
text, it
first
seems
to
the
Sunday
year's
in the
the
first
day
of the year.
tion of
new
The
of
on the Sabbath, are five, six, and eleven years. We have just passed the longest period, which occurs only once in twenty-eight years. Many of us will never see this long period elapse again. Some wiil never see the first of January come on the Sabbath again. Some will never see another new year's day. Some, perhaps, will never see another day. How solemn the thought
January
Even
is
gone we may go
to
eternity, be-
24
fore this
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
day
is
we may close our eyes in death. How important, then, that we should consecrate our service unto the Lord to-day. I. Let us notice what this consecration implies. It is a complete and entire separation from every other service, and includes a surrender of all our physical and mental powers to God, to serve him with our bodies which are his, to esteem him as the chief good, and to render
closed
unto him the adoration of the whole heart. 1. We must abandon Satan's service entirely.
so long as
Our consecration to God's service will not be complete we do any work for Satan, nor will God accept
We
cannot
We
must
Thousands
them.
kingdom.
him.
If
They complain
you don't want
to
that Satan
troubles
else,
by him, you must move further from him. If we live near to Christ, the devil can't harm us. If we are constantly employed
be troubled
is
their church
and its peculiar forms, ceremonies and doctrines. would never know that they made any pretense to
You
piety,
were it not for their activity in the sanctuary on the Sabbath day. Their zeal would be a good thing, if it was
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
for
25
God's glor\
;
r
,
if
it
gage
but
it
is
not.
not the
own
fancy.
Whether
not their
like Peter's
men than
the
things of God.
There
heaven in
all
their labor
wisdom
of this world,
us,
" is first
pure, then
partiality
We must abandon
self service.
We
to be indulged, to
We
are self
ble service to
after
me,
let
To
sac-
rifice self
repre-
The
self
make
this sacrifice
"If
must be denied,
sin forsaken quite,
And
They'd rather choose the road that's wide, And strive to think it's right."
Men
cause
is
right, be-
it is
Some
26 mistake
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
self will fur
naked
We
have an instance of
this in the
man who
now on
trial for
have us believe ihat he was led to the commission of that most heinous crime by divine inspiration; and it appears that he had worked himself up into the notion that it was all right, before he could nerve himself to commit the crime. There are thousands of evil deeds of less magnitude, to the commission of which men work themselves up in the same ^ay, and selfishness lies at the root of the evil. We serve self. Be assured that if we would consecrate our service unto the Lord, self
He would
must be sacrificed, crucified, die and be buried. 3. We must abandon our sinful state. By nature we are sinners, and we cannot serve God in our sins. The heart, the carnal mind, is enmity against God, is not in subjection to his will, and cannot be, thereThe old man fore the carnal mind must be removed. and his deeds must be cast out. We must have a new nature. You might as soon expect a stream to run up
hill,
serve
to
God
in his sins.
"
Nicodemus,
see the
kingdom of God." If we had not had our natuwe would never have seen the light of this world, likewise except we are born into the kingdom of We must be born Christ, we can know nothing of it. into the kingdom of God, in order to live and move and act our part in it, and we need the divine nature to qualral birth,
ify us to
to
God.
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
4. Finally\ iye
service.
27
the divine
We
devil's
camp,
him
Why
not? we have
why not forsake his service openly? Otherwise, Satan may charge us with sneaking away from him. He may claim our service on the ground that we have not given him proper notice that
served the devil publicly,
we have
quit him.
in
his vineyard.
To render
we
must unite with those who are in his service. II. Let us notice the nature qp acceptable service,
It
must
be voluntary.
is
Hence
the
willing
e?n
"
will, let
him
life
freely."
and
is
act of ours.
if
We may
but
we
To
is
consecrate our
Lord, therefore,
it
only necessary to
"Who then is willing?" have the service of constraint, lie demands the free consent of the will. Inanimate matter is governed by fixed laws, laws that it caqnot resist, in connection with which there can be no will but that of him who governs it. The inferior creatures are governed by instinct, but man is a moral free agent, and therefore responsible. He has the power of reflection and the fac?
get the consent of the will.
God
will not
qlty of reason,
He
28
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
He can
He
He
He
is,
clares, "
what doth the Lord^ require of thee but to do justly, love mercy and walk humbly with thy God?" The right way is made plain, and if we walk not in it, it is because we will not. The fatalist would rob man of his moral free agency and make him a mere machine, incapable of doing good or evil, and hence not responsible. This doctrine would
s
There would be no virtue to reward and no vice But God, in his Word, declares that there to punish. He will be a judgment, both of the just and the unjust. has been reiterating it ever since (he days of Enoch, that men will be judged according to their deeds, and that whether we are rewarded or punished depends upon our conduct in this life; that good and evil are set before us, and that grace is given us to reject the one and choose the other. Such is the import of the text, " Who then is willing to consecrate his service unto the Lord this day?" And this language stands not alone, as we have seen, but besides the passages we have quoted, the following are of equal force: "They hated knowledge, and did not
ment.
choose the fear of the Lord.
eat the fruit of their
*
*
with their
own
devices."
Prov.
29 and 31.
set
and
des-
Our
upon our
choice,
Jesus said
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
of
29
Fate has not
Mary, she
it
"
made
hers,
made
it
not possessed
free will.
it
by the
by her own
not be taken Thank God, He adds, from her." It was not forced upon her, and it shall not be forced from her. God will see to it that none shall take us out of his vineyard by violence. We are free to consecrate ourselves unto his service, and free to continue in his service, for none can pluck us out of his hand. Having been made free from sin, we become the servants of God, have our fruit unto holiness, and the end ever* lasting life. All of this is offered to us freely, but we must accept it freely. There are many reasons why we should fly from the road to death, and seek that which leads to life, yet, we are free. A gaping hell, with howling demons, making it hideous with more than ten thousand
terrors,
are free.
You
if
you
will,
down
to
and
means employed to keep you back from the This you can do, because you are morally free. pit. Heaven with all its glories awaits you at the end of
all
the
the road to
saints await to
There the enraptured host of glorified welcome you to the blissful regions of God's eternal domain, and to the joys of eternal day* There that darling babe that angels rocked to sleep, is waiting to meet and embrace you. and to fill your ears with such music as heaven alone can afford. All these
life.
anc|
unknown
to
mortals here,
0U
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
await you in the glory world, and invite you there; but you are free; you can reject them if you will; you can have them if you will. Who then is willing? Who will
close in with the offered blessings this
2.
day
This
is
a pleasant
service.
am aware
complain and whine about their troubles and vexations. They will have it that their lot is a hard one. I am quite sure that a sinner would find it hard work to serve God
jn his sins.
Yea, impossible.
hypocrite would
make
no
better head,
and
it is
may
be some
who
duty
may seem
It
a load
But
to the sound,
healthy christian,
really delightful.
must be
so, for
work
to serve
it
lover f]nd
one we love with all the heart? hard work to serve his spouse?
to serve
bridegroom find it hard work to the loving mother find it hard work
infant?
I anticipate the
and can
her helpless
makes the service delightful, and the more that can be done, the more happiness there is
In
all
afforded.
It
is
midnight!
darl^.
Heaven's
and darkness I see a man leave his bed, dress himself and prepare to brave the storm. Where goes that man |n tlae storm and darkness reigning without ? Why does
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
31
He
is
a loving
suddenly
ill,
he goes
who
is
five miles
which he slacks not until the desired object is Was it hard work to get that man out of his bed ? It would have been hard work to have kept him in it. It would have taken chains, and strong chains, to have held that man back. Why ? Because he loved
his pace,
reached.
his wife.
Now
work yoke
if
all
our heart,
it
will be our
it
The angels
don't find
hard
their delight.
My
and my burden light." Solomon says, " her ways are ways of pleasantness." If we have on a heavy yoke, it is not the yoke of Jesus if your way is not pleasant, it is not the way to heaven. There is a kind of good and evil equal bent, more a devil than a saint state, that some get into, and it's a hard road. get out of it to-day. if any of you have gotten into it; and you may be sure that you have, if you find it hard work to serve God. The truly pious find it joyful work to serve God hence they sing, " Let the children of Zion be joyful in their king," and again, '-'Rejoice in the Lord alway, and again I say rejoice."
easy,
;
;
3.
Bid
this is
a profitable
service.
The
devil, in his
attempt
to
He
said that
32
serve
PERSONAL CONSECRATION.
It is true.
The
christian does
He
that
serves
God has
an abundant reward.
Godliness, says
the apostle,
is
profitable.
The sinner
toils
God
Lord
is
God
33
SERMON
III.
shall
we have
I
therefore
"
have thought,
its
that, if the
tianity offers to
Peter's
votaries,
extreme
selfishness,
and follow
Christ, there is
no good reason
its
why any
other
influences.
Selfishness
was
:
one of the most prominent features in Peter's nature to First, this our attention is directed on several occasions.
at his call.
On
am
have
said
to
him.
Knowing
:
And
men. and followed him." Andrew, it is true, was wTth him, but it is Matt, iv, 19, 20. my notion that it was to meet and overcome Peter's selfishness, that the promise was added in this case, which we find in no other. The second occasion was that on which Jesus began to show his disciples, how he must go unto
fishers of
"I
make you
they straightway
left
their nets
34
TniC
REWARD.
many
and
all
scribes,
and be
killed,
and be
third day.
Here
leaped
Be it far from thee, Lord this shall For this, he received the most severe
rebuke that ever a disciple of Jesus received from his thou art an offence master, " Get thee behind me, Satan unto me: for thou savourest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men." Matt, xvi, 23. The third occasion was that of the transfiguration, on which Peter, having got into a good place, wanted to build and stay. He held a commission to gather the lost sheep were perishing in the valley, yet he was so filled who with thoughts of his own comfort, that he was ready to let them perish in the valley, if he could but continue to enjoy the rapture of the mount of divine glory. These passages most clearly indicate that Peter was naturally a most selfish man; and would not have embraced the religion of Jesus, had he not had the bes.t reason to believe Nor was a mind that it was most advantageous to do so. like his likely to be deceived he was never satisfied with a cursory view of a matter, but sought to fully inform himself. When he, with John, came to the sepulchre on the third morning, John outrunning Peter, reached the tomb first, and simply stooped down and looked in but Peter, coming a little later, went in and carefully exam ined the grave clothing. John xx, 5, 6. This same de:
sire to
If,
know
it all,
however, there
any
selfishness exhibited in
lie
text, it is a
commendable
selfishness,
la this he
is
not
35
So
far
from
this,
propounded.
An answer
We
it is
we are encouraged to inquire and act matured judgment. And, blessed be God the religion of Jesus will bear the most careful scrutiny, the most rigid examination, and when subjected to the severest ordeal, every grain of it will stand as pure gold
religion
'
that
upon
a well
profitable unto all things, not only for the life to come,
But the
text
Genuine attachment to Christ, rich, abounding and eternal. leads us to contemplate the nature
life.
grew out
of the refusal of a
wealthy young
man
to
venient shape
that there
is
to
I don't
think
It is
much
our duty
to see to it that
our
gifts are
bestowed where
unwilling
to
This young
is
man was
which
and, at
least,
why
more
36
confidential reliance
to
of those things
seen.
The worshippers
of Moloch caused their children to pass through the fire. As a test of Abraham's faith and obedience, he was required to give up his sorr, the son through whom the promised seed should come. I do not believe that this young man would have been any more required to render himself penniless, than Abraham was to render himself childless. If he had shown his willingness to obey, Jesus, no doubt, would have said," it's enough."
The consent
of the will
is
what he demands.
to
An
entire
him, a
sacrifice of self.
The Jewish economy was connected with many sacrifices. The blood of beasts, and of birds, the burnt offerings, the
sin offerings, the
Jesus,
wave
offerings,
and many
others.
by the
sacrifice of himself,
necessity
of these.
is
there
sacrificed.
full
and self-adoration must be must sacrifice everything that hinders a This sacrifice is reliance upon the divine promise.
We
not
to the
natural
man
It is
to
make
it
represented
member.
lose
an eye, hand
This young
37
lack
he had learned
yet?
"
What
namely, a sacrifice of his property. When he heard that saying, he went away sorrowful for he had great possessions, in which, it seems, he had more
perfect,
;
have been
in
the
promised
possession.
None who
forsook Jesus ever went away happy. Jesus said unto his disciples: " How hardly shall they
into
the
kingdom
of
God
it
easier for a
camel
to to
man
he trusts in his riches. The disciples, in their astonishment, asked, who then can be saved.
to
to whittle
away
this passage,
and try
said.
mean what he
fix
The trouble is, they overlook what he did say, and try to up a plausible meaning in accordance with their own shortsightedness. If we read enough of God's word to understand it, we won't have any need to exhibit any
such bungling attempts at fixing it up it is already fixed. We have been told that Jesus did not mean a needle's
;
seems
by that name. This, have never been able to accept it. Whatever he meant was something impossible with man. The doctors seem to have overlooked this fact, and try to get up a possibility: hence they manage to get their camel through their needle's eye, after getting him clown on his knees, and his burden off his back. This interpretation finely illustrates the importance of humility, but humility was not just the point that Christ was illustrating at that. time. He was showing the folly
to
me
to be far fetched.
38
and the impossibility of any one in riches, or who, like this man, had more confidence in riches than he had in Christ. The record in St. Mark makes it clear that stress was laid upon the trust. "Children, how hard it is fcr them that
of trusting in riches,
getting to heaven,
who trusted
trust in
riches, to
kingdom
of
God."
all
Mark
x, 24.
While
would be inconsistent for change the arrangement of his own plan of salvation. He could take a camel through a needle's eye, with more consistency and less difficulty, than he could take a man to heaven, who had more confidence in his own possessions than in God's goodness. The camel and needle being irrational creatures, he could do what he would with them, without corning in conflict with any of his own laws or purposes. To send a camel through a needle's eye would simply be to work a miracle. But man is a moral free agent. God himself has devised the plan of salvation, which includes trust in him; and, whosoever will go to heaven in that way, enters, and he only. This plan includes a willingness to renounce all things for Christ's sake. This man was not willing to do that. It includes a faith to let go the things we see and grasp those things which are not This man had no such faith, and it appears that seen. the love of riches deceived him and kept him from it. Jesus had announced that to be his disciple a man must deny himself. This man was unwilling to do that. I
order of his government.
It
God
to lie, to
deny himself,
or to
God
ail
must be
clear to
39
way
of taking
in on some new plan, not contemplated in his own plan of salvation. The mediator of the new covenant made no arrangement for any except
It must be equally would be no such difficulties for him to overcome in getting a camel through a needle's eye. He, to whom all things are possible, could easily pass a camel through a needle's eve. The language of Jesus and of Peter indicates that the
to
give up
all things, if
Peter answered:
and
the
And
answer which follows indicates the same: "Verily, I say unto you, That ye which have followed me, in the regeneration when the Son of man shall sit on the throne of his glory, ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of
Israel.
And
sisters,
my
name's sake,
surrender of
ideas.
and shall inherit everlasting show that Christ demands a total things, then words are useless to convey
we must be willing to endure any pain for conscience's sake. Christianity, or at least the form of it, has become so popular that it is very seldom that we have to resist unto blood, striving against
a follower of Jesus,
sin;
To be
40
they were
To be
We
Our old nature cannot be purified. We must be case. formed anew. We must be killed and made alive again. There must be a complete transformation, a complete coming out of our old nature, and the entering into a new. Like Abraham, we must cross the flood and come out of
of Chaldea,
our nativity.
Ruth we must leave the land of must be changed from nature to grace must "put off the old man with his corrupt deeds, and put on the new man, which is renewed in knowledge, We must after the image of him that created him." die unto sin and be raised again unto righteousness; or, in the language of Jesus, we " must be born again," not naturally, as Nicodemus supposed. A second natural birth, nay, a thousand natural births would not help our That which is born of the flesh is flesh, no matter case. how often so born. We must be born of the Spirit, to become spiritual. "That which is born of the Spirit is
and
like
We
spirit."
state.
natural figure
is
is
The change
it,
one that no
man
can explain to
would I be should I attempt it. It would be folly to expect an unborn child to understand the things of this world, and equal folly to expect one not
and great
fool
41
born of the Spirit to understand spiritual things. Much ignorance prevails respecting scriptural doctrines, because
we fail to realize that many expressions are figurative. The figure is not the fact, it is only a way of representing
the
fact.
'
is
way
of representing
and
man, or the shadow good picture bears some resemblance to its original, and likewise this figure bears some resemblance to the fact, but we must bear in mind that it is not the fact. If Nicodemus had been mindful of this, he would not have asked " Can a man enter a second time into his mother's womb and be born ?" he would not have persisted in his demand for an explanation, "How can these things be?" We need not expect a change visible to the eye of sense. It is not seen except in its effect. "The wind bloweth where it No man has ever seen the wind, no more can listeth." you see God's Spirit. You see light matter flying before the wind, houses blown down, trees torn up by the roots, and the ocean's billows lashed to fury, but you don't see the power effecting it. We likewise see wonderful changes
falls
man
short of being a
falls
effected in
human nature. A persecuting Saul of Tarsus becomes the most abundant laborer in the vineyard of
the despised
poor, blind
Nazarene.
vile,
degraded, miserable,
and naked sinner is transformed, clothed with garments of righteousness, and occupies a place among the saints; the drunkard leaves his cups, the gambler burns up his cards; he that delighted in vulgar jargon for song, or low sentimentalism, has learned the musicof
42
Zion
sits at
the feet
of Jesus, clothed
and
We
By our
spiritual birth
we
are
We
of spiritual
Egypt.
We
no more
But
ates.
We
ling.
The influence of the world is chilhe that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful." I cannot understand
the friends of Jesus.
" Blessed is
how
it is
the case;
and
have
In
been delivered, back into sin. Two years were trying to ratify an act prohibiting the sale of intoxicating drinks, there were
many
professed christians
to that of
who
God's
own chosen
them, and
ful.
up
to
To grow
day they are sitting in the seat of the scornin grace, to maintain the divine favor, to
God
as our companions.
who
find
it
too
warm
amusement, are not following Jesus closely. But we must abandon our way of living. Our sinful
43
There
is
ner of
"If ye know that he is righteous, ye know that every one also that doeth righteousness is begotten
life.
of him."
state.
The life is the best evidence of our spiritual To be a follower of Jesus we must forsake all sin. " Behold, we have left all." This was literally true of the apostles; they had literally left all. James and John were in the boat with .their father, mending
command
Levi was
sit-
command
of
Jesus he
left
that lucrative
drew were fishing; but at the call of Jesus they took up went fishing for the souls of men. And thus, they had been employed from the day that they were called. This is still required of the ministry; they have no business with secular employments, except in a case like Paul's, in which it may be necessary to show a little independence. But it is not meant that the mass of mankind shall thus give up their lawful and necessary business engagements, and yet they must totally abandon the world as the object of their affection and trust, and must forsake all sin. "Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin for his seed remaineth in him." We know that seed will produce its own. If therefore the seed of righteousness is sown in the heart, and it pro;
duces anything,
it
will
be righteousness.
If
sinful
44
of righteousness,
such
The chains
sometimes requires very great effort to break them; some very complete revolutions. The gambler, drunken and profane, have forsaken all at once so completely, that the thought of indulging in either
it
and
It is those
who
don't see
any
much
strictness,
who make
a compromise with
life,
and
live a slack-twisted
christian
and needless
indulgences.
ance,
r
we its, and follow Jesus fully. " Behold, we have forsaken all and followed We must find the paths he trod, and walk therein.
the path of humility.
a determined effort, with divine assistcan wholly overcome longstanding wicked hab-
By
thee."
It is
He humbled
himself.
It is
the
path of purity
He
work by the pattern he has given us. II. But the text leads us to consider the reward of
Dominion, honor therefore?" and glory, are among the things that are promised " Shall sit upon twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes This idea seems to be borrowed from the of Israel." reign of Solomon, in whose time the kingdom of Israel reached the zenith of its glory. Solomon enjoyed a peaceThe grandeur ful reign over the twelve tribes of Israel. his kingdom exceeded any of his throne and the glory of thing ever seen on earth. We are told that the great
45
far-off country, of the fame Solomon, and came to see his wisdom as displayed in his kingdom; and when she came, she was unutterably astonished, and declared that all that she had heard was true, but that the half had not been told her that his glory far exceeded the fame thereof. This exceeding grand earthly kingdom is taken by the Savior to represent the glory of his saints above. But their glory shall be twelve times greater; they are not only to judge twelve tribes, but are to sit upon twelve thrones, each representing twelve tribes, making a hundred and forty-four tribes. But twelve is a figurative number; it signifies completeness, or perfection, and indicates that the glory of the saints will lack nothing that they shall be possessed of This figure reminds us of the all their hearts' desire.
; ;
that
it
far exceeds
any
There
are
is
dignity of birth.
Men
age.
"
wont to boast of high birth and of their lineThe Jews boasted of their descent from Abraham.
first
The
is
proverbial.
Well, the
christian
is
born high
Spirit,
born of
born of the
what
geny.
is
meant by
The
affords dignity,
and
the
children of the
They
4Cy
An
incorruptible inheritance
we
any unfading portion here. All is fading here the trees, which in the spring and early summer appear so flourjshing and gay in their green dress, with beautiful, yellow, white, red, blue and purple spots, appear in autumn the flower faded, the leaf ragged, and in winter naked withered, dried, and fallen to the ground and thus giving to thoughtless mortals the sad and solemn lesson, that we soon, like them, must wither and decay that all our earthly possessions will likewise fade, and that we have no enduring riches here. But those who forsake all these sublunary things and follow Jesus, are assured of riches that are fadeless, incorruptible and eternal.
; ;
3.
There
is
It is
enjoy
and
Those who leave all and follow Jesus, rank and noblest of all created bexii, 22, 23, 24,
ings.
Paul in Hebrews
come, as follows: "But ye are come unto mount Sion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable
written in heaven, and to
company
of angels, to the
men made
47
All
compar-
and beauty, matchless worth, immutable gran* deur, unfading glory, and innumerable multitude of charming associates, with whom the followers of Jesus not to mingle for a moment merely, or shall assemble just long enough to learn that the anticipated cupful of
ble grace
;
blessing
is
never realized, as
is
which
is
pill,
from a cup
full of
un-
mixed
"
joy.
What
loss
shall
we have
?"
hundred
and
we have sustained as a follower of Jesus here. For the land we have forsaken, we shall have unlimited area; for the houses we have left, we shall have innumerable mansions for the friends we have lost, we shall
every
;
But we shall have everlasting life, which includes victory over death for the last enemy
;
is
death.
We
shall be strength-
meet this last enemy. Many have feared the have trembled at the thought of it, and yet have been astonished at the ease with which they got the victory at the trying hour. It is our duty to make all possible preparation for death, to be ever on our watch looking for the coming of the Lord daily, and yet I never expect to feel just like dying till death comes. Then, if
ened
to
conflict,
48
faithful
then,
we are assured
of victory.
of,
We
the
shall
grim
conflict,
and
seize
crown,
victor's
palm
is
in
"0
death, where
thy sting?
thy victory?"
49
SERMON
IV.
DROUS LOVE.
what manner 01 love the Father hath bestowed upon we should be called the sons of God; therefore the world knoweth us not, because it knew him not. Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what Ave shall be, but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him And every man that hath this hope for we shall see him as he is. in him purifieth himself, even as he is pure." 1 John hi, 1 3.
us, that
" Behold,
The
and wretched sinners are delivered from the thraldom of sin, and the penalty of God's violated law, restored to the divine favor, and brought into the enjoyment of all the
blessings of divine sonship.
What
love,
both in
The
may.
it
is
it
all
beneath.
In kind,
most tender.
When
worthlessness,
w hen w e consider our ungratefulness, and what vile and rebellious sinners we have been, we may well be amazed
r
more than
fatherly tender-
50
ess,
ii
own dear children, and puts within us a which cries, " Abba, Father." It is love of the highest degree. The love that adopts a poor, friendless orphan, and gives him a home, a parent's affection and
adopts us as his
spirit
care,
is
of love
that mortal
beings
surpas-
can exhibit
the
friendless.
is
It is
love
far
God
To
this aston"
Be-
what manner
What
are
notice,
Men
wont
cestors, or
Earthly honors,
titles,
distinctions,
To be
called sons
of
God
1.
implies,
transformation.
By
nature,
we are children
This
is
Adam's posterity. To become sons of God, our nature must be transformed. The image which Satan has fixed upon our nature must be defaced, the heart of enmity must be taken away, and the carnal mind removed. The apostles speak of this transformation under
various terms.
It is called
life,
We
frequently call
it
con-
51
word embraceschange of feelings, change of front, change of state. We are brought out of darkness into the marvelous light of the gospel. The rebellion and stubbornness of the will is removed, and it cheerfully bends in submission to the divine will. The pollution is removed from the affecThe guilt is removed tions, and they are made pure. from our conscience, and its burden no longer distresses
includes
all
that this
us.
2.
It
implies
the
abandonment of
the
world as the
object of
our
affection.
any man love the world, the love of the Father is "The world knoweth us not, because it knew him not." We have nothing in common with the
" If
not in him."
world.
'
Our
aspirations, habits of
life,
manner
is
of conver-
and
But
in nothing,
this difference
We
Be not conformed
no better
mark
affections."
Where your
If
treasure
set
yeart be also."
is
and that we are not sons of God. If the frivolities of earth charm and delight us more than the solid and important concerns of the soul and eternity, it is evident that we are essentially worldly. The sons of God have set their affections on the things
our hope, our
52
a devothe
ment
to
all
longing for
its
God.
They
but not of
it
and making
all
needed use of
fixed
it is
it.
upon the
' '
Yonder's
My
3.
treasure
And my
It
" If
abiding home."
any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is none of " Hereby know we that we dwell in him, and he in his." us, because he hath given us his spirit." By " spirit" we understand motive, that by which we are actuated. The Savior applied it to that, in his disciples which induced .them to ask, if they should burn up the Samaritans with fire from heaven. He replied, " Ye know not what manner of spirit ye are of"
He
tion of his offended dignity that they were seeking, but the
gratification of their
itans,
own
malice.
They hated
and therefore were glad of an opportunity to vent This was not the spirit of Christ. He could never have redeemed the world with such a spirit. " Fury was not in him ;" he prayed for his enemies, those who set at naught and sold him, pierced and nailed him to the tree, even for them he prayed, " father, forgive
their spite.
53
tender, kind
not what they do." A meek and lowly, and forgiving spirit, were eonstanth manihim. If we are the sons of God, we have the
know
same
4.
spirit.
It
implies participation in
all the
divine blessings.
For if we are sons, we are heirs, joint heirs with Christ of " an inheritance incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not away." This inheritance includes all temporal needs. " No goo.d thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly." Having committed our all to him, we may rest assured that he will keep what we have comIt includes a constant supply of mitted to his care. needed grace. Without this, our spiritual life could not be maintained. The great enemy would overcome us. Jesus reminded Peter that Satan had desired to have him, that he might sift him as wheat, but he had prayed for him. Peter warned the christians of his time, that their enemy, the devil, was going about seeking what soul he might devour. All this indicates that there is a fearful influence, constantly employed to separate us from our relationship to the Father, to draw us away from God. Indeed, we do not need to look into the Bible to see this, we have only to consult our own feelings. We shall find in our every -day experience temptations and inclinations to evil. We shall have them while we remain in this probationary state. No amount of piety can exempt us from them. It is the devil's business to tempt, a business to which his nature impels him, a business in which he will continue to engage so long as God permits him. We need not, therefore, expect exemption from temptation, nor need we desire it. We can get along as well with, as
54
without temptation,
severe temptation,
say, "
is
if
we will, we will
for in the
listen,
My
It
gra^e
is
is
I."
not, therefore,
we need, hut the grace of God to sustain us under temptation, and this we can have, in all its overflowing
that
abundance, sufficient
fcr all
and
for dying.
II.
THROUGH WHICH
The
What wondrous
love
is this,
Sou
To bleed
me.
wonders, the love of God in Christ is the sum it reached its culminating point, in his death upon the cross, angels, struck with wonder, gazed upon the scene, nature stood aghast, the rocks asunder
Of
all
total.
When
sun withdrew his beams, and in darkness veiled the earth. The love of God in Christ constitutes the song
rent, the
of the
Unto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood, and hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever," The
sing that enrapturing song,
"
00
He
loved
me and gave
"
It
was love springing from pure generosity, and bestowed upon objects who were wholly unworthy of it; love flowing from the inexhaustible fulness of divine benevolence: love reaching as deep as the sinners guilt, and extending to every child of man. " Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us, and sent his Son into the world to be a propitiation for our sins." 1 John iv, 10. We were not in a state in which favor could
It
be -expected, but the opposite. If we had loved and obeyed him, we might have expected love from him, but so far from this, we hated him without a cause, and did
not even desire his favor. In this is the nature of divine love displayed, as writes the great apostle, " God com-
us, in
that,
us.'"'
Romans
human
love
is
reached when a
man
lays
his friend.
man
than
that a
13.
man
lay
down
John xv,
laid
down
seldom ocis
curred, and
its
The
ence
i
:
For scarcely
ne
:
t,
das
56
Damon and
deatji.
Pythias.
Damon had
of
to
Promising to return at the hour appointed for his execution, he got permission from the tyrant Dionysius to go and settle his affairs, Pythias becoming his surety. He returned just in time to save his friend from being executed in his stead. The tyrant was so struck with the fidelity of their friendship that he remitted the punishment and desired to share their friendship. The sacrifice that Pythias was willing to make, was for his friend, and this, I repeat, is the extent of human love. But the love of Christ goes beyond this, he died for his
enemies.
2.
It
was a mysterious
love.
!
it
constituted the
Yea,
happy, bright and intelligent host of heaven become the students of the cross, and exhaust the force of their celestial powers in the attempt to sound the depth of redeem-
man. Why such love to sinners, to beings so entirely unworthy and worthless? God did not need us, his happmess was complete without us. He could have sent us all to the world of w oe. He could have blotted us out of existence, and created beings every way more worthy in sufficient numbers to have filled every throne in heaven. Why, then, such love to sinners? Simply because he delights in mercy. He is "The Lord God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, and forgiving iniquity, transgression and sin."
ing love
the love of
God
to
57
Exodus xxxiv,
wait, that he
6.
Isaiah
tells
may
* that
he
a
may
What
grand
He
not to pour out his wrath upon the guilty, but to see a
motion in the sinner's heart, indicating his willingness receive mercy. He waits and watches for a sympathetic cord in the sinner's heart, that he can touch and melt his hardness into love. O sinner! he waits on you
to
to-day,
love.
1
he waits
to see in
you a
and
'
Has waited long, is waiting still, You treat no other friend so ill."
3.
overcame all obstacles in the way of man's redemption. The enmity of the human heart, the malice of the devil, and the terrors of death and hell.
It
hills,
my
chariot wheels,
yield to love."
Love was the moving power in the Father's breast when he exclaimed, "Deliver him from going down to
the pit; I have found a ransom."
And
It
moved
is
the Son
to
come;
within
volume
of the
book
8.
it
:
my God
7,
my
heart."
Psa. xi,
Im-
58
pelled
left
those bright
flesh.
human
hills
'
and
-
And
all
The Saviours
his matchless
worth, nor can they give the praises due Jehovah's love.
Words are inadequate, language utterly fails to meet the demands of the divine theme; earth has no song, nor
songster, sufficient to do
it
justice,
upon heavens's
and temptation in the wilderness; over the valleys and mountains of Judea on errands of rnercyr, through hunger, scorn and reproach, and at last to the judgment hall, to Pilate's bar, and to the cross! Here, amid untold and incomprehento
fast
sible agonies,
all
satisfied
demands of justice, and made it possible for God and yet the justifier of the ungodly. Only the lost soul in torment will ever know what agony Jesus bore, and God forbid that any one who. hears me this
the
to be just
day
shall ever
know
You may
expect
to feel
something
of
pain in conviction
will
hardly be effected
it
should be; as
59
Thousands are weak and puny because more vivid. You should not, however, be discouraged if your winter has passed, and your spring ushered in, you will know it by the budding of holy desires, by the putting forth of the flowers of love, even though the March winds failed to
their experience has not been
blow.
best
in the heart
is
the
III.
Now
let
WORSHIP.
1.
We
love.
And
life.
his favor
The
God
is
princely
We
be."
like
know
doth not yet appear what we shall But we have this much revealed, that we shall be
him, and it is intimated that this likeness shall refrom beholding him; hence, the apostle adds, "For we shall see him as he is." Our bodies shall be raised in the likeness of his glorious body, and our souls shall be filled with all the fullness of divine knowledge.
sult
this
pure."
and
and
also
rose that
beautiful young people bud and bloom manhood and womanhoodfair as the first bloomed in Eden the joy of their parents, in;
60
gems
and
useful to humanity.
But, alas
all our expectations are blasted, and our hope Impure thoughts arise out of impure hearts impure actions follow; and the result is, a shipwreck of good character, and the loss of happiness and hope.
how
soon
faded.
you will, but don't forget the words of the Every one that hath this hope in him, purifieth himself even as he is pure." To the same effect are the words of Jesus, " Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God," To have, to retain this hope, we must be pure.
Forget
all
if
apostle, "
RICH
MAN
IN
TORMENT?
Gl
SERMON
WHY WAS THE
" But
V.
RICH
MAN
IN
TORMENT?
Abraham
is
receiveclst
now he
said, Son, remember that thou in thy lifetime thy good things, and likewise Lazarus evil things; but comforted, and thou art tormented." Luke xvi, 25.
Our
text
of,
is
we have any
heaven.
earth;
account
between a
and a
spirit in
The
picture presented
of two beings,
one vastly rich, the other miserably poor. One fared sumptuously every day, the other begged crumbs at the Both died, and after death found them rich man's gate.
selves in circumstances the opposite of
earth.
The
rich
man
what they were on up his eyes in torments, the Abraham's bosom. The poet thus
lifted
And what confusion earth appears, God's dearest children bathed in tears,
' '
While they, who heaven and earth Riot in luxury and pride.
But, patient, let
deride,
my
soul attend,
:
And, e'er I censure, view the end That end, how different Who can tell The wide extremes of heaven and hell ? Bee the red flames around him twine,
!
62
did in gold and purple shine, Nor can his tongue one drop obtain, To allay the anguish of his pain.
saint, so
poor below,
The
Our
rich
man
dip the tip of his finger in water and cool his tongue.
text
is
the response.
The
mere parable. Mere opinion is all that any one can give, and under the circumstances, mine would naturally be expected. I incline
this is a statement of facts, or a to the opinion that the characters are real.
I will
simply
viz.:
much like they are now. With us, it matters not how a man lived, if we speak of him after he is dead, we are
expected to put
to
do
that,
him in heaven and if we are not prepared we had best not speak of him at all in the
;
presence of those
who
loved him.
Now, the
in torment,
man
and been highly respected in he would withhold his name. This is just Jerusalem, what he did in the case before us, while the name of the man who had gone to heaven is given. If we regard it as a mere parable, this difference cannot well be accounted But if we regard the discourse as a narration of for.
lived
facts,
who had
is
obvious.
It is not at all
necessary, however, to
to
any purpose of
in this light. It
view
it
RICH
MAN
IN
TORMENT?
63
the same.
;
If a history, it
it is
a statement of
if
a parable,
a pic-
ture of
ties.
what may
man may
be in the en-
joyment of the very fat of the land, esteemed and honored by his neighbors, and regarded as among the very best on earth, and yet die and go to the world of woe. Taking into consideration this whole narrative, or parable, (whichever we understand it to be,) as recorded from the nineteenth verse to the end of the chapter, I want us to think on this important question: Why was this man in torment? Perhaps you will say, " I never thought about that before" If so, I think it is time you had. Jesus certainly meant that we should think about it, or he would not have taken such pains to tell us about it. But I have a special reason why I want this question
to
it
is
many
of tor-
people
who
any danger
to
when urged
to flee the
wrath
come, they
done? I don't think I honest, I pay all my just debts, (and I suspect they have forgotten their greatest debt, what they owe to their Maker,) I don't swear, nor gamble, I don't rob any one, I am not a drunkard, extortioner, nor libertine." Well, suppose you are not guilty of any of these things. Suppose you are what the world calls a
have
I
man
or, to
many
64
fifth
condemned, neither of which had done any harm. One had failed to take oil in their vesAnother had not imsels, but what harm was that? proved his talent, but what harm was there in that? he had not asked his lord to loan him the money, and he was careful to return just what he received. The third had not exercised themselves in acts of mercy, such as feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, &c. The complaint against them was, not that they had done harm, but that they had done nothing; and for this they were condemned. Then, if you are prepared to show that you have done nothing, that will be your condemnation. You will be judged out of your own mouth, and condemned by your own testimony. We did not come here to do
of characters that were
nothing.
Coming back
to the text,
man done?
custom
think
it is
Whom
him down with a great many crimes. I who remarks, " That men do this, it seems, to justify the Almighty in sending him to torment." God does not need any such help at our hands.
to load
Dr. Clark,
We
it.
spoil his
to
improve
glutton" are
Who
assuming that this us that he was a glutton. He undertook to tell us what there was in this man's case; he had the ability to do it, and I claim that he told us whatever there was of any importance to us. He says nothing about gluttony. The nearest he
ing there
?
There
is
no warrant
man was
a glutton.
tell
65
ous repast
plentiful,
and splendid
well
Bat
to
Might we not
call
glutton
Men have
was to This fact
it
treated this passage as though the object of show that a very wicked man went to torment.
is set
forth in
many
us
is
passages, but the one before That the notoriously wicked will
is
a fact generally
who
teaches us that
who
by the human standfrom the divine presence. Here we see a man in torment, against whom nothing of a notoriously wicked character can be alleged. He was what the world would call, a splendid specimen of humanity a grand, good fellow; a gentleman of the first order. Why, then, was he in torment ? but is that a good Well, we are told that he was rich reason for his being sent to torment? If so, there are thousands who cannot hope to get to heaven. There are thousands who are rich, and thousands more who want to be, and I suspect it is as bad to want riches as to have them. It is not money, but the love of it, that is said to
who
ard,
also be banished
be the root of
all evil.
He
"
fine
66
linen."
to
what will become of the people of This might well be called the dressy this generation ? age. When in London, a few weeks ago, I attended a reception given by the Lord Mayor, at which there was a large attendance both of English and American ladies, principally the wives, sisters and daughters of Methodist ministers. Among them I saw ladies who were not satisfied with the amount of dry goods they could carry on their backs, but had a lot beside, trailing on the floor, so that there was constant danger of getting one's feet tangled in their
trails.
would not mention the style of dress in which the guests appeared, and a lady would make herself notorious by appearing in a plain
City,
to
Washington
if
he failed
dress.
Nor
is
fine, costly,
where, in
all
our walks.
The
desire
is
and the indulgence is limited only by the want of means. What, then, will become of us, if this man was sent to torment for wearing fine and costly dress? We have already mentioned the fact thai he fared sumptuously, but in this he was not an exception, as all who feel able to do so, enter largely into the enjoyment And of the good things that God has provided for us. there is no hint that anything beyond this was indulged in at this man's table. I have no idea that there were four or more different wine glasses, for a corresponding number of different kinds of wine at each plate, as I have seen on the tables of professing christians. Certainly no
67
such bacbanalian exhibitions, as are witnessed at both private and public dinners in many of our cities, was witnessed
man's feasts, Why, then, was he in torment? It has been said that he was so mean and stingy that he would not allow Lazarus to have the crumbs that fell from his table. But there is no warrant for this state*
at this
ment, and a
little reflection
will
make
it
clear that
it
is
most erroneous. Jesus said that he was laid at the rich man's gate, and was desiring the crumbs. You see the desire continued if he had been denied the crumbs or cold pieces, he would not have been continually laid there Until the dogs become so well acquainted with him as to have compassion on him, and to do him those services which men neglected. Then it must be remembered; that that man was rich, that he had a daily feast, and would therefore not want the cold pieces returned to his own table. His appetite would only take that which was fresh. There are many crumbs which fall from the table of such persons; often much more than the servants can make use of, and whether the balance goes to the dogs or beggars, is a matter about which the wealthy don't concern themselves. There seems to be an intimation here that this beggar and the dogs were companions, and fared alike. The fact that the rich man suffered this beggar to lay at his gate where he could receive little donations from his wealthy neighbor, as they passed in and out, may fee mentioned to his credit. There are some men so mean and cruel-hearted that they would not have suffered him to lay there. The fact that he
;
knew him
as soon as
he saw him
in
Abraham's bosom,
08
conclude that
lie
had
freis
man
at his gate.
