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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>Sermons for the Times</title>
+</head>
+<body>
+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">Sermons for the Times, by Charles Kingsley</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Sermons for the Times, by Charles Kingsley
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Sermons for the Times
+
+Author: Charles Kingsley
+
+Release Date: February 29, 2004 [eBook #11381]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SERMONS FOR THE TIMES***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<h1>SERMONS FOR THE TIMES</h1>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Contents:<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fathers and Children<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Salvation<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+Good Conscience<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Names<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sponsorship<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Justification
+by Faith<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Duty and Superstition<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sonship<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+Lord&rsquo;s Prayer<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Doxology<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ahab
+and Naboth<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Light of God<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Providence<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;England&rsquo;s
+Strength<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Life of God<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;God&rsquo;s
+Offspring<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Death in Life<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shame<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Forgiveness<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+True Gentleman<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Toleration<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public
+Spirit</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON I.&nbsp; &lsquo;FATHERS AND CHILDREN&rsquo;</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Malachi iv. 5, 6.&nbsp; Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet
+before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord: And he
+shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of
+the children to their fathers, lest I come and smite the earth with
+a curse.</p>
+<p>These words are especially solemn words.&nbsp; They stand in an especially
+solemn and important part of the Bible.&nbsp; They are the last words
+of the Old Testament.&nbsp; I cannot but think that it was God&rsquo;s
+will that they should stand where they are, and nowhere else.&nbsp;
+Malachi, the prophet who wrote them, did not know perhaps that he was
+the last of the Old Testament prophets.&nbsp; He did not know that no
+prophet would arise among the Jews for 400 years, till the time when
+John the Baptist came preaching repentance.&nbsp; But God knew.&nbsp;
+And by God&rsquo;s ordinance these words stand at the end of the Old
+Testament, to make us understand the beginning of the New Testament.&nbsp;
+For the Old Testament ends by saying that God would send to the Jews
+Elijah the prophet.&nbsp; And the New Testament begins by telling us
+of John the Baptist&rsquo;s coming as a prophet, in the spirit and power
+of Elias; and how the Lord Jesus himself declared plainly that John
+the Baptist was Elijah who was to come; that is, the Elijah of whom
+Malachi prophesies in my text.</p>
+<p>Therefore, we may be certain that this text tells us what John the
+Baptist&rsquo;s work was; that John the Baptist came to turn the hearts
+of the fathers to the children, and the hearts of the children to the
+fathers; lest the Lord should come and smite the land with a curse.</p>
+<p>Some may be ready to answer to this, &lsquo;Of course John the Baptist
+came to warn parents of behaving wrongly to their children, if they
+were careless or cruel; and children to their parents, if they were
+disobedient or ungrateful.&nbsp; Of course he would tell bad parents
+and children to repent, just as he came to tell all other kinds of sinners
+to repent.&nbsp; But that was only a part of John the Baptist&rsquo;s
+work.&nbsp; He came to be the forerunner of the Messiah, the Saviour,
+the Redeemer.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Be it so, my friends.&nbsp; I only hope that you really do believe
+that John the Baptist did come to proclaim that a Saviour was born into
+the world&mdash;provided only that you remember all the while who that
+Saviour was.&nbsp; John the Baptist tells you who He was.&nbsp; If you
+will only remember that, and get the thought of it into your hearts,
+you will not be inclined to put any words of your own in place of the
+prophet Malachi&rsquo;s, or to fancy that you can describe better than
+Malachi what John the Baptist&rsquo;s work was to be; and that turning
+the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the hearts of the children
+to the fathers, was only a small part of John the Baptist&rsquo;s work,
+instead of being, as Malachi says it was, his principal work, his very
+work, the work which must be done, lest the Lord, instead of saving
+the land, should come and smite it with a curse.</p>
+<p>Yes&mdash;you must remember who it was that John the Baptist came
+to bear record of, and to manifest or show to the Jews.&nbsp; The Angels
+on the first Christmas Eve told us&mdash;they said it was <i>The Lord</i>,
+&lsquo;Unto you,&rsquo; they said, &lsquo;is born a Saviour, who is
+Christ, <i>The Lord</i>.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>John the Baptist told you and all mankind who it was&mdash;that it
+was The Lord.&nbsp; &lsquo;The voice of one crying in the wilderness,
+Prepare ye the way of <i>the Lord</i>!&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>The Lord</i>.&nbsp; What Lord&mdash;Which Lord?&nbsp; John the
+Baptist knew.&nbsp; Simeon, Anna, Nathaniel, all righteous and faithful
+hearts who waited for the salvation of the Lord, knew.&nbsp; The Pharisees
+and Sadducees did not know.&nbsp; The men who wrote our Creeds, our
+Prayer Book, our Church Catechism, knew.&nbsp; The Pharisees and the
+Sadducees in our day, who fancy themselves wiser than the Creeds, and
+the Prayer Book, and the Church Catechism, do not know.&nbsp; May God