Moreover, Lazarus
most
likely to be willing to do
him
Can
on the supposition that he had treated rudely? On the contrary supposition, we can Lazarus imagine the rich man, on beholding Lazarus, saying: " Why, yonder is Lazarus, that used to lay at my gate and receive the crumbs from my table. Surely if he can help me out of this misery, he will do it." Every circumstance in the case points to the fact, and irresistibly leads us to the conclusion, that he received the crumbs. It may be said that the rich man might have done a litRich as he was, he tle better than that for this beggar. done as the Shunamite woman did for Elisha, might have he might have made a little chamber on the wall for him, and had a bed and stool and candlestick put therein. See 2 Kings iv, 10. Yes, he might have done this, and we are assured that he would not have lost his reward. But there are thousands who don't put themselves to that
for this
we account
much
was.
when
many
sores, as this
man
much
difference
between this
man and
is all
the mass
of
many
people of God
So was he.
"
He
addressed
to the
Abraham
an
"Father," and
Abraham acknowledged
Son."
the relationship
by responding,
He belonged
favored race,
"
69
Why,
then,
was
he in torment
answer in the words of our text. Abraham mentions two facts the first of which includes the reason for his being in torments, and the
we
why he must
remain
this,
"
that thou in thy life time receivedst thy good things. * * And beside all
there.
"
Son,
remember
Thou
between us and you there is a great gulf fixed. in thy life time receivedst thy good things."
That which he esteemed good he had received. As a moral free agent, he had made his choice, which did not include heaven. He was admonished as to the better He thought part, but did not regard the admonition. he knew better than his Maker what was good for him. Such is the infirmity of human nature, that man sets up his judgment against that of his Maker. This man was urged to lay up for himself treasure in heaven, but he chose rather to lay it up on earth. He chose the things of this world as his portion, and pronounced them good. They were his good things, good in his estimation, and he had received them in his life time. He had made no choice, no provision, no arrangement for the hereafter. No sensible man can expect to have that which he has rejected, and refused or thrown away. Now, in a word, this man was in torments, simply and solely because he failed to prepare for heaven.
He
allowed the
thoughts of the more important concerns of the soul were excluded and hence the night w as upon him before his
T
;
work, for which the day was given him, had been begun.
70
given,
His time was out, before the work, for which time was was comixieneed. How many here to-day are copying his example? All who do, will cry in vain for relief, when lifting up their eyes in the world of woe. my dear, dying friends, listen to the voice of mercy.
' '
Now God invites, how blessed the day, How sweet the Gospel's charming sound
Come, sinners, haste, O haste away, While yet a pardoning God is found."
listened to the sophis-
who
We may
punish
men
for
may
Is
it
Would
it
not be
Even
genuine religion is a good thing, yea, even the best of all " Their rock is not like our rock, even uur enethings. mies themselves being judges." What do we know, or can we know respecting these matters, except by what is revealed ? We don't know much about this world, except what we have gathered from the hints that have come out through divine revelation. Much is said of science, but scientists are indebted to revelation for every useful thing they have learned. Certainly, on the subject before us, we can know nothing except what we learn from revelation. What, then, are the statements of revelation ? We need only mention a few " The wicked shall be turned into
:
liell,
with
all
"Upon
the wicked
fire
and brim-
" It is
into
life
be
If there is
no place
what do these passages mean? The you that the hell referred to is the grave that hell is translated from a Greek word which means the grave. I admit that it sometimes is, but not always. Our English word " hell " is translated from three different words. But I do not propose to attempt any
of punishment,
skeptic will
tell
think there
is
a better
way.
It
of the originals to
We don't
much of common
it
only needs a
little
good, hard,
is
Be not afraid of them that kill the body, have no more that they can do. But I will forewarn you whom ye shall fear: Fear him, which after he hath killed hath power to cast into hell yea, I say unto you, Fear him." Does the Son of God thus solemnly warn us against the grave digger, or the man who puts the body in the grave? Is it the disposition of the body after death that concerns us most of all things? Are we to stand in mortal dread of those who put the body in the grave? If hell means no more than the grave, this must be the meaning. Can any man with common sense believe it? But it is said that the rich man lifted up his eyes, being in torments. Then, it is a place of torments.
Luke
xii, 4,
"
and
after that
We
is
72
and gnashing of teeth." Are these torments in the grave? Have you ever heard a wail coming up from the silent tomb? Where is your graveyard? Let us visit that solemn place. Let us listen all day, all night, if you will. In the grave the eye weeps Is any sound heard?
not, the ear hears not, the heart heaves not,
all is silent
there
' '
The
By
Now wrapped in
Have
Then
sages
read,
the grave.
There must be another place, if these pasmean anything. Where is it, 0! where? But we
that
not,
fire
is
not quenched.
in
'
Mark
ix,
46.
worms
is
not
the
worms, but
worm"
It's
What
is
it?
What
is
worm
upon the
through
all eternity.
God
in
He
"
They
of the
men
shall
me:
for their
worm
their fire
be quenched."
The
eaten by
worms; to heighten which 'the valley of Hinwhich idolaters sacrificed their children to the
is
added.
73
consumed the flesh of infants went out but in the place into which those who transgress against God are consigned, their worm dieth not and the fire is not quenched.
;
I repeat,
for as
fire in
where
is
that place?
It
we have
worms
And if the fire mentioned refers to consumes the body in the grave, then it is that it certainly means that the soul shall not be consumed as the body is. But the skeptic will say, these are figures,
the grave.
whatever
Yea, this
years ago.
light on
is
the con-
many
any
Nor am
skeptic for
the subject,
This seems to me to be the natural construction to be put upon all such passages. It is impossible to convey the idea of invisible things to mortal beings, except by
figures
drawn from
a real
visible things.
there
is
worm which
shall
shall
gnaw
in
wormwood and
Thus
far I
smoke
only shadows"
But
strikes
me
notice the
A shadow-
If these are
figures,
tures,
what are the facts that they represent? If picwhat is the original from which they are drawn? If shadows, what is that fearful substance which sends forth such horrible shadows? If you see the shadow of a man on the wall, you know there is a man there, or there would be no shadow. Yes, these are "shadows,
74
is what makes them- so fearful. There their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched," and that is only the figure. What is the fact it represents ?
"
The smoke
up forever and
and that is only a picture what is the original from which it is drawn? "Death and hell shall be turned into a lake which burnetii with fire and brimstone." This is only a shadow; what is the substance? Well, let us see if we can solve this fearful problem.
ever,"
What
think
will
it
is
intimated that
memory
will bring
will be a fruitful
source of torment.
Memory,
the
undying worm.
all
Memory
back
to the
mind
said
how unpleasant. We have and done things, which, after a moment's reflection, we wished had not transpired, and the thought thereof pained us. But gradually the remembrance of such things dies away, until entirely forgotten. Now, in the world of woe, we have reason to believe that memory will bring back to, and retain in the mind, every unpleasant thing
that has passed, no matter
it.
This alone,
it
seems
to
me,
have
and realize by the course we pursued, and memory will bring back to mind the opportunities we have thrown away, and the golden-moments we have wasted. We shall remember that we had the privilege of selectingfor ourshall see things then as they are,
lost
we
But what we
selves a place
among
the flame
75
moment
to pass
without seizing
it.
The remembrance
and yet
lost to
of
in reach,
us
nity to seize
of remorse
them passed, I think will constitute a weight which will sink ail who have been favored
remembrance the prayers and plead-
Many
will call to
ings of sainted mothers, the sermons of faithful pastors, and the wooings of the Holy Spirit, all of which were employed in vain. The groans of agony and bloody sweat of Jesus in the garden, and the tragic scene of the suffering and dying Son of God on Calvary, will come back to the mind, and memory will testify that all this was endured for the lost soul. And why lost? Simply
because of
it
its
dowm
to
own mourn
neglect.
Yes,
its
own
in endless woe.
A
in
seems impossible to escape the conclusion that those in torment will see the saints in glory. agony of all agonies, to be in sight of heaven and yet forbade to enter Looking out from the dark!
Abraham's bosom.
mother mingling her songs with those of the saints of all ages, bathing her soul in seas of endless rest, and drinking from the living streams of bliss which burst forth from the throne of God, while he, condemned to endless woe, drinks of the wrath of God poured out without mixture from the cup of his indignation, and from
rious brightness, the soul in torment will see his
in glory,
76
Lamb that
"Yonder stands the lovely Saviour, With the marks of dying love, O that I had sought his favor When I felt his Spirit move Doomed, I'm justly, For I have against him strove.
All his warnings I have slighted,
When
If
he daily sought
to
my
soul,
some vows
him
I'd plighted,
:
How neglected
And
enraptured saints
in robes of
their heads,
snowy whiteness, with crowns of gold upon and harps within their hands, the souls in
T
They
Waiting
my
Farewell, neighbors,
Dismal
gulf,
And
and making
hell
and
up
their poetic-
lamentation
77
Down
I'm
rolling,
Now
Hell
Though I see my friends in glory, Round the throne they ever sing,
I'm tormented
By an
Lastly,
everlasting sting."
we have here
is
tormented
endless.
Beside
this,
there
is
a gulf fixed
between us and you, so that those who would pass canThe thoughts of woe to come will increase the not." torment. No matter how great our pain here, we have
the consolation to
feel
that
it
but in
Now,
my
to win us away from the become the servants of God, namely the love of God, the hope of heaven, and the fear He that takes away either of these, takes away of hell. a part of revealed truth and puts himself in danger of losing his part in the book of life and the holy city, Rev.
Gospel
to
world and
:
to
induce us
xxii, 19.
fails to
He
m} endeavor to present these three motives with what force God has given me ability to command. The subject here considered is drawn from the most
It
has been
woe that
is
found on
78
record.
alarm you. If not, your case is hopeless But I hope better things. The thought of giving you up for lost moves my very soul. 0, that I knew what sentence, what line, what word, what syllable would move you. Tell me, my unconverted friend, how shall I win thee? Hast thou a tender spot, a sympathetic cord that no, not I, but the Holy Spirit and melt I can touch thy heart into love? Would weeping win thee, I would exhaust the fountain of tears. Oh repent and believe, turn now to the Lord and seek salvation, and thou shalt be able to fold thy arms and sing praises unto the Lamb that was slain for thee,
this fearful picture should at least
is
incurable
79
SERMON
VI.
'
more easily to comprehend the subject. woman, brought to view in the text so splendidly adorned, we have a beautiful figurative representation of
will enable us
By
the
By the sun, with which she is we are reminded that the Church is invested with the rays of the Sun of Righteousness. The moon
under her feet, indicates the exalted position of the Church and also that the moonlight of the Jewish
;
economy
heud,
is
is lost
Righteousness.
a s\
The crown
of twelve stars
mbol
of the lives
and labors
of
80
and pain fitly symbolizes the persecution and suffering through which the Church has passed, while continuing to bring forth sons and daughters unto God. The man child she brought forth was Constantine, the Great. By the great red dragon, which stood before the woman, we understand the persecuting Roman Empire. By the wings which the woman received, we understand the Divine protection.
travail
I
Her
am
Some have applied it to Mary and But they forget that prophecy concerns the future. John heard a voice which said, "Come up higher, and I will show thee things which must be hereafter." The birth of Jesus w as not a future but a past event, and could not then be the subject of prophecy. Nor could it with propriety be said of Mary, that she was clothed with the sun and the moon under her feet. Neither was she the object of persecution, as was the woman in the text. Nor can the description of the great red dragon be well applied to Herod the Great. But in
tinguished authors.
the birth of Jesus.
r
to the
of the Christian by the metaphors in the text. It appeared to John as a great wonder, or sign in heaven We are not to understand that John was in heaven, or that there are really such things in heaven as appeared to him. John w as on the Isle of Patmos; yet so enveloped.
Church,
81
so occu-
mind
pied with the mystery of the triumph of God's kingdom on earth, that he was insensible to all material things. The thoughts of celestial things so filled up his mind that he entirely lost sight of his terrestrial connections and surroundings. The scenes which he beheld were not real, but imaginary they were pictures, presented to the mind, of coming events. The events symbolized by these pictures were to transpire, successively on earth, through
:
till
This suc-
cession of events
is
which John was enveloped by the Spirit, the different openings he beheld, and by the deepening mystery of the
revelation as
it
proceeds.
When
first
ap-
His mediand divine; his mind was occupied with spiritual things, and he may have been in a state of ecstacy, but not so much as to lose sight of material things. His physical senses were still performing their functions, and conveying to his mind a sense of his
peared to John, he was simply in the Spirit.
tations were heavenly
still
was still in a state which the divine appearance disturbed him caused him to fear and tremble, and to fall at the feet of him that talked with him. After that, he became still more occupied with the divine vision, until finally he entirely lost sight of earth and of his connection there-
He
with.
The
celestial
mind abcommanded
:
write related
to the
the
82
he beheld a door open in heaven, and heard the command " Come up hither, and I will show thee things that must be hereafter." The things to which his atten:
tion
had been called before, had already transpired, or were then transpiring. But the things symbolized by
were evidently
He
comes
dim
distance
indicating most
which he was
Our text is found under the second opening, the opening The period in the history of the Church at
which the special events here symbolized transpired, was the latter part of the third century. It was then that the Church brought forth a man child, in the person of Constantine the Great. Many snares were laid for his life, but he escaped them all, and ascended the imperial
throne.
It
is
called
God
made
it
church.
Constantine, having embraced Christianity, became a most zealous defender of the christian church and religion. Ke put a stop to the persecution of christians, and proclaimed that Christianity should be the
religion of his empire.
At
this point
that,
83
woman
brought forth a
man
child,
and he
hundred and sixty prophetic days -literally speaking, twelve hundred and sixty years from the time
for twelve
had ascended the throne, she was compelled to flee into the wilderness, where, in obscurity, she was protected of God
of Constantine
till
"
And
na-
man
:
child,
who was
the
to rule all
to his throne.
And
woman
fled into
hundred and
Why
He
;
was enthroned; he ruled all his pleasure was law and at his fiat she that brought him forth could have dwelt in safety in any part of his vast dominions. Yet, while he is receiving homage from all nations, she must flee from
protect her?
woman
his presence
We
in the text.
He was
a "
man
child."
Constantine was
He had
lest
God
in the heart,
mo-
ments,
he should backslide and be lost. It was the name of Christianity that he embraced, and the form of the christian religion that he protected. It was not so
heaven that he became a dominion on earth. He embraced Christianity, because he believed he would thus insure the attainment of the end of his ambition. It is said that, as he marched at the head of his army, he saw, in the
to secure treasure in
much
christian, as to secure
84
words which signify " Conquer by this." He and conquered and the cross being the symbol of the christian religion, he embraced the name the shadow of that religion. He may have had something of the substance, but he was very far from using divine means to propagate the christian religion. As a " man child," he introduced human means to subjugate the world to the Church the sword, the glitter of wealth, pomp and splendor, and all other means employed by men to extend and strengthen their dominions. Before the time of Constantine, all the victories of the
scribed
went
forth
Cross were
won by
the
bow
of truth.
The word
of
God,
(weak mortals,) had proved the power of God unto salvation to every one that believed it. In an earlier vision, upon a white horse, with a bow, going John saw a rider forth conquering a picture which most beautifully symbolizes the peaceful and blissful effects of the Gospel triumph. This is God's means of evangelizing the world; but Constantine departed from this divinely appointed
method. In his time, it is said that corruptions were introduced into the Christian Church, which did more to destroy genuine religion than all the fires that ever persecution kindled. And from his time till the Reformation, (a pe-
hundred and sixty years,) the woman, During all this period the reign of the beast and the false prophet, (Papacy and Mohammedanism,) the " witnesses
riod of about twelve
God
closed,
85
was only found among those who worshipped God in secret. The worship in the public assembly was mere form a mixture of Judaism and Paganism, in the name
of Christianity.
For instance, the Church is frequently represented by the figure of a woman. In Isaiath lxiv, 1-7, Jehovah
is
and
upon her
contemplation of
for a small
Her Maker
husband;
moment
Gal.
iv,.
rememtells us,
is Iree,
The Apostle
is
"The Jerusalem
that
from above
and
is
He
may
2d Cor.
xi, 2.
In the
forty-fifth
is re-
and
When
to the fore-
going we add that the church is spoken of as the " bride, the lamb's wife," it seems impossible to conceive of any
other interpretation of the text than that
we have given. was the custom with the ancients to represent their societies by the figure of a woman in some peculiar dress, as we find upon some of their coins. On one of the Roman coins a woman is seen standing upon a globe on another, the crown is ornamented with the moon and stars. The figures in the text are therefore borrowed from the customs of the times in which
We are
told that
it
86
this
grandeur anything
before produced.
" That Mr. Benson remarks formed by the beams of the sun,
:
to stand
to
amid a glory
set
wear a crown
with
ment formed by the soft rays of the silvery queen of night, is a scenery more grand and sublime than anything the
ancients ever imagined/'
of the
Church presented to the gaze of the beloved disciple. I. Notice,* she was clothed with the sun. That is, invested with the rays of the Sun of RighteousSolomon, in his Songs, gives us a figurative rep-
ness.
much
we
"Who
moon,
Songs vi, 10. In the first dispensation of grace, the gray dawn that broke over the deep darkness produced by sin and the fall, the Church looked forth as the morning. This dawn lasted for many ages. The Sun of Righteousness was expected, but did not make his appearance. Yet by his rays, dimly seen, believing patriarchs were able to find In the their way to the blissful regions of eternal day. second, the Levitical period, she appeared fair as the moon. In the Gospel period, she appears clear as the sun the dawn is superseded, the moon has gone down, or her rays are lost in the splendor of his from whom she borrowed them, for the Sun of Righteousness has risen with healing in his wings, and goes forth proclaiming, "I am the light of tne world they which sat in darkness
terrible* as
;
:
and
87
have seen the light thereof, and to them that were in the valley and the shadow of death, light has sprang up." It was this glorious Gospel light, which shines forth lighting up the dark places of the earth and dispelling the gloom of sin's dark night, which John beheld, appearing as a garment upon the woman, and hence the language of the text, " clothed with the sun."
II.
Notice "
As representing the
upon which
The
blessed Saviour
2. As a symbol of Judaism, the moon may be said to be under her feet. The severest conflicts which the Church had in the early ages of Christianity were with Judaism. Abundant evidence of this may be found in the epistles of the apostles. The Judaizing teachers struggled hard
triumphed and put Judaism under her feet. 3. As representing the exalted position of the Church. The Church, composed of true believers, rises above all sublunary things. They set their affections on things which
are above.
"
heavenward.
as eagles,
They
mount up
88
Freely
And
the
III. She had a crown of twelve stars upon hek HEAD. She had no need of stars to give her light when clothed with the sun. These were, therefore, simply ornaments in her crown, These allude to the twelve apostles but the symbol is not necessarily confined to them. The
;
hence, the
yea, all
who
let
in her
crown
especially those
who
turn
many
IV. Notice HER LABOR AND FRUITFULNESS. She was travailing in birth. The Church has
suffered
many
Her
most fruitful seasons have been the times of her severest persecutions.
num-
And whenever
persecutions scattered
took root in
3d
V. Notice HER PLACE OF SAFETY. She fled on eagle's wings to a place of safety. The wings of the eagle, which is the strongest, and soars the highest of all birds, bear her in triumph to a place of safety, where the everlasting arms are about her, the munition of rocks is her defence, and the shelter of the Eternal Rock protects her from all evil.
What, though the elements
shall melt,
And stars their orbits leave, And nature's pillars be removed, And dried up be the seas
:
The Church
of
God
his
shall stand,
:
Surrounded by
arms of love
90
ON EASTER.
SERMON
VIL
ON EASTER.
" He is not here for he place where the Lord lay."
:
is risen,
This
is
Romanism,
and
site
too
much
formalism,
we have
some things which are of special importance. In avoiding the superstitions which attach too much importance to days, times and seasons, we seem to have lost sight of those eventful days which rightfully
evil of neglecting
commanded
keep holy, there are three other days, upon which christians should bestow more than a mere passing notice. These days should be hallowed as Sabbaths, special Sabbaths. The events which transpired upon them deserve and that we to be brought constantly before the mind may be more deeply impressed with their importance, their annual return should be made use of, to instruct the ignorant, to call back the thoughtless wanderer, and I refer to the to encourage and edify true believers.
;
ON EASTER.
91
(Good Friday), and the day of his resurrection (Easter Sunday). I don't know but I should have made it five days, adding the day of Ascension and the day of Pentecost.
The
resurrection,
it
is
true, is
celebrated
upon
first
day
of the
Jewish week;
wellIt
Since,
we can hardly be
far
which
we have to do an event, than which nothing could be more wonderful, grand and sublime nothing so calcu;
and give
ance of his
life
own
of holiness.
We
shall notice,
I. Some op the things necessarily involved in the RESURRECTION OF CHRIST. Prominently among these we must consider his death and burial as essential to his resurrection. If he did not die, and was not buried, then he could not have risen. The apostle declares that the Gospel he preached embraced these three facts, viz. the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus. For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, how that Christ died for
:
92
our
sins,
ON EASTER.
according to the Scriptures
I Cor. xv, 3, 4.
We
To
his arraignment.
was arrested, tried, and condemned to die. His trial, it is true, was the most cruel mockery ever exhibHe was arrested without a warrant, ited to mortal gaze. placed on trial without an indictment, declared innocent by his judge, and yet sentenced to death I. When Pilate asked, " What accusation bring ye against this man?" they answered, " If he were not a malefactor, we would not have delivered him up unto thee." Did you ever hear such a response, in any other court, to the demand for a bill of charges against the defendant at the bar?
Pilate
is
He
required
is
to believe
upon that conclusion, and declare him guilty, and to order his execution, with no other evidence against him, except the fact of his having been arrested by his blood-thirsty enemies and delivered He was taken from Pilate to Herod, where to the judge. the same farce was enacted, and again back to Pilate,
clude that he
guilty, to act
who,
for the
in him,
and then washed his hands of his blood. Yet, after all, because of the clamor of the multitude, and incited by the priests, scribes, and other rulers, Pilate de* The enmity of the Jews livered Jesus to be crucified. pursued him to the cross, and at last prevailed over all the other influences that were operating upon Pilate's mind, and thus he was condemned to die.
ON EASTER.
2.
93
We behold his crucifa This act was performed in the presence of a vast multitude of ever}" class of Jerusalem's inhabitants.
!
The
clamor of the Jews, the cries of " Away with him crucify him," having prevailed with Pilate, and he having
delivered
him
him away
place
place of a skull
the
of
over the
him
in every possi-
way they placed a crown of thorns upon his head, and saluted him, and bowed the knee in mockery; and when they had inflicted every other torture that Jewish
malice could contrive, they
lifted
him up upon
a cross,
and hands. There he hung for three hours, suffering the most intense agony, and finally expired gave up the ghost, committing his soul into the hands of his Father. Ail nature felt the shock, the vail of the temple was rent from top to bottom, the earth quaked, the rocks were rent, and the graves of the saints were opened (but they could not leave their tombs until Jesus had broken their chains and relieved their bodies from the power of the grave.)- When the Roman officer saw and heard these things, he feared greatly, and said, " Truly, this man was the Son of God." As the folio wing Sabbath was a high day, the Jews besought Pilate that the legs of the criminals might be broken, to hasten their death, that the bodies might be removed. The legs of the criminals which were crucified with him were broken, but when they came to Jesus, they found he was already dead nevertheless, a soldier pierced his side with a spear, and forthwith came there
feet
; ;
;
94
out blood and water.
ON EASTER.
His executioners pronounced him dead, and it was evident to all that he was dead therefore, the evidence of his death was conclusive. It has never been denied, and for the very good reason, that it was so well attested that no one could deny it, with a hope of being believed.
;
Then he was also buried. Joseph of Arimathea, a rich disciple of Jesus, went to Pilate and begged the body, and with the assistance of Nicodemus, John, and a few faithful women, he laid it
3.
in his
When
Man
down on
that
But he had said he would rise on the third day. Therefore, the Jews went to Pilate and desired that the tomb be made secure until the third day had passed. They were troubled in mind they had seen him perform so many
lay silent in the tomb.
;
him
to fulfill
gagement, and determined to provide against it, if possible. Pilate gave them the desired band of soldiers the sepulchre was hewn out of a rock, and the entrance was closed with a large stone this was sealed, so that to open the sepulchre would have been an unlawful act. Every precaution possible having now been taken, the tomb was left to the care of the watch, who were responsible for the safe keeping of the body till after the third day. To have suffered the body to have been stolen, or to have left the tomb, by any negligence on their part, would
;
have rendered each of them liable to the penalty of death. With such a charge, and -the danger of such a penalty hanging over them, it is not likely that any one would The occurrences of that day, no sleep while on duty.
ON EASTER.
95
of discourse in the
camp.
The
pos-
incomprehensible
being whose body was resting in the tomb. If these did not afford sufficient matter to engross their attention and
what would. II. But let us notice the resurrection as attested BY THE DISCOVERIES OF THE THIRD MORNING, AND THE IMMEDIATELY SUCCEEDING DAYS.
1.
We
have
the
empty tomb.
To
* *
our attention
"
He is not
here
Come, see the place where the Lord lay." This was the language of the angel who, seeing the disappointment of the women that came first to the tomb with sweet spices to anoint him, spoke unto them these words of consolation. It appears that the women must have left the tomb on the day of his burial, before the setting of the watch and sealing of the stone, for they were saying
themselves, " Who shall roll us away the stone?" They would hardly have thought of this as their chief difficulty, if they had known that the stone was sealed and guarded. They found, however, every obstacle to their approach to the tomb removed, for the angel, with
among
his wing,
had pushed the stone aside, and by the brighthad filled the soldiers with such that they, at first, swooned away, and when they
had
w ent
T
in haste to their
employers, to
Thus
it
96
struct
ON EASTER.
them
iti
tomb
but, on reach-
it, they found not the object of their visit. The body was gone, the tomb was ernpt}\ John and Peter, having heard from the women that he was risen, also came in haste to the sepulchre, and found the grave clothing and the napkin, but they found not the body. I presume there were thousands who visited that empty tomb, but a thousand witnesses would make no impression upon a mind that could doubt the testimony of those already named. Peter and John, and at least three women, viz., the two Marys and Joanna, and an angel from heaven, six in all, or double the number that is required to establish any fact all these testify to an empty tomb. That the tomb had given up the sacred charge, there can be no doubt. What became of it? The enemies of Jesus were aware that this question would have to be answered, that the absence of the body would have to be accounted for, hence they invented and
ing
him
away while the soldiers slept, and bribed the soldiers to them in circulating this report. No doubt the soldiers had reported the truth to many on their way, but they were now to contradict themselves as far as possible, cease to report the truth, and thus make way for the circulation of the falsehood. The soldiers were promised security from blame or punishment
assist
for the
made
prove
ON EASTER.
Is
it
97
(1).
who
all
forsook a liv-
his dead by a band of Roman soldiers, body, guarded, as it was, the best in the world? The courage of Peter, which appeared great before Christ was arrested, forsook him when he saw his Master in the hands of his enemies. John was the only one of the eleven who ventured near the cross on the day of his crucifixion, and he alone, if any, was There never was a man more completely at the burial. deserted by his friends than Jesus. Had he not risen, What possible use his memory would have perished. could his disciples have made of his body ? A dead Saviour had no charms for them it grieved them, yea, put them out of patience to hear of his death. Peter rebuked him for speaking of his death, saying, "Be it far from Matt, xvi, 23. thee, Lord, this shall not be unto thee."
steal
No,
And if he had not from the dead, they would have been, of all men, risen most miserable. Such, in substance, is the language of the apostle, "If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable." But if the body was stolen, why was not a reward offered for it? Why were not the apostles arrested ? Why were they permitted to declare publicly, without contradiction, his resurrection ? This they did in Jerusalem, in the presence of thousands, and they were not contradicted. Why were not the soldiers punished for sleeping on their post, and thus sufheart-broken wretches ever beheld.
98
ON EASTER.
hands?
If
the soldiers had been thus guilty, the Jews would have
that
be
among
the
The
stone,
:
seal,
they
testify
story started
with one voice against the absurdity of the by his enemies, that he was stolen while the
soldiers slept.
had no hand in the removal of the body. But if the soldiers slept, how could they tell what became of the body, or what took place during that period? Is not infidelity pretty hard pushed when it has Would any to bring sleeping witnesses to the stand ? judge in the land take the testimony of a sleeping witness? You see that absurdity is stamped upon the face
ciples
(2).
It is
absurd
It is
to
who
courage
have made no
effort to
absurd
to
suppose that the soldiers, to whom were committed such an important trust, could neglect that trust, and not be called to account. I repeat, the whole story bears the
stamp
all
of absurdity
upon
its
face
and
this absurdity is
ON EASTER.
2.
99
We
remark
many
creditable witnesses.
rise.
It
was not
the will of
God
human
advantage over another in this respect. No mortal being saw him rise. The truth of the resurrection is received by each and every one in the same way, namely, on the
testimony of others.
is the angel. Whether angels saw an unsettled question with me. Whether by the fact of seeing him rise, or by his absence from the tomb, or by seeing him after his resurrection it does not matter by what means the knowledge was obtained, the angel first bore testimony to the resurrection. Such is
(1).
The
first
witness
him
rise or not, is
"
And
the angel
ye: for I
answered, and
know
"
which was
He
is
not
6.
here: for he
And
he said." Matt, xxviii, entering into the sepulchre, they saw a young
risen, as
5,
man
on the right side, clothed in a long white garment, and they were affrighted. And he saith unto them, Be not affrighted ye seek Jesus of Nazareth, which was crucified he is risen he is not here." Mark xvi, 5, 6. In Luke xxiv, 5, 6, we read as the language of the angel, " Why seek ye the living among the dead ? He is not here, but is risen." It is seldom that w e find a matter recorded by three authors, in so nearly the same language,
sitting
: :
as
is
this record.
The expression
by the three Evangelists is in substance the same, and a part of it in exactly the same words, yet there is sufficient
100
difference in the
ON EASTEE.
manner
is
The second
was confirmed to her by Jesus himself, and with her companions she reported this fact to the disoiples. Thus the angel was sent to tell Mary, (not the mother of Jesus, but
sent to
tell
the disciples,
morning
of
sundry other times for the space of forty days. On the day of his resurrection, as two of the disciples were journeying to a village a few miles from Jerusalem, it is said that " Jesus himself drew near and went with them." But they did not know him he talked with them by the way, stopped with them at a village, and made himself known to them in breaking of bread. See Luke xxiv, 13 31. He appeared on the night of that same day to the eleven, who were together
;
in a
closed.
Luke
xxiv, 36;
John
xx, 1925.
On
sembled with them again, and after that, he showed himself to them at the sea of Tiberias. See John xx,
and xxi, 1 14. Of the witnesses of his resurrection, the Apostle thus speaks " And he was seen of Cephas, then of the twelve. After that he was seen of above five hundred brethren at once; of whom the greater remain unto this present, but some are fallen asleep. After that he was seen of James; then of all the apostles. Last of all, he was seen I Cor. xv, 5--8. of me as one born out of due time."
26,
:
ON EASTER.
After showing that the whole christian fabric rests
the resurrection, that
if
101
is
upon no
he
"
faith vain,
is
Christ risen
first fruits
of
them
that
It ivas
The
tle's
resurrection
plan of salvation.
faith are vain,
We
to the
Apos-
and and that ye are yet in your sins. We may add that his triumph was not complete without this. " He must reign till he hath put all enemies under his
declaration, that without this both preaching
feet.
The
last
enemy
is
death."
he must place his foot upon the neck of this last enemy. He had met the great enemy on other battle fields and conquered. His first great battle is represented as having been fought on the shining plains of glory, beneath There he met the the shade of heaven's high dome. rebel host and sent them trembling over heaven's battlements down to regions of dark despair. His second engagement was in the wilderness, where he met the prince of the powers of disobedience and thrice repulsed him. His third great battle was in the garden and his fourth on Calvar}^. In all, he had been more than conqueror In all of these battles, however, he had appeared as on the
;
defensive.
upon him.
The contest appeared, so to speak, The field, the time, and the manner
as forced of attack,
102
ON EASTER.
all to
seem
have been chosen by the enemy. But scene changes the victor
:
;
in this
selects
minions.
appoints his
The choice of weapons are now own time: "Tear down this
it
and he
pro-
temple, but
up again."
He had
claimed victory by the mouth of the prophet, saying: "I will ransom them from the power of the grave; I will
redeem them from death: death, I will be thy plague; grave, I will be thy destruction." Hos. xiii, 14. He is described in the book of Job as thirsting for the conflict, impatient to engage the enemy, scenting the battle from afar, swallowing the ground with fierceness and rage, so that the distance between him and his enemy is as nothing. We must remember that this is Jehovah's description of the contest, for it was he that spake to Job,
in
person,
as
follows:
liorse
strength? Hast thou clothed his neck with thunder? Canst thou make him afraid as a grasshopper? The
He paweth in the he goeth on to and rejoiceth in his strength the armed men. He mocketh at fear, and is not meet affrighted neither turneth he back from the sword. The quiver rattleth against him, the glittering spear and the shield. He swalloweth the ground with fierceness and rage neither believeth that it is the sound of the trumpet. He saith among the trumpeters, Ha ha and he smelleth the battle afar off, the thunder of the capJob xxxix, 18 25. With his tains, and the shouting." eye fixed upon this tremendous conflict, and with full assurance of victory, he exclaims " Now is the judgment
glory of his nostrils are terrible.
valley,
:
ON EASTER.
of this world,
out."
103
now
own
and conquers.
victory.
He
of its
with his
hold, I
2.
Bearing away the gates of death, and standing upon the neck of his vanquished enemy, he exclaims: " I am he that liveth, and was dead, and befeet
am
the
types
and
'prophecies of the
and Jonah
was a prediction
Thou
my
25 31. When Jesus fell in with two of the on the day of his resurrection, and they spoke of that event as an astonishing thing, he exclaimed, " fools, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory?" Luke xxiv, 13 27. 3. This grand achievement was surrounded with circum-
See Acts
ii,
disciples
stances of peculiar glory. " behold," says the Evangelist, " there
And was a great earthquake" a mighty sbaking of the earth. And an angel descended from heaven, whose majestic countenance flashed forth as lightning, and his raiment glit-
tering with a
lustre of
which no
104:
ON EASTER.
mortal eye could bear, and for fear of him the keepers
did shake and became as dead
away.
When
was
rolled away,
remove the body, but they had not contemplated an encounter with an angel, who had power to shake the earth therefore, seeing that the tomb was empty, they fled, and reported what had happened.
;
4.
all Christ's
achievements.
He
cles.
To
raise another
was
-an act of
stupendous power,
for
life,
them
to
who
Through Him, we
your Savior.
is,
He
Sinner,
we
offer
him
to
you.
He
died for
our sins,
may
The grace
105
SERMON
VIII.
said,
Let there be
light:
light."
3.
own
This opening passage, in Jehovah's own account of his creation, written by the inspired pensman, is a most
Men have
different
ex-
efforts to
way
Infidel scientists
from have
failed
up
have
to
ment
effort
any theory
Nor can they agree upon which they will stick. In. their last great they have led us back to protoplasm, and there left
us to grope our
way
in eternal darkness.
Can
is
that be
willing to
its
tor in
crea-
Infidels
have not made much progress since Isaiah's time, and what motion they have exhibited, is in a retrograde di" They lavrection, from gold backwards to protoplasm.
5
106
and hire a goldsmith and down, yea, they worship. They bear him upon the shoulder, they carry him, and set him in his place, and he standeth." Isaiah xlvi, 6, 7. It does seem to me that this boasted age of science and research ought to be able to find a god who can move out of his tracks. But excepting the God of the author of the book of Genesis, none can be found who has exhibited less helplessness than the one described by the prophet.
he maketb
it
we
make
it
appear
plausable.
When we
who
solid
is
things,
upon a rock, in comparison with which all else is as sand. By this method of solving the mystery of the origin of the material universe, we steer clear of a thousand difficulties that meet us on any other line. You must find bottom some where. You must find a foundation upon which to build any theory you may be inclined to set up. You must get back to first principles, must find a first cause. We find the Intelligent, Eternal, Almighty God to be that First Cause, and our theory is, that he is the author of all things, and we assert that for any other theory you have nothing but conjecture. Is it said that ours is conjecture, we answer, it is supported by what purports to be a divine revelation, and until it can be demonstrated that it is not, we have
ground
;
yea,
something better than conjecture. We are not left to wander in the darkness of unsanctified human reason,
107
fact
is,
that
we
find
how
We
vast, the
man
is
inadequate
to
conceive.
live in a
much less than six thousand which Jehovah spake and said, "Let there be light;" and yet, in all these years no substantial progress has been made by unassisted human reason in solving the mystery of creation. We are amazed at the
period, by all accounts, not
small attainments of
man
collect the
knowledge of
unless I
it
all
am
would not all amount to what our father Adam knew on the day that he was created. He was made in the image of his Creator, who is the fountain of knowledge, And for what little we do know, we are largely indebted to divine revelation. The key to the knowledge of astronomy seems to have been borrowed from that sublime discourse which God delivered to Job out of the whirlwind,
as recorded in chapters thirty-eight to forty-one inclusive
Who
The
Whereupon
6.
we know how ridiculous and absurd many of them were. Who had demonancients had their notions, but
strated, or
empty
place,
it.
declared
and the earth hung upon nothing until God "Who, even at this day, can give a satisfac-
108
imitable discourse?
On
much has been written but even the learned admit that they do not certainly
forth Mazzaroth in his season ?"
know the meaning of the term. And the fact that those who profess to know, differ, makes it evident that none know to a certainty. On the question, " Canst thou bind the sweet influence of Pleiades?" much had been written,
and ages had elapsed
ence.* before even astronomers had
any
Taking a hint, however, from the question propounded by Jehovah, their investigations have led them
to conclude, pretty generally, that Alcyone, the central
is
all
it,
systems,
and that
This is truly a sublime borrowed from the book divine. It was he whom we call God that gave out the hint, which turned the astronomer's mind into the line of thought which led to this conclusion. The hints thrown out in that wonderful discourse afford themes for thought, and lessons of instruction sufficient to keep the world's students employed for many ages yet to come, before they will have learned them all. We commend these hints
idea; but
it is
We may
He,
ask,
How
shall
we account
acknowledge and adore as God, knew so much more, over three thousand years ago, than the wisest know even at this day ? If our notion of his be*What we
call the
whom we
six visible to
109
and estimate of his character be correct, the mystery If we accept the language of the text as our guide, and admit the declaration of divine revelation, that God is the author of all things, our vision becomes clear, every difficulty vanishes. Our soundings are no
solved.
longer
fruitless,
our thoughts no longer sink into a botfly back until they reach and find a
up
in the glory
der
The characteristics that revelation ascribe to him, renhim fully competent to be the author of all things. A God of unlimited duration, wisdom and power, could easily accomplish the work of creating all that we behold, yea, infinitely more than we can conceive of; and without such a being, we are left to grope in the darkness of
human
make
the darkness
more
visible.
is
The account
a grand
us!
we have, or can have. What and sublime opening the inspired pensman gives There is no labored preface, no apology for writ;
ing no introduction
but the stupendous subject bursts forth upon us from the inspired mind, and is at once set " In the beforth in all its grandeur and immensity.
Then
follows a statement of the original state of matter; it was a without form and void; and darkness was upon the
face of the deep."
this
to
bring
world of ours into being, he stepped forth in the majesty of his might, and brought his creative energies
110
to bear
his voice,
from the
womb
of chaos.
said, Let there be light: and there was light." At mandate that brightest and most beautiful image of its Almighty Author burst forth into being. Infidel and skeptical philosophers are wont to treat with derision, what they consider a great blunder on the part of the inspired pensman, in representing the creation of light as taking place before the creation of the sun, moon, and other luminaries. But they betray their own amazing stupidity, in failing to comprehend the fact that he who had the power to create the sun, moon and stars to give
"God
his
have created light independent of is not dependent upon any secare infinite; he doeth what he
to his
He
And because he is in everything that exists, latent or hidden heat, by which light is produced, exists in all things. Hence the Apostle says he " was the true Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world." It shineth, or existeth in the darkness, even though not seen. I have chosen the text with the view of considering that system by which light and immortality are brought
to light in the Gospel.
lustrate.
It is Gospel light we wish to ilcan conceive of no symbol of the Gospel more striking than light. I may also remark, that the
We
is
Ill
natural light
is
Thus
The people
that
sat in darkness
saw preat light; and to them which sat in the region and shadow of death, light is sprung up." And the evangelical prophet employs this samo figure to represent the Gospel day, and the effect of the Gospel
light
light
thee'.
upon
is
this
benighted world.
risen
upon
and gross darkness the people but the Lord shall rise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen upon thee. And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising." Now, the prophet did not mean that the sun, moon and stars should cease to shine, and that natural darkness should prevail, but that there w ould be a time of gross spiritual darkness, and that over this darkness should the Sun of Righteousness arise and send
r
forth the rays of Gospel light into all the dark places of the
earth;
and that the Gentiles, yea, even kings of the earth should be lightened by its gentle rays. I need not to remind you that this prophecy has been largely fulfilled in
same
to
illustration: "
shine out of darkness, hath sinned in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the
face of Jesus Christ."
Now
finite
its source.
Light
He
spake,
and
it
112
heard his voice he commanded, and it came forth. Likewise, is the Gospel the offspring of Deity. The Gospel, says the apostle, is not " cunningly devised fables" it is not the invention of human imagination, or the product of human ingenuity, but it is the glorious Gospel of the
:
Son
of God.
:
It bears his
image and
reflects his
glory in
every line
in
it
all
Here,
mercy and truth meet, righteousness and peace kiss each other, and wisdom, power and almighty love shine forth
in all their divine splendor.
But the Gospel resembles light in its design. The light makes manifest. By it, we behold things of which we would ever have remained ignorant without it. There might be innumerable beauties around us, and our organs e*f vision might be in their perfect state, but without light we could never enjoy the pleasure of beholding them, but should remain ever ignorant of their Paul, with all his learning, was ignorant of existence.
his natural depravity until the Gospel light of ignorance
fell
and the deceitfulness of his heart, shone around him, and the scales
eyes.
irom his
He
thought he was
of-
when he was
persecu-
beauty and saving power of the religion of Jesus. This to make manifest; to is the great object of the Gospel throw light into our dark understanding; to point out our danger, and our refuge to show us our disease, and
the remedy
ing,
to show us the pit into which we are sinkand the benevolent hand that is stretched out to de;
liver us.
By
we
see
our sinful
state,
113
and undone condition in it we also see our Saviour. It lights up our path from earth to glory; it is a lamp to our feet, and a "light to shine upon the road that leads us to the Lamb." It lights up the valley and shadow of death, throws a divine radiance over the tomb, and bright rays of joy and hope into the dying christian's eye, by which he has strength to exclaim, iu the
expiring moment:
" Come, welcome death, the end of Thy terrors I regard no more."
fear,
its
There
is
nothing so mild in
its
motion as
light.
All
when put in rapid motion, are more or The stream, when swollen to a flood, less destructive. sweeps away all before it. The air, which is balmy and health-giving in its quietude, yet, when agitated, it tears
other bodies,
up
trees
by the
with the
and engulfs majestic ships beneath the swelling billows. We have heard of hurricanes, which have swept away whole trains of cars, including massive locomotives. Not so with light: though it travels at the rate of twelve millions of miles a minute, yet it falls upon the eye with a mildness truly pleasant. So with the Gospel, in which there is neither lightning, nor thunder, nor tempest, nor smoke, and
earth, rolls of the sea,
up the waves
nothing
to
It
simply says,
"Come!"
all
heavy laden, and I will give you rest." Matt, xi, 28. When the law was thundered forth from Sinai, the trembling Israelites moved back from the mount, and
114
besought God not to speak to them any more, except through Moses, in whose voice there was no thunder. The law proclaimed the terrors of the Lord, his wrath and indignation, which those, who obey not his voice, " Cursed shall feel through the endless ages of eternity. is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them." " The soul
that sinneth, "
it
shall die."
When to the
It I
law
poured
its
curses
no relief could find This fearful truth increased my pain, The sinner must: be born again, Overwhelmed my troubled mind.
Again did
Sinai's
And
Alas
guilt lay
A vast,
!
oppressive load
I
it
plain,
The
Must drink the wrath of God. But while I thus in darkness lay, Jesus of Nazareth passed that way I felt his pity move A sinner, by his justice slain, Now by his grace is born again,
;
And
And And
To heaven
All hail
the
Unnumbered
The Gospel
us.
is
a message of mercy
Like
light, it is al}
it
115
God
perish, but
that
saying,
came
sinners
thirst, let
Jesus stood and cried, If any man and that him come unto me, and drink." What gracious words, what heavenly tenderness, what enrapturing
;"
"
mildness!
frighten us
gel,
for,
;
I repeat, there is
its
light
is
sent to
who
first
"
Fear not:
its
purity.
!
How
disease
beautifully transparent
it.
light
There
is
no foul
mixture in
;
It
may
it
matter; unpolluted,
air, it inhales no contagious sweeps on through space, dispensing joy and gladness, but nothing hurtful or unpleasant.
but,
unlike the
The Gospel
tion."
It
is
likewise pure;
is
it is
a system of purity:
its
purifying influence
called the
"washing
of regenera-
and pollution, and diffuses and makes holy. It has come in contact with every foul system heathenism, paganism, Mohammedanism, and all the corrupting influences that have operated against the Christian Church, and yet it is pure. Stripped of the garmentsjn which sectarians have
removes
sin's guilt
purity:
it
sanctifies
beauty of
many of
its
passages,
it still
remains the pure Gospel word, the sincere milk of which gives strength to the bodies and souls of men. It is healing and invigorating.
116
Solomon says, " Truly the light is sweet." It is only those whose " deeds are evil " that " love darkness more
than light." To
ducive
all others,
light
is
how The sun pours forth his rays but the unhappy man gropes his way at noon. The beauties of nature surround him, but he knows nothto their happiness.
who has
lost his
reckon-
No
on the shore,
warn him of danger, or cheer him with hope. What joy would light bring to such distressed mortals Such is the sinner. He is blinded by the god of this world, is in the darkness of his lost state, and in the road to death. He is tempest-tossed upon the billows of his guilty conscience, and exposed to the breakers of divine wrath. He is lost in the wilderness of sin, and is " without God and
!
To
dom
of grace.
It dispels
and brings
fills
to
shore.
The Gospel
117
heart with the light of joy, and the expectation with the
light of hope.
"
It scatters all
And
Now
all
it is
shine in
all
Go ye
into
TO BE DIFFUSED.
By
is
the visible
God on
world with the light of divine knowledge. In solving the mystery of the seven candlesticks, in the midst of
which John saw him standing, Jesus said, " The seven candlesticks which thou sawest are the seven churches." As the candlestick holds, and thus displays the light, so
does the church.
By
that
the
life
and
"
The seven
stars,"
Sun
of Righteousness.
It is
burning luminaries, to Their mission of hellish night. earth's remotest bounds; and they are encourlight, as
aged by the assurance of the divine presence. " Lo, with you alway, even unto the end of the world."
ministry
is
am
The
Gospel light.
He
is
true, in
themselves, but
of his pur-
in the
accomplishment
118
pose, to
Take a com-
let
out and in before them, and you change in that community. The deep darkness will disappear, and light will spring up and
man
:
of
God
is
among
them.
ship.
was
Christ's
command may
which
is
"
see
and
in heaven."
we are to be lights in this benighted land. To each and to every one of us he says, " Let there be light." If we are
not letting the light shine, we are not fulfilling our mis*
sion.
men, to deal out to that community " liquid damnation." At this election, there were a number of persons, who professed to be christians, that voted what *they called " the wet ticket "that is, they voted to license the sale of intoxicating drinks. I heard of one classleader, who voted the wet ticket. What shall we say of
be granted
such a leader?
Where
is
Cer-
tainly, not into the true Gospel light, but into the dark-
We would not sit in judgment upon the christian character of our neighbors; but how a man, who supports the whiskey traffic, can imagine himself a christian, is a mystery beyond my comprehension and as a watchman upon the walls of Zion, I feel in duty bound to warn the people of the evils of the presness of intemperance.
;
119
know
ravages, so exacting in
demands, or so
fearful in its
We,
as a
from a bondage most oppressive, degrading, and evil in its consequences a system denounced by a great and good man as the "sum of all villainies." Whatever were the evils of that system, (and they were never half told), and whatever were the horrors
have
lately escaped
upon the slaveholder, no such evil case as are the victims of intemperance These are enslaved, both soul and body. Death released the victims of our late system of slavery, and we have no doubt that thousands of them were conveyed by angels to Abraham's bosom. We have no such hope respecting the victims of intemperance. Death sinks them deeper. The Apostle reminds us that the drunkard shall not inherit the kingdom of heaven, and Jesus warns us that there is a danger of having our hearts overcharged with drunkenness, and that day come upon us unawares. Drunkenof that system were in
!
Very little is said of intemperance among the people of God at that period. No doubt there was drunkenness in that day, but it was among those who made no profession of righteousness.
was
so generally
Jesus to
The wickedness of intemperance acknowledged, it was not necessary for say much about it. It is the sin of all sins of
It is the fruitful
our day.
the sun.
bell, it is
it
with the
number
of
its
victims.
120
Like the great red dragon that stood before the woman,
this
monster seems to have been waiting the results of the emancipation proclamation, that it might seize upon the freed people and enslave them again, before they
were strong enough to resist its power. Our penitentiaries are filled with its victims; and the auction block has often been surrounded by horses, mules, cows, and all manner of implements of husbandry, the property of one who had a fair start and was doing well, before he fell under the power of the whiskey traffic. The wretchedness and woe so fearfully prevalent, the ragged and halfstarved children, the heart broken wives and mothers,
the
numshow
downward
road, all go to
how completely
monster has, in many cases, wholly nullified the intended effect of the freedom proclamation.
this
yet, there are
And
too,
even ministers,
us,
professing christians
and who oppose the efforts that are put forth to remove it from the land. Some even go so far as to threaten to withhold their support from ministers who speak against this evil. The minister who would swerve one hair's breadth from his duty for fear of men, is not worthy of support. They forget that he who opens and no man can shut, has said, " Your water is sure, and your bread shall
be given."
What then
is
he whose scorn
I dread,
121
wilderness, I
we
are to
wander
it
forty years in
this
but intemperance.
Let us drive out
"Let there be
light."
God grant us grace to diffuse light by a holy example, and thus hasten the day when the kingdoms of this world shall become the kingdoms of our God.
122
the
soul's anchor.
SERMON
THE
steadfast,
IX.
SOUL'S ANCHOR.
soul, both sure and into that within the vail whither the forerunner is for us entered, even Jesus, made a high priest forever after the order of Melchisedec." Heb. vi, 19.
At the commencement
text
is
of the chapter, of
which our
vancing
horts his
Hebrew brethren
to
leave the
principles,
He
means
1
Verses
8.
He
of faith
and obeVerse
9.
By
pointing to the
and labors
on to greater diligence. He would comfort believers with a view of God's goodness, in the engagements he had condescended to enter into, and which he had confirmed by " Wherein God, willing more abundantly to an oath
:
the
show unto the
things, in
soul's anchor.
123
that by two immutable it by an oath which it was impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation, w ho have fled for refuge Then follows to lay hold upon the hope set before us." the text: "Which hope we have," " We," that is, the Apostle and every other believer, who, having been awakened to the sense of a lost and undone condition, have fled to and laid hold of the promises of God, and made them our refuge, or, as the Apostle puts it, are heirs or inheritors of the promises, " have this hope as an anchor
counsel, confirmed
7
of the soul."
All we,
who
and wretchedness, have, for safety from deserved wrath, laid hold upon the promises set forth in the Gospel, have a strong and consoling assurance that our confidence is w ell placed, and that our refuge is sure. The Apostle mentions two rocks, or solid foundations, upon which our confidence rests, and intimates a third. " That by two immutable things, in w hich it was impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation." One immutable thing would have been sufficient to have sustained all who would confide in it, hut in the inexhaustible abundance of God's goodness, he gives beyond measure. He presses it dowm in the measure, shakes it together, and then runs it over; yea, more, he doubles and trebles his blessings. The two immutable things, of which the Apostle speaks,
pravity, weakness, guilt
T
7
is
sure);
and second, the oath by wdiich the promise is confirmed, ''The oath," says the Apostle, "is the end of strife." It puts an end to all contradiction. That which is sworn
124
to, is
the
regarded as
soul's anchor.
vailing testimony.
And
there can
be no testimony
lie,
him
that cannot
no greater, he swore by himself. Therefore, we have as a ground for our hope the promise of God, who cannot lie, and the oath of God, which cannot be broken. In addition to this, the Apostle mentions the further fact,
that Jesus, our forerunner, has entered also within the
and there abideth forever a high priest. A forerunner is one who goes before to prepare the way for
vail,
others to follow.
place,
vail of
thief, whose faith pierced the ignominy which enveloped the crucified Nazarene, and beheld in him the King of saints, and trusted in
him
as such.
as the fore-
runner,
who has
He
has taken
for the
accommoand
afford
He
ing to
it,
conduct us
safely,
grace, to enable us
fight of faith,
to finish to lay
our
and
hold
upon
I.
eternal
life.
tian's HOPE.
The Apostle calls it the soul's anchor " Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul." The anchor is thai which, when cast, holds the ship steady amid the storms
and keeps
it
to
125
when
when
mix
with the clouds, death rides upon the storm, and the mariner fears destruction upon the rocks; the anchor is then his only hope; if it fails him, his ship is lost. Amid the storms of life, hope is the christian's anchor.
When
to
friends all
fail
and
when
subjected
afflictions;
when
the
to
seem
"
Oh
that
my grief
my
would be heavier than the sand of the sea: therefore my words are swallowed up. For the arrows of the Almighty are within me, the poison whereof drinketh up my spirit: the terrors of God do set themselves in array against me." In such an hour, hope holds the soul steady, and sweetly whispers:
it
now
soul,
fear,
Thy
Be
great deliverer
still is
Thus encouraged,
the days of
my appointed
till
my change
come."
The Apostle calls this a "sure" hope. It is not every hope that is sure. We read " The hypocrite's hope shall perish, whose hope shall be cut off, and whose trust shall be a spider's web." But the christian's hope, like David's covenant, is ordered in all things and sure. It is a hope that sustains him in every discouragement in life, and
:
126
forsakes
him not
life.
in
deatha hope
full of
immortality
and eternal
unyielding, unmoved.
it
The
it
violence
nor drag
from
its
moorage.
The thunders
among
anchor of hjpe holds on, and safely keeps the soul until the storm of life has passed
fury, but the sheet
Till
hope in fruition
faith
is
dies.
And
lost in sight,
God s right hand, and from this divine presence the Holy Spirit comes forth to bear witness with our spirits, that we are
esty.
sits
at
Within
Triad
is
this
vail
our anchor of
hope
is
the
is
soul's anchor.
127
US' fast.
The Son
of
God
Father accepted
that
we
hope.
Keeping in view the Apostle's metaphor, the anchor, we are reminded that to hold a vessel steady in the storm, the anchor must be cast, and must take hold upon
ground yields, the anchor will drag, and the ship will be cast upon the fatal breakers. Likewise hope, to sustain us amid the storms of life, must be an active, well-grounded hope. Such is the christian's hope. The anchor is not It is a lively hope. carried as an useless encumbrage on the vessel's deck, but it is there to be employed, to be used, to be cast on good and solid ground. And the anchor of hope should
good, solid ground.
If the
grounds of
pure and
undefiled religion.
grounded upon divine bethat he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life." This was the Apostle's boast./' He loved me and gave himself for me." Surely, the amazing exhibition of divine love, as displayed in the mystery of redemption, affords ground upon which the christian's hope may safely rest, and bid
believer's
"
Now, the
hope
is
nevolence.
God
128
the
believer's
soul's anchor.
The
hope
rests, also,
upon
the finished
work cf
Christ.
He
By
and
the right and the power to present us without fault before the throne.
The
sacrifice
he offered met
in
all
tho de-
mands
just,
Divine truth demanded the infliction of the death penalty, as an atonement for the broken law.
Divine mercy, in the person of Jesus, by the oblation of himself once offered, rendered full and complete satisfaction for man's disobedience
and
sin.
He
magnify the law and make it honorable;" I will restore By to it all that man's disobedience has taken from it. man's rebellion, peace had departed from the sons of men, divine indignation was kindled, and wrath was threatened. To appease the divine anger, an atonement made by the nature that had rebelled was required, and it was also required that the atonement should be perfect but there was not a just man upon earth. Divine mercy, in the person of Jesus, interposed. " A body thou
;
Dost thou demand it will I offer." Lo! I come, in the volume of the book it God; yea, is written of me, 1 delight to do thy will, thy law is within my heart. I will declare thy righteousness in the great congregation, and thy loving kindness unto the sons of men. By his righteousness he hath justified many; he has reconciled man to his Maker, reBy the sacstored peace to earth, and good will to man.
hast prepared me,
"
obedience?
rifice of himself,
he gave glory
to
to
man,
129
and
and
tender mercy.
urrection
By
his death
upon the
and ascension
to glory,
to the
power of
made
rec-
and gave
finished
work
of Christ.
But
it rests also
upon
Hav-
he entered death's
dominion, spoiled principalities and powers, broke the robbed the grave of its victory and death of its sting, ascended to his Father's throne, and ever
liveth to
make
"A
priest forever
Aaron, which was changeable, descending from father "because they were not permitted to continue by reason of death," but like that of Melchisedec, his abides
to son,
Like Melchisedec, there was none of his line who filled the office before him, and none will succeed him. Like Melchisedec, there was a mystery hanging over both his birth and his death and yet, like his type, lie was born and also died. He did not receive his priesthood by descent like the sons of Aaron, but by an oath like Melchisedec. Hence, the language of the Psalmist, quoted by the apostle: " The Lord hath sworn, and will
in himself.
;
not repent,
tinues, "
By
Thou art a priest forever." The apostle conso much was Jesus made a surety of a better
testament.
And
many
priests,
because
"
130
the
soul's
anchor.
is
changeable priesthood.
Wherefore he
them
to the
God by him,
make
The
upon this intercession, and he is encouraged, with the immortal Charles Wesley, "To bid his soul arise, shake off its guilty fear, and behold the
hope
rests firmly
bleeding sacrifice in
'
'
its
behalf appear."
He
His
me
to intercede,
redeeming love, his precious blood to plead, Which blood atoned for all our race,
And
sprinkles
now
Five bleeding wounds he bears, received on Calvary, They pour effectual prayers, they strongly speak for Forgive him, O forgive, they cry,
me
Nor
let
The Father hears him pray, his dear anointed He cannot turn away the presence of his son,
His Spirit answers to the blood, And tells me I am born of God."
Upon
and
ali
the
mad
billows rage
"For still the Christian's bark outrides The blustering winds and swelling tides.
He who
also the
intercedes for us
enmity and subtlety of the enemy of our souls. frail tenement like ours, and was in all points tempted as we are. He passed through a. fiery ordeal, a bloody sweat, a painful agony and exceeding
He
once dwelt in a
THE
sorrow of soul
SOUL'S ANCHOE.
131
"
he trod the wine press alone, and of him " yet he triumphed
;
through
it all
divine favor,
(
and thereby secured for us the blessing of and the assurance of divine sympathy.
'
Touched by a sympathy within, He knows our feeble frame He knows what sore temptations mean, For he has felt the same."
;
hope rests also upon his own personal His knowledge of the forgiveness of his sins, his acceptance with God, his justification by faith, the peace he enjoys within, and the sustaining grace by which he is enabled to stand, and maintain the conflict, and after all to stand are all connected with a sure hope. Divine love, the finished work of Christ, and mediatorial intercession, will all go for nothing, unless they are connected with a personal experience, a knowledge that the kingdom of God is within us that he reigns in our hearts. We must have the Spirit of God in us, bearing witness with our spirits that we are the children of God. We must know by God-blessed experience, that we have passed from death unto life that the old man with his deeds have been cast out that our nature has been changed and the new creation formed within. We must be able to say with our favorite poet
But the
believer's
experience.
'
'
My God is reconciled,
He owns me
With
confidence, I
no longer fear
now draw
nigh,
And
Father,
Abba
Father, cry."
To have
know
He must have
132
the witness in himself, must
chains.
;
know
mere hope that he is a christian is not sufficient he must " knoiu" He must know that the burden of sin has been removed, that its heavy load has passed from his back, and that he is no longer oppressed by its weight. He must know that the gloom, distress and fear of sin's dark night have been cleared away, and that they have been superseded by the light of liberty, peace and joy, which are the fruits of justification by faith. If we have them not, we cannot have a sure hope of heaven. The ship, the cable, the anchor cast, are all important, but their utility depends upon their connection. The kingdom of grace set up in our hearts, is the substantial sea-worthy craft, which alone will convey us
safely across the tempestuous ocean of time; faith
is
our
made
y
fast to
the anchor of
and while
this connection is
maintained, we are
safe.
"Though by winds and waves we are tossed and driven, Yet while freighted with grace we are bound for heaven."
we are in deed and in truth believers in Christ Jesus, if we have made the promise of God our trust, if we have fled thereto for refuge, if we have laid hold upon
if
Now
we have the strong consolation these blessings and may unite with the Apostle in appropriating the language of the text " Which hope we have as an
:
anchor
the
ner
is for
soul's anchor.
133
priest for
made a high
ever after the order of Melchisedec." Finally, the believer's hope is grounded upon his longThese are the Spirit's implanting they ings for home.
;
lead us
for
the living
streams of
' '
I cannot, I
cannot forbear These passionate longings for home when will my spirit be there, O when will the messenger come ?"
He who
the right
vail,
has his
upon things above, where hand of God his heart and his flesh crieth out for the living God. His desires go onward and lead him toward his home, and while standing upon some lofty
affections set
Christ sitteth at
of thatglorious light
which flows
city of
God, he exclaims:
Yonder's my house, my portion fair, My treasure and my heart are there, And my abiding home."
III.
HOPE.
possible for
That by two immutable things in which it was imGod to lie, we might have strong consolation." The promises of God, and the oath by which
11
solation.
There are many and sore trials through which most of God's people have to pass in this howling wilderness. Afflictions arise from the temptations of the
134
devil
the
soul's anchor.
he will vex,
if
he can do no
and from our business, social or domestic Under the burden of these afflictions, distresses cares. and cares, we are oonsoled by the hope of future and eternal felicity. We are consoled by the assurance, that "our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory, which shall be revealed in us." We are consoled by the assurance, that whatever our trials and difficulties, whatever dark nights of sorrow and affliction, whatever dark paths duty compels us to pass through, a hand divine is leading us, and will cheer us, (for he " giveth songs in the night,") and will lead us safely and with rapture to the city of everlasting habitaof our nature,
tions.
We are
buffeted
we may
pushed we
licious
our
in a
shall
word more
however hard may be, however numerous, or strong, or maenemies, however long the conflict may last* whatever the nature of the engagement, we than conquer through him that loved us and
for us,
may
gave himself
We are consoled
and unaccountable the dispensations of Providence, yet all things shall work together for the good of those that
love the Lord, that
" Behind a frowning providence,
He
hides
a smiling
face,"
Consoled and strengthened by such invigorating and soul-stirring assurances, we are enabledj not only to stem
the
soul's
anchor.
135
weak
To
that celestial
hill.
of time
and
space,
On faith's
rise,
And force your passage to the skies, And scale the mount of God.
And by his side sit down To patient faith the prize is sure, And all that to the end endure
The crosSj
shall
13G
SOUL,
SERMON
X.
SOUL.
whole world, exchange for
re-
Whom
do
men
say that
I,
the
Son of
man, am ?"
They answered that there were a variety of sayings respecting him. Some said he was John the
Baptist, risen
it is
said,
was Herod's
this
Herod hatched
opinion
To
he had unlawfully taken to himself, he had John beheaded. John had rebuked this wicked couple for their unlawful conduct, and the woman planned for his destruction the king falling in with, and executing
;
whom
Wicked
as
There-
he would find relief in persuading himself that this was John, risen from the dead as, in that case, he could console himself with the idea that he had not done him much harm, after all. It often happens that men regret
;
SOUL.
137
own doings, when it is too late undo them but they foolishly fall back upon the hope that God may overrule in such a way as to, at least, nullify
Suppose he should ? That won't help their case. No matter what God may do for his own glory, their sin remains the same, until they repent. Repentance and faith alone will remove The more exguilt and give substantial peace of mind. cellent way, however, is to do only that which an enlightthe effect of their misdoings.
some said he was "Elijah; and others Jeremias, or one of the prophets."
The
He
Son
whom
say ye that I
am? And
said,
Thou
After assuring
form them
self.
what should soon transpire respecting himthat time forth began Jesus to show unto his disciples how that he must go unto Jerusalem, and suffer many things of the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and be raised again the third day." At this Peter took him and began to rebuke him, saying, " This shall not be unto thee." But Jesus said, Get thee behind me Satan thou art an offence unto me, for thou
of
"
From
'
be of men."
poorly;
denial;
that
he had
it
self-
upon which discipleship must rest: he, on the contrary, had exhibited selfishness as a most prominent feature in his character, and
the basis
138
THE
LOSS OF
THE
yea,
SOUL.
which controlled
capstone thereof.
his action
it
He
is
new one laid, from which every must be removed. And for this, the following reason is given " For whosoever will save his life, shall lose it.' He that would save his life by
must be dug up, and
a
particle of selfishness
;
it.
"
my
it."
and thereby
loses his
life,
shall find
it
again in heaven.
end that he has really lost nothing. Then follows the text; " Fcr what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul ?" To impress them with the importance of the subject, he employs a method with which men engaged in mercantile pursuits are well acquainted, namely, loss and gain. The merchant who does not pay attention to this If he does not see rule, will be most likely to suffer loss. to it that something is gained by all his transactions, he had best close up shop. If he pays more for what he buys, than it will bring when sold, if the outlay is more than the income, it is clearly a losing business; and if
shall find in the
He
he continues thus, all eventually will be lost. To ascertain the value of any business in whieh we are engaged, ^e must consider the entire outlay. If this subtracted from the income, leaves a balance, then it is evident that the business pays. But if the outlay is the larger of the two, he is admonished by the rule that he cannot subtract a larger number from a smaller, that it is a losing business, and if cpnfintfed failure will be inevitable. The
THE
LOSS OF
THE
SOUL.
139
and
loss to the
I say
imaginary, for
it
is
not
real.
He
that embraces
sublunary things as substantial good, is Let us suppose a case in which a man goes deceived. into the stock market and a picture of great wealth is
this world, or
making
a cer-
He
is
carried
away by
the promise of
great riches; he
is encouraged by old stock gamblers, and enraptured with the view of the splendid air castles formed in his mind, and is intoxicated with the idea that he will soon be a millionaire. He at once resolves But this does not satisfy to invest all his available cash. his ambition "Ventures make millionaires as well as merchants," and he feels a desire to sink his bottom dollar in this one great effort. He, therefore, mortgages all his property, raises all he can thus, and invests it, Well, he has spent all, and while he awaits the also. moment at which he is to realize the expected fortune, he buys on credit, and borrows from his neighbors, until his credit is exhausted and he can borrow no more; because his failure to meet his payments promptly, has shaken the confidence of his creditors. He is surprised that those who had alwa\\s trusted him should be unwil:
ling to
as yet,
make him
further advances.
He
what he expected from his investments, but has no d^ubt of their soundness and great productiveness in the end. But the conduct of his neighbors renders him unhappy he is vexed at the idea of their lack of confidence, and he says to himself, I will wait no longer; I
;
140
will sell
my stock at what it will bring; I will pay my debts, lift my mortgages, and if I have not reached the object of my ambition, I will yet have comfort and ease, and I will make my neighbors ashamed of the want of
confidence they have shown.
to his astonishment, learns
into
the stock market to offer his stock for sale; but he there,
is
He
Can you imagine a more wretched being than that man, when he awakes to the
has spent
all,
and
lost all.
full
I repeat,
be has invested
all,
and
yea,
He
hope and
all is
He is
witli
and edu-
of labor they
but they have learned only the livery of high life, know nothing. They have known nothing
know
it.
How
can
he face that loving wife and those darling children, and break to them the doleful story of their poverty and dis* grace 9 The shock is too great, the shadow of despair
hovers over
and reason leaves its throne, upon his countenance, the last sad act, self-destruction, follows, and all is over; no, not all, he has changed lives, but not states. The hell from which he flees, when he cuts his throat and leaves this world, meets him in another, intensified
falls
!
himit
a thousand fold.
Such
is
the wretch,
life,
who
barters
away
things of this
pursues them
to
in the
THE
loses all.
LOSS OF
THE
SOUL.
141
What
if
he has gained
much?
titles,
has seen
as the green
many years of prosperity, has flourished bay tree? Suppose he has gained the world,
if
possible,
is
what
will
it all
amount
brought to face the stern realities of eternity ? Alas, it won't purchase for him one poor drop of water to allay the anguish of his pain, or cool his scortching tongue It is like the worthless stock in the hands of a broken gambler; it will yield him nothing of any value in the dying hour. But let us consider this imaginary gain a little more
!
The
;
" if"
it is
it is
certain that
whole world. No man ever did gain the whole world; and if one had it, he would not know what to do with it, or with himself after he had possessed it. It is said of Alexander, (sur-named the Great!) that when he supposed he had conquered the world, he sat down and wept because there were no more worlds to conquer. Alas! poor man he was not happy after all, in his fancied possession of the world. But suppose he did possess the whole world, what does it avail him now? Where is Alexander the Great, the mightiest conquerer that ever
!
the
"
He goat"
of Daniel's proph-
from conquest
to
ground
he who
142
own brow who made toys of the crowns of kings, and seized upon the gold of Ophir as his treasure I repeat, where is Alexander the Great? The world he conquered and seized upon as his own, no longer affords him a home. He has passed away. Let us follow him to that eternity to which he has gone, and ask him to instruct us on the momentous interrogatories of the text. Supposing that he lost his soul, he has now endured the agonies of the lost for more than two thou* sand years. Suppose we draw aside the curtain, raise the hatches of hell, and getting assurance from the angel Gabriel of a safe return, we descend that dark abode, and inquire of Alexander the Great, " what is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul ? What, think you, will be his answer ? Yonder he sits upon the bosom of a burning lake. His mighty captains, too, are there, companions of his woe. I see no laurels now upon his brow, no crown upon his head, nor sceptre in his hand neither are there any marks of conquest, nor tokens of victory, He no longer sighs for other worlds to conquer. He looks not like a conqueror, but wears the visage of one that has been conquered. He looks dejected and hopeless. An angry scowl rests upon his brow, woeful sadness fills his eye, and anguish wrings his soul. He is terrible to behold and fearful to approach but I accost him from a point beyond which Gabriel warns me not to venture. I ask, " Alexander, what is a man profited who gains the whole world, and loses his
placed them upon his
,?
own soul?"
Hark, his answer: "Profit! profit!! there It is all loss here is no such word in hell's vocabulary. " What, then, will a man give loss, loss, eternal loss "
SOUL.
"
143
? "
To
;
this
he answers
When
fool
in
and dois
man that
:
and bear from me this solemn message to the sons- of men, yet in time Forget the imaginary value of wealth, honors and titles; forget everything else but don't forget that no price set upon the soul can mark Us value/ Its value is beyond computationDisregard this truth if you will trifle it is priceless. with it, treat it derisively and contemptuously, or break its force'upon the mind by sophistry or ridicule; crowd it out by worldly amusements, or whatever the w orld can offer you but learn as I have learned, that the one regret that will eternally gnaw as the undying worm, will be the regret that the soul's value was not learned in the
Go back
go back
season of salvation."
II.
Let us
is
What
them away
lem
?
it?
setting too
to the
now consider the loss of the soul. What is the loss sustained by those who, much value upon material things, pursue
them
?
repeat,
what
is
the
loss of the
soul?
I confess
my
mighty theme.
r
The mind staggers at the thought of attempting to penetrate the momentous meaning of the five following w ords Eternal loss of the soul. If there are five words in any language more expressive of all that is to be feared, their sound has never fallen upon my ears.
:
144
THE
LOSS OF
THE
SOUL.
First, of " the soul."
What
"
is
it?
God breathed
and
the
Elihu
is
tells
us that
it is
The
soul in
purity
;
is
touch, as a
its
man
nature,
must eternally
Socrates,
who came
nearer
knowledge
of the truth
He will most certainly arise in the judgment to the condemnation of many who have refused to walk in the light Revelation most plainly teaches thi3 of revealed truth. truth: "These shall go away into everlasting punishment, but the righteous into life eternal." Yes, we must eternally exist somewhere, but where ? " Man dieth and wasteth away, yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where Such was the cogitation of Job's mind and the is he ?" thought equally concerns us. And the language of the poet may well be sung in every land by every tongue:
; ' '
Soon
as
from earth
to the
I flee,
What
me V
to, viz.,
This brings us
the " soul's loss."
What
we
to
It evi-
If the
know another moment's To lose the soul ease or comfort while eternal ages roll. is to lose whatever of bliss God has reserved for his loved It is to endure whatever of pain God will inflict ones..
once
lost,
shall never
145
upon the disobedient. We know nothing of what either is, except by the pictures in which God, by 'his Spirit, has painted them in the book of revealed truth, and upon the tablets of our hearts. We know by experience something of joy, of grief, and of pain, and by these we may be instructed. We have live avenues through which
either comfort or misery are poured into the soul
ing, seeing, feeling, smelling,
hear-
and
tasting.
If
only so
many
we have we have
the aveis
and variety
to
keep
all
The
loss of the
soul
the
It is
represented as a four-square
There are
charming
We
!
when
remembered
as music.
The
pictures of heaven
fruits,
the
life,
Then
Then
heaven
146
through which pleasure is conveyed to the soul, will, in torment, be the avenues through which wretchedness and woe will be poured into it forever. Instead of heavenly music, will be sounds of agony and woe. Outbursts of angry demons will make hell hideous. Children will be heard cursing their parents, and charging them with their damnation. Then, there will be the wails of lost souls, and these sounds of agony, woe and sorrow, together with the angry outbursts, will be continual and eternal for they that worship the beast shall never have rest. Then there will be soul-sickening sights, from which the eye can never turn gastly and horrid forms, " if form that can be called, which neither shape nor form presents, in member, joint or limb." And, from that sink of all filth and corruption, will constantly arise a stench more obnoxious than that emitted from the most filthy cesspool of earth. And from this sickening odor the nostrils can never turn. Y/e sometimes pass by filthy places in large cities, from which we hasten away, holding our breath to avoid the inhalation of unwholesome and unendurable odors; but there will be no getting away from this offensive odor in the world of woe. Unendurable it may seem, but must be endured. And of this there is no cessation no interval in which an agreeable or wholesome breath is breathed. No, the inhabitants of torment will never enjoy a sweet or pleasant breath. But the pictures by which the meat and drink furnished for the inhabitants of torment are represented, are extremely uninviting wormwood and gall a most bitter repast. We are also told that " they shall drink of the wrath of God,
;
THE
which
is
LOSS OF
THE SOUL.
147
indignation."
And
tal
excruciating pain
frame.
"
pains
In Rev. xiv, 10, 11, we find the following; (the lost) shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb: and the smoke of their torment
The same
and they have no rest day nor night." This is only the shadow, what then must be the substance which sends forth such fearful shadows? This is the picture only what must be that fearful reality from which it is drawn? Deep and dreadful must be that condemnation which requires such fearshall ascend
up forever and
ever,
it.
kind of
shuts
enjoyment.
of
It is
more:
is
it is
to feel
capable.
The
out from
moment
any more. " What then is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul ? or what will a man give in exchange for his soul ?"
of peace
is
calculated to
induce us
ness, to
axe
at the root of
our
own
selfish-
unhinge our affections from the things of this world, and hang them on the things that make to our
eternal peace,
148
DESTINIES,
SERMON XL
TWO CHARACTERS AND TWO
'
'
DESTINIES.
;
And these shall go away into eternal punishment righteous into life eternal." Matt, xxv, 46.
but the
were uttered by the Son of God, the Saviour of the world, and are found in one of his
of our text
latest discourses
ciples.
The words
He had
hypocritical scribes
is
and Pharisees,
in the temple,
which
and government.
:
He
under her wings, and } e would not! Behold your house is left unto you desolate." As he passed out from the temple, his disciples called his attention to the grandeur of the buildings, but he said, they should be utterly destroyed, so that not one stone should be left upon another, which should not be thrown down. As he sat upon the Mount of Olives, his " Tell us, when disciples came to him privately, and said
:
DESTINIES.
149
be? and what shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?" After giving them suitable instruction, by which they might escape the horrors of the destruction of Jerusalem, and by attention to which, thousands of christians did escape
them, he turned
to the consideration of the last question
all
end come?
What he had
on
with this 25th chapter, runs entirely through it and ends in the words of our text. We remark, that he did not
answer their question directly. He did not tell them when the end would come. It has not pleased the Lord to tell us when the end will come. That is a secret which he has hid in his own heart; and it is folly for man to attempt to search it out, as God has determined not to reveal it till the time comes. Silly men have attempted to fix the time, but their followers have found their prophecies delusive. In 1848, they had a day fixed, and some went out and sat on the hill sides, but they might have sat there till now, if they had lived so long and been foolish enough, and yet not realized their expectaIndeed, I cannot see what .good a knowledge of tion. time would do the world. I suppose, if it were rethe duced to a certainty that the judgment would come tomorrow at twelve o'clock, scores of people would not think of commencing to get ready till half-past eleven; so much is mankind disposed to put off till the last moment that which ought to be attended to first. For this, or some other good reason, God has kept this matter to himself. He tells us that he will come at an unexpected
150
DESTINIES.
hour
hour at which peoWhile he did not tell them when the end would come, he did tell them what would be the condition of things, in respect to his kingdom, and the relation of mankind to it. Under three figures, he presented the human family into two classes. One class received favor, reward, and eternal enjoyment; the other disappointment, punishment, shame and everlasting
(figuratively,) the
at midnight,
misery.
First,
classes
and the other foolish. They all went forth at night with lamps to meet the bridegroom, but the
of virgins, one wise
foolish neglected to take oil to recruit their lamps.