+grant that we may all know, not only with our lips, but with our hearts,
+our faith, our love, our lives, who The Lord is.</p>
+<p>Jesus Christ, the babe of Bethlehem, is The Lord.&nbsp; But who is
+He?&nbsp; The Bible tells us; when we have heard what the Bible tells
+us we shall be able better to understand the text.&nbsp; The Lord is
+He of whom it is written, &lsquo;And God said, Let us make man in our
+image, after our likeness.&rsquo;&nbsp; And who is God&rsquo;s image
+and God&rsquo;s likeness?&nbsp; The New Testament tells us&mdash;Jesus
+Christ.&nbsp; In Him man was made.&nbsp; He is the Son of Man, who is
+in heaven&mdash;the true perfect pattern of man: but He is also the
+image and likeness of God, the brightness of His Father&rsquo;s glory,
+and the express image of His person.&nbsp; He is The Lord.&nbsp; He
+is the Lord who instituted marriage, and said, &lsquo;It is not good
+that the man should be alone; I will make him an help-meet for him.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+He is the Lord who said to man, &lsquo;Be fruitful and multiply: fill
+the earth and subdue it.&rsquo;&nbsp; He is the Lord who said to the
+first murderer, &lsquo;Thy brother&rsquo;s blood crieth against thee
+from the ground.&rsquo;&nbsp; He is the Lord who talked with Abraham
+face to face as a man talks with his friend; who blest him by giving
+him a son in his old age, that he might be the father of many nations.&nbsp;
+He is the Lord who, on Mount Sinai, gave those Ten Commandments, the
+foundation of all law and right order between man and God, between man
+and man:&mdash;&lsquo;Thou shalt honour thy father and thy mother.&nbsp;
+Thou shalt do no murder.&nbsp; Thou shalt not commit adultery.&nbsp;
+Thou shalt not steal.&nbsp; Thou shalt not bear false witness in courts
+of law or elsewhere.&nbsp; Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour&rsquo;s
+property.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This is The Lord.&nbsp; Not a God far away from men; who does not
+feel for them, nor feel with them; not a God who despises men, or has
+an ill-will to men, and must be won over to change his mind, and have
+mercy on them, by many supplications and tears, and fear and trembling,
+and superstitious ceremonies.&nbsp; But this is The Lord, this is the
+babe of Bethlehem, this is He whose way John the Baptist came to prepare&mdash;even
+He of whom it is written, that He possessed wisdom, the simple, practical
+human wisdom, useful for this everyday earthly life of ours, which Solomon
+sets forth in his Proverbs, in the beginning before His works of old;
+and that when He appointed the foundations of the earth, that Wisdom
+was by Him, as one brought up with Him, and she was daily His delight;
+rejoicing alway before Him; rejoicing in the <i>habitable</i> parts
+of the earth; and her delights were <i>with the sons of men.</i></p>
+<p>In one word, He is the Lord, in whose likeness man is made.&nbsp;
+Man&rsquo;s justice is a pattern of His; man&rsquo;s love is a pattern
+of His; man&rsquo;s industry a pattern of His; man&rsquo;s Sabbath-rest,
+in some unspeakable and eternal way, a pattern of His.&nbsp; Man&rsquo;s
+family ties are patterns of His.&nbsp; God the Father is He, said St.
+Paul, from whom every fathership in heaven and earth is named, that
+we may be such fathers to our children as God is to us.&nbsp; God The
+Son is He who is not ashamed to call us brethren, and to declare to
+us the glorious news, that in Him we, too, are the sons of God, that
+we may be such sons to our heavenly Father&mdash;ay, and to our earthly
+fathers also, as the Lord Jesus was to His Father.</p>
+<p>Yes&mdash;and even more wonderful still, and more blessed still,
+the Lord is not ashamed to call himself a husband.&nbsp; Our human wedlock
+and married love is a pattern of some divine mystery.&nbsp; &lsquo;Husbands
+love your wives, as Christ also loved the Church, and gave Himself for
+it, that He might present it to Himself a glorious Church, not having
+spot or wrinkle, but that it should be holy and without blemish.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Blessed words, which we cannot pretend to explain or understand, but
+can only believe and adore, and find, as we shall find, in proportion
+as we are loving and faithful in wedlock, that God&rsquo;s Spirit bears
+witness with our spirit, that they are reasonable, blessed, true; true
+for ever.</p>
+<p>This, then, was the Lord who was coming to judge these Jews; not
+merely a god, but <i>The</i> God.&nbsp; The Lord, in whose likeness
+man was made; who had appointed men to be fathers, sons, husbands, citizens
+of a nation, owners of property, subject to laws, and yet <i>makers</i>
+of laws; because all these things, in some wonderful way, are parts
+of His likeness.&nbsp; He was coming to this nation of the Jews first,
+and then to all the nations of the earth, to judge them, Malachi said,
+with a great and terrible day.&nbsp; To lay the axe to the root of the
+tree; to cut down from the very root the evil principles which were
+working in society.&nbsp; His fan was in His hand; and He would thoroughly
+purge His floor; and gather His wheat into the garner, for the use of
+future generations: but the chaff, all that was empty, light, and useless,
+He would burn up and destroy utterly out of the way, with unquenchable
+fire.&nbsp; He would inquire of every man, How have you kept my image;
+my likeness, in which I made you?&nbsp; What sort of husbands, fathers,
+sons, neighbours, subjects, and governors, have you been?&nbsp; And
+above all, Malachi says, the root question of all would be, what sort
+of fathers have you been to your children?&nbsp; What sort of children
+to your fathers?&nbsp; Does that seem to you a small question, my friends?&nbsp;
+Would you have rather expected to hear John the Baptist ask, what sort
+of saints they had been?&nbsp; What sort of doctrines they were professing?</p>
+<p>A small question?&nbsp; Look at these two little words, Father and
+Son.&nbsp; Father and Son!&nbsp; Are they not the most deep and awful,
+as well as the most blessed and hopeful words on earth?&nbsp; Do they
+not tell us the very mystery of God&rsquo;s being?&nbsp; Are they not
+the very name of God, God The Father and God The Son, knit together
+by one Holy Spirit of Love to each other and to all, who proceeds alike
+from The Father and from The Son?&nbsp; And then, will you think it
+a light matter to ask fallen creatures made in the likeness of that
+perfect Father and that perfect Son, what sort of fathers and sons they
+have been?&nbsp; God help us all, and give us grace to ask ourselves