This
was truly foolish, for the time- of his coming was not fixed, and such feasts were often attended at a very late hour. I may here remark, that the lamps were not such what we w ould call as we use. It was a lamp, or torch an outdoor, torchlight procession. When I was a boy, we used to go fire fishing, for which we made a torch of broken flax a good bunch of which we wrapped tightly around the end of a stick, and soaked it well with oil. This made a good light and burned a long time; but when the oil was exhausted, our lamps went out and left us in darkness. To provide against this, we carried a vessel of oil to recruit them when we had need to do so, that is, when we intended to stay out till a late hour. As one of the Evangelists speaks of smoking flax, I am inclined to the opinion that it was a torch of this kind that was carried by these virgins; if so, it is easy to understand how important the vessel of oil was. During
fell asleep.
DESTINIES.
151
many
generations of
was at midnight that and meet him; and those whose lamps were trimmed and burning, went He in to the marriage, but the others were shut out.
It
summoned
to arise
among
talents. Some improved Those who improved their talents, represent the practical christian, who works out his own salvation, while God works in him, both to will and to The other represents do of his own good pleasure. the fearful and unbelieving. He brought the talent back, and told his lord that he knew him to be hard to please, and that he was afraid. There are many of those who
whom
them
one did
tell
make
work
manly
or
womanly
The want of him to endless weeping, wailing and gnashing of teeth and those, who, like him, are afraid to make an effort, in
are accomplishing with apparent ease?
hope
ters,
for
nothing
better.
The
final
divided,
is
assembled before him, the separation line drawn, the character of each declared, and the sentence pronounced.
At
commenda-
152
tion for
DESTINIES.
good works, inquired when the} were performed. "Lord, when saw we thee a hungered, and fed thee? or thirsty, and gave thee drink? When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? or naked, and clothed thee? Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee ?" He answered, " Verily, I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me." Every deed of charity he acknowledges as work acceptable to him. On the other hand, those who were condemed for the neglect of charity, also asked, " Lord, when saw we thee a hungered,
7
and did not minister unto thee?" He answered, " Verily, I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to me." To neglect the humblest mortal in his distress, affliction, or
want;
to disre-
is
Then
"
eternal."
oil
who has
worked out
tical
his salvation
godliness);
demands of charity, shall depart from the divine presence, and abide in perpetual distance shut out from the marriage supper of the Lamb, forsaken, abandoned, and crying in vain for admission shall be taken away from the palace, and bound in prison, in outer darkness, where
;
there
is
of teeth
they
DESTINIES.
153
shall be separated from the company of the blessed feel the infliction of divine wrath, and the punishment pre;
And doomed
to endless woe."
" But the righteous into life eternal." " The righteous." Those who have the lamp of profession in full blaze are letting their light shine, have the oil of grace in their hearts, go forth in the practice of every duty; are using the talents which God has given them, embracing every opportunity to do good, and waiting patiently on the Lord, who in his own good time will reward them: such shall have an eternal life, in fulness of joy, and pleasure
Such, in short,
the
are the two characters, and the two destinies, as set forth
in the text,
is
conclusion.
But the
but
is
tinies is not
also taught in
many
is
truth.
In Proverbs
it
written,
"The
righteous hath
hope
Say ye
shall be
well with
ings.
him
for they
T
unto the w icked it shall be ill with him for the reward of his hands shall be given him." What can be more reasonable, or just, than that a man should
:
Woe
own
crop
154
that
if
DESTINIES.
it.
If
propounds the solemn interrogatory, " If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and sinner appear?" If those who make
Peter, in his first general epistle,
it
may
be accepted
and thus manifest their affection for, and confidence in him, and their obedience to his commands, and declare themselves strangers and pilgrims here, are scarcely saved, what shall become of those who, so far from making any effort to please God, are at enmity and in rebellion against him, and treat his offer of mercy with contempt? If his own dear, loving children are scarcely saved, what shall become of those who hate him ? Those who
of
;
him
" Set at naught and sold him, Pierced and nailed him to the tree
?"
If,
chosen as illustrations
sideration, there
is
one mind
beyond the reach of reason, and beyond the persuasive power of the Gospel. But I have good hope that many are so far convinced, that they will follow us prayerfully as w e advance in the further illustration of this important truth*
as are their characters, that
is
r
mind
DESTINIES.
155
Let us consider a
little
more
fully
ACTERS.
tarian
Whatever lines men may draw, whether however men may class themselves
;
as to wealth,
only as belonging
Jesus says,
said to a
"
to
He
that
not with
me
against me."
young man
once, "
He answered, " No." "Why?" I further asked, has the Lord done to you that you are against
"
Oh," he
said, " I
am
This
man
cied he was occupying a middle ground, and was neutral, but the declaration of Jesus is, that there is no middle
a single mortal can stand; that the sharply drawn, and that each occupies a position
And
the
there
'
is
same passage,
another delusion which Jesus exposes in viz; the notion that you are doing
say, "
nothing.
Some
Though
am
That
to say, I
am am
side.
of Jesus
"
He
that
Matt,
xii, 30.
This passage teaches most clearly that each and every one is either with Christ or against him, and at work on
Each one
is
doing something in
no neutral ground, and no idlers in this strug* and Beelzebub: all are engaged in the conflict, and each soldier has the mark of his sovereign, which fixes his character. Those who are with
There
is
156
DESTINIES.
who
are against
him
are not,
of themselves, or
whatever we
may
of
evident from revelation. And we can what is righteousness in the sight of God, except by what he has revealed in his word. We may fix
Jehovah, as
know nothing
up
to
of
own fancy, but it won't amount anything when we come to stand before God. The Scribes and Pharisees had what they supposed to be a very excellent righteousness. And it must be admitted that it was in many things highly commendable. They fasted twice in a week, had eighty forms of prayer, never entered a house without praying, prayed in the streets and in the market places, paid tithes of all they possessed, were strict in the observance of the written law and the traditions of the elders; so strict were they that there was a generally accepted adage, that if but two per^ sons were saved, one would be a Scribe and the other a Pharisee; and yet Jesus made, to the multitude upon the mount, the astonishing announcement; "Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the
a righteousness in our
shall in no case enter into the Bear in mind, it was not their wickedness that he was finding fault with, but their righteousness. It was not the hypocritical Scribes and Pharisees he was finding fault with on this occasion, but the sincere ones. It was not their badness, but their goodness, he was condemning; their goodness was not good
Scribes
and Pharisees, ye
of heaven.'
1
kingdom
enough.
We
need not
Bible to discover
that there are two separate, distinct, and widely different characters in every
community
DESTINIES.
157
have passed through a spoken of as a new birth, by which they are enabled and obliged to lead a new life. In consequence of this change, they claim to enjoy peace with God, and to have a sure hope of a
blessed immortality.
Then
no such
profession,
majority of those
who make
various branches
while the
who do
not
make
this profession,
members
There
is
very
Among
chris-
bold, fearless,
strong, active christians; full of good works, of self-sacriof love to God, and love to man you have no room doubt that they are, at least, thoroughly in earnest, think what you may of their wisdom or intellectual balfice,
for
ance.
Then
is
so
weak, grace
so small,
and love so cold, that it would require a microscope to discover any christian life in them. Yet, if they really have any faith, any grace, any genaine good works, any love to God and to the souls of men, they are on the Lord's side: however young, if babes only in Christ, they are numbered with the righteous, and are on their way to heaven however weak,
good works
:
sickly, or
side,
puny,
if
christians at
all,
and are numbered with the righteous. It is the transformation, the new birth, which changes the nature and forms the christian character. It is the grace of God, poured into the soul, through justifying faith, which, working by love, purifies the heart, produces
158
DESTINIES.
life
of righteousness.
"By
yourselves,
Ephes,
ii,
8.
It is
practical
godliness which
the soul.
fessions,
maintains and continues the reign of righteousness in That there are persons who make such pro-
and whose
life
and labors
testify to their
honesty,
the other
profession
;
hand
they
that
the reason
An unborn
;
child is
know anything
of this world
nor can
of the
Spirit to
know
anything of the spiritual nature. They know nothing of justification by faith, they doubt the reality of such a thing. They know nothing of divine grace as a means of justification, through faith, they have not tasted that the Lord is gracious, and in their notions of the sufficiency of human nature, they can feel no need of grace. They know nothing of the Holy Spirit, or of his sanctifying influences: they have no faith in his operation. They don't hunger and thirst after righteousness, and therefore are not filled. The bread and water of life is spurned; the invitation to the great feast of oxen and fatlings is slighted, and the inviting messengers are put The broad way and its many off with vain excuses. travellers are preferred to the narrow way and the pilgrims journeying therein who acknowledge themselves strangers and sojourners, as their fathers were and that they can tarry but a night. They love the world su;
premely
it
is
and
DESTINIES.
159
Its
wealth,
its
fashions,
lionors,and
glory are their good things, in which they trust, and for
evident,
which they labor. That this class of characters exist is and that these two classes make up the human family is equally evident, from our daily experience with thope around us. To consider the character of the righteous a little more definitely, we may remark,
1.
That
it is
an imputed
righteousness.
It is the righteousness
who
believing on
him who
raised
up Jesus from the dead, who was delivered for our offences, and raised again for our justification." Connected with
the imputation of Christ's righteousness,
is
the non-im-
putation of our
ness
is
own
iniquity.
When
Christ's righteous-
which had been crooked in our conduct is not imputed, what was amiss is not held against us, we are treated as though there never had been any wrong in us, but as obedient children, beloved of the Father. Also, in connection with imputed righteousness
imputed
to us, that
is
To
transgress
is to
what
and hence all need forgiveness. Hence, also, it is written, that by the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified, because in the flesh the law has been violated. A citizen who has never violated the law is eutitled to all the rights of citizenship, but so soon as he becomes a violator, his condition is
is
forbidden.
changed.
man
munity
years, as a
most upright
with
160
DESTINIES.
his character; but at the end of he breaks open a neighbor's house and steals his goods is not that man, in the eye of the law, as much deserving of punishment as any other criminal ? Has he not spoilt the whole fabric of his fifty years' righteousness? This is the meaning of the passage which asserts that the man who misses the hundredth only, is guilty of the whole. I think we would understand it better, if we should simply say, he is guilty, notwithstanding his former correctness. He has no power to redeem himself; the law holds him for punishment. If the penalty was death, " Even a great ransom could not deliver him." Such was the condition of human nature; righteousness was lost, through disobedience; mankind stood guilty before God, and justice cried for the infliction of the penalty, which was death temporal, spiritual, and eternal. It was when man was in this condition, in his extremity, that mercy interposed, and God cried, " Deliver him from going down to the pit: I have found a ransom." I have found one who, by his righteousness, hath the right and power to redeem, and to proclaim righteousness in the great congregation, for the law of his God is in his heart. He also hid, covered, or put away sin out of sight. We have no power to put away sin, we must not attempt to hide our sins, and yet they must be hid. This fact v was set forth in the type of the scapegoat, over whose head the priest confessed the sins of the people, after which it was led away to a land not inhabited. To put away our sins, and to bring in an everlasting righteousness, Christ, the antitype, appeared. Upon him God laid "the iniquity of us all,"
DESTINIES.
161
of believers
have escaped
righteous.
made
With the heavy load of human guilt upon him, he was led away to Calvary, a land not inhabited by the living to
"
no more remembered
against us
Look
soul,
The Holy
Spirit
spoken of by the Psalmist " Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered. Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile." Psa. xxxii, 1, 2.
:
2.
"
Not
of works, lest
boast."
It is said
Abraham believed God, and his faith was counted unto him for righteousness. We quoted, a while ago, the
that
is
represented as the
medium
through which grace is poured into the heart of the believer. We have sometimes illustrated the idea here presented by the New York aqueduct. The people of that city found themselves in want of sweet, fresh water. Now there was an abundance of pure water in the Croton river, which, however, was many miles distant from the city. To overcome this difficulty an aqueduct was built, through which the water is conveyed all that distance, emptied into a great reservoir, and from thence conveyed to all the hous2s in the city, through pipes prepared for
162
DESTINIES.
the purpose. Now, it was pure water that they needed, but they could Dot have had it without the aqueduct. And no more can we have grace without faith. What if there was an abundance of water in the Croton river? It would not have benefited the people; without the aque-
would have flowed on in their God-apAnd what if God's grace is abundant? It cannot benefit us except it can reach us, and it can only reach us through faith. If, therefore, we have no Faith is a confidential refaith, we can have no grace. liance upon the divine promises. The Apostle only made a common-sense statement, when he said, " Without faith
duct, its waters
pointed channel.
it is
No man
is
pleased with
I
do not suppose you could vex a man more, in any way, than by showing that you did not believe a word that he said, especially if he was deeply in earnest, and regarded his message as important. How then can God, who can neither trifle nor lie, feel toward one who will not believe him? Faith is what God demands, and when he sees it in us. he imputes it unto us for righteousness. Finally, the righteousness which is accepted of God is comIt must enter into every fiber of our nature, and plete. run through the warp and woof of our lives. The Aposyou,
tle
when you
for his
head-
loins
girded
with truth, his hand grasping the sword of the Spirit, his feet shod with the Gospel; and the great shield of faith completely covering him, and protecting him from the poisoned arrows of the devil. It was in this complete
DESTINIES.
163
armor that the poet represents the pilgrim standing when Satan met him. He was just from the armor-house, too, and every piece was shining brightly. Satan eyed him for a while, and finally thus addressed him
'
'
Good morning, brother Pilgrim tell to me your name ? And whence it is you are travelling to, Likewise from whence you came ? Pray, what is that upon your head, Which shines so clear and bright?
Pray
Likewise the covering on your breast,
Which
dazzle so
my
sight?
What kind of shoes are those you On which you boldly stand?
Likewise that flaming instrument,
wear,
You hold
in your right
hand
?"
To which
' '
am, bound, I 'm from the howling wilderness, And the enchanted ground. With glorious hope upon my head, And on my breast a shield, With bright sword I mean to fight Until I win the field. My feet are shod with gospel grace, On which I boldly stand
I
My name To Canaan
It is
bold pilgrim,
In conclusion,
life
let
upon
"The
righteous into
The
love of
life is
deeply seated in
human
164
life,
TWO
and cling
;
CtlAEACTEIiS
AND TWO
DESTINIES.
to
it.
is
divine in
its
origin
this life as
1
'
of the
Deity.
But love
still,
And
We
tell,
less."
The withering
all testify
is
that our days on earth are but a shadow, and none abiding. To the lovers of this world, this Thousands of young people is a gloom-producing truth, refuse to permit their thoughts to stoop, linger, and con* With what rapture such persons verse with death. would receive the assurance that they should never get Such an assurance cannot be given old, and never die.
there
it.
It is this*
up
of
life,
that
when
shall
this
is
dissolved,
we
have
that
and that a
state of incorit
shall succeed
come
grief,
Take But we
life
or friends away,
shall find
them
all
again
his maker.
165
SERMON
XII.
know
of no history
more
So tran-
scendency wondrous are the scenes which are brought to view in rapid succession, that many have been inclined to set the whole book down as an allegory. I think there is no necessity for such a conclusion: fact is stronger than fiction, and what the human mind is capable of imagining, God is much more than capable of bringing
to pass.
There are several interesting characters brought to view none more so, I think, than Elihu, the speaker of the text. He is the last actor brought upon the stage: he does not close the scene, but he plays his part among the closing exercises. He seems to be a puzzle to many learned commentators. Who was he? is the question upon which much thought has been spent. A very sensible writer remarks " He was the son of Barachel
in this book, but
:
166
MAN
Ram. Neither Scripture nor history tells us more respecting him, and to push our inquiry further, is timply a waste of time to no purpose. )f All beyond this is mere conjecture. He appears to have been a man of fine talents, and of great candor. He was
the Buzite, of the kindred of
Ackept,
by their
The
silent attention
discourses was of
much
benefit to him,
Notwithstanding he was younger than they, he was prepared to rebuke them all. This he did, however, in a fair and most respectful manner. It is remarkable that, though God rebuked Job for his rashness of speech, and declared that his wrath was kinones.
Who
is
this that
knowledge?" can be so considered,) he does not utter a word of rebuke to Elihu. The words of the Almighty seem to be addressed to Job, and not to Elihu. "Then the Lord answered Job. I have long held to the opinion that Elihu was the writer of this truly interesting history and notwithstanding the many arguments that 1 have read to the contrary, and especially the plausableand forcible arguments
7'
;
my
opinion.
is
HIS MAKER.
16?
is
a well
founded opin-
He
I
certainly
had
all
He was
a silent listener
and
of,
He
Sevenin his
hearing, during which time he said nothing and did nothing, unless, as I suppose, he
and remarks that in the discussion he advances but one idea. That is true but that idea was nearer to the point than any other that had been advanced it was an idea that nearly solved the question at issue. But I would call the attention of the learned to Job xxxii, 15 To whom IT. " They were amazed,' was Elihu speaking, when he said,
;
;
&c?
verse 15.
should think, for they would not need thus to be informed. To whom, then, if not to those who should read the book or history he was writing To whom was he speaking, when he saidj " When I had
to by-standers, I
Hardly
?'
still, and answered no more.) I said, I will answer also my part I also will shew you mine opinion "? Twenty years ago I first carefully observed these verses, and I thought I had found the author of the book of Job and I have seen nothing' since to change my opinion. In the chapter in which our text is found, Elihu critiu cises Job's rashness of speech Thinke^t thou this to be right, that thou saidst, My righteousness is more than
108
MAN DISINCLINED
Verse
2.
Job had not said this in so many words, but his expression was capable of this construction. He had insisted upon his own righteousness, and yet charged God with multiplying his wounds without cause. Chapter x, 17. Thus it would be inferred that he was more righteous than God. Indeed, God tnrnself intimates the same complaint " Wilt thou disannul my judgment? Wilt thou condemn me, that thou mayest be righteous?" Chapter xl, 8. Under severe trials, we need to be especially careful not to so express ourselves as to appear to impeach the goodness of God. Elihu reminds Job of the infinite distance between God and himself, and that neither his righteousness nor his wickedness could affect the Almighty: his conduct might benefit or injure mortal beings, but not the Great Immortal. Then follows the text, in which it is declared that the great reason why men do not find consolation under affliction, is because they do not apply to the right source. If Elihu meant to apply this to Job's case, he was certainly wide of the mark yet,
God's ?"
;
mankind in general, his declaration is entirely " They cry out by reason of the arm of the correct. mighty." They cry, but not to the Lord. " None sayeth, Where is God my maker?" God alone can give relief to those in trouble, but men will not apply to him. In him is light, elsewhere is darkness; in him is life, without him is death. In him is joy and peace, out of him is endless woe. God says, u O Israel, thou hast destroyed thyself; but in me is thine help." Yet, men go to dreamapplied to
books, fortun-tellers, and everywhere
else,
rather than to
MAN
169
the only source of consolation. " None sayeth, Where is God my maker, who giveth songs in the night?" SUBJECT TO SEAT. Notice THAT MORTAL BEINGS ARE
SONS OF DARKNESS.
"
These are common to humanity: few are exempt from distress of some kind.
woe.
They arise often from the oppression of the mighty. Those who are in power, or those who are so situa" The arm of ted that they can oppress or afflict others. the mighty." Those who are strong or mighty, and who
1.
The
dispo-
man
to
page as the progenitor of the long line of oppresand Abel as the first victim of persecution unto
Since their time, the lines of the oppressed and
death.
On
and employment
of
means
of oppression.
On
the
other side, the head is dizzy with pain, the heart with anguish wrung, and bleeding at every pore; and the hands with fetters torn.
Of the seasons
of darkness
and
distress
through which
What
a night
!
How
God was caused to pass through Torn away from a happy home,
falsely accused of a
most hein-
170
MA.N DISINCLINED TO
arm
of the mighty.
He
The
where
history of Israel in Egypt, in Babylon, and elsein captivity; indeed, the history of the world,
is full
on
world from
its
Baca"
Look
at
many
martyrdom, and you behold a most melancholy picture of the victims of oppression and the arm
of the
2.
mighty.
there
Then
There are seasons of disease, sickness, and bereavement, which are common to man, from which few are exempt. "Peter's wife's mother lay sick of a fever;" the centurion's servant is sick the daughter of Jairus is dying at Bethesda a multitude of sick people are assembled; the widow of Nain follows her son to the tomb, and Lazarus has " lain in the grave four days already." But why need we select instances from Holy Writ? Where is
;
And
been
3.
sick.
Then
many
are called
to
pass.
HIS MAKER.
171
The sound
one another in rapid succession, had hardly ceased to fill the ears of Job, when the feet of the second were heard, and a third, and a fourth came, each bring*
these followed
of
ing a more heart-rending message than the former the last bringing the doleful tidings of the terrible death of
all his children.
But his
his
end here: he
was
afflicted in
own
him
to
"
fill
cup of bitterness
to the
and charged him with by* pocrisy. What a long and dark night was his We have seen persons strangely afflicted one trouble has followed another, until they have been brought to the lowest depths of grief. Strange diseases, too, have been the lot of some diseases that have baffled the skill of the best physicians, who, for weeks, months, and even years, have labored in vain to find their seat and effect a cure. These seasons of darkness and distress extort a cry from the afflicted.
friends
became
his accusers,
II. This brings us to consider the natural disincli* NATION OF MANKIND TO TURN TO HIS MAKER IN TIME OF
DISTRESS.
"
None
sayeth,
Where is God my maker, who giveth The mind of man does not naturWithout the aid
of divine revelation,
he knows not God. The most enlightened mind knows not God, except by supernatural agencies.
I.
We
human
nature turns
to self,
and
172
MAN
that self-sufficiency
the
and
self-conceit are
predominant
feelings in
human
heart.
It is the
nature of
man
are,
to
exhaust
all
the resources in
Men
love
what they have done, and what they can do. Listen at the boasting of the king of Babylon " The king spake, and said, Is this not great Babylon, that I have built for the house of the kingdom by -the might of my power, and for the honor of my majesty?" Daniel iv, 30. Now this haughty uplifting of self
what they
re-
to discipleship.
"If any
man
will
come
after
me,
let
him deny
his
himself."
It is said of the
and prayed, and thanked God for "Lord, I thank thee that I am not
he forgot what he went up to the temple for. Instead of praying for needed grace and blessings, he occupied his devotional hour in telling
He
was
The better he was than his neighbors. was he failed to obtain a blessing, for the very good reason that he had not sought one. He had gotten into the habit of calling on the name of God like thousands
God how much
result
of others,
the sacred
name they
are
mind.
Distressed
2.
human
nature turns
to its fellow.
When
self fails
him,
man
MAN
173
monis,
who had
that
who professed to talk with the dead. We well remember what a hold spiritualism had upon many a few years ago; and there are thousands now who depend
upon dream-books and fortune-tellers, for almost everything they want to know especially, if they have afflictions that they cannot account for. They seek relief, but
who invites us to bring our burdens The whole system of soothsaying grew out of this inclination in man to turn to his fellowman, when burdened with unaccountable distresses. The cunning and crafty learned to practice upon and make money out
not from the Lord,
to
him.
and credulous. What have upon the human mind how they keep the mind from God. Men have even turned to devils. Isaiah tells of some who had made a league with hell and a covenant with death. It thus appears that man turns everywhere but to his Maker for solace in affliction,
of the superstitions of the ignorant
why
relief is not
found
Where is God my maker?" III. Let us notice the attributes Elihu ascribes to the Almighty, to whom men refuse to bring THEm
None
sayeth,
BURDENS. " God, my maker, who giveth songs in the night." <; God," the supreme Being, the infinite and eternal Spirit,
the Sovereign of the universe.
"My
maker.
5
'
He
The
that
formed
me
my
soul.
nostrils the
breath of
life,
great
the Creator,
174
MAN
able mind,
rest of
which
He
himself
the fountain.
Elihu
refers to
God
as maris Maker.
The Author
and might,
It
of our being.
for I
am
"fearfully
He was
is
which had a
alone inhab*
He
he
He
existed in
were
set
in
motion
before
empty
place,
hung upon nothing; before the hewn out, or the corner stone of
laid
;
pillars of nature
were
earth's foundation
was
with shining orbs, was stretched out; before the void im* mense in astonishment awoke at the sound of Jehovah's
hammer, beating crude matter into form, or chaos felt the pang that pierced her when light, creation's first
born, leaped from her
4 '
womb
hills in
Before the
order stood,
The mind
HIS MAKER.
175
We
it.
But we
"
rejoice to be-
Job says, He is wise in heart '; Elihu says, He is mighty in wisdom"; and the Psalmist says, ''The heavens declare his glory, the firmanent sheweth his handywork." But nowhere is his wisdom more fully displayed than A minute description of the in the constitution of man. human body alone would afford much more than enough material for a sermon, to say nothing of the soul, which constitutes the real man. Solomon, however, in the 12th chapter of Ecclesiastes, gives an interesting synoptical description of those parts of the human structure, which most sensibly mark the approach of dissolution and decay careful attention to which will serve to illustrate the dis"
7
"The
"
the
shoulders, arms,
and
The strong men " the back, the main strength of the body
teeth,
which
The grinders"
which grind the food. " The lookers out of the windows " the eyes, the lids of which, like window" The doors " shutters, are either open or closed. or lips through which the food passes into the throat. "The which lead to the stomach. " The daughters streets" the vocal organs, which are exercised in makof music " ing music. " The silver cord " the spinal column which goes down the backbone, having a white and silvery appearance. " The golden bowl " the brain, which has a yellow and golden appearance, and formed in shape like
the
a bowl.
"
The fountain
"
the
176
heart,
HIS MAKER.
understood
to
the great vein which carries the blood to the fountain." "The cistern" the ven" The wheel " the great artery which of the heart.
of
life.
The
pitcher "
"
left
tricle
and distributes
it
fitly called
it
medium. When it ceases to perform its wonted functions, the lamp of life goes out, and the dust returns to the earth as it was. The study of this fearfully and wonderfully wrought structure, in connection with divine revelation, and under the influence of the Holy Spirit, necessarily forms within the mind a desire to know more of him who formed it, and should prothe grand circulating
duce
2.
faith in,
Bui
to his
"
He
He
is
the God, or
He
"
succors
the distressed,
banishes
fear,
chases
of night,
and gives
Freely,
He
giveth songs."
it
is
his pleasure to
pass, those
who
take their
experience of
to
dened souls
for joy.
all who have carried their burhim, they have received songs, yea, songs
He
gives songs
no other source.
not only
I will
"When
He
if
happiness, but
ever so deep, or
however dark
season
may
be,
he
MAN
177
me
of
my
distress,
my
and put songs into my mouth. Or, as the Psalmist has with songs of deliverance." will it, will "compass me give me songs in the night. What can be more cheering than the sound of a choir of sweet singers breaking upon the ear at the midnight hour! There might have been fear and trembling, anguish and wretchedness of soul, but the songs would dispel the gloom, and drive away the fear. Such is the relief that God gives to those who
apply
to
him
178
GOD'S CITY.
SERMON
XIII.
GOD'S CITY.
There
is
of God."
Psalms
In this Psalm, we have an expression of the confidence which the church has in God. The Psalmist declares
what God
is
to
the church
"
God
is
we
have no need
ties
to fear
there
may
be,
we
Though
there should be
a removal of the earth, and carrying away of the mountains, by such a swelling of the. waters as was seen at the
deluge,yet, the true people of
God should
evil
still
enjoy a situ-
no
of the earth
may
be destroyed by
Though
one river
other waters
may
which is not agitated by the flood, its streams pour out the wonted supply not foaming with madness, nor angered by the storm, but clear and calm as usual. Hence,
CITY.
179
make
Such, in short,
the obvious
meaning
of
which is, that it matters not what troubles there be in the world, the Church, the body of believers in Christ
Jesus, shall
still
and gladness.
I.
We
Not
habitation on high, where he dwells in uncreated light, and receives homage from the six- winged seraphs, which continually surround his throne with anthems of praise but his visible city, the city of his saints on earth the Church, in its universal aspect, composed of all who have repented, and truly believe. " The city of God, the holy place of the tabernacle of the Most High." His earthly abode, his terrestial residence. Every true believer is a tabernacle of the Most High, in which he dwells, is hon" Know ye not," says the Aposored, loved and praised. tle, " that ye are the temple of the living God, and that And again, his Spirit dwelleth in you?" 1 Cor. iii, 16. " What! know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost, w hich is in you?" 1 Cor. vi, 19. And again, " For ye are the temple of the living God as God said, I will dwell in them, and walk in them." Jesus pronounces a blessing upon those servants who are found watching when their Lord cometh, that openeth the door immediLuke xii, 36, 37. To John ately when he knocketh." on Patmos, he said, " Behold, I stand at the door, and knock if any man hear my voice and open the door, I will come in to him." Rev. iii, 20. These and other
;
:
180
GOD's CITY.
tation of
God
of believers;
me-
the
centre of
his
grandeur and
then,
is fitly
glory
the
place where his light shines forth, and his perfections are
visibly displayed.
The Church,
it is
framed together, and built up Now, therefore, ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints, and of the household of God and are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone, in whom all the building fitly framed together, groweth up into a holy temple in the Lord, in w hom ye also are built together for a habitation of God through the Spirit." Ephesians ii, 1922. It may fitly be called " the city of God," because he is the chief ruler. Paul tells us that he is the chief Shepherd and Bishop of souls. John saw him with a crown, and again with many crowns upon his head. He introduced himself to Joshua as the " Captain of the Lord's host." Paul says, " He is the head of the body, of the church, who is the beginning, the first born from the dead, that in all things he might have the pre-eminence." And again, " And hath put all things under his feet, and gave him to be head over all things to the church." The church also reflects and displays the divine glory it is a city whose light emanates from him its inhabitants
zens with the saints,
God.
"
walk in his
light,
and show
CITY.
181
THE STREAMS OF II. Notice THE RIVER MENTIONED WHICH GLADDEN God's CITk\ By this we understand the Gospel dispensation. The
Gospel
is
a message of reconciliation.
pour water
upon the dry " Ho every one that thirsteth, come ye to the ground." And whowaters." " And let him that is athirst come.
is
thirsty,
and
floods
soever will,
let
him take
All
many
music
1.
to
lie
The Gospel,
its
river, cleanses
thoroughly
its
all
who are
effi-
subjected to
clea,nsing
cacy.
The flowing
thousands
Likewise,
may
flowing.
away
all
cleansing process
called the
washing
of
and the renewing of the Holy Ghost. It is said that " Christ gave himself for the Church, that he might sanctify and cleanse it, with the washing of water by the word that is. the Gospel word." The evangelical
regeneration,
;
prophet utters these soul-cheering words " Though your sins be like scarlet, they shall be white as snow though
:
they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool." The Gospel cleanses thoroughly, and still retains its cleansing power undiminished. Though millions of filthy mortals
its
crystal
182
yet those waters are clear, sweet, and pure as ever;
and
when
millions
still
waters
will be pure.
nver, the
sin.
venomous
reptile, is to
wound
open, and
The
and has
is
but the
fatal
Gospel stream
ting,
most
Like a
river, the
is
Gospel
is inexhaustible.
Its
supply
abundant,
fail
its
resources
never-failing.
but an army
may
drink from a
Like-
human
parched ground to become a pool, and the desert and blossom as a rose.
"Its streams the whole creation reach,
bud
So plenteous
is
the store
each,
Like a
river, the
Gospel
is
peaceful
symbol of peace. " His peace shall be as a river." Seas are ever in motion " cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and .dirt"; but a river
river, in Scripture, is a
CITY.
183
called
it is
How beautiful upon the mounhim that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace." The Apostle quotes this beautiful
the feet of
language of the evangelical prophet, and applies it to the preaching of the Gospel " And how shall they preach except they be sent, as it is written, How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace, that bring glad tidings of good things." Romans x, 15. The Gospel brings peace with God. God is angry with the wicked, and the heart of the wicked is enmity against God. The carnal mind is not in subjection to the will of God, but rebellious, striving, yea, righting, against God.
:
Foolish as
is
be to the sinner, yet it is continued, and would be continued until the sinner was crushed by the hand of Omnipotence, were
it
moves
down
"
yea,
the
peace of
God which
and
The
weapons of his rebellion, sits at the Oh Lord,! will praise thee, for though thou wast angry with me, thine angry is turned away, and thou comfortest me."
feet of Jesus,
sings, "
(1.)
war
in the
The Gospel brings peace of mind. It puts down the members. The sinner is not at peace with
himself.
The
and the
down
and thus
184
GOD'S CITY.
a peace
It
maniac
(2.)
Finally,
brings peace
among
may
all
to see alike in
things
however
christian
may
be,
it is
not at
all essential to
harmony.
ferent parts
There
;
and harmony in an army, composed of different regiments, with different kinds of arms, and different modes of warfare. Likewise, there may be peace and harmony among christian men, differing from each other in many things. The Gospel makes men respect the opinions of good men who differ with them it teaches them that God made men to differ. It enforces peaceableness, and proclaims a blessing upon the peacemaker, declaring such An angry broiler does not to be the children of God.
:
RIVER.
It
has no tributaries, no from one source only Other rivers are made it rises out of one fountain alone. up from different sources springs, lakes and small streams. Our beautiful Cape Fear is made up of many waters; nearly a dozen smaller rivers empty their waters Not so with this river, the streams whereof into it. it borrows nothgladen the inhabitants of God's city
from
all
others in that,
contributing branches.
It flows
ing, save
It
springs
up
GOD'S CITY.
185
from the exhaustible fountain of divine benevolence: it is poured out of the bowels of God's infinite compassion the love of it flows from the fullness of redeeming love God to man. The love of God is the only source of this Gospel river. John, in Revelation, calls it the river of life, and says he saw it proceeding out of the throne of God, and the Lamb. This was not his judicial or great white throne, from the presence of which the heavens and earth shall flee away, and from the glorious radiance
;
nor was
it
with
it
"the
Out of and
tender mercy
streams
While the Gospel river, which rises in the love of God, has no tributaries, yet there are streams running out from it. While it borrows not, it lends; nay, more, it gives to a thirsty and perishing world streams of living waters, which overflow the parched soil, causing the wilderness and the solitary places to rejoice, and the desert to blossom as a rose. " Whose streams," &c. In countries where it seldom rains, the land is sometimes watered by streams running out from the river. Thus Egypt was watered from the river Nile, and thus some of our cities are supplied with water by outlets from rivers. I presume the idea in the text is borrowed from the manner in which the land of Egypt was watered, by streams from the river, or, possibly,
the city of God."
make glad
; :
186
CITY.
from the manner In which some city was supplied by There are many streams flowing out from the Gospel river, u which make glad the The Gospel is glad tidings. It is good, city of God." wholesome, and soul-cheering news, a gladening message tidings which are productive of joy in the highest degree. Takeaway the Gospel message from the church, and all is dull and cheerless. It was the dawn of Gospel day a ray of Gospel light, dimly seen through the telescope of prophecy, that cheered the believing patriarchs while on their pilgrimage. Faithful Abraham saw it, and rejoiced and David, the sweetest singer of Israel's tribes, his harp to sweetest note did tune, and highest strain did raise but even he, of cunning, great beyond degree, had neither word, nor tune, nor skill, to match the thrill of joy that pierced his soul, as rising on the ft ings of faith, he saw the gladdening stream of Gospel grace. Idolatry, Mohammedanism, and infidelity are systems dark and cheerless, because they have no wells of salvation, no living waters of grace, no river of life sending out streams of loving kindness and tender mercy, to overtake the perishing, and relieve their thirsty souls with draughts from an ever-flowing fountain. But this is the glory of the Gospel it gladdens its streams make glad the inhabitants of God's city. There are many streams flowing out from the Gospel river, which make glad the We cannot enlarge upon them; the limit city of God. of this hour's service forbids more than the mention of
a stream from a river.
There
is
Of
GOD'S CITY.
187
di-
Ye
shall
make you
free."
Ail
know the truth and the truth who accept in their hearts, in
is
poured
enrapturing assurance, that they are freed from sin, are accepted in the Beloved that they have passed
from death unto life, that they are new creatures, that old things have passed aw ay and all things become newr The Spirit, which Jesus promised to send forth, testifies within them, bearing witness with their spirits that they are born of God. They know in whom they believe, on what their hope rests, and have a foretaste of joys imT
.
mortal.
"Rejoicing
now
in glorious hope,
They
stand,
all
See
And
There
all
a stream of sanctifying
influence.
;
The Gospel is a complete system of redemption it is the power of God unto full salvation. It is the divine arrangement for the salvation of, and restoration to man, of all that w as lost by the fall. Jesus prayed "Sanctify them through thy truth." Then there is the declaration, that God wills our sanctification. If our will accords with his,
T
there
is
nothing
to
The
camp
to secure
our sanctification by
his blood.
He also reminds
the filth of the
away
188
flesh,
GOD'S CITY.
all sin.
to
much more shall the blood of Christ cleanse us from The stream of sanctifying influence is destined sanctify, and make holy all who are subjected to its
which they
shall feel the fulness of divine love,
sin.
and
This
is
God's
will,
and
to this
Spirit,
grace
not
by
overflowing abundance.
Hence,
we sing
"
Oh
I,
Christ shall in
me
appear,
even
I,
I shall
be holy here."
If
we
is
we
shall obtain
it,
and he
that
3.
There
The author
solation.
God
of all con-
And
The world through which the believer journeys is a wilderness, of dark nights and clouds, and gloomy fea;s but the Gosthe Gospel are numerous, rich and cheering.
pel
is
full of consolation.
"Fear
to give
it is
Paul reckons that the sufferings of the present time compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us. There is one expression which, it seems to me, should quiet all our fears. It is this: "All things work together for good to them that love God." It matters not, then, what trials, what afflictions, what
are not worthy to be
CITY.
189
losses,
endure;
behalf,
and
to result in
our highest
well-being.
'
"
God moves
Of never-f ailing
skill.
designs,
will
courage take
dread.
'
The
cloulds
you
so
much
Are big with mercies and shall break In blessings on your head.
7
190
SERMON
XIV.
SAINTS,
A RESULT OF CONFORMITY
for me, I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall when I awake, with thy likeness." Psa. xvii, 15.
:
be
There
is
fact,
that this
world does not afford an adequate supply of bliss to meet the cravings of the human mind. The eye is not satisfied
is
the
Solomon was wise above all that were before him he piled up gold, until it lost its enchantment and became a burden. He feasted upon good things, until his soul loathed the honey-comb. He drank from earth's fountain of bliss, until it became insipid and nauseating. He inhaled the fragrance of flowers and
heart
with joy.
:
feasted his eyes with their beauties, until their very loveliness
was a burden
to his soul.
when he could
satisfied.
was not
He
wrote upon
"
ities, all is
vanity."
The
miserably small.
Good men
of all ages
191
Is
not a
j srfect
satisfying
The
bliss for
which we
sigh."
The Psalmist
with rapture
at
and living in an
state, his
at-
purer
soul thrilled
thy likeness."
the
prays for
whom
>ys
he
calls the
God
frequently
.1:
:
hence
which them as men of the world men whose hearts are set upon the world, whose thoughts are occupied with its vanities, whose time is spent in the pursuit of them, and who. though merely
language, "Deliver
sword.*'"
my
is
thy
He
characterizes
is
human
aspiration.
He had
own integrity in verse 3, " Thou hast proved mine heart." Thou knowest exactly what manner of man I am, for
thou hast searched and discovered the secrets of my soul. By temptations, afflictions and vexations, thou hast tested
my
sincerity.
Thou
hast visited
me
in the night,"
when no
:.
when others
their
In the season
dark
3,
me.
And having
192
determined that
I
shall be pure.
" I
am
purposed that
not transgress."
will keep a strict
However much
may
watch over all my words and actions. " I will keep my tongue from evil, and my lips from speaking guile." And while the wicked are before me, vexing and tempting me to sin, "I will keep my mouth
as with a bridle."
of the perfect
work
God
language
from
"
ness: I
ness."
me, I will behold thy face in righteousshall be satisfied, when I awake, with thy likeI do not envy the wicked their portion, nor men
for
As
may hope
to
reap therefleeting
dif-
from.
They may,
if
they
will, cleave
to these
my
My
felicity I ex-
when
in
body I shall appear in the likeness of Temporal things are not my portion the vanities of earth cannot fill the desire of my soul I have laid hold upon the hope set before me, of joys which are immortal and eternal and to these I shall cleave.
; :
;
my resurrected my Redeemer.
"As
for
maintain that imputed righteousness which " Blessed are the pure in will qualify me to see thy face.
I will labor to
The wicked,
;
if
they will,
I shall
may
to
maintain that purity and meetness in which behold thy face, and appear in thy likeness.
193
IN
Our theme is the perfect satisfaction of the saints THE GLORIFIED STATE. And we may remark, thai perfect satisfaction can only
We
was
and
all will
not be restored
until
complete then,
I. We observe that God's work in us is designed to RESTORE US TO THE DIVINE LIKENESS. AND TO RAISE US TO THE ENJOYMENT OF ALL THE HAPPINESS OF THE GLORIFIED
STATE.
state.
"And God
said,
Let us
di-
make man
nature.
in our
likeness."
The
happy.
He was
head of his creation, and monarch of all below the skies. Sin robbed man of his purity, defaced the divine image, stripped him of his glory, tore the crown from his head, sowed the seeds of disease in his
tive, the visible
nature,
to
eternal death.
Now
which sin has robbed us, namely, holiness, happiness, and eternal life.
us
is
1.
For
this,
was
the
Son of God
That, " As
we have borne
image
we
uf the heavenly."
eternal purpose.
man was
created, that he
194
So wrote the great Apostle of the Gentiles " For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son." Romans viii, 28. It was God's eternal's purpose, appointment, determination, will and pleasure, that all those, whom he knew would truly repent and believe, should be conformed to the likeness of his Son, should bear his image and be like Christ, viz., " holy, harmless, and separate from sinners " that we should have the mind that was in him, and walk as he
:
walked.
2.
To
this
work, of bringing us
to
a conformity
to the
divine
likeness, is the
He
all truth,
but will
make
The influus to
us, leads
is
We
of holiness
by the power of the Holy Spirit, which quickens our dead nature, and testifies within us that we are born again. The Apostle Paul speaks of the Holy Spirit as the grand agent in bringing about this change in our nature. "But we all, with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image from glory 2 Cor. iii, to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord." Here we are represented as "beholding" the divine 18. "glory," and being "changed into the same image." But the Spirit of the Loid is the efficient agent by which this wonderful change is effected. The Spirit is He who has prepared the glasses, through which we behold the glory The Gospel is one of those glasses, and this of the Lord.
195
na-
Spirit's inspiration.
glass,
The human
another
and
formed
womb
The
away from our eyes, opens our understanding, transforms our nature by his renewing and sanctifying power,
and thereby fixes upon us the divine likeness. II. But we notice that perfect conformity to the DIVINE LIKENESS IS NOT ATTAINABLE IN THIS LIFE. And here we must distinguish between things that
differ.
Christian perfection
is
is
thing
it,
yet, if we attain to the former, and live and die in we are sure of the latter. Christian perfection is a
;
in glory.
The
sanctified state
that
we
shall
ivhen we shall
awake
short
fell far
under the Christian dispensation, for Jesus tells us that John the Baptist, who was the greatest of the prophets, was less than the least in his kingdom. Likewise,
christian perfection falls short of the state of the glorified
saints.
Christian perfection
is
to this state.
The
perfect likeness
There
is,
to
the divine
and
to possess,
and
live in this
196
state
the text.
ness."
I
As
am
eousness, in which
behold thy
This righteous-
ness no
cation
:
man possesses by nature, nor is it acquired by edumen are not trained into it. It is called the rightwe
receive
it
speakable
boast."
ceived through
Ii ts
knows
it.
He
is
not
left to
is
God-blessed assurance of
" his
He knows
and the place where, dungeon shook, and his chains fell." He knows when he was relieved of his burden, when the load was removed from his back, and his soul went skipping up Zion's hill. He knows when the night
of sin
ended,
when
when
the
morning
soul.
star arose,
of
The change from darkness to light is so great that all who really pass through the transformation, are senAll will not have exactly the same kind or sible of it. same degree of emotion. The emotions may be as great in variety as the number of the redeemed. With some, the change may be sudden and violent, and accompanied with much distress. Some may be so powerfully wrought
imagine that they had a bodily sensation. Paul had the impression of a voice, and a light shining round him. With some, the experience is less vivid their winter passes out so mildly and the spring comes in
upon, as
to
:
or calendar, to
tell
just
107
While the experiences through which believers pass, in being made righteous, differ, yet in some things there is an agreement. Each one can say, " whereas I was blind, now I see.'' I know that which no man could teach me, which the n n regenerate mind has never grasped, and cannot: u For except a man be born again, he cannot see kingdom of God." He that is made righteous is sensible of the relief from the burden of sin, and can testify
that he has peace with
God.
All
who
are
made
right-
eous also
feel their
God he sends
which cries, " Abba Father." But righteousness is practical as well as experimental, and capable of being demonstrated. There is an outward as well as an inward righteousness; a righteousness in the life, conduct and conversation, as well as in the heart of the believer. That in the heart is the vine or branch that in the life is its fruit. If the branch is
;
righteous,
it
it
nor can
retain
its
:
For
Jesus says
Every branch
It
in
me
taketh away."
pattern given.
must be Christ's righteousness, working in, running through, and governing all our thoughts, words, and actions. To be like him in the resurrection, we must be like him in the regeneration. The transis
the prelude to
transformation
effected
by the resurrection.
We
need the resurrection from the death of sin to a life of righteousness, to have a sure hope of a future resurrect-
198
tion
and the
and only
We must
have
of Christ's humanity.
Be like him as a man, follow his steps, walk in his ways in a word, our life and conduct must be like his. He was distinguished for meekness and humility, and he said " Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for " Tell ye the I am meek and lowly in heart." And again daughter of Sion, behold, thy King cometh unto thee, meek, and sitting upon an ass, and a colt the foal of an As an example of humility, he washed his disciass." ples' feet. And the Apostle tells us that he humbled himself, that he made himself of no reputation, and took the form of a servant, notwithstanding his equality with the Father. The Apostle, therefore, urges lowliness and hu-
mility of mind.
denial.
He He demands
this of us,
for
it
great
self-
down
as the
include
Jesus
to
filial
obedience
is
an obedience which
is
delight
Not as I will, but as thou wilt." To his parents, who had sought him for three days, and who complained of the trouble and anxiety " Wist ye he had caused them by his absence, he said not that I must be about my Father's business?" Thus, must we render unto God a hearty and cheerful obedience
do thy will
"
and again,
"
in all things.
2.
We
nature.
We
The
199
man walks in the light of the knowledge he posHe deals justly, just in proportion as his mind is enlightened. A good man may mean well, and yet do a great injury to one whom he desires to serve, because
good
sesses.
he lacks an enlightened judgment. In order that a judge may dispense exact justice in every case that comes before him, he must know the merits of every case. Yet he has done his duty, when, after giving due attention to
the case, he decides
Still
it
condemned, on account of the want knowledge on the part of the judge. God can dispense perfect justice, because he has perfect knowlHuman justice, though not exactly equitable, edge. if the intention is pure, and every possible means to
fectly honest, unjustly
of better
is perfect.
This
But
if
;
the light
that is in you be darkness, you must stumble that is, if your judgment be at fault, you are likely to err, no matThe intention, however, is ter how good your intention. what God regards: if that is pure and holy, we are ac-
cepted of him.
To
this extent,
we can
We
liness,
no
man
None but
the pure in
him
and,
able privilege,
have a well-grounded hope of this unspeakwe must purify ourselves, as he is pure. Our affections must be pure, our thoughts pure, our words and actions pure.
200
Human
" If
love extends to
its
own, and
to
thern only.
The
us.
God commends, takes in those that hate Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you, that ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven." This
divine love: he that has
it,
is
vine likeness.
shalt love the
commandments are, " Thou Lord thy God with all thy heart, and
The
great
with
all
all 'thy
soul,
and with
is
it,
all
thy strength.
is
the second
the
first
commandment, and
Thou
bor as thyself."
"Love
is
He
that loves
all
God with
him with
his might.
He
that
to treat
him.
He
commandments
is
a perfect christian
is
What
when
all
humanity comes up
thy will be done
For
on
earth, as
it
is
in heaven."
The kingdoms
Lord and his Christ." But even this state of things on earth would not give entire satisfaction. I repeat,
of our
" This world can never give
The
bliss for
which we sigh."
201
No
spiritual
no matter what temporal wealth, social standno matter what ing, or official honors we may enjoy
;
may
reach,
is
we
shall
still
We
shall
still feel
that,
"Beyond
There
life
above
flight of years,
Unmeasured by the
And
For
put
this
all
that
life is
love."
happy
state the
christian sighs.
of
He
life.
longs to
off mortality,
and be swallowed up
To
this
thoughts.
III. Notice, THE RESURRECTED SAINTS IN THEIR GLORIFIED BODIES, WILL BE COMPLETELY CONFORMED TO THE
ISFIED,
be satisfied,
when
ail
our expectations
of the soul en-
more than
realized,
tirely satisfied.
1 '
Of all my heart's desire Triumphantly possess'd Lodged in the ministerial choir, In my Redeemer's breast."
There are different opinions advanced by the learned, which we have not time now to consider.
present inquiry.
The
202
morn.
" I shall
when
when I
arise
from
my
glorified
upon
my
(for " as I
We
" the
trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible," " and we (who are on the earth) shall be changed in the twinkling of an eye" " mortal shall put on immortality." The glorified body, with which we shall be clothed, will be a source of great and endless satisfaction. The old body was a burden a body of death. It was afflicted with disease, sickness, infirmity, But when we pain, age, decrepitude, death and decay. awake with our glorified body, these will all have passed away. Not an ache, nor pain no infirmity, deformity, nor age these terms are not found in heaven's vocabulary. Youth, health, vigor, and beauty, will be among
We
we
our Redeemer.
spoken of as one of the unspeakable blessings secured by the surpassing love of God. "We shall be " If we have like him, for we shall see him as he is." been planted together in the likeness of his death, we
This
is
Our
ZUd
transformed and
shall
made
"
like
* *
and our bodies unto his glorious body. So The Lord Jesus Christ, who
it
change our
may
be fashioned like
We
upon
There were certain Greeks (who, having heard of Jesus, in the days of his incarnatiou, when only occasional rays of his glory shone out,) came to the disciples, saying " Sirs, we would see Jesus." If a sight of him in the days of humility was so much to be desired, with what rapture will the saints gaze upon him,
" I will
when they
see
shall see
him
as
he
is!
When
they shall
his glory
the
longed but
He was
God caused
by the Almighty hand, from the overwhelming rays of his glorious face; yet, this mere glimpse of Jehovah's glory, gave to the face of Moses a radiance upon which the Israelites could never look. Ever afterward, he appeared before the congregation only with a
veiled face.
If,
his
naked
filled
face
beamed
forth, its
incomprehensible radiance
them
with awe.
likeness,
we we
will not need to be covered by the divine hand, or that he turn his face from us, or give us merely a transient view but we shall gaze upon him,
the throne
We
204
see him
just as he
is.
We
shall
We
we
shall
know
all
we want
to
this state, is the want more we know, the more fully we realize how little we do know. When we awake with the divine likeness, there will be no more mysteries. Ignorance will not vex us in the gloried state " we shall know." Our knowledge will be unlimited. We shall sit at the fountain whence streams of knowledge flow, and drink and to enable our intellectual capacities to receive the never-ceasing stream, which will flow from the living fountains, to which the Lamb shall lead us they will be continually expanded and enlarged. We shall never feel the w ant of knowledge, for the moment the desire arises, the supply will meet it. Before
One
of the
of knowledge.
And
the
knowledge,
all
away
forever,
and we
tial light.
do you sometimes think about it? I don't ask, would you like to be there? but can you say with the Psalmist, " I will behold thy face in righteousness: I shall be satisfied,
when
205
SERMON
XV.
upon
it fast,
but
it
it
he shall
Job
cession,
which passed upon Job, in rapid sucand the depths of wretchedness into which he was suddenly plunged, were a puzzle to his neighbors. They could not understand why the most wealthy of all men among them, and possibly the wealthiest man then
The
afflictions
and become the most miserable of all on earth and their astonishment was heightened by the fact, that he was regarded as the most righteous of all men.
;
sand camels,
was seven thousand sheep, three thouhundred yoke of oxen, and five hundred she asses." Besides this, it is said that he had "a very great household; so that this man was the greatest of all the men of the east." His wealth, together with his seven sons and three daughters, was all swept away, as with a besom of destruction, and the news thereof reached him by four messengers, one following the other as rapidly
Job's substance
five
11
as they could
tell
But
this
was not
206
from his crown to the sole of his feet, so that he was a mass of putrefaction, and his breath was corrupt. His neighbors hearing of his affliction, came to comfort him; but they were so astonished at the wretchedness in which they found him, that they sat for seven days, regarding
him
in silent
amazement.
During the long silence, those who came to comfort him had been casting about, in their minds, to fix upon the cause of his affliction; and three of them seem to have arrived at one conclusion, namely, that Job had been guilty of some great wickedness, unknown to them, but known to the all-wise God, and for this God was punishing him. They believed that only by the acknowledgment of his sin, would he be restored to the divine favor; and hence, they undertook, by arguments, to lead him to No doubt they conviction, repentance and confession. with the good intention of breaking unto Job set out their suspicion by gentle words, and thus to lead him to repentance; but, the first speaker had not uttered half a dozen sentences, before he had waxed warm, and was delivering himself in language which must have pierced Job's very soul and the second, at his opening, indicated most clearly his belief that Job was a hypocrite. The third charged him with falsehood and mockery; and thus they continued, with argument, ridicule, sarcasm and
:
Bildad,
from the prevailing opinion, that worldly prosperity was an evidence of divine favor, and that afflictions were a
207
remembered
When he saw the wicked flourishing as a green bay tree, his feet were well nigh gone. While Bildad's premises were false, and while he wholly misunderstood Job's case, and therefore misapplied his illustrations; yet he, as it were, stumbled upon a very important truth. It is this that our happiness our real well-being, depends upon our being in our right and proper element. All creatures have their own element, or a state in which they perfectly enjoy their existence. Some creatures cannot live at all out of that condition birds thrive in their native air; but, caged up, where the air is impure and unwholesome, the} soon die water is the element in which the fish lives; remove it therefrom, and it perishes. Now man's true element is to enjoy the love and favor of his God in this he must dwell, if he would be happy: out of this, no matter what his circumstances, he cannot be happy. The divine favor will constitute our happiness here, and will be the source of our enjoyment hereafter.
stumble.
:
u To dwell in God, to taste his love, Is the full heaven enjoyed above The real bliss of christians now, Is heavenly love enjoyed below."
:
This
is
it
seems
to
bled upon; for he does not seem to have fully realized the force of his own illustrations. The first is drawn
flag
from plants: " Can the rush grow up with mire? or the without water?" Verse 11. Can that kind of plants, which are the peculiar product of miry and watery sec-
208
tions, still
live
?
it
dry land
cut down,
"
and grow, if transplanted on high and Whilst it is yet in its greenness, and not
all
around
it
flourish, the
transplant from the miry and watery soil withers and dies,
out of
its
native element.
So are the paths of all that forget God." Such is the end to which the paths of all that forget God leads. They
will perish: their path leads to destruction.
"
And
the
off,
hypocrite's
hope
shall perish
and whose
who
trust
they trusted, as
shall lean shall hold
frail
and flimsy
it
as a spider's web.
it
"
:
He
he
upon
it fast,
but
When
then
its
goes
and
When it
is sat-
goes into
upon
leans
it,
its
hind
its
legs, it
holds on with
it
and thus
upon
fast;
when the housekeeper comes along with her broom just when it feels most comfortabty situated, this spiderweb destroyer sweeps the spider, its web and all its hopes
away.
Such
will be the
all
who
is
forget, or fail to
He
is
the
no
safety.
He
this
sand.
;
He
that builds
upon
209
any other foundation will, with his house, be swept away by the relentless flood of divine displeasure, that will gather around the wicked, when God pours out his wrath and indignation upon them.
The
doxy.
The
atheist
who
forgets
God
or leaves
that there
is
some of the structures and upon which they lean or, in other words, the false premises upon which men base their hopes and the frail material of which they erect that in which they trust. There are three things of importance in erecting a building first, a good foundation secondly, good material and thirdly, to context leads us to contemplate
for themselves,
The
;
The The
web is very frail material to build a house of. The Apostle cautions us as to the material of which we
build, even
on a good foundation.
:
" If any man buildeth on the foundation gold, silver, costly stones, wood, hay, stubble; each man's work shall be made manifest: for the day shall declare it, because it is revealed by fire and the fire itself shall prove each man's work, what
to
sort
it is."
(I
Cor.
iii
12, 13.
Revised Version.)
Gold,
silver,
and a certain kind of stone will stand the fire; but wood, hay and stubble will soon be consumed by the
flame.
210
We
means of escape from impending wrath, naturally forces itself upon the human heart. Man would drive away this impression if he Sometimes daring ones exhibit could, but he cannot. their pride, and their ambition to be gods, themselves, and to usurp prerogatives which they do not possess but
;
made
The king
Is not this
who boastingly
spoke,
and
said
my
was brought, by power divine, to realize his weakand insecurity, and the need of something in which to trust, more substantial than any power he possessed. Now, God has a variety of means by which he awakens in the minds and hearts of men a sense of human helplessness. Sometimes he unfolds his strange providences, as in the case of the king just mentioned, who was driven out from among men, and ate grass as an ox: his body was wet with the dew of heaven his hair became as eagle*s feathers, and his nails like birds' claws; until seven times (seven years) passed over him, and until he knew and acknowledged the power of the Most High. He then lifted up his eyes to heaven and praised and honored Him that
ness
;
liveth forever.
Sometimes, ordinary
ing
means
of lead-
Men,
who
and scornful in health, are brought to repentance in sickIndeed, afness, and tremble at the approach of death.
fliction
seems
to
211
and many and brought to repentance. Sometimes, the motion comes from an internal sense of guilt. At the hour of midnight when no other, but the Eye that never sleeps, sees them, men are troubled, and lie in sensible recognition of the heart's palpitations.
man
to give
is
Such
heart.
moment
it
is
sometimes the
Holy
If a
genuine sigh
if
and
and
insulted,
is
driven
is effected
More frequently, however, the continued until some kind of a compromise a compromise suggested by the evil one; and
one which involves the erection of such a structure as he shall suggest. Knowing the peculiar turn of mind with which he has to deal, he, in every case, suggests what is most likely to be adopted. Whatever he suggests, you may be sure is a refuge of lies.
With the text in view, let us notice some of the spiderweb houses on which Satan induces men to lean; and to
which they hold
I say
if
fast, to
some,
for
we knew them all. And they are all Satan's devices, and all equally delasive. They are all frail and flimsy as the spider's web. You may lean upon them, but they
212
will not stand
fast,
not endure.
First
among
is
system
it
may
be
called)
Atheism.
of the
inspired pensman,
Atheist.
we
The
folly of the
harmony and
heavenly bodies, rolling through the vast expanse conducted, as they evidently are, by an unseen but unerring
hand; each
from age to age: who accomplishment of events, wholly out of can mark the the range of the means which appear to be employed who can contemplate his own body, fearfully and won* derfully made, and yet deny the existence of an Allwise and Almighty Creator, can only be fitly characterized by the language of the Psalmist: " The fool hath said in his heart, There is God." I suspect that the character mentioned by the Psalmist was ashamed to utter such an idea with his lips, and hence is described as saying The Apostle Paul declares Atheism to it " in his heart."
in its appointed path,
5
be inexcusable folly:
"For
him
from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and. Godhead so that they are without excuse." Romans i, 20. With these examples before us, of the manner in which the inspired writers treated Atheism,
;
we
feel justified in
dismissing
all
who
"He
shall
but
it
Infidelity is another frail tenement to which men cling, which we don't think deserves more than a passing notice. The man who rejects the Bible, is not likely to pay much attention to anything we can say. We should have more faith in Infidelity, however, if its advocates would hold out to the end; but they do not. They do not die Infidels. We have never known nor heard of one who did. The testimonies of dying Infidels are all against the system. Doleful and distressing have been the last words of many Infidels. They have been known to tremble at the approach of death what then, must have been their horror, when they entered the dark valley and shadow! Ii their confidence failed them on the banks, how did they fare in the billows of Jordan? A system that only sustains you when you don't need it, is not worth the name. We have touched upon fatalism in another discourse, and need not enlarge upon it here. But the text leads us especially to consider the hypocrite's
hope.
"The
doubt whether
It is
more an an effort to appear daring. But there are hypocrites who suppose themselves to be what they are not, and therefore have a hope, which their real state does not warrant. This seems evident from what is
the Atheist, or Infidel, has
exhibition of bravado
much
hope.
iii,
17: "Because
uiou sayest I am rich," <&c, "and knowest not," &e. These were evidentlv deceived, and did not know their
214
wretchedness.
condition.
They have a name that they live, but are dead. They are among God's people, but not of them. They say, " Lord, Lord," but do not the things which God requires. They have the form, but not the power of godliness; they
have entered the vestibule, but not the temple and they Their affections are on the world have much more love for theaters, balls, parties, and other worldly amusements, than they have for the services of
of grace.
;
the sanctuary.
to
little rain,
;
or cold, or heat,
is
sufficient
keep them from church and when there, they can't endure to be crowded must have plenty of room but to the theater they can go in heat, cold, or storm, and crowd
if
hours
and enjoy the stale nonsense, which they have heard over and again. If collections are frequent for church expenses, or charitable purposes, there is much complaint in consequence. "Its money, money, all the time money: I don't see what they do with so much money." But they can go to the theater, and pay money every night. Now Jesus says, " Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also." Is it not pretty evident that the hearts of such people are set on the world, and
that the world
is
;<
was in heaven, would they not have more interest in heavenly things? Can such persons be genuine christians? If not, they must be hypocrites lukewarm." Jesus says, U I would that thou wert cold or hot, * * because thou art lukewarm, I will spew thee
If their treasure
215
mouth." I imagine some of my congregation are saying, " That don't fit me, I am not a professor." Some people think that there are no hypocrites but such There could be no greater as are members of the church. mistake. There are thousands who imagine themselves not far from the kingdom but if they are not in it, they are as far from being acceptable to God as the most wicked. They are " lukewarm." I said once to a lady friend, " I fear you are lukewarm." She was decidedly amiable, and might have passed for a right good christian but she had not embraced the Saviour, nor had she united with God's people. To my remark, she
out of
my
answered,
"
0, I hope I
am
I
"Very
"There are three cold, hot, and lukewarm. Which is yours ? Are states you cold ? Have you no interest in religion ? Do you hate the people of God ? Do you believe them all a set
well, let us see,"
of miserable hypocrites?
Is that
your
state ?"
"
I asked.
With a discouraged look, she answered, No." I continued, " Have you then the heat of divine love in your
soul?
fire
burn?
?
Is there a
Can you
'
know
that
my Redeemer
is
liveth,' that
my name
in heaven
my record
effort
"
I asked.
With an
on high ?' Is that your state ?" to maintain her composure, she
What then ?" After a few moments' answered, " I suppose I must be lukewarm."
this would be the answer of very many, if they would acknowledge the truth. This is, as she characterized it, a very "disgustful state." There is no state more so in
And
216
the sight of God.
other.
it.
Men ought
it,
to
ought
to
embrace
If
it,
by their presence in the sanctuary, nor their gifts Every time you contribute to the cause of God, you testify that you are not cold. Religion is dither a grand and glorious reality, or a most detestable fraud. If a fraud, it deserves to be exposed, and voted out of soif a reality, it has claims which we can only withciety hold at our peril claims that no honest man can withhold and he that hopes to escape the hypocrite's doom by refusing to enroll himself with the people of God, will find in the end that his trust is a spider's web, and
age
at the altar.
;
utterly useless.
But " time enough" I suspect, has a large and heavy burden of souls leaning upon it; and, oh, what a fearful sweeping away there will ultimately be, of souls that are leaning upon " time enough !" You admit that you know that you must die, and that a preparation for death is necessary, and that it must be made in time; but still you put it off. Is this wise? Is it in accordance with our practice in other matters? If we were promised a million of dollars in gold, which we could get by simply going to the bank and asking for it, would we say, " Its time enough?" I think not. Why, then, put off this matter in which the eternal interest of a priceless soul is involved? a soul that must forever live in raptures or "Time enough," was the language of a young in woe? man who lived in New Berne, N. C, some years ago. He was greatly respected, and worthily so, too for he was genteel, good-natured, and free from the grosser vices of
217
in the Gospel, he lacked Hasty consumption seized upon his vitals, and in a few days he was at death's door. I approached him, as his feet touched the waters, and asked him if it was well with his soul? He answered: " You know it is no time to talk upon that subject now." It all that I could get out of him, and soon after that was he dropped into eternity. My brethren, time is flying, and with it we are being hurried on to the house ap-
youth.
But
like the
young man
pointed for
all living.
"
still,
And
we
tell
less."
to beat before our work you could have seen that young couple sitting in church at Edenton, on a Sunday night, as I saw them some moths ago if you had heard their merry voices as they returned to their home at a late hour, (for the services were protracted,) you would have thought there was plenty of time for either of them to prepare for death. The husband was, to all appearance, in perfect health when they retired and fell asleep; but sometime before dfy the wife awoke and found the life" You may less form of her husband lying by her side! lean upon that house, but it sliall not stand" We shall mention but one more of these flimsy structures, upon which men lean, and to which they hold fast. It is near of kin to the one last considered. I refer to death-bed repentance. I presume that in this christian land, there are more people depending upon death-bed
if
What
is
done?
''Time enough
If
218
They say
;
mean
to
to
be
lost;
they mean
when?
To-day? "No." To-morrow? "No." Next week? "No." Next " No." No, they have not fixed upon any time to commence this work, but expect to be ready when death
year?
There seems then to be nothing left but deathbed repentance. I have not the greatest faith in deathbed repentance. I will not say that none are saved on their death-bed but it is not the most satisfactory experience. I have known persons who thought they got religion, on what they thought would be their death-bed: it proved otherwise, and they found afterward that they had no grace. What if they had died with what they afterwards found was not religion? I would not discourage the effort, even in the last moment, for there is
comes.
:
too
much
at stake to think of
is
Especially
thief,
may
they be encouraged
But
is
now
is
Behold,
now
il
Now God invites, how blest the day, How sweet the gospel's charming sound."
" I
Much
is
think he died
all
though he
had dropped asleep." What if he did drop off quietly, what does it signify ? Would it be a strange thing, that a person who had not enough mental and moral energy to
raise a sigh to
to raise a
heaven while in health, should be too lazy The testimony of one life
219
God
is
You
are, per-
you
will
to die. But you may not have this lingerYou may not be confined to your bed for a long period. You may be suddenly cut off. I could tell of numbers who died suddenly. Some time ago, a friend came to convey me to one of my appointments, and on his way he stopped at a neighbor's gate, talked with him a few moments and started on he had not driven but a little way when a cry arrested his attention, and looking
thus prepare
illness.
ing
life-
form of her husband, to whom he had just before Oh, how uncertain is life been talking We know not what a day may bring forth not even what an hour may
!
bring forth
4
go,
But I admit that the chances are that you will die in bed; most people do. But you are not sure that you will be granted repentance at the last hour, or that you will have the grace given you to call on God for mercy. Remember you cannot come unless God draws, also that he says: " My Spirit shall not always strive with man." And again " Woe also unto them, if I depart from them." We are also reminded that if once the good man of the house rises up and shuts the door, our crying without will be
:
220
in vain.
Remember
also the
that
it
loses its
lamp
unconverted friends, don't lean upon deathbed repentance. It is one of Satan's delusions it is a
;
My
web refuge; it is one of those frail and flimsy structures which will eventually be swept away. As we have already intimated, they may be swept away before we have passed from time. We may realize their worthlessness when it is too late to lay hold of anything stronger. However this may be, they surely will be swept away in the floods of Jordan. But blessed be God, there is one sure refuge the Gospel This is not only God's great means of showing men
spider
their danger, but
It
it
throws a full flood of light upon the subject of the weakness and helplessness of human nature; it also tells
us in
whom
is
our help.
He who trusts
his soul
upon the
The Gospel establishment will stand when all else fails. The rains may fall, the desolating floods may beat upon
it;
may shake
the pillars of
Yea,
Those who make the Lord their trust, And faithful to the end endure,
Shall stand in Jesus' righteousness
ages, sure.
; ;
221
may
The scheme
to rescue fallen
man
Which gave my
Enraptured in dark, Egyptian night, And fond of darkness more than light,
Madly
To
Sinai's fiery
mount
is
I flew
But
frowning face,
J
This mountain
But, lo
!
no hiding place
And Mercy to my soul appeared, She led me on, with pleasing face,
To
Jesus Christ,
my hiding pla 3
name
3.
And now
I feel the
is all
heavenly flame,
My
trust
in Jesus'
And
find in
him
my hiding place.
And shake the globe from pole to pole No thunder-bolt would daunt my face,
For Jesus
is
my hiding
place.
A few more rolling suns at most, Will land my soul on Canaan's coast
Safe in
my
222
SERMON XVI
THE GLORY REVEALED
IN
THE CHRISTIAN
the life
CHARACTER,
[An Eulogy, by Bishop J. W. Hood, on
of Robert
N. C, Novem-
us.'
seems
to
me
that
who ought
to
complain
caused to
of suffering.
He was
THE GLORY IN THE CHRISTIAN CHARACTER.
suffer
223
from
false
brethren
from
those
who
cause
were connected with him in the ministry of God yea, even by these was he caused
;
in the
to suffer.
are few
mankind is one in which there exempt from suffering. "Sickness and sorrow, pain and death," are the common lot of humanity. I doubt whether a man has ever lived on this earth that
present state of
The
never
felt
pain.
had special reference to the sufferings peculiar to good men. While all suffer, tkere are some sufferings which are peculiar to the people of God sufferings which they have to endure, that others are exempt from trials through which they have to pass, that others know nothing of. And as the Apostle had been pointing out the characteristics of a perfect man, and the blessings con-
it is
fair to
was
still
Now, the
suffer-
ings of a good
man
arise
which we notice
1.
From
I place this
because
it
stands
first
in the history of
The envy of
first
attack ever
made upon
kill
;
human
being.
Il
was envy that caused Cain to Abel had done nothing to him
received the
he
of
had simply
vine
his God.
offered sacrifice in
commendation
him
all
the
224
be
good to
serve God,
the
divine requirement,
provoke envy, then Cain had a provocation; and that was the only provocaIt was envy that moved the tion for the first murder.
sufficient to
Hainan
to
nation, in
it was envy that caused scheme for the destruction of all the Jewish the kingdom of Ahasuerus; it was envy that
;
was envy that caused the Jews to crucify the Son of God. 2. Then there are sufferings arising from " the ignorance of good men's contemporaries,^ the ignorance, or want of inlast,
and
but not
least, it
A
he
to
fil
really
his fellow
good men.
man desires, and labors for, the good of Many around him content themselves
because he has done so
little
with the
is
false
distressed
He
do no harm, but
to
do good
and he
anxious
to ful-
mankind and
to glorify
This desire on his part leads him to consider, to investigate and find out in what way he can best accom-
God.
His turn of plish his desire, to benefit his fellow men. mind, his habit of study, his deep-toned piety are rewarded in a large expansion of his intellect. His mind expands and goes out to grasp the duties that are before him. He is enabled by his investigations to see what he can do, where he can begin that work, and how best complete it. The way of duty is made clear to him. He lives five, ten, twenty, even forty years ahead of his genera-
225
of his generation,
William Lloyd Garrison was full forty years ahead and he was a martyr to the principles
has ever been with
he taught. So
it
men who
are good
and
great.
They
when he went up
into
the mount, into the presence of God. During this period, some who were between him and the multitude, took advantage of their position to poison the minds of the multitude against the good man, and make them believe he was not what he pretended to be. " As to this Moses, we do not know where he has gone; let us make gods to ourselves."
These
men were
so
much
but
it
does not
last.
disposed to blame
him
before,
not under-
would not unite and explain, his enemies hang upon his rear and harass him. Although he has no use for the bridges which his enemies burn behind him, as he never intends to retreat, yet
if
against
him
it
grieves
It is
him
to see that
mode
of attack.
How mean
his enemies:
"We
shall
10
226
God."
We
we
this
What
a strong testimony
Daniel's rectitude!
was without fault his rectitude was absolutely perand therefore they could not attack him upon his
They could not find any thing amiss with management of affairs. They could bring no charge against him in this. So they could only attack him upon
character.
his
This
Is
to
some point, and knowing he is honest, straightforward and unyielding, they seek on that very point to attack him. They know that the multitude are not in that way of thinking, and therefore finding out his opinions they prepare to attack him upon his righteousness, and to condemn him because he is right. The enemies of Daniel, however, were angels in comparison with men who lived since their time, They would have scorned to raise a false report about Daniel. They might have gotten together and hatched up some nice story; the}' might have outsworn Daniel, as
they were in the majority
being
many
against one?
of followers, they might have maintained a falsehood against Daniel. But they would have disdained to do it. Men do not scruple in this day and time to coin lies out of nothing, for the purpose of attacking good men, and by misleading the multitude, make them believe that good men are bad men, and that
227
well informed.
must not dwell longer upon these things. And make applications. You must make your own applications. I have referred to these events, to these attacks upon good men in former ages, for the pur-
But
I stop not to
show
good men. The good men of all ages have had to suffer from these sources from the envy of the wicked, and from the want of information on the part of those by whom they have been surrounded. Ofttimes because a man's real worth is not understood, because he is not known he lives among people who do not know him don't know the depth of his knowledge, nor the breadth of his intel;
lect,
and
good
men
It is
man must
is
no friend of
But I repeat, we must not dwell longer upon these things. The? Apostle declares that they are " not worthy to be
compared with the glory which
shall be revealed in us."
They
tle "
they are of
lit-
What
The
my sufferings amount
Only a few moments. Our life is as a span, a bubble on the wave, and when brought down to the smallest calculation, it is nothing it is only momentary. What are
sufferings of this time will soon end."
days, a few
228
compared with the endless life Suppose you should have to suffer; suppose things should go contrary to you here; suppose neighbors, friends and relatives should turn against you in this world, what does it amount to? God will reward you. It " is not worthy to be compared to the glory which shall be revealed in us."
above?
"
There
is
simply the glory of God in Heaven the glory of the sanctified host, the glory of the angelic
after awhile; not
army around
in us."
the throne of
is
God
but the
"
glory revealed
life.
God's glory
And
this is the
fore men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven." This glory is revealed in the life of a good man. His life testifies for God. A good man is a walking evidence, a walking monument of the divine character the character of God is displayed in the good man's life. Well, how is it displayed ? A good man " loves his enemies, blesses them that curse him, does good to them that despitefully use him, persecute him, and say all manner of evil against him." Have you not thought it very strange, sometimes, when you have seen a man who had been abused and Jied about, go up to his enemy and give him a kindly hand and indicate that after all he did not mind it, but was ready to forgive it, and say to that very enemy, " Come and go with me to heaven ?" He is ready He won't take down to ask God's blessing upon him. he will dishis flag, he won't pull down his standard
220
charge his duty if the heavens grow black but he will discharge it in such a manner as not to hurt any body in such a manner as to indielse if he can help it because cate that he Joes it because he loves to do good
is
He
He
11
God.
God sends
his rain
upon the
the good
man
treats his
as his friends.
theirs in the
He
them and
toward his best friends. There is a glory revealed in such a character. Is not that a glorious character? The character of that man who, notwithstanding all that is said or done against him,
threatens not
;
same way
on his way; he does not turn around to murmur and complain, but puts his trust in God, and indicates that he feels it his duty to take care of God's cause and let God take care of his character. It is glorious to see such men such a course *>f conduct is glory revealed in us it is God's work within us. A man cannot do this unless he has God in him; unless he has the Divine hand to lead him. If this were all, it would be enough to know that we are able to show forth the glory of God in our lives, would be enough to induce us to bear patiently all
;
life.
But
there is also
the
good
maris perseverance.
It is said
he
shall persevere;
way He knows he
;
230
THE GLORY
fight
IN
he must meet the hosts of night. He counts makes up his mind, puts on his armor, goes out for the fight, and is not satisfied if he does not get into a fight. V/hen soldiers are well drilled they burn for a fight; their swords are well rubbed up, their ammunition is in good order, and everything is ready for the fight. " Hast thou given the horse strength? Hast thou clothed his neck with thunder? The glory of his nostrils is ter-
must
the cost,
off." And the good wants to fight. He goeth out to the battle and he he holds on his way, perseveres cares not how many enemies he has, so long as they are in his front. They harass him some, but if they will stay in front of him, he is always ready he does not fear an open enemy he expects them, he is ready to meet them. God's glory is revealed in him, in the manner in which he stands the contest. He throws himself in the battle; he says, " I must fight, if I would reign " and if
rible.
He
man,
like Job's
;
war
horse,
he
feels
any weakness, he
cries, "
Increase
my
courage,
;
God in overcoming the world he shows in his life and character that God has power to bring his saints out " more than conquerors." The man of God will go on his way you cannot stop him. But I must pass on. The glory of God is revealed in the
Lord."
glorifies
;
He
death of a good
He
is
He more
life,
:
Having
of fear
lived a righteous
not afraid.
He
says
"
I am prepared
am
Come, welcome, death the end standing joyful on the marwill soon be broken, the
gin of Jordan.
231
low."
God
is
a revelation of glory.
Have you
There
may
but there is a peace, a calm, which even death cannot distrub. In the
be no rapture
is
;
sometimes there
when death
at
is
hour
of dissolution,
strings,
wheel at the
" What, what
upon
my
frame?
Is it
death
?
If this
be death,
From
I shall the
King
is
of glory see
All
well
Weep
not,
my friends,
weep not
for me,
My sins
I am free
To hide my Jesns from my eyes, I soon shall mount the upper skies
All
is
well!"
And, while standing upon the banks of the mystic Jordan, awaiting the coming of heaven's chariot, the dying saint beholds the heavenly host moving up the shining avenues of the golden city; heaven's armies on dress parade upon the sea of glass, and the harpers near the throne, and, filled with rapture he exclaims:
* '
Tune, tune your harps, ye saints in glory, I soon shall join your pleasing story; The angels are from glory come, They are 'round my head, they are in my room, They 've come to bear my spirit home All is well!"
:
232
THE GLORY
IN
And
hosts
salutes
the heavenly
" Hail!
I've
all hail!
come
Now all is peace and joy divine, Heaven and glory now are mine,
O, hallelujah to the
Lamb
All
is
well!