+that question morning and night, before the great and terrible day of
+the Lord come, lest He come and smite this land with a curse.</p>
+<p>I have been led to think deeply and to speak openly upon this solemn
+matter, my friends, by seeing, as who can help seeing, the great division
+and estrangement between the old and the young which is growing up in
+our days.&nbsp; I do not, alas! I cannot, deny the complaints which
+old people commonly make.&nbsp; Old people complain that young people
+are grown too independent, disobedient, saucy, and what not.&nbsp; It
+is too true, frightfully, miserably true, that there is not the same
+reverence for parents as there was a generation back;&mdash;that the
+children break loose from their parents, spend their parents&rsquo;
+money, choose their own road in life, their own politics, their own
+religion, alas! too often, for themselves;&mdash;that young people now
+presume to do and say a hundred things which they would not have dreamed
+in old times.&nbsp; And they are ready enough to cry out that all this
+is a sign of the last days, of which, they say, St. Paul speaks in 2
+Tim. iii. 4&mdash;when men &lsquo;shall be disobedient to parents, unthankful,
+boasters, heady, high-minded, despisers of those who are good, lovers
+of pleasure more than lovers of God.&rsquo;&nbsp; My friends, my friends,
+it is far better for us who have children, instead of prying into the
+times and seasons which God has kept in His own hand, to read our Bibles
+faithfully, and when we quote a text, quote the whole of it, and not
+just those bits of it which help us to throw blame on other people.&nbsp;
+What St. Paul really says, is that &lsquo;in the last days evil times
+will come;&rsquo; just as they had come, he shows, when he wrote; and
+what he means I will try and show you presently.&nbsp; And, moreover,
+remember that Malachi says, that the hearts of the parents in Judea
+needed turning to their children, as well as the hearts of the children
+to their parents.&nbsp; Take care lest it be not so in England now.&nbsp;
+Remember that St. Paul, in that same solemn passage, gives other marks
+of &lsquo;last days,&rsquo; which have to do with parents as well as
+with children, and some which can only have to do with parents&mdash;for
+they are the sins of grown-up and elderly people, and not of young ones.&nbsp;
+He says, that in those days men shall also be &lsquo;covetous, proud,
+without natural affection, breakers of their word, blasphemers; having
+a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof.&rsquo;&nbsp; Will
+none of these hard words hit some grown people in our day?&nbsp; Will
+not they fill some of us with dread, lest the parents now-a-days should
+be as much in fault as the children of whom they complain; lest the
+parents&rsquo; sins should be but too often the cause of the children&rsquo;s
+sins?&nbsp; Read through St. Paul&rsquo;s sad list of sins, and see
+how every young man&rsquo;s sin in it has some old man&rsquo;s sin corresponding
+to it.&nbsp; St. Paul does not part his list, and I dare not, and cannot.&nbsp;
+St. Paul mixes the parents&rsquo; and the children&rsquo;s sins together
+in his words, and I fear that we do the same in our actions.</p>
+<p>Oh! beware, beware, you who complain of the behaviour of children
+now-a-days, lest your children have as much cause to complain of you.&nbsp;
+Are your children selfish, lovers of themselves?&mdash;See that you
+have not set them the example by your own covetousness or laziness.&nbsp;
+Are they boastful?&mdash;See that your pride has not taught them.&nbsp;
+Incontinent and profligate?&mdash;See that your own fierceness has not
+taught them.&nbsp; If they see you unable to master your own temper,
+they will not care to try to master their appetites.&nbsp; Are they
+disobedient and unthankful?&mdash;See, well, then that your want of
+natural affection to them, your neglect, and harshness, and want of
+feeling and tenderness, has not made the balance of unkindness fearfully
+even between you.&nbsp; Are your children disobedient to you?&mdash;See
+that you have not taught them to be so, by breaking your word to them,
+by letting them see you deceitful to others, till they have lost all
+trust in you, all reverence for you.&nbsp; Above all, are your children
+lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God?&mdash;Oh! beware, beware,
+lest you have made them so,&mdash;lest you have been blasphemers against
+God, even when you have been fancying that you talked religion.&nbsp;
+Beware lest you have been teaching them dark, cruel, superstitious thoughts
+about God,&mdash;making them look up to Him not as their heavenly Father,
+but as a stern taskmaster whom they must obey, not from gratitude, but
+from fear of hell, and so have made God look so unlovely in their eyes
+that &lsquo;there is no beauty in Him that they should desire Him.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Can you wonder at their loving pleasure rather than loving God, when
+you show them nothing in God&rsquo;s character to love, but everything
+to dread and shrink from?&nbsp; And last of all, are your children despisers
+of those who are good, inclined to laugh at religion, to suspect and
+sneer at pious people, and call them hypocrites?&nbsp; Oh! beware, beware,
+lest your lip-religion, your dead faith, your inconsistent practice,
+has not been the cause of it.&nbsp; If you, as St. Paul says, have a
+form of godliness, and yet in your life and actions deny the power of
+it, by living without God in the world, and following the lowest maxims
+of the world in everything but what you call the salvation of your souls,
+what wonder if your children grow up despisers of those who are good?&nbsp;
+If they see you preaching one thing, and practising another, they will
+learn to fancy that all godly people do the same.&nbsp; If they see
+your religion a sham, they will learn to fancy all religion false also.&nbsp;
+Oh! woe, woe, most terrible, to those who thus harden their own children&rsquo;s
+hearts, and destroy in them, as too many do, all faith in God and man,
+all hope, all charity!&nbsp; Woe to them! for the Lord Himself, who
+came to lay the axe to the root of the tree, said of such, &lsquo;If
+any man cause one of these little ones to offend, it were better for
+him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned
+in the depths of the sea.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So it is too often now-a-days, and so it will be, until people condescend
+to learn over again that simple old Church Catechism which they were