Now
permit
me
for a
moment
to refer to the
experience of
During
his illness
some months
ierwards informed me, a most joyful and glorious experience a happiness so great, a joy so complete, a fullness
;
of glory
expressed
which is the result of holiness of heart. As he it "I had got to Beulahland; that happy place where the Christian rests after his labors. He had connections here, friends here, that were pulling him back; but his mind was going after God." If he had departed in that state at that time, he would, he said, have been perfectly happy. He was sanctified then, but he stayed here eight or nine months longer. He was one sanctified soul who remained upon earth after sanctification. And that is better than all argument the testimony of a living witness, one who feels that perfect rapture. What complete resignation he showed to the will of God and that I claim as the key-stone in the arch of sanctification. This state of resignation which comes from a complete yielding of everything, body and soul to the will of God, brings with it a peace which we generally and you must get there before you go. call sanctification
Z66
God
his testimony
"
the testimony of a
;
dying
man
to
have that he
I
am
willing to go
fit."
now up
God
heaven,
Then
at the
there is
in a good
man
judgment.
had almost said that this would be the most complete revelation. There is a revelation of glory at the judgment in the fact that the good man shall be entirely vindicated. It is said that "a lie will go a thousand miles while truth is getting its boots on." But at the judgment, truth will catch up. And that is one great purpose of the judgment that all wrongs may be made right, and that a good man may be vindicated before all
I
who
and, therefore,
there were no
judgment
at
which
all
be made
posed.
did,
known
But we
to all
who
and ail who did not hear of us, will know the truth, and the good man's character will then shine. We shall
then see the heart, the motive, the intent, as
God
sees
it.
"
Then we
Him we
;
shall see
Him
as
he
is;"
"we
know even
as
we are known."
As the
Apostle says,
absolutely.
"We shall no longer know in part," but We may not know all that God knows we
may
that
but everything
that our
is
minds
shall
come
necessary
will be
There
234
be ever increasing.
it all,
we
shall
know
it.
And
in
man that is born of God, we shall see the real glory of the christian character.
is
a revelation of glory in
through
all eternity.
We shall
new
revelations
These sufferings are not worthy to be of divine glory. compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us."
God's glory shall be revealed in us throughout
nity
!
all eter-
We
never thirst
We
We shall
we
song of
may God
what belongs
our
lives.
Then
loved brother,
who
departed,
we
dying hour,
Let
to fold
of the righteous.
me
him
with us; we have enjoyed his talents; we have received He was an honor to the instruction from his counsels. connection, and to the General Conference of which he
to Christianity.
my
brother.
We
shall soon
As
I said of
him
men whom
whom
235
'
When
resting
in his presence I
of a great
man
upon me;
I-felt
have never been able to sound his depth, to measure the breadth of his mind, and I do not know the
I
man who
has.
loss, in
We
our
the State, in
But,
blessed be
God
things,
gain and He that knoweth all and doeth all things well, knows what is best for us. No doubt he had some good purpose in taking him away from us. Let us imitate his virtues, and seek to conform to the will of that Saviour he loved and cherished. So that when our days are numbered here below, we may meet him on the shining shore. To his weeping relatives I would say, weep no more dry up your tears. He is gone where
' '
Are
felt
He
But
in the presence of
May God
eternity
236
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION,
SERMON
XVII.
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
"
Made ready
before
it
was brought
thither."
Kings
vi, 7.
It will
It is
full
be seen that the text is not a complete sentence. taken out of its connection, in such a way, that its
is
import
not apparent.
This
is
done
for the
purpose
we wish
to illustrate.
The
view " made ready." It also indicates the time and place in which this preparation must be made, if made at all, " before it was brought thither." The whole verse reads, " And the house, when it was in building, was built of stone made ready before it was brought thither: so that there was neither hammer, nor axe, nor any tool of iron heard in the house, while it was in building." The house referred to was the temple built by Solomon at Jerusalem, which was erected according to the divine plan as a place of divine worship and service; wherein God might dwell among his people in visible appearance. This was the most interesting and beautiful structure ever erected by mortal hands, and was a type of that building not built by man, but eternal in the heavens. We shall not attempt anything like a minute description of the temple, but will speak only of a few of its features. It was three-
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
score cubits long, thirty in height
237
The common
about
feet,
the distance from the elbow to the extremity of the middle finger, or the fourth part of a well proportioned man's
structure.
its
Its
There were towers extending up to the height of a hundred and eighty feet. Its length was from east to west, and its breadth between north and south and represented what was anciently supposed to be the shape of the world, viz: an oblong square. There was a porch extending across one end, ten cubits broad and thirty high. Besides the supporting columns of this porch, there were two massive pillars set up as monuments, or ornaments, or both. There has been a question in controversy respecting the height of these columns, as in Chronicles, they are said to have been thirty-five cubits high, in Kings eighteen. It is possible, however, that they were cast in one piece, and then cut in two, and that in Chronicles, the length of the whole piece is given. The statement in Kings is It is accepted by the great best supported by other facts. Jewish historian, Josephus, and to say nothing of chapiters and globes, a column of thirty-five cubits could not be set up under a porch only thirty cubits high. There w as some reason, I have no doubt, for the masOf an ordinary wellsive proportions of these columns. proportioned column, the height is supposed to be about nine times its diameter. The diameter of these was four cubits, indicating a column of thirty-six cubits. Their names seem also to indicate extraordinary proportions. The name of the one on the left hand w as Boaz, which
breadth thirty.
;
238
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
name
worshippers,
coming up to the temple, beholding these massive pillars and calling to mind the signification of their names, would exclaim "In strength is this house established." And to us, there is in them a typical signification of the strength which God will put forth to establish his church and to defend his people, against all the assaults of the
:
powers of darkness. Some suppose that the object of Solomon, in setting up these columns, was to represent the two imaginary pillars that the ancients supposed were placed at the equinoxes to support the heavens:
this
if
would account
to
tradition
massive proportions.
should prefer
to
com-
memorate the two pillars, said to have been set up by Enoch before the flood. Enoch enjoys a most honorable distinction among the antideluvians. Jude informs
us that he was a prophet, and that he foretold the de-
by fire, and a judgment, to be followed by an eternal state, either of happiness or misery. Tradition informs us that Enoch, vexed by the wickedness of his time, assembled those in w hoin he had confidence, (including Adam, Seth, Jared and Methuselah) and implored their assistance in stemming the tide of wickedness, which w as "overflowing the world.
struction of the world
7
teries,
and that to preserve the sacred mys. committed to his charge, he built two great columns on a high mountain. Not knowing whether the
either fire or water,
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
destruction would be by rcater or
fire,
239
be built one of a
kind of granite, which is said to resist the fire, and the other of brass, which he supposed would resist the force of a flood. We are told that the granite column was overturned, swept away, and washed into a shapeless mass by the force of the flood; but the other, by the providence of God, stood firm. If this tradition is true, the mystery of these columns is solved. They were two in number, to commemorate the original two, and composed of brass, to commemorate the one which withstood the force of the flood. They were cast hollow, and were The chapiters were the depository of the archives. adorned with wreaths of net work, lilly work and pomegranite, symbolizing the unity of the three master minds engaged in the work (Solomon, King of Israel Hiram, King of Tyre; and Hiram, the architect and beautifier of the temple) and also the peace, plenty and prosperity which the people enjoyed under their direction and care. Upon one of the balls, which surmounted the columns, was traced maps of the earth's surface upon the other, a view of the heavenly bodies. The temple was built of stone so completely squared, that it was difficult to find the joints, and so white, says one writer, that it resembled a large snow-bank. Its gold-covered top, when viewed in the sunlight, presented a brilliancy which dazzled the eyes of beholders. Grand and complete as this building was, it is said to have been erected without the sound of any iron tool being heard on it while it was being constructed. Iron was considered polluting. In Deuteronomy xxvii, 5, we read that God commanded Moses to build an altar of stone, but not to
;
; ;
240
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
lift
an iron tool upon it. Also, in Exodus xx, 25, we " And if thou wilt make me an altar have the following of stone, thou shalt not make it of hewn stone: for if thou lift thy tool upon it, thou hast polluted it." For this, with other reasons, no iron tool was used in the erection of the temple. But how could such a splendid structure be erected without the sound of some iron tool being heard? The Hebrews are said to have a tradition that the stones were not formed and polished by human industry, but by a worm called samir, which God prepared for that purpose; and that the stones come together of their own accord, and were erected by angels. We have also read a Mohammedan tradition, that Solomon, being annoyed by the noise made by the workmen in preparing the materials, offered an imprisoned genii his liberty if he would inform him how the hardest materials could be worked without noise. The genii admitted that he possessed no such knowledge, but said it might be learned from the raven. Take (said he) the eggs from a raven's nest and cover them with a crystal bowl, and thou shalt, Solomon see how the mother bird will cut it through. the instruction, and soon a raven came and flew followed about the bowl, but finding that she could not get at her eggs, she flew away, but soon returned with a stone in her beak, called sarnur, with which the bowl, being touched, fell into two halves. Solomon procured a num ber of these stones and divided them among the work:
to
without the slightest noise or confusion. From these fabulous traditions, it is evident that it was geneially
known
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
fusion
241
which fact is attempted to be accounted for by the putting forth of these traditions. But respecting this and everything else in the history of God's ancient people, the Scriptures are the most satisfactory most In recertain, full and complete source of information. gard to the matter under consideration, the text supplies a most reasonable solution: "The house was built of stone made ready before it was brought thither." The preparation of the stone only, is mentioned but the expression is hyperbolic, in which a part is mentioned for
the whole.
The preparation
is
in-
There were three places in which the materials were prepared. The stones were prepared in the quarry, the wood in the forest, and the metals in the clay ground, on the banks of the river, between Succoth and Zeredatha.
tended
to
be included.
The statement
to
must be made before we cross the narrow stream of death. We have remarked that this Jerusalem structure was a composed of glotype of the temple of the saints on high
rified believers.
To prepare us
is
temple
not
an
external preparation.
call it a professional
We some times
our duty
to
preparation.
It is
make
We
stand up for
in love
we are no longer
with
it;
it
242
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
This we. can do, and this God requires of us. He never does what man can do; hence he did not take away the He wanted to teach stone from the grave of Lazarus.
them
was their duty to do. They could not bring Lazarus back from the dead: he did that himself; but they could take the stone away,
that they had a
it
work which
to do.
The joining
is
of the
our part.
We
We
death of sin to a
ourselves of
all
of righteousness: that
is
God's work.
and strip dependence in anything we have or can have, growing out of ourselves. No matter what we have, whether a favorable lineage, wealth, honors, titles, or anything else of a worldly nature, it will not give us admission to the enjoyment of the saints in light. We shall be stripped of all these in the ante-chamber of death, and if we enter heaven, it will be without them and the work of stripping from our affection the love of the things of this world, is a most important part of the work
sinful habiis,
;
that spake as
man
never spake,
is
"Love not the world," says " for if any man love
not in him."
So long
we
love,
and
this
we
which
is
to
come.
We
must wear
drop
if
it
off at
any time.
eternal inheritance.
This
is
how slow we learn that more than meat, and the body more than raiwe
are:
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
243
ment; that we mast put off the filthy rags of unrightand be clothed with the garment prepared for us the wedding garment, the garment of salvation, which constitues our vital union with Christ, and gives us a title to, and a meetness for all the blessings of the marriage supper of the Lamb. The outward sign of this vital union with Christ, is a public declaration of our having accepted the offered grace by uniting with the church the people of God. To refuse to make this pubeousness,
lie
profession
is
rebellion:
it is
sin
it is
robbery.
It
robs
It
God
of the affectionate
robs the soul of the peace this secures, and robs the church
of the influence that
2.
we should
behalf,
There
is
an
internal preparation.
The heart, by nature, is and desperately wicked. The guile thereof must be removed, the stony nature must be taken out its hardness must be melted, and its coldness consumed by the flame of divine love. The rough and unpolished state of the stone in the quarry, the timber in the forest, and
preparation of the heart.
deceitful
is
fit
emblem
of
human
nature
and depraved state. There is much rubbish of sin to be removed from our nature, much earth to be shoveled off from our affections, and much dross to be
burnt up, before we shall appear as stones squared, polished and
numbered
for
244
3.
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
There
is
"practical 'preparation.
There is work to be performed not meritorious work not work which produces righteousness, but work which is the fruit of righteousness, by which our righteousness
is
evinced.
"By
The
in the
life
a mistake
those
who
ter of their
Indeed,
marks so prominently, However well the cautious that none need be deceived. ones may conceal their defects, there is one Eye from which none can hide; and because it is the eye of the Inspector General, under which we must pass, it is of the
there are
utmost importance to us that our works are such as will bear inspection: only such as spring from love to God
places in
which
There are also three places in which the material for the New Jerusalem temple is being prepared, viz: the family, the social circle, and the church. We must not forget that children have souls as well as bodies, which must be fed and clothed. While we are trying to outdo our neighbors in providing fine dress for our children, we must not neglect to endeavor to secure for them the garment of salvation which is freely offered. Then there is the social circle, in which much work is to be done, or great loss will be sustained. Brotherly love and relief are used as motors in society but their demands are not
;
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
fully
245
met by administering to the wants growing out of There are distressed, afflicted, and perishing souls, which must be relieved, and clothed now, or being found naked at the judgment, will be ashamed. Whatever is done by us to advance the hapbodily afflictions.
piness of others,
is
own
souls shall
be watered
4.
also.
is the
There
church,
and
its circles,
which
constitutes the
All
its
may
pre-
all
went down to the sea. Likewise, the mathe heavenly structure must be prepared on this
This
And about
this,
we are prepared.
we Every
its place in the building. In Psalms we read that, "the stone which the builders refused became the head of the corner." This suggests the idea that a stone must have been carried up for inspection, which, owing to the ignorance of the inspectors, was refused, but afterwards had to be accepted, as it proved
without which
it
The
Master overseer of the heavenly building will make no such mistake he knows the place for every piece, whether
:
corner or cap-stone.
Just here
may remark,
that this
246
A DESIRABLE CONSUMMATION.
benevolent
societies,
courses delivered to
which have
been greatly praised as promoters of human happiness. Whether they are or not, depends largely upon their subordination to evangelical religion.
If they claim soul-
saving efficienc3T
or
church,
From
not your
to
fit
us
God grant
that our
preparation
may
we
spir-
247
SERMON
XVIII.
Our
text
is
his servant
to write in a
churches in Asia.
John, the beloved disciple of Jesus, having survived
all his
to silence him, he was Patmos by the Emperor DoWhile thus in exile on initian (it is generally believed). account of his testimony to the truth, it pleased the Lord to give him a prophetic view of the conflicts and triumph The things which he beheld of his kingdom on earth. in this vision, he was commanded to write in a book and send unto the churches, over which he is supposed to have been the presiding Bishop. God sometimes permits men to remove his servants
upon the
isle of
from a particular field of usefulness, but not to hinder them from doing good. Indeed, it has often happened,
248
that the very
to hinder,
God has
to
overruled
to
If a
man wants
to
he usefully employed,
God
will find
him,
let men do what they may to Bunyan was cast into Bedford jail,
means
to
the
God
comages,
employed him
till
in writing a work,
which
will carry
through
all
message
epistles,
The
hand"
"
Then
know thy
works."
a state-
ment of the condition of the church designated, a commendation of that which was good, and a condemnation of that which was bad. In two of the churches, Smyrna and Philadelphia, there was nothing to condemn: in one, Laodicea, there was nothing to commend. The other four was a mixture of good and bad. To three of them there is an exhortation to repentance. Ephesus, to which the language of our text is addressed, was not in quite so bad a condition as Laodicea or Sardis, yet we have no account of its improvement, by reason of the exhortation sent, and its total extinction affords a striking evidence of the infliction of the punishment threatened
249
itself
was for ages without an inhabitant. To John was told to write thus, " I know thy works, and thy labor, and thy patience, and how thou, canst not bear them which are evil, and thou hast tried them which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found them liars, and hast borne and hast patience, and for my name's sake hast labored and hast not fainted. Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee," etc. Notwithstanding there was much in this church to commend, there were also a few things amiss, and we have
this church,
Such
is
the
it is
eventually root
it
will
its vic-
over a month ago, while steaming down the on board the steamer Greenville, I w as studying this passage, not with a view to preaching from it at any time, but simply for my own edification. I was suddenly
Tar
river,
bear the message contained in the text to this church. This church, or its condition, had not been in my thoughts during that day, or for days, until that moment, but the
to
felt
it
my
duty,
if
called
upon
to
to discourse
from
this subject.
il
250
ferent subject
to select
been
left
Nevertheless,
I think
Holy
Spirit.
and word of God, in the use of such means as God them ability to command. The more I thought upon this subject, the more I felt the burden of the message resting upon me. Nor did I feel relief until I began
Spirit
gives
to write
down
the cogitations of
my
heart.
There is certainly some resemblance between the situation and history of this church and the church at Ephesus. That was the first church named among those to whom a message was sent -most likely the first one formed, and the chief of those over which the Apostle presided. Ephesus was a flourishing maritime city, possibly the most flourishing of its time. Likewise, this church is situated in the first of American cities, and was the first African Methodist Episcopal church formed upon earth.
It
engage against caste prejudice. Before the foundation of any other of the early African M. E. churches was laid, her walls were towering up toward the heavens, and her sons and daughters were frequenting her courts. When Richard Allen, the founder of the Bethel connection, was, according
history, a local preacher in the
to their
own
and declaring
their
determination to enjoy
251
Ephesus.
also once a
"I know thy works, labor and patience." This was working church. Some of you can remember her labors of love in years gone. Both the ministry and the laymen were untiring in their efforts for the salvation of souls. Young men united in bands to attack the powers of darkness in their strong holds, and by their persuasions and prayers brought sinneis out from their haunts of iniquity, and gave them no rest until they found rest in Jesus. Night after night. w eek after week, and month after month, they were found at the sanctuary. The word "tire" was not -known to them. And the sisters the daughters of Conference and daughters of Zion connected with this church, made sacrifice and performed labor, the far-reaching results of which will only be fully known, when they are read in the light of eternity. Many a poor minister, dispirited and ready to give up a poor field, received such substantial encouragement from the
7
return with joy to their labor, and thus church after church was planted, and the borders of Zion were extended East, North, West, and finally South. Ephesus was commended for her patience, under the
have thought
be a virtue.
The
slanders of
set afloat, has been kept in circulation for nearly a century, and she has
252
suffered
denial.
them
to
The church
to evil-doers:
at
for its
aversion
"And how
are evil."
opposition to evil-doers.
of evil, so far as they
Our
Some ment
who came
call this
bonnets.
You may
it
was
what religion required. Plainness of dress was a part of their religion, and, to their notion, there was no religion without it hence, the}' insisted upon it. As they opposed vanity, so they opposed whatever else seemed to them evil. The church at Ephesus was commended for its acuteness and faithfulness in detecting imposters. " And thou hast tried them which say they are apostles and are not, and hast found them liars." Likewise has this church been rigid in its examination of those who claimed to be called to the ministry. She has admitted none but such as gave evidence of a divine call. Such is the favorable the bright side of the picture we have to present. I w ould that there was no other side to
their idea of
;
it;
it
:
is,
and the
Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love." Notwithstanding the gen-
commendation of the church at Ephesus, there were some things that were not approved. And I fear that if judgment was laid to the line, and righteousness to the
eral
253
plummet, the same complaint would truly be brought against old Zion. Come now! you have been with me thus far, you must go with me to the end. Face the
truth
:
if it is
is
not in
God
or his
we
is
wo
I
know
it,
the better.
line of
my
Thou
It
hast
left
thy
first
love."
Literally,
thou hast
lost,
remitted or
let
down thy
less
tion.
has become
men
has declined.
The
still
maintained and
moved
thee to
make any
lost. There is still an attendance upon divine worship, but it is cold and formal. There is little of that holy, burning Christian love which fills the heart with joy at the thought of entering the sanctuary a joy which was once so overflowing that it broke forth from the lips, in the language of the Psalmist, " I was glad when they said unto me, let us go up into the house of the Lord our feet shall stand within thy gates, O Jerusalem." It is not an uncommon thing, either with individual christians or with churches, to lose their first love. You have often seen young converts start out so full of zeal and good works, as to throw old christians in the shade;
and the same may be said of churches. They are formed under the influence of a great revival, or a godly zeal,
254
which takes possession of a portion of the members of an old organization, and causes them to break away from their cold and formal associates, and form a new organization for the promotion of holiness. Such were the circumstances under which the Methodist Church was formed. Sometimes larger religious liberty is desired. This desire gave birth to the A. M. E. Zion Church. These
young
zeal,
organizations, like
young
converts, usually
show
fire of their
and become as formal and dead as the older bodies from which they sprang. This is seen in the Wesley an church in England it is seen in the Methodist Episcopal Church it is seen in our own church. This declination of love is the result of various causes. With indi;
;
viduals,
it is
sach
as reading the
leads
not
out hope.
exclaims:
Ah where am I now When was it, how That I fell from my heaven of grace ? I am brought into thrall, I am stripped of my all, I am banished from Jesus' face.
'
'
Hardly yet do
know
go,
his love."
LOSS OF FIRST
LOVE
255
of the inclinaeffect,
Worldly
association,
and tend
Some
are led
away by temporal
prosperity.
Abundant
fill
our
and lead us
to greater devotion
to
have
much
are
As churches
composed of individual members, whatever tends to the declension of love in the members, affects the entire body. There is such a thing as a church being ate up with respectabilitytoo respectable to be a working church. Wrapped up in old moth-eaten garments of self-righteousness, they imagine themselves well dressed, in old-fashioned finery than which nothing looks worse. There is such a thing as a church wearing its old clothes, till they are entirely out of fashion and threadbare; or, in other words, living the past what it has been old-time respectability. Sometimes the members of a church get so respectable, that they don't want anybody in church but
'
They are especially opposed to new comers. They' can pay the minister themselves, if they can have
themselves.
one
to order;
and what
is
the church
?
for,
Sometimes a
after
7
long
w ould be sacrilege to diffuse any fresh and the result is, the church goes to seed. It loses all healthful growth and vigor; and from its scattered seed,
;
256
there springs
orous plants,
young and vigwhose branches shoot out and cover all the
up around
it
number
of
enthusiastic worshippers,
coming up to the sanctuary to Think of the influence Zion once wielded in this city. She was the great centre of attraction the other little bodies exh ibited only a reflected light, borrowed from the refulgence of her poured-out splendor. She was the queen of christian beauty, sendworship the God of Jacob.
:
ing out her rays to enlighten the dark places of the earth. When her sister churches were struggling for existence,
she was floating on the bosom of prosperity.
We
are
urged
to recollect
to
remember,
to
minds a remembrance of our former state; to think of the warmth of love, the ardor and zeal that once characterized this church. Such a recollection of our former state,
when
will
Nothing
is
better
257
chris-
upon a backslidden
till
they sing:
I
once enjoyed!
still
How
sweet their
memory
But they have left an aching The world can never fill."
void,
As our thoughts rest upon the blessedness we knew when the love of God was blown to a flame in our hearts,
by the soul-refreshing view of Jesus and his word; holy desires spring up, and holy resolutions are formed, and by the aid of divine grace, we are encouraged to call back
We
soul,
and
end
The
What e'er that idol be, Help me to tare it from thy And worship only thee.
So
shall
Calm and
So purer light shall mark the road That leads me to the Lamb."
remembrance
of former
happy days
will
remind the
how much
258
have accomplished, and how great attainments, they might have reached. Think of what vast results this church might have accomplished, if she had continued to weild the influence she once wielded: she might have been sitting here in the garden of prosperity, with a large number of full grown and flourishing daughters in this and neighboring cities. We have sent you from the South hundreds of promising lambs, but you have suffered
2.
them
to
folds.
We
are exhorted
"
first
works."
pent" sin, disobedience and slothfulness a fixed purpose, a firm and active resolution to forsake sin, and engage in the practice of every virtuous and benevolent work. Sometimes there is a desire in the heart of backsliders to return to the practice and enjoyment of
a godly sorrow for
religion, but they don't
know how.
And
there
may be
those
who long
know where
first
The text directs us: "Do thy God has done his works once and for all. The work now is ours: you will not be happy now until
to begin.
works."
you work.
It is
not so
much
it is
people to backslide as
work
and work that is required. The unregenerate are justified by faith, but believers can only feel the evidence of divine reconciliation, by actively and continually engaging in works of righteousness, which are the fruit of the Spirit. If you have backslidden, and feel cold and lifeless, and desire to feel the joy of former days, go to work for the Lord, for the salvation of souls, for the upthat has been neglected,
259
feel
the flame
Don't
sit
in silent
medsome
special visitation
you back and restore you to the joys of better days, but get up and go to work. The counsel of the Savior to those who have left their first love is, " To do. their first works,"-to engage themselves at once in doing what they did in the days of their early piety, the days when the light of heaven shone upon their when no kind path, when they went about doing good of weather, and no kind of amusement kept them from the prayer-meeting, or class-meeting. "The day of thy espousal." Do you wish to see the borders of Zion enlarged ? Go to work as our fathers did in the early days of the church, and as you did when in the enjoyment of your first love. Bring in the stragglers, call back the wanderers, raise up the fallen and gather the lost sheep, and let Zion's gates be crowded with a throng of happy worshippers. We can not regain all that has been lost by neglect, but there is much ground that can yet be occupied, and cheered by the hope of future possibilities: let us live, and work for God and Zion. Let us emulate the holy determination of the evangelical prophet. " For Zion's sake
from above,
to call
;
my
Notice the
THIS ADMONITION.
"
Or
else I will
remove
The
for that
260
city
the
means
if
removed,
God threatened
vious meaning
to inflict, if
He would
The
ob-
no more.
We
have already remarked how fully this judgment was Mr. Gibbon, though not a believer in revelation, bears testimony that will show with what exactness the prediction in regard to this church has been accomplished. " In Speaking of the conquests of the Turks, he says
inflicted.
:
fall
of
the
first
first
candlestick; the
desolation
church of mercy,
curious traveller."
Thus
it
also the Christian church have both passed away, and nothing remains but unsightly ruins. What God did in Ephesus in the ful-
and
fillment of his
He has removed the light, and left them in darkness. During the last ten years I have frequently seen church buildings in which a sermon
individuals and to churches.
who
will
own
the
name "Christian."
God
forbid that
any backslider should be left in eternal darkness. But meet for repentance is the only preventative. Perhaps some will feel discouraged, as so much time has been lost. You have no need to be. Let each do
fruits
261
Whining over
have nothing to do with the past, except to be admonished and instructed by its experience. To the future we must look. Thank God there is a future a bright and
glorious future
We
helm, and
now sparkling with delight, man the old ship Zion, and steam
her across the pitching and tossing waters of prosperity, and bring her into port laden with a full Christian cargo.
Then
promise
of God."
there
is,
is
"To him
life,
of the tree of
which
The
' i
O what
If
my sufferings here,
me meet
And worship
Give
at thy feet.
Take life or friends away But let me find them all again,
In that eternal day."
262
SERMON
XIX.
Jesus,
left
To
structions,
miracles,
and refreshment, and they suggested them away. The Lord Jesus, however, had compassion on the people, and said to Philip, (who was a native of that country), "Where shall we buy bread that these may eat? And this he said to prove him for he himself knew what he would do. Philip answered him, Two hundred penny worth of bread is not sufficient for them, that every one of them may take" a little." Andrew remarked that there was a lad present with five barley loaves and two fishes, but that these would go but a little way among so many. Jesus commanded the multitude to be seated upon the grass he gave thanks, broke the bread, gave it
they needed
: :
263
After
it
to the multitude.
were satisfied, they took up twelve baskets full of the fragments that remained. This miracle convinced many of them that Jesus was the Messiah promised them, and they were desirous to crown him and proclaim him king
;
which,
when he
perceived, he retired to a
mountain alone.
and returned
to Capernaum but as Jesus went not with them, the multitude remained. The next day, however, when other ships passed by, they also crossed the lake.
;
To
their astonishment,
how he had reached that shore. It had not occurred to them that he, who could multiply a few loaves and fishes into a meal sufficient to feed thousands, could also walk upon the bosom of the deep. Hence, they asked "Rabbi, when earnest thou hither?" He refused to gratify their curiosity by giving them an
:
motive in following him, and to teach them the lesson they should have learned from the miracle he
criticise their
had wrought the day previous. "Verily, verily, I say unto you, Ye seek me, not because ye saw the miracle, but because ye did eat of the loaves, and were filled. Labor not for the meat which perisheth, but for that meat which endureth unto everlasting life, which the Son of
man
sealed."
you for him hath God the Father They had not been duly impressed with the
:
264
should not
make
it
ment
with the using of them, and at most can only give mo-
mentary
satisfaction,
which gives eternal life, and and that felicity which is eternal. "Then said they unto him, What shall we do to work the work of God? Jesus answered and said, This is the work of God, that ye believe on him whom he hath sent," All the work required of
to obtain that spiritual food
is
faith in
It is this
work
;
he requires, until we believe on his Son. The perverseness of the hearts of most of his hearers, however, caused
them
to reject this
way
of salvation
not
all,
for
some
them he declared
to
whom
to his
own
him such
as believed
on
for they alone are acknowledged as bis. All who remain in unbelief are children of the wicked one. Some of his hearers, notwithstanding they had seen his latest
him,
They intimated
that, in
Our
manna
in the wilderness, as
gave them bread out of heaven to eat." But he answered, " I say unto you, Moses gave you not but my Father giveth you the that bread from heaven true bread from heaven." That was not the gift of Moses
written,
;
He
265
but of God it came not out of heaven, but out of the air. The Psalmist spake of manna simply as a type of the true bread, which God has now given out of heaven, and which giveth life to the world. When Jesus declared
himself this bread out of heaven, which
to the world,
some
of the
To
this Jpsus
Murmur
not
among
yourselves." Don't
mur-
mur
at
my
hard to be believed: it is not the want of truili in them, but your prejudice against me, and the perverseness of your will, which cause you to reject them. For such is the degeneracy of your nature, such the hardness of your hearts, such the stubbornness of your will, and such your depraved and helpless condition, that nothing but the power of grace divine can prevent your " No man can come to me, except the eternal ruin. Father which hath sent me draw him." The text is one of those passages which emphatically declare the universal degeneracy and helplessness of human nature, and
the absolute impossibility of restoration, without divine
aid.
Mankind
is
so
weak and
helpless, so
under the
reigning power of
sin, that
he cannot come
to Christ until
drawn by cords divine. He cannot savingly believe until God helps his unbelief. He cannot open his eyes to behold the light of the glory of God, in the face of Jesus
Christ, unless
God
gives
him strength
to
do
so.
Hence
Jesus
is
There
266
A figure, however, representing a more helpless state than that of sickness, is frequently employed to represent
the soul's condition, namely, death.
sin.
It is
dead
dead in
If these
"
And
life,
and
also as
none
spir-
could.
itual
The sinner
of the
is
destitute of
image of God, which is the essence of vital union with him; of his favor, which is life, and his loving kindness, which is better than life. The sinner " Sin," is judicially dead dead by sin through the law. " finding occasion through the comsays the Apostle, mandment, beguiled me, and through it slew me." (Revised version.) The sinner is doomed to natural death, and exposed to the danger of eternal death. I. But the text reminds us of the spiritual and moral DISTANCE WHICH SIN HAS WROUGHT BETWEEN MAN AND
life,
his
Maker.
man
caused
man
to
not out of his sight for if I borrow the wings with which the rays of morning light fly across creation with incomprehensible speed and with them fly and dwell in the uttermost parts of the earth, his allseeing eye shall follow me: not beyond his power; for if I take up my abode in hell, that is his prison, and his hand shall hold me there: but away from his holiness, away from' his reconciled love; away from that vital union with him, which constitutes our spiritual life and
;
;
joy unspeakable,
267
"Away on the mountain wild and bare, Away from the tender Shepherd's care."
bring
was
to
to
back
to
God.
"
He came
to seek,
and
save
"We all like sheep had gone astray, We had left the fold of God
Each wandering in a different way, But all the downward road."
We
had
all
heaven
to
bring
us back to God.
ity,
By
poverty, shame,
;
death
and by His resurrection; He has made an atonement, which meets all the demands of divine justice-
"He
was bruised for our iniquity, the chastisement of our peace was upon him, and by his stripes we are healed.''
to
We
He
ters,
is
and there
deceptive
He
if
is
the door
he shall be saved.
He
is
is
is false.
He
to
the
life;
He
invites us to
come
him:
"
He
wounds
his
ex-
his side
by a crown of thorns, and his back furrowed by a wire whip. He dwells upon the easiness of the terms " Without money and without price." He proclaims the richness and costliness of the provisions" My oxen and my fatlings are killed, all things are ready
his temples torn
:
>
268
come
And when
life."
:
every
effort
vain, he complains:
"Ye
will not
come
is
to
me, that ye
to
life
may have
(Rev. Version.)
It
our interest
hinges
him; nor can there be any present peace, security, or real happiness here without him. That
we may be
truly
'
'
happy
here,
of love,
Christ
Where all our pleasures roll The circle where our passions move, The center of our feoul."
to
heaven, with
rors,
is
and
hell,
with
urge
us.
is
to Christ; to refuse,
rebellion is
unto death
temporal,
spirit-
Hence,
and undone " For there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must
we must come
to Christ,
be saved." II. This brings us to notice that while vve are invited
to come to Christ
it
is
TO him. and
Yet,
no man can come to Christ except the Father draw him. Such is the language of the text, and it was uttered by the Son of God. "Then," says the sinner, "if I am not divinely drawn, I am lost." Precisely so. If God should pass you by, you are forever lost. "Then my case is both helpless and hopeless, unless the Lord be pleased to draw me?" It is verily so. "Then I have nothing to do, but
THE HELPLESSNESS OF HUMAN NATURE.
to wait
269
God's time?"
This
is
devil, in
falsehood.
it is
true that
you
to
all
you might
have
doing nothing, while waiting. If nothing else, you would be wishing the train might come on time; notwithstanding, this wish might be fruitless. But we have the assurance that a sincere desire for the Saviour's love
is
it
you
to
it
would be an ansious waiting something by the Psalmist, when he says: "My soul waiteth for the Lord more than they that watch for the morning: I say, more than they that watch for the morning." He repeated it to exhibit the force he wished to throw into it. You can imagine how a shipwrecked mariner, alone upon the bosom of the deep, would watch for the morning for light, by which his signal of disI repeat,
tress
could be seen.
The Psalmist
it
agony
of
any
distressed, benighted
It
who
He had drawn as near to the Lord as he could get. This is a waiting in which there is no folding of the arms, no indifference, but am energy
270
of longing,
now.
He
it, "Behold now is the day of salvation." Hence, you need wait no longer, but come! Come now, while he is drawing you for, blessed be God, he passes none by: he leaves no soul to perish in its sins not until love's utmost efforts, in its behalf, have been exhausted in vain. While power is given to the Son to save all who come to God through him, yet the Father is not an idle spectator of the glorious work. He is not only watching the process through which sinners are passing in the washing of regeneration, but is also engaged continually in drawing souls to Christ, that they may be saved. Do you say you don't understand the divine drawings ? You must remember that the instrumentalities by which objects are drawn, are as various as are the objects to be drawn. An apple is drawn from the limb of a tree to the ground by the power of gravitation that is, when the hold, by which it was held to the twig, has relaxed, then the power of gravitation, takes hold of it, and draws it to
proclaims
power of gravitation is not strong enough to bring it down. Likewise, when our affections relax their hold upon the things of this world, we are easily drawn to God by the cords of divine love. This earth, with all its sattellites is drawn around the sun by the joint action of the centre-seeking and centre-fleeing forces. The one keeps the earth from flying off into unlimited space, the other keeps it from tumbling into the sun. A train of cars is drawn by the power of steam, and a wagon is drawn by horse-power brought to bear upon traces attached to it. .Thus you see that matter is
the ground.
Till then, the
TIIE HELPLESSNESS
OP
HUMAN NATURE.
271
But there is something in man that is not matter, and in that something is the spring of all his moral actions. We call it the soul. As the body has a heart, or fountain out of which life's blood flows, so has the soul a heart, centre, or mainspring of all its action. This mainforces sailed to its nature.
drawn by
am
inclined
to
believe,
is
the
have heard men speak of doing things against their will, than which there could be no greater mistake. We. act only when the will acts: that which is done against our will, is not our act, but the power of forces "which we either cannot or will not control. To make the matter plain Suppose I lay my hand upon this Bible, a desperado rises up before me and shouts out, "Take that hand up!" I answer, "No, I won't." " Take that hand up, or I will blow your brains out !" he
I
:
exclaims.
Now,
if
my
my hand will still remain unmoved. If I don't say it, in so many words, my act says, " Crack away I won't move my hand." But if I am not willing to risk having my brains blown out, or am more willing to take up my hand than to take that chance, my will runs down into that hand and it comes up. It comes up by the consent of my will too. That force operating upon the will was strong, I grant; it the had to be stronger than the will, in order to make it yield. Likewise the will must yield to the divine influence hence, the cords by which men are drawn, are such as can be brought to bear upon the will. Jehovah says, I draw them by bands of men. There are peculiar cords by which human nature is drawn, and which operate
the danger before me,
!
272
upon the
for
which
act.
have declared
I
to
be responsible
every moral
And
may
God
will.
"
whosoever will/
Jesus
said, "
The consent
of
is
And
that
required of
many
There are
at
least three strong cords, which operate upon the will and draw men to Christ the cords of fear, the cords of interest, and the cords of love. The fear of hell, the hope of heaven, and the love of God, are the three grand motives prominently set forth in the Book Divine, and they are designed to draw men to Christ. Man is an intellectual
He
and
He
and
affections
which can
its
There came once a own importance: it was during a revival season. I said to him, " Would you like to go forward to the altar for prayer ?" He gave me a look, which seemed to say, " I don't want your prayers !" Now, I might have talked with that man for a month, while he was in that state of mind, without moving him. To have gotten that man to the altar, I would have had to apply physical force, and then only his body would have been there. But the services continued, the Spirit of God touched that man's conscience, tears stole down his cheeks, his head was bowed, and finally he arose and went to the altar, and found peace. That man's conin response to
influence.
moved
man
to
church,
filled
273
was reached, and caused to yield to the divine influence; and it would have taken strong chains to have held him back from that altar, to which he could only have been
dragged, a
little
while before.
came
man
was
to
church,
human
help-
minister
way
of salvation,
through
the
faith in Christ,
Before the
morning a thoughtless unbeliever, found that peace which he had never before thought of seeking for. His understanding grasped the truth, which he thought had never before been so plainly set forth, and reason said, " Why not accept the Saviour now?" That man's will yielded to the force of reason, and he was thus drawn to Christ, and saved. Let us suppose a lady, who is a millionaire, is
place of a servant
and become a
child's nurse.
What
if
is
the result?
You have
such a
to the position
She scorns the thought. But let that ladyof a servant be a loving mother, and let her child be at the point of
death, and where will you find her?
robes,
Clothed in scarlet decked with jewels of gold, and entertaining the gay and thoughtless mortals who delight only in exhibitions of sublunary grandeur? No! Where then? You will find her near that sick child, watching and waiting,
and serving
12
a servant
of the child.
274
toil,
and
What brought
her
by the cords
of love.
of affection
down? She was drawn down Her will was for that child.
to the force
says, draw them with cords of love;" With everlasting kindness have I drawn thee." You were all drawn to church this day, as you have often been, but I see not the cords by which you were drawn: and yet some of you were drawn so hard, that
" I
God
"
and again,
it
would have caused you pain to have stayed away. You would have been unhappy at home, on account of your great desire to be here. Some were not drawn so hard, but they are here. A little rain would have held some back, because they were not drawn by the kind of cords which draw people through all kinds of weather. You were drawn here by a variety of forces. Some were drawn by the cords of affection for the house and worship of God. Like the Psalmist, you were glad when they said unto you, "Let us go up unto the house of the Lord." You said with heart-felt love, with glowing rapture, "Our
feet shall
Jerusalem."
Some
felt
not
who
may have come to inquire for the Great PhysiOf such, the Matchless Speaker has said, "Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted." Perhaps some have been drawn by the cords of curiosity something new to possibly, some by the cords of vanity exhibit. " The bands of men," or cords by which they arc
ZYO
by which the Father draws souls to Christ. The danger, therefore, is not that we shall not be drawn, but that we
employed in vain. God passes none by. He leaves none to perish, until all the cords by which he draws men to his Son have been employed in vain. Do you say, "I have never felt the divine drawings?" Possibly they were so gentle and tender, and you so thoughtless and indifferent, that you failed to notice the heavenly influence. If you had been like the Psalmist, waiting for him more anxiously than they that wait for the morning, you would have felt the divine operation. Many are brought to Christ through a painful process, because they will not yield to the milder means. With some, severe providential interpositions have to be
suffer the divine influence to be
it
may
For, I repeat,
is
such
as the furnace
troubles.