+taught when they were little, and to teach it to their children, not
+only with their lips but in their lives.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The Church Catechism!&rsquo; some here will say to themselves
+with a smile, &lsquo;that is but a paltry medicine for so great a disease&mdash;a
+pitiful ending, forsooth, to such a severe sermon as this, to recommend
+just the Church Catechism!&rsquo;&nbsp; Let those laugh who will, my
+friends.&nbsp; If you think you can bring up your children to be blessings
+to you,&mdash;if you think you can live so as to be blessings to your
+children, without the Church Catechism, you can but try.&nbsp; I think
+that you will fail.&nbsp; More and more, year by year, I find that those
+who try do fail.&nbsp; More and more, year by year, I find that even
+religious people&rsquo;s education of their children fails, and that
+pious men&rsquo;s sons now-a-days are becoming more and more apt to
+be scandals to their parents and to religion.&nbsp; If any choose to
+say that the reason is, that the pious men&rsquo;s sons were not of
+the number of the elect, though their fathers were, I can only answer,
+that God is no respecter of persons, and that they say that He is; that
+God is not the author of the evil, and that they say that He is.&nbsp;
+If a child of mine turns out ill, I am bound to lay the fault first
+on myself, and certainly never on God,&mdash;and so is every man, unless
+the inspired Scripture is wrong where it says, &lsquo;Train up a child
+in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from
+it.&rsquo;&nbsp; And the fault <i>is</i> in ourselves.&nbsp; Very few
+people really teach their children now-a-days the Church Catechism;
+very few really believe the Church Catechism; very few really believe
+that God is such an one as the Church Catechism declares to us; very
+few believe in the Lord, in whose image and likeness man is made, whose
+way John the Baptist prepared by turning the hearts of the fathers to
+the children.&nbsp; They put, perhaps, religious books into their children&rsquo;s
+hands, and talk to them a great deal about their souls: but they do
+not tell their children what the Church Catechism tells them, because
+they do not believe what the Church Catechism tells them.</p>
+<p>What that is; what the Church Catechism does tell us, which the favourite
+religious books now-a-days do not tell us; and what that has to do with
+turning the hearts of the fathers to the children, I must tell you hereafter.&nbsp;
+God grant that my words may sink into all hearts, as far as they are
+right and true; if sooner or later we are not all brought to understand
+the meaning of those two simple words, Father and Son, neither Baptism,
+nor Confirmation, nor Schools, nor this Church, nor the very body and
+blood of Him who died for us, to share which you are all called this
+day, will be of avail for the well-being of this parish, or of this
+country, or any other country upon earth.&nbsp; For where the root is
+corrupt, the fruit will be also; and where family life and family ties,
+which are the root and foundation of society, are out of joint, there
+the Nation and the Church will decay also; as it is written, &lsquo;If
+the foundations be cast down, what can the righteous do?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And whensoever, in any family, or nation and church, the root of
+the tree (which is the conduct of parents to children, and of children
+to parents) grows corrupt and rotten, then &lsquo;last days,&rsquo;
+as St. Paul calls them, are indeed come to it, and evil times therewith;
+for the Lord will surely lay the axe to the root of it, and cut it down
+and cast it into the fire: neither will the days of that family, or
+that people, or that Church, be long in the land which the Lord their
+God has given them.&nbsp; So it has been as yet, in all ages and in
+all countries on the face of God&rsquo;s earth, and so it will be until
+the end.&nbsp; Wheresoever the hearts of the fathers are not turned
+to the children, and the hearts of the children to the fathers, there
+will a great and terrible day of the Lord come; and that nation, like
+Jud&aelig;a of old, like many a fair country in Europe at this moment,
+will be smitten with a curse.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON II.&nbsp; SALVATION</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>John xvii. 3.&nbsp; This is life eternal, that they may know Thee,
+the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent.</p>
+<p>Before I can explain what this text has to do with the Church Catechism,
+I must say to you a little about what it means.</p>
+<p>Now if I asked any of you what &lsquo;salvation&rsquo; was, you would
+probably answer, &lsquo;Eternal life.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And you would answer rightly.&nbsp; That is exactly what salvation
+is, and neither more nor less.&nbsp; No more than that; for nothing
+greater than that can belong to any created being.&nbsp; No less than
+that; for God&rsquo;s love and mercy are eternal and without bound.</p>
+<p>But what is eternal life?</p>
+<p>Some will answer, &lsquo;Going to heaven when we die.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+But what before you die?&nbsp; You do not know? cannot tell?</p>
+<p>Let us listen to what God Himself says.&nbsp; Let us listen to what
+the Lord Jesus Christ, the Word of God, says.&nbsp; Let us listen to
+what He who spake as man never spake, says.&nbsp; Surely His words must
+be the clearest, the simplest, the most exact, the deepest, the widest;
+the exactly fit and true words, the complete words, the perfect words,
+which cannot be improved on by adding to them or taking away one jot
+or tittle.&nbsp; What did the Lord Jesus Christ say that eternal life
+was?</p>
+<p>&lsquo;This is eternal life, that they may know Thee the only true
+God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>To know God and Jesus Christ; that is eternal life.&nbsp; That is
+all the eternal life which any of us will ever have, my friends.&nbsp;
+Unless our Lord&rsquo;s words are not complete and perfect, and do not
+tell us the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, about
+eternal life, that is all the eternal life any one will ever have; and
+we must make up our minds to be content therewith.</p>
+<p>To which some will answer, almost angrily, &lsquo;Of course.&nbsp;
+The way to obtain eternal life is to know God and Jesus Christ; for
+if we do not, we cannot obtain it.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>What words are these, my friends? what rash words are these, which
+men thrust into Scripture out of their own carnal conceits, as if they
+could improve upon the speech of the Son of Man Himself?&nbsp; He says,
+not that to know God is the way to eternal life: but rather that eternal
+life is the way to know God.&nbsp; He does not say, This is to know
+God and Jesus Christ, <i>in order that</i> they may have eternal life.&nbsp;
+Whatever He says, He does not say that.&nbsp; Nay, more, if we are to
+be very exact (and can we be too exact?) with the Lord&rsquo;s words,
+He says, that &lsquo;This is eternal life, <i>in order that</i> they
+may know God and Jesus Christ.&rsquo;&nbsp; Not that we are to know
+God that we may obtain eternal life, but that we must have eternal life
+in order that we may know God; that eternal life is the means, and the
+knowledge of God the end and purpose for which eternal life is given
+us.&nbsp; However this may be, at least He says what the noble collect
+which we repeat every Sunday says, &lsquo;That our eternal life stands
+in the knowledge of God,&rsquo; depends on it, and will fall without
+it.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;That we may know God.&rsquo;&nbsp; Not merely that we may
+know doctrines about salvation, and the ways of winning God&rsquo;s
+favour, and turning away His vengeance; not merely to know what God
+has done ages ago, or may do ages hence, for us: but to know God Himself;
+to know His person, His likeness, His character; and what He is, and
+what He does, now and always; to know His righteousness, His goodness,
+His truth, His love, His mercy, His strength, His willingness and mightiness
+to save; in a word, what the Bible calls His glory; and therefore to
+admire and delight in Him utterly.&nbsp; That is what our eternal life
+stands in; that is why God has given to us eternal life in His Son,
+that we may know that.&nbsp; Oh, believe your Saviour simply, like little
+children, and enter into the joy of your Lord.&nbsp; Acquaint yourselves
+with God, and be at peace.</p>
+<p>To know God; and also to know Jesus Christ whom He has sent.&nbsp;
+For St. John, when he tells us that God has already given to us eternal
+life, says also, that this life is in His Son.&nbsp; To know the Son
+of God, in whom the Father is well pleased, because He is His perfect
+Son; His exact likeness, the likeness of that glory of His, and the
+express image of that person and character of His, which I described
+to you just now; One whose life was and is and ever will be eternally
+all love, and mercy, and self-sacrifice, and labour, for lost and sinful
+men; all trust and obedience to His Father.&nbsp; To know Him and His
+life, and to come to Him, and receive from Him an eternal life, which
+this world did not give us, and cannot take away from us; which neither
+man, devil, nor angel, nor the death of our bodies, the ruin of empires,
+the destruction of the whole universe, and of time, and space, and all
+things whereof man can conceive or dream, can alter in the slightest,
+because it is a life of goodness, and righteousness, and love, which
+are eternal as the God from whom they spring; eternal as Christ, who
+is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever; and nothing but our own
+sinful wills can rob us of them.</p>
+<p>This is eternal life, and therefore this is salvation.&nbsp; A very
+different account of it (though it is the Bible account) from that narrow
+and paltry one which too many have in their minds now-a-days; a narrow
+and paltry notion that it means only being saved from the punishment
+of our sins after we die; and a very unbelieving, and godless, and atheistical
+notion too; which, like all unbelief hurts and spoils men&rsquo;s lives.</p>
+<p>For too many say to themselves, &lsquo;God must save me after I am
+dead, of course, for no one else can: but as long as I am alive I must
+save myself.&nbsp; God must save me from hell; but I must save myself
+from poverty, from trouble, from what the world may say of me or do
+to me, if I offend it.&rsquo;&nbsp; And so salvation seems to have to
+do altogether with the next life, and not at all with this; and people
+lose entirely the belief that God is our deliverer, our protector, our
+guide, our friend, now, here, in this life; and do not really think
+that they can get on better in this world by knowing God and Jesus Christ;
+and so they set to work to help themselves by cunning, by covetousness,
+by cowardly truckling to the wicked ways of the very world which they
+renounced at baptism, by following after a multitude to do evil, and
+standing by, saying, &lsquo;I saw it not,&rsquo; when they see wrong
+and cruelty done upon the earth; afraid to fight God&rsquo;s battles
+like men of God, because they say it is &lsquo;dangerous.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And so, in these evil days, thousands who call themselves Christians
+live on, worldly and selfish, <i>without God in the world</i>; while
+they talk busily enough of &lsquo;preparing to meet God,&rsquo; in the
+world to come; dreaming, poor souls, of arriving at what they call &lsquo;salvation&rsquo;
+after they die, while they are too often, I fear, deep enough in what
+the Scripture calls &lsquo;damnation,&rsquo; before they die.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But,&rsquo; say some, &lsquo;is not salvation going to a place
+called heaven?&rsquo;&nbsp; My friends, let the Bible speak.&nbsp; It
+tells us that salvation is not in a place at all, but in a person, a
+living, moving, acting person, who is none other than the Lord Jesus
+Christ.&nbsp; Let the Psalmists speak, and shame us, who ought to know
+(being Christians) even better than they, that The Lord Himself is Salvation.&nbsp;
+The whole Book of Psalms, what is it but the blessed discovery that
+salvation is not merely in a place, or a state, not even in some &lsquo;beatific
+vision&rsquo; after men die; but in the Lord Himself all day long in
+this world; that salvation is a life in God and with God?&nbsp; &lsquo;The
+Lord is my light, and my salvation, of whom then shall I be afraid?&nbsp;
+The Lord is the strength of my life, and my portion for ever.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+This is their key-note.&nbsp; Shame on us Christians, that we should
+have forgotten it for one so much lower.&nbsp; &lsquo;The name of the
+Lord,&rsquo; says Solomon, &lsquo;is a strong tower: the righteous runneth
+into it, and is safe.&rsquo;&nbsp; Into it: not merely into some pleasant
+place after he dies, but all day long; and is safe: not merely after
+he dies, but in every chance and change of this mortal life.&nbsp; My