Are you inclined to hang back until the strongest and most severe cords are employed to draw you ? Is it not more reasonable to yield to the milder influences? Is it
not unfeeling to put the Father to so much trouble to bring us to Christ? No man can truly say, he has never felt the divine drawings. Have you ever felt guilty, or a
moment's remorse
of conscience?
Have you
ever
felt
Such feelings
only come through the divine influence; they are his drawings if yielded to, they will bring us sweetly and
:
joyfully to Jesus.
once
remorse of conscience.
never expect
THE HELPLESSNESS OF HUMAN NATURE.
276
to
meet another, who can truthfully say the same. Is who can? If so, let him now stand up I conclude there is none. Then you have all been drawn perhaps time and again. Don't you remember a time in which you were aroused at midnight a night so dark
that
it seemed as though every star had been blotted out, and the stillness was so profound that it appeared as though all creation was at silence for a while? And don't you remember that, notwithstanding the stillness, you felt a horror as though 'you were in some dreadful presence? That was God drawing you by filling your conscience with tormenting fear? Have you at times, like Agrippa, felt that you were almost persuaded to be a christian? God was then drawing you by the cords of reason. Were you almost ready to accept the Saviour, while urged to do so by your dying mother ? He w as then drawing you by the cords of tenderness which you felt toward that sainted parent. If you have yielded to these influences, you are happy in the Saviour's love; if not, you have resisted the strivings of the Spirit: and God says, " My Spirit shall not always strive with man." The time will come, and you know not how soon, when God will cease to draw you, and then you will be forever undone. yield now, while you are under the divine
r
influence.
'
say,
On Thee
I'll
call."
277
Prayers
Angels are lingering near, rise from hearts so dear O wanderer, come!
" Almost persuaded," harvest is past! " Almost persuaded," doom comes at " Almost" cannot avail;
last!
"Almost"
is
but to
fail!
" Almostbut
lost!"
2^8
SERMON XX,
THE CHRISTIAN CHARACTERISTICS.
1
'And
first
in the midst of the throne, and round about the throne, full of eyes before and behind. And
creature was like a lion, and the second creature like a and the third creature had a face as of a man, and the fourth creature was like a flying eagle." Revelation iv, 6, 7.
(Revised Version.)
In the three chapters of this book which precede the one in which our text is found, we have a description of the state of the Christian Church as it existed in John's time, as revealed to him by the Son of God. This description
is
were.
After giving
suitable direction
and encouragement to the churches and their pastors, his attention was directed to a second vision, in which things were revealed which should transpire after that time
sively
that
is,
from the time of the vision until the mystery of God, respecting mankind on earth, should be accomplished. In this vision God is represented as seated upon his heavenly throne in the midst of his saints. His
to pass
come
glorious majesty
and
the most
finite
lively, beautiful,
mind could
possibly imagine.
The
picture includes
279
of the church triumphant before the throne engaged in unceasing adoration and praise. As no language of mine can equal that in which the beloved disciple paints this sublimely glorious and heavenly scenery, I transcribe his language " After this I looked, and, behold, a door was opened in heaven; and the first voice which I heard was as it were a trumpet talking
:
Come up
hither,
and
will
show
And immediately was in the Spirit: and, behold, a throne was set in heaven, and one sat on the throne. And he that sat was to look upon like a jasper and a sardine stone: and there was a rainbow round about the throne, in sight like unto an emerald. And round about the throne were four and twenty seats and upon the seats I saw four and twenty elders sitting, clothed in white raiment and they had on And out of the throne protheir heads crowns of gold. ceeded lightnings and thunderings and voices: and there were seven lamps of fire burning before the throne, which
thee things which must be hereafter.
:
;
And
and
in the
And
the
first
and the second beast like a calf, and the third beast had a face as a man, and the fourth beast was like a flying eagle. And the four beasts had each of them six wings about him and they were full of eyes within and they rest not day and night, saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come. And when the beasts give glory and honor and thanks to him that sat on the throne, who livetli
;
:
280
for ever
and twenty
cast their
elders fall
before
him
and
ever,
and
throne, saying,
Thou
art worthy,
:
and honor and power for thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure they are and were created." In this vision John beheld a door opened in heaven so it appeared to him and he had the gratifying promise of a further insight into the divine mystery. There are several of these openings mentioned in this book, by each of which John gained a new and more extended prospect. Here a door was opened, afterward the temple of God in heaven (chaps, xi, 19 xv, 5), and still later heaven John was bidden to itself was opened (chap, xix, 11). ascend, which it appears he did immediately, not in body
;
;
but in
spirit.
"
He
We
His mind received the impression of a picture Jehovah seated on a throne of majesty, arrayed in robes of glory, as a king, governor, and judge. The apof
pearance of three precious stones, connected with the rainbow, the lustre of which attracted the attention of the
seem indicative of his purity, or righteousmercy, and truth: and show, that in him mercy and truth are met together righteousness and peace have kissed each other. The jasper is white, signifying his purity and righteousness. The sardine stone is red, and denotes his justice, in executing vengeance upon his enemies. The emerald is green, and betokens mercy to the penitent. The rainbow signifies his truth in keeping his covenant: he is true to all his engageevangelist,
ness, justice,
;
281.
tnents. Around the throne, in a circular form, were four and twenty seats, upon which sat four and twenty elders.
to correspond with the patriarchal and Jewish costume, especially that of the Jewish priests their harps and golden vials seem to indicate their connection with the tabernacle and temple worship. Their golden
:
crowns indicated that they were made kings and priests unto God. Understanding the elders to represent the Old Testament church' I think we must regard the four beasts as a representation of the Christian Church. Dr. Doddridge remarks, that it was a very unhappy mistake in our English translators to translate this word. beasts it should have been translated " living creatures," One had wings, and anas it is in the Revised Version. other the face of a man, neither of which belong to beasts. I, therefore, adopt the term " living creatures ;" and shall
:
them as representing the Christian Church. These were nearest the throne. Their number indicates universality, and corresponds with the Christian Church, which is to extend to all nations. The new song which they sang "Thou hast redeemed us out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation," would not well apply to the Jewish church, for it was composed of one nation only; much less to angels, who were not redeemed. The elders sang of creation, with which the ancient church was best acquainted, the living creatures sang of redeeming love. I. Let us consider the characteristics of the Christian Church, as set forth in the description of these living creatures.
consider
282
Some think
intended to be
Church
at different periods is
first age, the Church undaunted courage; that in the second age, when the people of God were slain. like sheep for the slaughter, the Church was distinguished for unwearied patience that further on in its history, intelligence was its peculiar characteristic and, finally, when all the enemies are overcome, and every obstacle removed, she will go forth upon wings as an eagle, extend-
set forth
that in the
was distinguished
for
ing her conquests to earth's remotest bounds. however, that the picture
is
:
I think,
named
"
The idea of undaunted courage is set forth, The first living creature was like a lion."
life
How
fre-
and character
of the people of
it
God
undaunted
Forty days
hands
His death, and boldly charged His death to the enmity of the Jews; and declared that God had raised Him from the dead. Kings,
princes,
disciples to speak in
the
name of Jesus but they answered, " God rather than men," and continued
name.
We should
to
obey
speak in his
While
and
283
fear-
Nazarene.
The
danger and death in the cause of their Master, and counted not their lives dear if spent in defence of the truth. Paul at Athens, the seat of science, charged the learned Grecians as being in the darkness of ignorance and superstition, and urged them to repent and embrace the light which is revealed in the Gospel. To king Agrippa, associated with his beautiful sister Bernice, he put truth so pointed that he drew from the king's lips the acknowledgment that he was almost perdisciples faced
women
lamp
of truth
ger
mighty, through God, in pulling down the strongholds not by secret stratagem, but with open of the devil
boldness.
2.
tience
"
unwearied
The
The second
Horses
;
grow stubborn
but not
have seen him when the load was heavy get down on his knees, and hang to it, until his eyes seemed ready to start from their sockets. There is
I
Now
patience
is
We
are thus
admonished by
"
284
that ye
may
and
He
also refers
who endured
to the end,
and thereby
Also,
v, 10. 11.
through faith and patience, inherited the promisesSpeaking of the suffering and endurance of the Old Testament saints, he says, " they were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins, being destitute, afflicted, tormented; of whom the world was not worthy they wandered in deserts, and in mountains, and Hebrews xi, 37. Yet in dens and caves of the earth. through all of this they possessed their souls in patience, and obtained a good report were faithful to the end. These things being said of them, reminds us that patience especially becomes us as christians. How fully this virtue was displayed by the early christians is plainly seen in
;
:
'
under every dispensation of his providence, in our judgment, the capstone of christian perfection.
i l
They shall before his face appear, And by his side sit down To patient faith the praise is sure,
;
And
The
all
cross shall
The Captain
fering;
of our salvation
to
suf-
and we,
285
Christianity
The
reminds us that
bears the
marks of
The
mass
had the
face of a
man.
The
religion of Jesus
oracles:
is
ningly-devised fables.
onstrated,
and worthy
and the
it
We
yea,
breaking
ject in God's
dominion, they exhaust the utmost effort of their celestial powers in studying the mystery of redemption. It is the true wisdom, which cometh down from
heaven
edge.
They who embrace it are not mad, as Festus supHe, who had been so mad that he dwelt among the tombs in a nude state, cutting his flesh
posed Paul to be.
brought by
power to sit at the feet of Jesus, clothed, mind. " Then shall we know," says the prophet, "if we follow on to know the Lord." There is no limit to the knowledge secured through the religion of Jesus: we shall reach the source whence knowledge
its
and
in his right
The
idea of intelligence
is
not
one of the living creatures, but "they were full of eyes." It would be impossible to present the idea of intelligence more forcibly than by the representations in this vision. They were full of eyes round about and within. They
286
had not only eyes without, but within also to see themselves. Those who only have eyes without, cannot see themselves. They can see everybody else, can detect the
smallest defect in the character of others; butnot in their
own can see a moat in their brother's eye, but not the beam in their own eye. The genuine christian has large self-knowledge: he discerns his own faults; can see wherein he is wrong; discovers evil in his own nature studies and knows himself; finds the plague in his own
heart,
and
rests
not until
it
is
removed.
Light and
knowledge, and their natural productjoy and peace, increaseth, wherever the religion of Jesus prevails. Ev* eryerything beastly in humanity vanishes, as Christian*
ity goes forth
bearing on
its
face the
beams
of angelic in*
telligence.
4.
also
unceasing
"
The
It is
day and night, saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come." They also had each six wiogs. It must be a dull mind that does not perceive
also said of the creatures, that they " rest not
Activity is the general order of created things. The subordinate planets cease not to perform their stupen* dous revolutions, and the burning orbs, which are suns
and centers
to travel.
have each
written, "
Mark
the
Even Satan's crew are always busy. For it is They have no rest that worship the beast." The hosts of heaven rest not, but difference.
287
The heavenly
:
employ themselves
their
adoration.
rest
;
they cannot
upon the bosom of like one upon a bed a burning lake, they shift and turn, of thorns, seeking ease or rest, but find it not. Even here on earth they have no rest; their master, the devil, keeps them busy. Some he employs in useless vanitiessuch as going to the circus, card-playing, dancing, and other vain amusements; others he employs on coarser, baser, and more daringly wicked work such as slander, adultery, robbery, drunkenness and murder. They are
agony forbids
tossed
wicked cannot
rest
woe, and saints in heaven will not rest/or cease their holy
exercise
;
hang down,
until they
all
have done
all
in their
power
which
to
others within their circle, into that meetness and perfectness of heart
ceptance.
and
life,
We
David
age
is
"My
Thou
hast
my
"
Mine
But we are admonished, by the vast concerns that hang upon these fleeting monothing before thee."
ments.
The
tell it
288
"
Secure, insensible,
A point of time,
a moment's space,
place,
our souls,
if
saved at
all,
if
must be saved
secured at
all,
lasts.
Our
eternal interests,
lasts.
We conclude
with the
No room
If now the Judge is at the door, And all mankind must stand before
And wake
Before
to righteousness.
me
tremendous day, thou with clouds shall come To judge the nations at thy bar And tell me, Lord, shall I be there, To meet a joy doom?
The pomp
When
No
matter which
my thoughts
joy,
employ,
A moment's misery or
But,
O when both
!
shall end,
289
my
destined place?
Nothing
is
But how I may escape that death That never, never dies How make mine own election sure, And when I fail on earth, secure
A mansion in
the skies.
Ah And
!
my heart,
290
SERMON
DAVID'S ROOT
XXI.
IN
"I am the root and offspring of David, the bright, the morning star." Revelation xxii, 16. (Revised Version.)
in vain
Words
beauty, the glory, the wisdom, the power and the grace
immutable and incomprehensible Being who apDaysman. The inspired penmen have employed the most beautiful and expressive figures that heaven and earth afford, to aid our limited comprehension and yet, they have failed, as all finite effort must fail, to grasp the Infinite. He is the " Branch," the " Dayof this
pears as our
Renown"
;
"
High Tower,"
from the Storm," a " Covert " the " Shadow of a Great Rock in a Weary Land," the " Way, the Truth and the Life," the " Rose of Sharon," the " Lilly of the Valley," the " Fairest among Thousands," and the " Altogether Lovely." In the text he is the " Root and Offspring of
ter
901
The
up the
He
this
Omega, but
language
is
my
am
the root
star."
and
offspring of
The
first
figure
is
of Jesus as
"
If
he possessed but one nature, and that the divine, he might be the root, but not the offspring of David. If he had but one nature, and that the human, he might be the offspring, but not the root of David. In his divine nature, he is the root, the source, the first, the underlying principle; hidden from view, but upholding and sustaining all things. As a root, he sends forth the bough and branches of the visible creation unseen, but as surely sustaining all things as the unseen root sustains the He is elsewhere spoken of as God's fellow and tree. companion; his possession in the beginning of his way, before his works of old-t-before the mountains were brought forth, before time was born, or light conceived. We feel back through countless ages, but cannot touch the beginning of his way we throw our thoughts back through the mental telescope, back, back, back! and attempt in vain to survey the eternal regions, in which he hides himself with curtains too thick for mortal thoughts to pierce. He is the Everlasting Father and Eternal Son, the great First Cause of all things,
292
of
Himself uncaused and eternal. He is also the offspring David sprang from David. This eternal, self-existing Being condescended to appear in human form, as the descendant of a mortal. He, who in the beginning was with God, and was God, became flesh and dwelt among us in mortal form was really and truly man, with all human infirmities, sin excepted. As a man, he was hungry, thirsty, and weary as a man, he ate and slept. He had the human passions of love, desire, fear, sorrow and joy. He was really and truly man had a human body, and a human soul and spirit; had a will of his own, separate from, but in all things yielding to that of his Father. He said to his Father, " Not as I will, but That he might die for us, he took upon as thou wilt." himself our nature in ail its weakness and infirmity, except sin. Like Adam, " sufficient to have stood, yet free Hence he is called "the second Adam." to fall."
The
"
morning
star," is
the charrepresent
become our
Daysman. is As such, the planet referred to would not him the sun would be a better figure.
In his divine nature, he
:
ferred to
is
is
the earth,
If
Venus
is
which shines only by reflection. inhabited, (as is most likely,) to its inhabi-
Venus does
the earth
to us,
is
except
much
sec-
In the
first place,
larger;
and
ondly,
having an orbit outside of Venns, the inhabiof that planet view its whole illuminated surface, tants when at its nearest point at which time it must reflect a
it
;
VENUS
light
IN"
THE APOCALYPSE.
'IVo
m0 st
it is
beautiful to behold.
We
when
it is
from us
on the other side of the sun, a hundred and "When at its nearest point fifty-six million miles away. Being belike the new moon. to us, we only see its rim,
when
its
illuminated surface
ture of Jesus.
The
true character of
Venus
Its
it
is
only seen
seen in
when
is
illuminated side
is
us,
and
its
true
Likewise, the
human
nature
was most clearly seen when he hung upon the the rays of the divine glory were wholly withdrawn from our view, and his lifeless body hung between the heavens and the earth. His suffering and death were convincing evidences of his humanity, while
when
away
and powers, drew out and came forth as the spoiler of hell and conqueror of death, and exulting in his possession of universal dominion. These
its
reflected
fre-
by the per-
294
up your eyes
skies,
And send your fears away News from the regions of the
{Salvation's
born to-day."
city of David, a Saviour,
"
which they were to find the child wrapped, but also to which the angel alluded the light the divine glory, which he bid them not to fear this, no doubt, illuminated their path, and guided them to the place where the young child was. It was the rays of divine glory reflected by him that caught the attention of the far-off eastern wise men, and guided them to Jerusalem, to which they came, saying, " Where is he that is born king of the Jews, for we have seen his star in the east, and have come to worship him." We are not to understand that they saw this star to the east of them but that they were in the east when they first saw it, westward from them. Looking toward the west, they discovered a light which appeared to them as a star, which they had never noticed before. The} called it his star, and no doubt it was a brightness emanating from him possibly the same that appeared \to the shepherds. It was a sure guide, designating the very spot where he
clothes in
dwelt. Just before they reached Jerusalem, its rays were withdrawn, that they might inquire, and thus announce
295
So soon as the divine purpose was accomplished, and they had started to Bethlehem, they again beheld the light, which differing from
which you never seem to get nearer, it stood over the place where the young child was, and guided them to the very spot, which, when they reached,
other
stars, to
star,
The
him
so clearly, that,
The
at twelve years
he sat in the temple among the doctors, asking and answering questions with such wisdom and grace that all who heard him were astonished. In the miracles of Jesus also, as before mentioned, his divinity shone forth. Before the splendor of his divine power, darkness fled, and a flood of light rushed into the
eyes of those
blind.
Infirmities retreated
all healing power, and icy death melted away before the lustre of his brightness. display of divine wisdom was exhibited in the an-
swers of Jesus to those who attempted to catch him in his words. Behold the Scribes and Pharisees, with a
woman, an
selves
him
to
may
condemned, and the woman left without an accuser. to place him, either in the attitude of contradicting Moses, which would have moved the enmity
They thought
of all
who revered
the
memory
296
historian
which would have been inconsistent with his kinglyclaims. They thought they had him completely cornered, and therefore pressed him for a decision. They declared the case to be a clear one, the woman was taken in the very act, and could make no defence. There was nothing left but to decide as to what disposition should be made of her. " Now Moses in the law commanded that such should be stoned, what sayeth thou ? " When he stooped down and wrote upon the ground as though he heard them not, they pressed him for an answer with an energy which seemed to be inspired by a feeling of assured triumph; but when he arose, he easily swept away the webs they had woven around him. He neither contradicted Moses, nor assumed the authority of a magistrate, nor denied his authority in the matter but he
;
demanded
which they
sin
law required.
"
He
that
is
without
among
you,
let
him
first cast
a stone at her,"
At
founded by his wisdom and penetrating power; and the woman was left, without an accuser alone with Jesus,
;
aging words, " Go in peace and sin no more." In company with the Herodians, the Pharisees made a second great effort to catch him in his words they came with a question about the tribute money, and thought they
:
This,
it
297
he might have simply referred them the law, hence, they quickly added, "Shall we give, or
If he had said would have said that he was a pretty king, teaching his subjects to pay tribute to another! The throne of David, which it was promised that Messiah should restore, would not be restored, in its
shall
we not give?
"
Mark
for-
who
justified
it.
We
our-
what contempt our own revenue officers On the other hand, if he had said they should not pay tribute, they would have accused him before the Roman court. It will be remembered, that this accusation was brought against him before Pilate, but was not sustained. If they could have proven Thus it this, they would have had a case against him.
in
know
bringing
him
into dis-
Romans or
to
and it necessarily followed that Caesar must have his own " Render unto Csesar the things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's." In other words, if by. your wickedness you have fallen under Caesar's subjection, if you are reminded of that subjection by every financial transaction, if you have no
to Caesar;
currency but
Caesar's,
re-
of intercourse with
your
298
neighbors.
But remember
that,
notwithstanding
this,
and Herodians having been by his wisdom, the Sadducees came next, with a question by which they thought to render the doctrine
Scribes, Pharisees
The
silenced
the
Coming
to Jesus,
man
to
case the
they
named
no children, and last of all the woman died also. They asked "In the resurrection, when they shall rise, whose wife shall she be of them, for they all had her to wife?" They, no doubt, thought they had pictured a delightful heaven, where seven men But he answered, would bequarreling over one woman
died, leaving
:
!
whom had
"
Do ye
not therefore
err,
because ye do not
of
known
marry.
God?" come they don't need to Here sickness wastes, and death depopulates,
power
:
and marriage is necessary to maintain the human species. There death is unknown sickness, sorrow and pain have no place for the heavenly atmosphere is untainted with disease, and marriage is unnecessary to maintain the
;
know
He who
at the
'
299
and give them an angelic nature, who neither marry, nor are given in marriage, " For in the resurrection they
neither marry, nor are given in marriage, but are as the
angels of
God
in heaven."
He
then
But as touching
was spoken unto you by God, saying, I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob?
God is not the God of the dead, but of the living." Then Abraham, Isaac and Jacob are living, and as they live, we shall live also. After this we are told, they asked him no more questions, and thus acknowledged themselves
confounded by his wisdom. But he is the Bright and Morning Star. Venus is preeminently the bright morning star; appearing as such
for
months
is
MerMars,
cury
so near to the
sun that
it
is
seldom seen.
and
long
their rising
and
do not mark any But Venus, having an in making its journey around the
setting, therefore,
sun,
zon,
it
never
rises
and therefore never rises more than three hours ahead of the sun its average being only one hour and a half ahead of the sun hence, when it rises, we know that that its dawn will soon appear. It is is coming day truly the certain harbinger of day. Other lights may mislead, deceive and disappoint us, but it, never When
;
;
it arises, is
we know
It
Now
300
Jesus
may
duced the
be called the Morning Star, because be introfirst ray of hope into this sin cursed world.
Man had lost the divine image and favor, the last ray of hope had faded from his soul, and there was nothing but
a fearful looking for the blackness of eternal darkness a darkness so dense that no star was seen, nor was there
hope of a morning
ness the
"
to follow.
Morning Star
of
The
seed of the
woman
;
This promise gave hope to a lost world: it was the har^ binger of the day dawn it ushered in the morning of redemption; it introduced the day of salvation, and pro-claimed the approach of the dayspring from on high. In
its
its
path,
City.
and cheered them on their journey to the Celestial As the Morning Star, Jesus ushered in the day of
freedom from the rigor of the legal economy. What a burdensome system that was; what an almost endless round of ceremonies, of new-moon feasts, and many kinds of offerings, of fasts, affliction of soul, and long and te-* dious journeys to the place of worship. These were.types
of the one offering for sin, of the intense
agony
of
him
who should
be bruised for our iniquity, upon whom our chastisement should fall, and by whose stripes we should be healed. His coming in the flesh lifted the burden of
claimed the day of Gospel liberty a day in which we have no need to make a pilgrimage to some high mouh* tain, or to Jerusalem to worship, but wherever two or three are assembled in his name, truly believing, there
%
301
we may expect
tion ascends
assured
il
of hallow'd space
Jehovah's presence can confine Nor angels' claim restrain his grace, Whose glories through creation shine.
It
Where two
or three are
met to
raise
Their holy hands in humble prayer, Or tune their hearts to grateful praise.'*
happy
condition,
hath appeared and there is remission, JJo burdensome rite henceforth on us laid, For Jesus the price of redemption hath paid."
star
The
As
Morning
and
peace.
Star,
opes and
fills
He
is
represented
by the Great Teacher, as sitting in darkness, in the valley and shadow of death in gross darkness. And we who have been called out of darkness into God's marvelous light, can testify
how dark
and
302
Star.
with what rapture we beheld the rising of the Morning As its glorious rays brightened the morning of our
espousal,
we sang
" In darkest shades,
when he
appeared,
star,
"And
right-
of the
prophecy
is
at
:
hand.
He
that
him be righteous still and he that is filthy, let him be made filthy still and he that is holy, let him be made holy still. Behold, I come quickly and my
:
reward
his
last,
is
with me,
is.
to
render to each
man
the
according as
first
work
and the
may have a right to come to and may enter in by the gates into the Without are the dogs, and sorcerers, and fornica* city. tors, and murderers, and idolaters, and every one that loveth and maketh a lie. I Jesus have sent mine angel I am to testify unto you these things for the churches. the root and offspring of J)avid, the bright arid morning The Spirit and the bride say, Come. And he that star. heareth, let him say, Come. And he that is athirst, let him come he that will, let him take of the water of life I testify unto every man that heareth the words freely. of the prophecy of this book If any man shall add UiUo
wash
the tree of
;
303
them, God shall add unto him the plagues which are written in this book: and if any man shall take away from
the words of the book of this prophecy,
God
shall take
and out of the holy city, which are written in this book. He which testifieth these things saith, Yea; I come quickly. Amen: come, Lord Jesus. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with Amen." all the saints. THE END.
his part
away
from the
tree of life,
BISHOP
S.
T.
JONES.
BISHOP
J.
J.
MOORE.
BISHOP
].
P.
THOMPSON".
BISHOP THOS.
H.
LOMAX.
Appendix.
: :
SERMON
I.
THE UNPARDONABLE
BY BISHOP
J.
SIN.
J.
MOORE,
D. D.
"Verily, I say unto you, All sins shall be forgiven unto the sons of men, and blasphemies wherewith soever they shall blaspheme but he that, shall blaspheme against the Holy Ghost, hath never forgiveness." Mark hi, 28, 29.
Upon this subject men and women's minds have been much exercised. The great difficulty that has attended
a proper solution of this grave subject, has arisen from
the confounding of passages of Scripture referring to other
classes of sins,
with this sin, to which the text refers, and from not properly understanding the nature of the sin
as
named
in the text.
There are three classes of sins in which men themselves beyond God's pardoning mercy in
beside the sin referred to
I.
may
put
this life,
m the text.
;
There is the sin unto death as referred to in 1 John v, 16, " If any man see his brother sin a sin, which is not unto death, he shall ask, and he shall give him life for them that sin not unto death. There is a sin unto death This same class of I do not say he shall pray for it."
sins is alluded to in
Numbers
"And
if
308
APPENDIX.
make an
atonement
when he sinneth by
ignorance,
before the Lord, and it (his sin) shall be forgiven him. But the soul that doeth ought presumptuously, * * that
among
his people."
In the
ded
to
text.
Although
it
is,
or
was a
was not the sin of blasphemy that Christ sealed with eternal damnation. This sin unto death, which many confound with the sin of blasphemy against the Holy Ghost, has an exemplification in the case of the prophet or man of God sent by the Lord to reprimand Jeroboam, the King of Israel, for his practicing idolatry at Bethel. See 1st Kings xiii, 17 24. This man of God sent to Bethel was instructed by the Lord, when he had delivered his message, not to tarry at Bethel, nor eat bread, nor drink water in the place, and not to return by the same way he came. There was an old lying prophet at Bethel, who heard of the man of God that had delivered the message to Jeroboam his sons were present at the altars of worship or sacrifices at Bethel they saw all that had transpired, and told their father (the lying prophet), all that had happened. The old lying prophet went to bring the man of God back to eat with
being forgiven, yet
him.
The man of God disobeyed the divine injunctions given him by the Lord, not to eat bread nor drink water
the Lord,
Thus disobeying
God prepared
a lion, and
ars
THE UNPARDONABLE
SIN.
309
house
to
him in the highway. This sin of disobedience was immediately punished with death therefore it was a sin unto death, or a single In the case of sin that the Lord punished with death.
slew
;
Ananias and Sapphira, (Acts v, 1,) we have two other instances where a single sin was punished with immediate death their sin of lying unto the Holy Ghost. They
told a wilful lie to God's apostles about their earthly pos-
These Apostles were acting under the power of inspiration were acting in Christ's stead, under the directions of the Holy Spirit, therefore in lying unto the Apostles, Ananias and Sapphira lied unto God, and the Lord punished them with death, and gave them no space for repentance. In the case of the man of God in 1 Kings xiii, 17 24, he was acting under the immediate influence of the Holy Spirit, yet disobeyed God, made the sin at once damnable, and visited immediate retribution upon the offender, not allowing mercy unto him. In the case of Ananias and Sapphira their lie was told, notwithstanding they were under the influence of the Holy Ghost, therefore it was a damnable sin, and beyond mercy; hence, none but such as were circumstanced as they were could sin the sin unto death. It required a person to be favored with the highest evidence of the influence of the Holy Spirit to sin the single sin unto death. 2. There is another condition in sin, in which men may place themselves beyond God's pardoning mercy in this life which condition is sometimes confounded with the
sessions.
810
APPENDIX.
which we here is that of apostasy. This sin is treated by the Apostle in Hebrews vi, 4 8 u For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted of the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, if they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance." See Luke xi, 24, on this subject. As this condition of sin, spoken of by Paul in the Scripture just read, excites anxiety among many common backsliders, I would here say that there was a great difference between those apostates alluded to by Paul, and common blacksliders of God's church in this day. Common backsliders now do not occupy the position those Jewish converts did hence apostasy, or common backsliding now, is not attended with
unpardonable.
to
The
Christians
now, as was the case of the Jewish converts, be " enlightened" and they may have tasted of the " heavenly gift" and of the. "good word of God" and of the "powers of the world to come" as did the Jews when converted, but we are not made partakers of the Holy Ghost in the sense they were. Hence, we can't apostatize as they did, being differently circumstanced religiously. Apostasy with the Jew was the falling away of Christian converts, who had been favored with the miraculous demonstrations of God's power under two dispensations of his grace a people who had been chosen to peculiar divine favors. Those whom the Apostle warns against the sin of apostasy, were favored with the testimony of those who were the living
may
THE UNPARDONABLE
witnesses of Christ's incarnation
:
SIN.
311
death and resThey had witnessed the Church's miracleworking endowments. They had been invested with all the saving power with which the Christian Church is invested, even to the resurrection power. Upon them was bestowed heaven's highest gift, the special gift of the Holy
after his
now
fell
do not enjoy.
Is it
any
away from this condition, that they could be renewed unto repentance again ? This was a very different state from that of common backsliding, which is not a state of sin on which the door of mercy is closed the backslider, therefore, may find pardon, if he will return to his offended Saviour: he is not in a condition to commit the unpardonable sin, which Jesus seals with damnation in backsliding children, saith the Lord the text. " Turn, ye backsliding children, and I will heal your Return,
:
backslidings."
3.
Jeremiah
iii,
14, 22.
come next to consider what is called the unpardonable sin, or the sin of blasphemy against the Holy Ghost- the sin which the Saviour declares in the This is the sin that text would never be pardoned. those that are solicitous about it, want explained. In considering this grave question, we must not simply take into account the mere act of blaspheming against the Holy Ghost, which was in itself, according to the common meaning of the term, speaking irreverently of the Holy Spirit, or the Deity, or Holy One. So far as the
We
simple act
the
is
Holy Ghost,
Holy
Spirit,
312
of pardoning mercy.
APPENDIX.
It
By
do the
we
them
(1.)
to that act of
blasphemy.
cause."
The
Scripture states,
(2.)
pride.
They were prompted by a spirit of arrogance or They were too proud to admit the divine work of
It
the Saviour.
(3.)
was prompted by a
Son of
God.
First, it
was prompted by
and
that
evil spirits
by the prince
of devils
their
knowledge and
conscience told
them
better.
Secondly,
let
us notice
some
added
enormity of the act. (1.) They had been favored with the highest developments of God's miracle-working power in their behalf. They had seen and confessed the works of the Holy Spirit confessed His power in other instances, which they now blaspheme. (2.) They here blasphemously deny the highest attesta*
to the
THE UNPARDONABLE
(3.)
SIN.
313
No
because
it
Those
against the
Holy Ghost,
therefore,
damnation.
to
commit
not be
solic-
itous about
committing
is
now.
life,
But there
a condition, or state of
men may
selves
beyond God's pardoning mercy. of reprobacy. Men and women may reach this state in sin,~and still remain on earth for a time. This condition
is
Prov.
i,
22
30
"
How
plicity?
and
my reproof:
behold,
pour out my Spirit unto you, I will make known words unto you. Because I have called, and ye refused I have stretched out my hand, and no man regarded but have set at naught all my counsel, and would none of my reproof. I also will laugh at your calamity when your fear I will mock when your fear cometh cometh as desolation, and your destruction cometh as a whirlwind when distress and anguish cometh upon you. Then shall they call upon me, but I will not an-
my
me
me:
for that
Again we have
ii,
this condition of
for this cause
And
314
APPENDIX.
shall send
them strong delusion, that they should might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousAgain in Rom. i, 28: " And even as they did not ness." like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind." Again in 2 Cor. xiii, 5
believe a lie: that they all
"
God
Know
is left
This
into.
is
mankind reached
condition.
;
It is
reached
which every sinner living can reach by often rejecting God's proffered mercy. Heb. x, 22. That men may not procrastinate their acceptance of mercy, and get beyond the reach of pardoning mercy,
This
is
a state into
" He that is given them in Proverbs xxix, 1 being often reproved hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy." This is a loud
a warning
warning voice to sinners to shun the sin of reprohacy, which is the sin that fills up their cup of iniquity, which seals their fate, putting them beyond God's pardoning mercy, as were those that blasphemed against the Holy
Ghost.
315
SERMON
II,
J.
P.
THOMPSON.
iii,
He
Genesis
24.
Never was there a sight so solemn, or a scene so mourn-* that displayed in the banishment of man from the garden of the Lord. The sentence bad been heard, but still they wereunapprized that banishment awaited them. They had learned that they were doomed to toil and to
ful, as
die,
re^
might spend their Sabbaths amid the bowers of Eden and repose at night within the sacred enclosure, or rest at noon beneath its ample shades: but alas they discovered that they were soon to be hurried away to parts unknown. The preparations which were being made by Deity himself for clothing them with coats of skin, betrayed a purpose to send them forth to less salubrious climes to a rigor in which the fig-leaf covering of Eden would not protect them. " Unto Adam and to his wife did the Lord God make coats of skin and clothed them." How changed their condition Thus
flection that they
! !
work
of Deity,
whose wrath
seemed strangely
316
APPENDIX.
mingled with compassion. They queried the meaning what need of clothing beyond the fig-leaf, where chilling winds had never blown, and frost had never nipped the virgin flowers that bloomed on the plains or skirted the
;
rivers of
A hash most deeply solemn was in the garden-^a stillness per-? vaded the earth and the sky. No sound was heard save only a moan of distress, mingled with a sound of confusion in the breeze, which came over from the world of animals among the neighboring hills that seemed por-* tentous of evils before unknown. On the far-off sky the The first storm gathered first dark clouds were seen. and fasW-the lightnings, it may be, played on its thick bosom. New-born thunders shook the heavens, but in On golden pinions angels the garden all was calm.
signs of
Eden ? They doubtless guessed as God, and longed to know the worst.
to the de-
gathered
among
the
trees
pared
to drive
them
without the gates of Paradise, which was then to them forever lost. The man looked on the woman her glory
had departed with anxious solicitude she returned the How gaze upon the man, and he was a fallen monarch They fain would have talked of appalling the scene the thrilling scenes which were enacting around them but they were culprits and dare not speak. Indeed, no time had been allowed them for consultation, from the time they had first partaken of the forbidden fruit until the time of their condemnation. Step by step they had
:
|
been hurried from their hiding place in the garden to and their banishment.
JTew scenes were about
to
be revealed
new
trials
317
of wrath were soon no time was afforded for consulAmid the trees a Trinity were seen in council tation. as to the manner of disposing of the culprits, whose lives had been spared by the interposition of the promised seed. "And the Lord God said, Behold the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever: therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from which he was taken. So he drove out the man." Until then, perhaps, they had never ventured beyond the
new developments
still
and
now
and
place, prepared to
conduct them to the world beyond. With despairing look they gazed upon the much loved spot, then turned away in all the agonies of despair, and slowly and with
faltering step retired
to the
toil.
The sun, perhaps, was just retiring from the western sky, when the guilty pair passed out of their native Paradise^
to return
no more.
How
solemn their
reflection as they
upon
came over them, when they saw the glittering trains of the Almighty disappearing in the distance, while they, in solitude, were left upon
lonely the spell that
the untented
field,
How
blue sky
were alone in a state of banishment from their native home. No angel voice was heard no whispers of mercy were in the breeze They felt that they were banished
;
!
none
to help
and none
to pity.
318
APPENDIX.
Never did solitude appear less charming, and yet no way of escape was seen. They fain would have ventured back, but God had driven them forth, and they knew they could not return, and to make the attempt would be to incur his greater displeasure. The night approached the beasts of the field were reposing in slumber; all nature was hushed in silence no sound was heard save tiow and then perchance the growl of the tiger as he passed, the howl of the wolf among the neighboring hills, or the
;
;
desolate.
Thistles
and
soil,
No bowers
No bow
murings
of promise
No
gentle mur-
surrounded.
flections,
Gloomy beyond
mutely sat upon the ground. They remembered the pleasures of Paradise from which they had been driven^-their nightly rambles amid its bowers their fearless star-light musings and unbroken slumbers within its walls. But with respect to these, they were then as those who dreamed. They could scarcely realize, while retrospecting their former glory, riches, and power, that they were then reduced to poverty, toil, and peril, in a state of lonely exile from that glorious kingdom over which the Almighty had so recently given them dominion. They fain would have fancied it all a dream
as they
;
spirit
they
felt,
the goadjngs of
319
chill
which was lost. With sleepless vigilance they watched the foes with which they were surrounded, and longed for the approach of day. Angels, it seems to us, might well have wept, when silently gazing on the banished pair, as they nerved themselves to resist the first pangs of their depraved moral nature, and the first sorrow of their fallen state.
distressed them, demonstrated clearly that all
damp and
With
moan
of
sounding
in every
coming
The glittering spheres were wheeling, and glowing, then but that with them was not the moment for as now meditating upon nature's beauties. Their thoughts were turned upon themselves reflections upon their own
;
melancholy future held pre-eminence, and a burden of grief, almost intolerable, overwhelmed them. Bitter were
their recollections of the past,
and
were shed
and the unborn millions of the race for all ages then to come, what a night was that first spent beyond the Crushed hopes and tormenting fears gates of Paradise were blended with bodily pain, from fatigue and exposure to the damps of earth and the piercing chills of the nightwinds of heaven. Among all the stars that twinkled in the dusky depths of the sky, there was to them no star of hope no gleam of joy. They watched the seemingly slugglish movements of the spheres and longed for day, that they might see the worst of the untried theatre assigned them, and seek some means of safety and support. The day dawn came With what tears of joy they saw
!
!
320
the
APPENDIX.
coming morn!
eastern sky
man. But oh how changed The earth was cursed weeds and briers sprang forth from the ground where once the lilly grew, and the guilty pair
forth revealed to the eye of
morning repast. They thought of the fruits of the garden, and resolved to return and risk the vengeance of
God
lo
it
was in
full
bloom
To
it
were bending with fruits its foungushing and flowing amid its bowers; in the east of the garden was the Tree of Life, and thither they bent their way, with joyful expectation of partaking of But suddenly they its fruit that they might live forever. A sentinel paused, as though some danger threatened was there! Grim and terrible he appeared; a flaming sword was in his hand and fiery indignation in his eye* They retreated from this awful presence, and the last ray of hope was gone. This awful banishment is recorded for our instruction and improvement. This was the punishment inflicted In it, God gives for the first act of human disobedience. us the first picture of the exceeding sinfulness of sin picture painted by the hand of Infinite Purity, and displaying in fearful colors the evils of disobedience. If by this one sin, the original Paradise was forever lost, we have much cause for care, lest there should be in us a spirit of
tains were
I
321
may
rob us
the Eden
on high, where
the Tree of Life, laden with immortal fruits, nourishes on either side of the river. May God grant unto each of you grace to listen to the warning voice, to give earnest heed to the importance of
obedience, as designed to be taught by the historical fact
we have
mitted to
briefly delineated
that
the second
Adam
all
who
are partakers
of His nature.