+friends, I am ashamed to have to put Christian men in mind of these
+things.&nbsp; Truly, &lsquo;Evil communications have corrupted good
+manners; awake to righteousness and sin not, for some have not the knowledge
+of God.&rsquo;&nbsp; I am ashamed, I say; for there are old hymns in
+the mouths of every one to this day, which testify against their want
+of faith; which say, &lsquo;Christ is my life,&rsquo; &lsquo;Christ
+is my salvation;&rsquo; and which were written, I doubt not, by men
+who meant literally what they said, whatever those who sing them now-a-days
+may mean by them.&nbsp; Now what do those hymns mean by such words,
+if they mean anything at all?&nbsp; Surely what I have been preaching
+to you, and what seems to some of you, I fear, strange and new doctrine.&nbsp;
+And what else does the Church Catechism mean, when it bids every child
+thank God for having brought him into a state of salvation?&nbsp; For
+mind, throughout the whole Church Catechism there is not one word about
+what people commonly call heaven and hell; not one word though &lsquo;heaven
+and hell&rsquo; are now-a-days generally the first things about which
+children are taught.&nbsp; Not one word is the child taught about what
+will happen to him after death, except that his body will rise again,
+and that Christ will be his Judge after he is dead as well as while
+he is alive: but not one word about that salvation after he is dead,
+which is almost the only thing of which one hears in many pulpits.&nbsp;
+And why, but because the Catechism teaches the child to believe that
+Jesus Christ is his salvation now, in this life, and believes that to
+be enough for him to know?&nbsp; For if Christ be eternal, His salvation
+must be eternal also.&nbsp; If Christ&rsquo;s life be in the child,
+eternal life must be in the child; for Christ&rsquo;s life must be eternal,
+even as Christ Himself; and that is enough for the child, and for us
+also.</p>
+<p>And with this agrees that great text of Scripture, &lsquo;When the
+wicked man turneth away from his wickedness, and doeth that which is
+lawful and right, he shall save his soul alive.&rsquo;&nbsp; People
+now-a-days are apt to make two mistakes about that one text.&nbsp; First
+they forget the &lsquo;when,&rsquo; and read it as if it stood, &lsquo;If
+the wicked man turn away from his wickedness in this life, he shall
+save his soul in the next life:&rsquo; but the Bible says much more
+than that.&nbsp; It says, that when he turns, then and there, that moment
+he shall save his soul alive.&nbsp; And next, they read the text as
+if it stood, &lsquo;he shall save his soul.&rsquo;&nbsp; Here again,
+my friends, the Bible says a great deal more; it says, that he shall
+save his soul alive.&nbsp; Perhaps that does not seem to you any great
+difference?&nbsp; Alas, alas, my friends, I fear that there are too
+many now, as there have been in all times, who do not care for the difference.&nbsp;
+Provided &lsquo;their souls are saved,&rsquo; by which they mean, provided
+they escape torment after they die, it matters nothing to them whether
+their souls are saved alive, or saved dead; they do not even know the
+difference between a dead soul and a live soul; because they know nothing
+about eternal death and eternal life, which are the death and the life
+of eternal persons such as souls are; they say to themselves, if they
+be Protestants, &lsquo;I hope I shall have faith enough to be saved;&rsquo;
+or if they be Papists, &lsquo;I hope I shall have good works enough
+to be saved;&rsquo; valuing faith and works not for themselves; yea,
+valuing&mdash;for I must say it&mdash;Almighty God Himself, not for
+Himself and His own glory, but valuing faith and works, and the Father,
+and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, only because, as they dream, they
+are so many helps to a life of pleasure beyond the grave; not knowing
+this, that living faith and good works do not merely lead to heaven,
+but are heaven itself, that true, real eternal heaven wherein alone
+men really live; that true, real eternal life which was with the Father,
+and was manifested in Jesus Christ, whom St. John saw living upon earth
+that same Eternal Life, and bore witness of Him that His life was the
+light of men; that eternal life whereof it is written, that God hath
+brought us to life together with Christ, and raised us up, and made
+us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus:&mdash;not knowing
+this, that the only life which any soul ought to live, is the life of
+God and of Christ, and of the Spirit of God and Christ; a life of righteousness,
+and justice, and truth, and obedience, and mercy, and love; a life which
+God has given to us, that we may know and copy Him, and do His works,
+and live His life, for ever:&mdash;not knowing this also that eternal
+death is not merely some torture of fire and worms beyond the grave:
+but that this is eternal death, not to live the eternal life which is
+the only possible life for souls, the life of righteousness and love;
+a death which may come on respectable people, and high religious professors,
+while they are fancying themselves sure to be saved, as easily and surely
+as it may on thieves and harlots, wallowing in the mire of sins.</p>
+<p>For what is this same eternal death?&nbsp; The opposite surely to
+eternal life.&nbsp; Eternal life is to know God, and therefore to obey
+Him.&nbsp; Eternal life is to know God, whose name is love; and therefore,
+to rejoice to fulfil His law, of which it is written, &lsquo;Love is
+the fulfilling of the law;&rsquo; and therefore to be full of love ourselves,
+as it is written, &lsquo;We know that we have passed from death unto
+life, because we love the brethren;&rsquo; and again, &lsquo;Every one
+that loveth, knoweth God, for God is love.&rsquo;&nbsp; And on the other
+hand, eternal death is not to know God, and therefore not to care for
+His law of love, and therefore to be without love; as it is written
+on the other hand, &lsquo;He that loveth not his brother abideth in
+death.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer;&rsquo;
+and ye know that no murderer hath eternal life abiding in him; and again,
+&lsquo;He that loveth not, knoweth not God, for God is love.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Eternal death, then, is to love no one; to be shut up in the dark prison-house
+of our own wilful and wayward thoughts and passions, full of spite,
+suspicion, envy, fear; in fact, in one word, to be a devil.&nbsp; Oh,
+my friends, is not that damnation indeed, to be a devil here on earth,
+and for aught we know, for ever and ever?</p>
+<p>Do you not know what frame of mind I mean?&nbsp; Thank God, none
+of us, I suppose, is ever utterly without some grain of love left for
+some one; none of us, I suppose, is ever utterly shut up in himself;
+and as long as there is love there is life and as long as there is life
+there is hope: but yet there have been moments when one has felt with
+horror how near, and how terrible, and how easy was this same eternal
+death which some fancy only possible after they die.</p>
+<p>For, my friends, were you ever, any one of you, for one half hour,
+completely angry, completely <i>sulky</i>? displeased and disgusted
+with everybody and everything round you, and yet displeased and disgusted
+with yourself all the while; liking to think everyone wrong, liking
+to make out that they were unjust to you; feeling quite proud at the
+notion that you were an injured person: and yet feeling in your heart
+the very opposite of all these fancies: feeling that you were wrong,
+that you were unjust to them, and feeling utterly ashamed at the thought
+that they were the injured persons, and that you had injured them.&nbsp;
+And perhaps, to make all worse, the person about whom all this storm
+had arisen in your heart, was some dear friend or relation whom you
+loved (strange contradiction, yet most true) at the very moment that
+you were trying to hate.&nbsp; Oh, my friends, if one such dark hour
+has ever come home to you; if you have ever let the sun go down upon
+your wrath, and so given place to the devil, then you know something
+at least of what eternal death is.&nbsp; You know how, in such moments,
+there is a worm in the heart, and a fire in the heart, compared with
+which all bodily torment would be light and bearable; a worm in the
+heart which does not die: and a fire in the heart which you cannot quench:
+but which if they remained there would surely destroy you.&nbsp; So
+intolerable are they, that you feel that you will actually and really
+die, in some strange unspeakable way, if you continue in that temper
+long.&nbsp; Do not there open at such times within our hearts black
+depths of evil, a power of becoming wicked, a chance of being swept
+off into sin if one gives way, which one never suspected till then;
+and yet with all these, the most dreadful sense of helplessness, of
+slavery, of despair?&mdash;God grant that may not remain, for then comes
+the mad hope to escape death by death, to try by one desperate stroke
+to rid oneself of that self which is for the time one&rsquo;s torment,
+worm, fire, death, and hell.&nbsp; And what is this dark fight within
+us?&nbsp; What does the Bible call it?&nbsp; It is death and life, eternal
+death and eternal life, salvation and damnation, hell and heaven, fighting
+together within our hapless hearts, to see which shall be our masters.&nbsp;
+It is the battle of the evil spirit, who is the Devil, fighting with
+the good spirit, who is God.&nbsp; Nothing less than that, my friends.&nbsp;
+Yes, in those hateful and shameful moments of pride, or spite, or contempt,
+or self-will, or suspicion, or sneering, on which when they are past
+we look back with shame and horror, and wonder how we could have been
+such wretches even for a moment,&mdash;at such times, I say, our heart
+is a battle-field, on which no less than the Devil himself, and God
+Himself are fighting for our souls.&nbsp; On one side, Satan trying
+to bring us into that state of eternal death in which he lives himself;
+Satan, the loveless one, the self-willed one, the accuser, the slanderer,
+slandering God to us, slandering man to us, slandering to us the friends
+we love best and trust most utterly; yea, slandering our own selves
+to us, trying to make us believe that we are as bad, ought to be as
+bad, and must always be as bad as we seem for the time to be; that we
+cannot shake off our evil passions, that we cannot rise again out of
+the eternal death of sin into the eternal life of righteousness.&nbsp;
+And on the other side, the Spirit of God and of His Christ, the Spirit
+of eternal life, the Spirit of justice, and righteousness, love, joy,
+peace, duty, self-sacrifice, trying to make us know Him and see His
+beauty, and obey Him, and be at peace; trying to raise us again into
+that eternal life and state of salvation which the Lord Jesus Christ
+has bought for us with His most precious blood.</p>
+<p>Oh, awful thought!&nbsp; Life and death, the Devil himself, and the
+Lord Jesus Christ Himself, fighting in your heart and in mine, and in
+the heart of every human being round us!&nbsp; And yet most blessed
+thought, hopeful, glorious,&mdash;full of the promise of eternal victory!&nbsp;
+For greater is He that is with us, than he that is against us; and He
+who conquered Satan for Himself, can and will conquer him for us also.&nbsp;
+No thing can separate us from the love of Christ; no thing, yea no angel,
+or devil, principality, or power; no thing, but only ourselves, only
+our own proud and wayward will and determination to the Devil&rsquo;s
+voice in our hearts, and not the voice of Christ, the Word of Life,
+who is nigh us, in our hearts, even in our darkest moments, loving us
+still, pitying us, ready, able and willing to help all who cast themselves
+on Him, and raise us, there and then, the very moment we cry to Him
+and renounce the Devil and our own foolish will, out of self-will into
+God&rsquo;s will, out of darkness into light, out of hatred into love,
+out of despair into hope, out of doubt into faith, out of tempest into
+peace, out of the death of sin into the life of righteousness, the life
+of love and charity, which abideth for ever.&nbsp; Oh, listen not to
+the lying, slanderous Devil, who tells you that by your own sin you
+have lost your share in Christ, lost baptismal grace, lost Christ&rsquo;s
+love&mdash;Lost His love?&nbsp; His, who, were you in the very lowest
+depths of hell, would pity you still?&nbsp; His love, who Himself went
+down into hell, and preached to the spirits in prison, to show that
+he did care even for them?&nbsp; Not so: into Him you have been baptized.&nbsp;
+His cross is on your foreheads, His Father is your Father:&mdash;and
+can a father desert his child, even though he sinned seventy and seven
+times, if seventy and seven times he turn and repent?&nbsp; Can man
+weary God?&nbsp; Can the creature conquer and destroy the love of his
+Creator?&nbsp; Can Christ deny Himself?&nbsp; Not so; whosoever thou
+art, however sorely tempted, however deeply fallen, however disgusted
+and terrified at thyself, turn only to that blessed face which wept