God
the Father.
Amen.
14
322
APPENDIX.
SERMON
THE LOVE OF GOD ITS
III.
AND
BY BISHOP THOMAS
LOMAX.
"For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have
everlasting life."
John
iii,
16.
announcement be received as Dare we credit it, or lift up our guilty hearts to comprehend its terms? It is so exceedingly strange and thrilling, that it seems to stunn us, and only on recovering from our amazement, are we able to grasp this blessed declaration. There is so much of God in it, that we recognize his awful presence, and fear, as we are
this extraordinary
?
Can
actual truth
may
God so loved the world." If God created the world, or God God governs the world. The lan-
guage I employ is, to my mind, the symbol of infinite wisdom, power, and benignity. But when I repeat this
statement,
the
"
God
so loved the world," the apparently simat which and yet these the true explanation of many mys-
meaning
:
mind
is
323
example,
God's providence.
Why,
for
may
the
and joy and the dark shadows that lay on my mind have all fled away or, Why does the throne of the universe now stand out as a throne of grace, to which there is for me daily T access, continuous welcome, and rich response? or, W hy are there in heaven the spirits of our human kindred, whose bodies are lying yet in the darksome pollution and thralldom of the grave ? Are net such changes, privileges and blessings to be traced upward and backward to the grand and ultimate fact, that God loved the world? Now, the introductory shows that this text presents
into the conscious possession of divine peace
;
itself as
The
ref-
erence in
national
ancient Israel.
that he sent
They had
fits
of
insanity, so
among them
and
died.
and many of
them were
ment, and
bitten
make its terror of salutary effect, Moses was commanded to frame a brazen figure of one of the poisonit upon the summit of the flag-staff, any wounded Hebrew might be able to see it from the extremity of the camp, and every one, no matter how sorely he felt the poison in his fevered veins, if he could only turn his languid vision to the sacred emblem, he was instantly healed.
go that
It is
is
a process of equal
simplicity, facility
lifted up,
and
certainty.
death.
This
a pledge of safety
324
liever.
(l
APPENDIX.
He
The scheme
origin,
its
of salvation
here presented to us in
;
its
means and
its
designs
or
the
secondly, in the
provision he has
his
made
the
gift of
Son
and
The
object of
God's
love.
Again we recur
to the
startling
thought,
if
God
so
his love
is
its fairest
on it nounced it "very good," but that same world ruined by sin, and condemned for its apostasy. There would have been no wonder had the divine Lawgiver assumed the stern functions of the Judge and doomed our guilty earth to the death which it deserved. Might it not have been enveloped in flames, which, gleaming far into other orbits, would have taught other creatures that " our God is a consuming fire"? But, though he had armed his law with a terrible penalty, and allowed the incipient elements of the menace to fall upon the sinner; though the holiness of his nature and the interests of his government seemed to demand that punishment shall in* stantly and immediately follow transgression, yet, with* out any change in our claims or character, he loved us. And that love is not a mere relenting which might lead to a respite, or a simple regret which might end in a
sigh, but thrice blessed
}
be his name,
it
is
a positive af*
THE LOVE OF
fection.
GOD.
325
our
sin.
Now
itself
there
is lovely, for
by a
liness.
Such an
He
cannot but love what bears his image, and therefore who surround his throne
man
and there is Divine attachment. Paradise loathed and expelled him, and the globe into which he was exiled out of Eden, has been cursed for his sake " the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together"; the bleak rock on which no seed can vegetate; the eternal snows where no animal breathe the blasted oak of the forest, stretching its leafless arms to the wintry sky; the beach spread over with the wreck and corpses of the hurricane; the desolations of volcanic fires and the rocking and chasms of the earthquake; the bed on which tosses the invalid, to whom wearisome days and nights are appointed the hand which the laboring man uplifts to wipe the perspiration from his brow and those monuments of victory that tell of thousands lying beneath them uncoffined and unknelled these are tongues by which nature proclaims in melancholy emphasis that she has wandered from her God. And this sin of man is not his misfortune, but his fault. Sometimes those around us are overborne in providence; wave after wave
can
be,
now
as unlike
him
as
to attract the
326
APPENDIX.
fall,
!
they are
more
trary,
to
Alas
on the con-
man
he has lowered himself to what he isthe victim of his own pride and disobedience. I presume not to solve the mystery of the origin of I cannot tell why, with God's possession of infinite evil. power and purity and love, sin was ever permitted to find its way into our world ; but this I know, that amidst all subtile speculations on this dark theme amidst all daring and devious attempts to climb these heights of eternal Providence this one truth is Yery apparent:; "God made man upright, but they have sought out many inventions;" there is, therefore, no palliation for our crime. Our Master is not an "austere" one reaping where he had not sown, and gathering where he had not strewn. The law under which man was placed was holy, and just, and good; and he was furnished with power of perfect obedience. The test by which he was tried was an easy one, and he was, but for one restraint, lord of the world besides, it was simply a respect for the divine will which could lead him to obedience. There was no commingling motives such as that which spring out of natural relationship and originates moral obligations but man broke this simple covenant, and wantonly disobeyed
tree.
,
And
yet that
way made
itself so
guilty
and
not
perversity
and
disloyalty, is
thrown off by God is not flung into oblivion by him, and covered with his frown is not merely tolerated, or, like a condemned criminal, indulged with a few provi*
327
The marvel
but is really loved by him. nothing he hates so much as sin, and yet no one he has loved so much as a sinner. In in spite of our low spite of our alienation and hostility
minor kindnesses
is this,
there
is
and loathsome repugnance in the midst of so much that he hates and condemns and nauseates, God has loved,
;
world
!
!"
amazing love
*
'
of
God
Let
grace in
Thou shalt walk in robes of glory Thou shalt wear a golden crown Thou shalt sing redemption's story With the saints around the throne, Thou shalt see that better country Where a tear-drop never falls, Where a foe may never enter, And a friend ne'er said farewell. Where upon the radiant faces
That
will shine
on thee alway,
Thou
God
loved,
and
so loved this
little
Should some large and important province of an empire rise in rebellion, the sovereign will use every
to
means
to
induce
it
he proceed
arms against
at once
volved in insurrection,
summary vengeance
will be taken
was only a small portion of God's universe. What a melancholy thought did we look up to the sky and see in every orb a wreck and in every star a prison of ruined spirits
its folly.
on
Now, our
rebellious world
The
is
a vast territory
on which
328
its
APPENDIX.
still
Creator can
If,
therefore,
around his throne, brighter in their glories of light and mass of structure and motion than ours; if the absence of our earth from creation would be as little felt as the removal of a single particle of sand from the mound which girds the ocean and if another
;
worlds unnumbered
new orb, and with another population whose obedience should be coeval with existence and co-extensive with their faculties will it yet be aflirmed that it was from any selfish motive, or with any selfish purpose, that God has prolonged our existence, when life and all its enjoyment has been forfeited? or that we are of so much importance to himself, his happiness, or the harmony of his empire, that, rather er than allow us to perish, he gave up his only begotten Son to death, even the death of the cross ? " When I consider the heavens, the work of thy fingers the moon and stars, which thou hast ordained; what is man that thou art mindful of him ? and the son of man, that thou visitest him?" Higher beings are even the servants of
divine
flat
could at once
fill
its
place with a
humanity.
Of highest
Gfod, that loves
His creatures
so,
works with mercy doth embrace That blessed angels he sends to and fro, To serve to wicked man to serve his wicked
all his
And
foe.
The same truth has been pictured out to us by the great teacher. The shepherd had a hundred sheep, and only one
had gone astray. But his fond anxieties go out after it and leaving the ninety and nine in comparative neglect, he flees into the wilderness and seeks everywhere, till he
329
comes upon the object of his solicitude the one poor wanderer; and when he finds it, there is more joy in his bosom over the recovery of the solitary straggler, than over the entire flock that had not deserted the fold. Oh, there is more of the heart of God exhibited in our salvation than in all his benignity to the universe, in which this orb is truly a " little one;" and yet it has called out emotions which other and mightier spheres have failed to elicit. Now, such is its moral magnitude, that in its connection with Christ, it stands out in unrivalled glory from other worlds, and over its redeemed inhabitants is the chant raised, this my son " was dead and is alive again and was lost, and is found." Therefore, we may exclaim " The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want." " Not unto
us,
us,
but unto
Thy name
give glory,
for
3.
God
not of fallen
for
angels
men
and
his love
must
man was
sition in
Beings of higher original nature, and having their poheaven itself, were mysteriously involved in the
and doom of apostasy, and expelled from their bright domain. And yet, though they dwelt in heaven, they are not summoned back to it; no pardon is offered to them no means of purity are provided for them no
guilt
;
mediator has taken on himself the nature of angels, in order to make atonement for them: they are left to the
endurance of death death for ever ever sinning, ever suffering, while pardon and restoration have been proclaimed
to the
330
APPENDIX,
allied to the
So nearly
it
ground they
tread, so
their debility
and
proud in would
not have been a more natural operation, so to speak, to have saved these lofty exiles, and called them again to the heaven in which they once lived, and for which they were created, than to select this distant and miserable world, and by an abnormal and mighty process to purify and refine its wretched earthy outcasts for a realm of existence to which they are strangers, and to which they reason, inducing infinite wisdom to make this choice?
We may
fallen
man
can only be resolved into a mysterious exercise of unconThe loved of earth and hell both trolled sovereignty. might have been punished with eternal penalty, and neither the one nor the other could have complained of the equity of its doom, and both might have been forgiven and redeemed, and the one and the other would have equally felt its salvation due to the blessed Jehovah's tender pity. Nay, though hell had been taken and earth had been left, though the earliest transgressor only had been saved, and brought again to the awful presence before which they once mixed, and the hallelujahs which they once sang, while this world was left to pine and grow hopeless and helpless. But Christ's universal and everlasting kingdom hath been gloriously set up.
Doth his successive journeys run His kingdom spread from shore to shore, Till moon shall wax and wane no more.
331
love.
of a gift
by various
criteria.
must be taken
into con-
man
a fraction,
if
its
propor-
tion to
it, is
semblance of when he declared that the poor widow, who cast her last mite into the treasury, gave truly more than the wealthy worshippers with the ringing shekels and talents of their abundance, for " she gave her all." Nor can the motive of the giver be left out of the calculation one may heap favor upon the head of a fallen foe to wound his pride and produce within him a rankling sense of his inferiority. But such a donation suffers a sad discount when compared with other and in themselves smaller benefactions bestowed in cordial warmth and generosity of spirit. The manner, too, in which a gift is conferred, must enter into the estimate; if it be withheld till it be rung out of the
does not possess
than another
magnitude.
this scale,
be offered in a surly
donor by repeated and humiliating importunity, or if it spirit, and its amount enlarged upon with undue exaggeration, or if it be meted out slowly and
self-
it
portance, especially
boon given.
God gave
his
832
APPENDIX.
and endless? The riches of the universe are at his dis* posal. But oh, when he gave his Son, did he not give his all? What other gift remained superior to him equal to him or next to him ? There was no second Christ
many
is
gifts.
love.
seen, too, in
by which that end is achieved. He gave his only begotten Son for this purpose, that " whosover believeth in
have everlasting life." The language plainly implies that the race were all in a lost condition. The Son of God is given to keep them from perishing from sinking into irretrievable ruin. It was a perdition great and terrible which sin had produced. What a frightful spectacle! a soul in ruin^away from God, and hostile to him; his image gone; his glory in the dust; a darkened mind; a distracted or sensualized heart; a spirit in thraldom; appetite predominates; the divine
perish, but
law forgotten; conscience bribed, hushed, or quelled; and the end of man being not unrealized, of all enjoyment. Life, how eagerly cherished by all; the sick man tugs for it; the bad man dreads its termination, and the good man prays for its continuance. The whole struggle of world is for life for means to enliven and prolong it. It
is full
Now,
that
is
if
that
now
is
life
life
that
and ten years, and it is ended amidst spasms and tears Oh, what intense aspi-
THE LOVE OF
rations
GOt).
883
and prayers and wrestlings should there not be after a life that is not measured by centuries or by millenniums a life far above change and sorrow a life serene as the bosom of its Giver, and endless as God's own
eternity
"Let every tongue thy goodness speak, Thou sov'reign Lord of all Thy strength'ning hands uphold the weak,
And
6.
raise the
poor that
fall."
The
result of
God's love
to the world.
to deliver
her from
her.
upon
Son of God is a true and mighty sacriThat death might be viewed in a variety of asfice. pects; for while it was an instance of undaunted bravery and a confirmation of his sincere attachment to men, it was also an example to all his followers, inspiring them with that patience which they must evince during their lives, and with that calmness and fortitude which must not forsake them, even in the hour of trial and desolation. But it was more than a tragedy or a martyrdom.
of the
The death
to be the victim of
human
perseis
but an ordinary termination to his extraordinary existence. To bring into one fold all who will conform to His divine laws is one of the designs of the blessed Jesus also it is his design to bring into the church of God all who are in the fellowship of the church the communion that its members enjoy, one with another. The end of this fellowship is the maintenance of sound doctrine and
true; but to suppose
to give
;
834
APPENDIX.
We
will preach
Him
to all
"
And
It
away
his fear.
spirit
whole,
And calms the troubled breast 'Tis manna to the hungry soul? And to the weary, rest.'
5
335
SERMON
IV.
this District,
and a short
recess, the
Conference re-assem-
peace."
the bond of
No apostolic admonition possesses deeper, broader, and more significant meaning, or is capable of a more general and beneficial application than that contained in the text.
Sin has not only exhibited
its hostility
against
God
in its
stubborn and defiant attitude of disobedience and opposition to his just requirements, but
it
tween
man and
first
his fellows.
The
a sad
66h
APPENDIX.
and unsuspecting brother into the field, and, in open day, coolly and without any just provocation, smites him to the death and leaves him weltering in his blood. Thus early in the history of the human family were our parents summoned, to look sadly on the legitimate results of their own rash act, and the unmistakable development of the malice and hate, the envy and murder which it had produced. The cause and excuse for this beginning of fratricides was, that God had respect to the offeringof Abel and had none for that of Cain. The exercise, therefore, of a preference on the part of the Almighty toward one of his own loyal subjects, led to the commission of the first foul murder; and how many have since
been murdered in character, reputation, good name, and even deprived of life itself simply on account of prefer-
ence? Such
if
is
human
heart that
you will traduce your neighbor, acquaintance, or associate, you excite for him pity; but commend him speak
and you have aroused for him in the bosom of your hearers, feelings of jealousy and bitter hate. David w ou!d have had but little to fear at the hands of Saul or any of his S3 mpathizers, if, after he had slain Goliath of Gath, it had been said of him by the popular crowd, that there was but little valor about his exploit; that it had been performed in an awkward and bungling manner; and that after all, the credit and glory of the achievement were mainly due to Saul and his brave army, and not to the mere accident of this youthful rustic, fresh
ation
r 7
337
from the sheepfold. But, the startling and significant cry which rang out on the evening air, and whose inspiring eloquence and enchanting cadence, as it issued from the lips of the fair damsels of the land, quickened the pulsations of every patriotic Israelite was "Saul hath slain his thousands, but David his tens of thou-
sands!"
Not, even, with credit announced with equal sweetness
same fair maidens that Saul and had slain their " thousands " could they brook the announcement, truthful as they knew it was, that David had slain his "tens of thousands."
from the
lips of the
his confederates
me nothing,"
I
see Mordecai the Jew His banqueting, wining and dining with the king and queen, to the exclusion of all the other members of the royal court, the honor of
and
all
Haman
were soured blighted to ashes by this slight, but wellmerited mark cf respect awarded to that horrible Jew. And thus does jealous envy and secret hate, armed with
murderous weapons,
stalk
abroad through
all
the land
field
where
it
perpetrated
its
its first
dark design
it
foul mischief
and murder
life, it
slimy, ser-
338
to desecrate
APPENDIX.
and pollute the sacred oracle. It were by no means difficult to prove that the desolating wars which have drenched so large a portion of the earth in blood have been the almost invariable fruits of envy, jealousy and hate, that ascendency to the thrones of earth have been more numerous through treachery and murder than by lawful claims or lawful means. The legitimate elements of sin are pride, selfishness, arrogance; these lead to discord, dissension, division, and bitter strife; then come uncharitableness,unmercifulness, wicked conspiracies, sinful plottings, envy, jealousy, hate, and murder often bloodless, but, nevertheless, murder; for he who hates his brother, under any circumstances, is charged in the Scriptures with murder, though he does not actually shed blood. Hate cherished in the heart fostered and brooded over carried to its desired end means murder as its objective point its cherished aim. It misrepresents, defames character, destroys reputation and, in the language of Shakespeare, takes that from another which we cannot give; and is, in the eye of God, equally infamous with the taking of life. It needs no warrant from Scripture to prove that many of those who are converted, justified children of God by many infallible signs, are far from being perfectly freed from indications the remains of the lingerings of these offshoots of sin of the carnal mind. Even among the devout and holy men engaged in establishing the Christian Church, we find, at least, one example of the spirit of bitter contention, which distracts the church, and finally leads to division, envy and unholy strife. Paul and Barnabas, by far the more earnest and
339
have been expected, that these good men separated in consequence of the sharp contention that arose between them, long and beneficially as they had traveled and labored together; and, so far as we are informed, they never
associated in their labors subsequently.
Thus
its
early in
distin^
among
most
is
in
and division. We could hope, for the sake of that homogenial spirit, that harmony of operation, which is the ornament and beauty of christian character, as well as for the power, influence and success of the Christian Church, that this divergence of holy men of God from that path of peace and love which appeared so prominent, so uniform and so captivating in the early experience of the church, were left isolated and alone in its subsequent history and progress; that this huge malformation, marr^ ing so greatly the otherwise symmetrical and beautiful form of the Body and Spouse of the Lord, was the single instance of its kind to which infidelity could refer, 03?
envy,
strife
anti-christianism take exception against the claim of the church as the repository and dispenser of divine knowL edge; but the truth is sadly otherwise. The implied claim and boast of superiority in judg-* ment; in aptness to teach; in clearer or more correct comprehension of the word of God in clearness of per* ception on doctrinal points; in appropriate and fitting
;
340
other less important
APPENDIX.
matters,
another, originated the most rancorous dissensions, resulting in the most unfortunate divisions.
And many
Paul and Barnabas, whose christian intercourse had been most pleasant, whose fellowship in Jesus had been sweet, and whose labors together in the vineyard of the Lord had been crowned with most brilliant success, have separated, never again on earth to be as lovingly united in
a
common
cause as before.
Add
to these
seeming preference which the Almighty exercises by en" dowing one or more of his servants with more ability, more influence and power, and, by consequence, more success than others, and which, not unfrequently, mani^
fests itself in
carries
on such
From these and other considerations, the importance and necessity of christian endeavor in the direction of the careful and prayerful maintenance of the spirit of
unity will readily appear.
First
The term
such manner as
probably, to
ties arising
and creeds are an indefinite period; possibly, and most the end of time. Denominational diversi-
A FAREWELL TO KENTUCKY CONFERENCE.
pretation of the
341
word of God, seem, therefore, unavoida^ ble^and any serious attempt at uniforrnit} in these re7
spects,
much
as they
may appear
care,
desirable,
is
likely to be
unsuccessful and
futile.
and early training in education, in literature, in lines of thought, and in all the conditions, accidents, and circumstances which enter into the formation and development of mental and moral character, must, in the nature of things, precede any hope^
Uniformity in maternal
ful
noth^-
would seem
vantage or
benefit.
is
not, conse?
nominational distinctions
or uniformity in
tions in
any
of those circumstances
aecommo?
and harmonizes them as to render each subservient and helpful to the other, and alike beneso blends
and
ficial to all.
Secondly^- We observe that the nature of the unity, maintainanceof which we are urged by the Apos* tie to put forth an earnest endeavor, is " unity of spirit"?
for the
union, agreement,
harmony
mind wherein
and controlled by a
feel*
342
APPENDIX.
will, that
and predominating
at all times,
imaginary provocation, shall hold its whatever ascendency over every other feeling that would seek to antagonize it, with its banner joyfully thrown to the breeze, floating in triumph over all human selfishness, emblazoned with the Christian motto, " good will to men." The fostering and exercise of this spirit would prove a panacea for the effectual cure of nearly all the maladies which enervate the church, and shear it so fearfully of its influence and power for good. However widely we may differ in our opinions, our creeds, our views of church polity, our modes of adminhowever diversified our gifts, graces and callistration life; whatever may bo our denominational diver? ings in gencies, we may, and ought to be, firmly and harmoni;
As
in nature
harmony
eties
;
is
made up
it
of diversities or
seeming contrari*
depends upon alternate chords and discords, so also in the Christian Church, infinite wisdom and goodness, by a seeming predetermination, has diversified the elements of usefulness in harmony with the
as in music,
accommodation to similar diversities in the human family, to the end that all may avail themselves of the means of salvation, and every one may be left without excuse. There is, consequently, nothing in the dissimilarity ex* isting among men, either as individuals or associations,
343
may
common
comprehend
In view what seems to them a crude, heterogeneous mass, made up of all nationalities, all complexions, all grades and conditions, they regard it as being a most unsavory and incongruent command. And there are those who occupy high positions in the visible Church who share, with the Apostle Peter, the same lofty feeling of superiority, and evince the same
of a strict observance of the divine injunction. of the fact that the
Church
is
composed
of
loathing repugnance,
when summoned
like
him
to a
and uncon-
God
ners
In vain to them
is
the vessel
let
filled
with a hetero-
them comes the voice from the throne of the kill and eat." They still insist that whatever to their refined and fastidious tastes seems " common and unclean" must necessarily be so regardless alike of the judgment and commands of heaven. Conuniverse: "Rise, Peter,
344
at
APPENDIX.
by the bold announcement, "God is no respecter of persons," and in the earnestness and impartiality with which he subsequently maintained his posiof the fact
tion,
notwithstanding
its
unpopularity
trymen.
text
To
may seem
is
from its God-required observance, there beauty and fitness connected with it that commends
the favor and hearty acceptance of
all
a
to
who
are capable of
comprehending and appreciating the harmony of natural things and their application to those harmonizing influences among men, and especially among Christians, which
accord with their best interests.
yet, the insignificant
it
The
materials entering
;
and seemingly
inferior portions of
more
and all contributing its share to the stability, the beauty and utility Thus, by the appropriate and beautiful of the dwelling.
conspicuous and apparently useful
figure of the
each
human
and harmony
symbolical representation of
exist in the
Church
body
no part
is
Just as each
member
of the
human body is
345
constitutes
The
real or
pared with others does not destroy their identity nor supersede their usefulness
;
function,
however
makes its contribution to the symmetry, harmony and beauty of the whole. So intimately are they connected, so harmoniously are they blended in the human system, that the loss, or even the serious interruption of any one member, will be sensibly felt by the entire body. So, likewise in the Christian Church, we are all members of the same body, and whatever affects one affects all. True, we belong to different nationalities; we are born in different localities we belong to different denominations, and worship under different forms. We differ in color, in tastes, in conditions and circumstances in life.
;
We
but,
differ quite as
having received the same heavenly recognition, the indwelling testimony of the Divine Spirit, we sustain perfect equality before God, and any invidious distinction made as between the children of God is insulting to him, and in its highest degree anti-christian. There are, indeed, diversities of gifts and operations; some possess, in a remarkable degree, the spirit of wisdom; others, the word of knowledge; others, the working of miracles others, diverse tongues some prophesy, some teach and some are evangelists some exert a wider influence than others, and are more successful. But all belong to the same body, are members one of another, are governed by the same head, are seeking the same
; ;
15
346
object
APPENDIX.
maintain unity of
even
to quarrel
It
may
be very desirable to be
may seem
what seems to us the more important positions, and we may become envious of our brethren, and, like Cain, seek to injure them on account of this seeming preference exercised on the part of the Almighty. But this course will
never alter these conditions; and, so far from deriving
any permanent advantage from the adoption of a course of such extreme folly and wickedness, it is destined to bring signal disaster upon the heads of its perpetrators. The sad history of Cain, of Saul and of Haman, who were
conspicuous in this reprehensible practice in the early
history of the race, abundantly illustrate the truth of this
averment. And who but recalls some one or more whose premature downfall and ruin was the legitimate consequence of jealous envy? He who digs a pit for his brother is sure, sooner or later, to fail therein himself, with equal or more saddening results than he intended. Many a Haman has, by divine permission, been made to suffer the penalty of his envious guilt upon the same gallows which he had erected for some innocent and unsuspecting Mordecai
Proper consideration will readily convince us that if not all, the causes which constitute the grounds of envy and jealousy, resulting in discord and uncharitamost,
bleness toward our brethren, are
neither they nor ourselves have any control, but are the
result of divine
arrangement; and so
far
from causing
to
be benefi-
347
And
a golden chain possessingindeed multiform, multifarious and multinominal links but neverof perfectness
theless, a chain,
into one
bond of peace, harmony and love so strong that no power on earth could sever it. And with the great
Head
of
its
harmony and
security.
much
less exercise,
any
since,
God hath set the members one of them in the body as it hath pleased Him." every Neither let us despise any one since each one is part of the whole. Let not the eye envy the ear, because of its ability to try sounds to the exclusion of the other members. Let not the hand despise the foot, because it occupies the lowest position for the ear cannot see, the hand cannot hear, neither can the feet manipulate. Each serves a desirable purpose peculiar to itself, designed of God, and conducive to the comfort of all. Equally absurd and senselessly wicked are those in; ;
spirit,
founded on
race,
with divine arrangement; and the variety here as elserather than of discord and
where should be made productive of harmony and love strife, and especially when Christ is formed in the heart. Third Having spoken of the importance of Christian
348
APPENDIX.
and
its
the
method of maintaining
"
En-
deavor"
try,
is
to
labor intensely.
effort.
Nothing important
Let
us, therefore,
is
accom-
plished without an
in view of
both to ourselves and those with have intercourse, as well as the cause of God, which will be so greatly promoted thereby, put forth an earnest, faithful and prayerful endeavor, to maintain the unity of spirit at all times and at whatever cost, by the
its beneficial results,
whom we
which checks the tendency to provocation in ourselves and overcomes the disposition to provoke others by lowliness of mind, or such modest views of ourselves, our
;
of others.
By
to
which enables us
without
fiery
resentment or a desire to revenge, but disposing us to hold the same kind, generous and loving
tenor of our way, prompts us to seek to confer the largest
amount
of
By a
spirit of
loving
by forgiving one another, as we are have others forgive us, we shall find, on a careful review of our Christian life, many things for which we can with difficulty forgive ourselves. Others doubtless
siderations of lo\e;
wont
to
find as
349
similar infirmities, so
to forgive
Let this mutual view of kindred offenses, arising from humble us as to prompt us as freely
each other as we forgive ourselves, or hope to
to be forgiven of the Lord.
we
to
our brethren but in such manner, and under such circumstances, as will bring it within the category of M speaking the truth in love."
Much
that tends to
acrimony and
strife,
leading to
among
improper
information.
publish what
we
have heard, or at best know very imperfectly, we frequently indulge however undesignedly in gross misrepresent-
ations seriously
No
sustained by a
little
delay in
;
would
effects.
denominations
to misrepresentations, or insidious
among
to inveigh character,
brethren, by innuendo,
by a
smile, or by a manifestly false apology for one whose good name is being traduced, in which, by attempting a lame excuse, we admit the facts contained in the slander, although we do not believe them, and thus crystalize into truth what we might easily have branded and
meaning
silenced as a falsehood.
350
If the time, effort
APPENDIX.
and
skill
more
amount
of peace, prosperity
and
would
result to
tan now presides in grim majesty. Far more time and study are employed in attempts to belittle each other as Christians and as members of community, than is enlisted in battling against the common enemy, or in studied, honest and prayerful endeavor to " With what measure you establish the cause of Christ. mete the same shall be measured to you again," is a trite truism, that should serve to remind us that the thorn-seeds wilfully sown by us for the goading of others to-day, will be harvested and resown to-morrow, with the vast increase which the crop will yield, to recompense us for our toil with the largest interest by and by. The pupils
a slander, a misrepresentation, or any belittling or depreciating lesson against our brother
before
recite
whom we
our
skill
and our
tact, to
to-morrow with
all
these
damaging improvements.
throwing dust
So that every
in the air, with
it,
effort of
this character is
the cer-
own
painfully,
Finally, if
we would encourage the diffident and strengthen the weak if we would counteract the sourness of spirit, which leads to alienation and estrangement; if we would contribute toward that oneness of heart which signalizes all the special and fuller manifestations of divine power and success in the Church of God, let us carefully avoid what we know to be reprehensible, and as carefully practice what we know is commendable. Thus shall we foster that unity and harmony of spirit which infidelity cannot gainsay, the world cannot successfully resist, which Satan condemns and God approves. This will embrace whatsoever is true, honest, just, pure and lovely; and, if we would faithfully and successfully serve the cause of God and advance the interest of Zion,
if
;
let
353
A.N
ADDBESS.
T.
JONES, D. D.
Good Samaritans
and Daughters
1 '
of
Samaria
at Knozville, Tenn.
And Jesus answering said, A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among thieves, which stripped him of his raiment, and wounded him, and departed, leaving him half dead. And by chance there came down a certain priest that way and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side. And likewise a Levite, when he was at the place, came and looked on him, and passed by on the other side. But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was; and when he saw him, he had compassion on him, and went to him, and bound up his wounds, pouring in oil and wine, and set him on his own beast, and brought him to an inn, and took c ire of him. And on the morrow when he departed, he took out two pence and gave them to the host and said unto him, Take care of him and whatsoever thou spendest more, when I come again, I will repay thee. Which now of these three, thinkest thou, was neighbor unto him that fell among the thieves? And he said, He that shewed mercy on him. Then said Jesus unto him, Go, and do thou likewise." Luke x, 3037.
; :
We
those attempts
have here briefly narrated an account of one of which are frequently put forth by the
and
may
substitute
354
instead, their
APPENDIX.
own
roneous.
lawyer
law
approaches
the
Saviour with
mands, and inquires " Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life ?" Notwithstanding the solemnity of the question, the sequel proves that this man, like thousands of others since his day, w as far more anxious to justify his own course of conduct, right or wrong, than to learn what was the good and acceptable way of the Lord. For, in answer to the Saviour's questions, " What is written in the law? how readest thou?" after answering very promptly and very correctly by repeating the two leading commandments embracing love to God and to man, comprehending piety and philanthropy, the soul of all true religion, the end of the law and the aim of the prophets he shows either his ignorance or his disregard of the spirit of these commandments, or both, by asking, "Who is my neighbor?" To cure at once his ignorance and narrowminded con7
ceit,
light,
Jerusalem to Jericho, encountered a band of thieves, which, having stripped him of ail he had, even to his raiment, and having beaten him unmercifully, left him wounded and bruised and half dead on the wayside.
The lawyer is reluctantly forced to admit that, whoever came to the succor and salvation of this unfortunate
man whether
355
proves himself
to
be neigh-
powers of usefulness, the robes and sanction of the Church, are not to be relied upon as evidences of love to God.
signs to teach us in this narration that there
Nothing seems more evident than that the Saviour deis a wide contrast between the mere forms and ceremonies of Christianity and the reality of it; the mere profession however ostentatiously made, however loudly claimed and that indwelling of the divine principle which is as certain to make its presence and influence known and felt by all who are within reach of that influence, as are the rays of the sun to effect, beneficially, every form and species of vegetable and animal existence and life with which they may come in contact.
He
the recognized
and
to
leader of a
Church founded
in infinite tenderness
love for
mankind by
the interest
of those
left
who had
among
helpless
by the wayside,
and
the universe
this
high
functionary
who was to imitate the example of his divine Lord and Master by lifting the fallen, cheering the faint, and binding the broken-hearted this distinguished
representative of the
High
mpathy
356
APPENDIX.
but devoid of that tenderness of heart which weeps with those who weep and mourns with those who mourn, unmindful of his solemn obligations and lost even to those patriotic
to
come
one of his own countrymen and creed, he gathers his priestly robes about him and passes on the other side. Doubtless we all would have been electrified had we listened to the sermons and lectures of this divine,
to the relief of
have been aroused in the interest of suffering humanity, as he discoursed with burning eloquence on that subject,
just as they are to-day,
when we
listen
to the
touching
men
in the Church,
who,
same
priest,
when
practical
sympathy action,
invariably pass by
almost
What
a vast
number
of
whom
it is
unpopular
condemn, are passed by unassisted and uncomforted. Most of the evils which afflict mankind, originating in man's inhumanity to man, might be effectthe ministry of the ually remedied if the priesthood sanctuary would take time to stop by the wayside and have hearts to sympathize with God's poor unfortunate ones who in one way or another have fallen among thieves who have stripped them of rights and privileges common to all men in this highway of life, and left them friendless and comfortless. These men will find time and
to
convenience too
to stop to
357
if it
church,
to defend the peculiar dogmas of their and ceremonies; they will find time to stop to resent an insult, however slight, offered to some one of distinction or wealth, and raise their hands in holy horror at an injury inflicted upon these; but obscure humanity, suffering from whatever wrongs, burdened
with whatever sorrow or cares, pleading with whatever pathos, is passed by on the other side. Matters of mint,
anise and
cummin
these
judgment, humanity, mercy, are criminally neglected passed by on the other side. Thus it seems clear that the highest positions, the costliest robes and the most emphatic sanction of the church, do not necessarily prove the possession of Chrisjustice,
tianity, since
he
who
man,
whatever may be his theory on that subject, ignores thereby all claim of saving love to God. We come next to notice the conduct of the second personage
whom
tive narrative
priest,
the
church which in consequence of its loyalty to the divine government and its zeal for the divine worship were made the guardians of sacred things, (he exponents of the law and the teachers of the people. It might be expected
if
his predecessor
Aaron
at the foot of
if he,
in his
358
APPENDIX.
by
people,
and whose
feel-
might easily be expected, I repeat, that the imploring look and sad and touching moans of this wounded man of Israel would have been responded to by this Levite. But he, too, following the cruel example of his superior, passed by on the other side. Second. This brings me to remark, that Church organizations, religious zeal and loud professions of charity* are no proofs of christian character. As the priest repit
may
be taken as the
and w e
r
see in his
illustra-
phrase,
like
people."
And
tial
thus we see
it to
day.
members of
pomp and
are
but such
the rule.
evils of a general character
but might
THE GOOD SAMARITAN.
be cured, or at least checked,
if
359
humanity, the Church, divinely appointed to hear the cries and administer to the wants of the fallen and forlorn, has partaken of the popular frenzy, and the popular frenzy is to give prostrate humanity the go-by, unless it be distinguished humanity. The Church which eloquently proclaims a gospel which assures us that there is no respect of persons with God, emphasizes its faith in that gospel by practicing the most invidious distinction. In the privileges and immunities of government; in the necessities and comforts of life; in social intercourse; in tender sympathy; in its approach to the sacred altar of worship and even in death itself in all these it leaves out the lowly and obscure, and passes by on the other side. Evidently, church membership and religious observances and zeal are no warrant of eternal life.
But
Third.
of
Finally, we notice that human kindness, acts humanity impartially bestowed upon our fellow men,
Spirit,
In the person of this Samaritan we have a man who is on a journey, and therefore had but little time to wait on the w ay he might have easily excused himself and silenced his conscience on this ground, and passed on
r ;
;
but he did not. In the next place, this traveler is a Samaritan, identified with a people who cherished a most
inveterate
hatred toward
It
despised by fhem.
was a marvel
the Samaritan
360
APPENDIX.
at the well, that
woman
after
drink of water.
for the
"
How is it," said she, " that thou, being a of me, which am a woman of Samaria?
Jews have no dealings with the Samaritans." From it is hardly possible to conceive of anything much lower in the scale of humanity than the Samaritans were held by the Jews and as this hostility was mutual, it required no ordinary degree of humanity, large-heartedness, and love for man because he is a man, to have induced this Samaritan traveler to perform the kind offices he so generously bestows on the unfortunate Jew. But he was equal to the emergency. His feelings of humanity conquer all personal animosities, all race pride, all religious differences, and proudly holds the mastery. He does not plead immunity from duty on the grounds that the priest and Levite, whose special duty it was to look after this member of the Jewish Church, have
the facts of history
;
passed by.
He
tion, will it be
popular
my
my
interests
by
eliciting the
or the favorable
will it
comment
to the
expose
me
contemptuous scorn of
this lonely road,
my
sect?
He
to his
own
life
and person on
where at
any moment he might meet the same band of highwaymen which had perpetrated this foul deed of blood but,
;
361
a
He
him
number
of
and order; he does not stop to lecture garments which still hung upon his filthy appearance, or his want of prudent him, or No, he would first prove himself a caution, and all this. friend by kind, generous, helpful treatment; then lecture him, if need be, when he had time and heart and strength But now, to hear, comprehend and appreciate a lecture.
tionality, his faith
him about
his tattered
wounds and painful bruises are to be bound up and mollified and soothed with ointment; strength is failing from loss of blood and from the agony of pain; the spirits are fast sinking, and the life of a fellow being is trembling in the balance. To meet these,
these gaping, bleeding
He
tenderly
soothing
isters a
oil;
up the wounds and pours on the thus he allays the pain. He next adminto the
cup of wine
parching
He
then
lifts
him up
there,
and
sets
carries
him on him to
his
own
beast,
him
in
charge of
promises
Such,
my
who
such
is
Lord and Master, and such is the religion of the Bible. what is our creed, our office and standing our gifts and qualifications, our nationality or complexIt matters little
362
iou,
APPENDIX.
our church relations and religious zeal or our claims
to piety
it
tion
this
we are known
to
if
we lack
this practical
humanity,
genuine philanthrophy,
this distinguishing
mark
of
element on which
life.
Independent Order of Good Samaritans and Daughters of Samaria" doubtless designed that the association, having the name of the distinguished philanthropist whom we have been considering, should also emulate his illustrious example. Hence, your declaration of principles commits you to the grand, ennobling and God-like work of hunting up the outcast, the degraded and forlorn, and especially the inebriate; to relieve and to rescue them, to close up the gaps and bind up the wounds which a wicked and profligate course of life has inflicted, as well by your example as by your precept, and to pour in the oil and wine of sympathy, material aid and spiritual consolation; to lift them up by your personal efforts and influence as well as by your prayers and tears, and, bearing them in the arms of the love and affection, bring them to the spiritual inn Church of the living God for final healing and full res-
"The
toration to society
and heaven.
mented and crystalized by the noble example of this Good Samaritan and, while your constitutional obligations make it your first duty to look after each other, let
;
common
brotherhood of mankind
363
to all
and aid
within
your reach, passing none by. Remember your motto, " Love, Purity, Truth." Exemtrio by love to God plify this beautiful and appropriate
practice, and to all mankind, by. purity in principle and Love the principles, rules and by truth in all things. observed and regulations of your Order see that they are Be true to each other, true to God, their purity.
;
in all
and true
selves.
to
mankind, but Good Samaritan Jesus Christ who never passes by, form and in stoops to lift up suffering humanity in every lasting every place, and your organization will prove a
blessing.
with Finally, imitate, in all your intercourse great prototype of the the example of the