+over Jerusalem, to that great heart which bled for thee upon the cross,
+and thou shalt find him unchanged, the same yesterday, to-day, and for
+ever, the Lord of life and love, able and willing to save to the uttermost
+all who come to God through Him, and the accusing Devil shall turn and
+flee, and thou shalt know that thy Redeemer liveth still, and in thy
+flesh thou shalt see the salvation of God, and cry, &lsquo;Rejoice not
+against me, Satan, mine enemy; for when I fall I shall arise.&rsquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON III.&nbsp; A GOOD CONSCIENCE</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>1 Peter iii. 21.&nbsp; The like figure whereunto baptism doth now
+save us (not the putting away the filth of the flesh, but the answer
+of a good conscience toward God,) by the resurrection of Jesus Christ.</p>
+<p>These words are very wide words; too wide to please most people.&nbsp;
+They preach a very free grace; too free to please most people.&nbsp;
+Such free and full grace, indeed, that some who talk most about free
+grace, and insist most on man&rsquo;s being saved only by free grace,
+are the very men who shrink from these words most, and would be more
+comfortable in their minds, I suspect, if they were not in the Bible
+at all, because the grace they preach is too free.&nbsp; But so it always
+has been, and so it is, and so, I suppose, it always will be.&nbsp;
+Man preaches his notions of God&rsquo;s forgiveness, his notions of
+what he thinks God ought to do; but when God proclaims His own forgiveness,
+and tells men what He has actually done, and bids His apostle declare
+boldly that baptism doth now save us, then man is frightened at the
+vastness of God&rsquo;s generosity, and thinks God&rsquo;s grace too
+free, His forgiveness too complete; and considers this text and many
+another in the Bible as &lsquo;dangerous&rsquo; forsooth, if it is &lsquo;preached
+unreservedly,&rsquo; and not to be quoted without some words of man&rsquo;s
+invention tacked to it, to water it down, and narrow it, and take all
+the strength and life out of it; and if he be asked whether he believes
+the words of Scripture,&mdash;for instance, whether St. Paul spoke truth
+when he told the heathen Athenians that they and all men were the offspring
+of God;&mdash;or when he told the Romans that as by the offence of one,
+judgment came on all men to condemnation, even so by the righteousness
+of One, the free gift came upon all men to justification of life;&mdash;or
+when he told the Corinthians, that as in Adam all die, even so in Christ
+shall all be made alive;&mdash;or whether St. Peter spoke truth when
+he said, that &lsquo;baptism doth also now save us,&rsquo;&mdash;then
+they answer, that the words are true &lsquo;in a sense;&rsquo; that
+is, not in their plain sense; true, if they were only true; true, and
+yet somehow at the same time not true; and not to be preached &lsquo;unreservedly:&rsquo;
+as if man could be more cautious and correct in his language than the
+Spirit of God, who inspired the Apostles; as if man could be more careful
+of God&rsquo;s honour than God is of His own; as if man could hate sin
+and guard against sin more carefully than God Himself.</p>
+<p>Just in the same way do people stumble at certain invaluable words
+in the Church Catechism, which teach children to thank God for having
+brought them into that state of salvation.&nbsp; Even very good people,
+and people who really wish to believe and honour the Church Catechism,
+and the Sacrament of Baptism, find these words too strong to please
+them, and say, that of course a child&rsquo;s being in a state of salvation
+cannot mean that he is saved, but that he may be saved after he dies.</p>
+<p>My friends, I never could find that we have a right to take liberties
+with the Bible and the Prayer Book which we dare not take with any other
+book, and to put meanings into the words of them which, in the case
+of any other book, would be contrary to plain grammar and the English
+tongue, if not to common sense and honesty.</p>
+<p>If you say of a man, &lsquo;he is in a state of happiness,&rsquo;
+you mean, do you not, that he is happy now, not that he may perhaps
+be happy some day?&nbsp; If you came to me and told me that you were
+in a state of hunger, you would think it a very strange answer to receive
+if I say, &lsquo;Very well then, if you become hungry, come to me, and
+I will feed you?&rsquo;&nbsp; You all know that a man&rsquo;s being
+in a state of poverty, or of misery, means that he is poor or miserable
+now, here, at this very time; that if a man is in a state of sickness,
+he is sick; if he is in a state of health, he is healthy.&nbsp; Then
+what can a man&rsquo;s being in a state of salvation mean, by all rules
+of English, but that he is saved?&nbsp; If I were to say to any one
+of the good people who do not think so, &lsquo;My friend, you are in
+a state of damnation,&rsquo; he would answer me quickly enough, &lsquo;I
+am not, for I am not damned.&rsquo;&nbsp; He would agree that a man&rsquo;s
+being in a state of damnation means that the man is damned; why will
+he not agree that a man&rsquo;s being in a state of salvation means
+that he is saved?&nbsp; Because, my friends, God&rsquo;s grace is too
+full for fallen man&rsquo;s notions; and therefore there is an evil
+fashion abroad in the world, that where a text speaks of wrath, and
+misery and punishment, you are to interpret it exactly, and to the very
+letter: but where it speaks of love, and mercy, and forgiveness, you
+are to do no such thing, but narrow it, and fence it, and explain it
+away, for fear you should make sinners too comfortable,&mdash;a plan
+which seems wise enough, but which, like other plans of man&rsquo;s
+wisdom, has not succeeded too well, to judge by the number of sinners
+who are already too comfortable though they hear the Bible misused,
+and God&rsquo;s grace narrowed in this way every Sunday of their lives.</p>
+<p>But, my friends, we call ourselves Englishmen and churchmen; let
+us be honest Englishmen and plain churchmen, and take our Catechism
+as it stands.&nbsp; For rightly or wrongly, truly or falsely, it does
+teach every christened child to thank God, not merely that it has some
+chance of being saved, when it dies, but that it is saved already, now,
+here on earth.</p>
+<p>Whether that is true or false is another question.&nbsp; I believe
+it to be true.&nbsp; I believe the text to be true; I believe that why
+people shrink from it is, that they have got into their minds a wrong,
+unscriptural, superstitious notion of what being saved, and saving one&rsquo;s
+soul alive, and salvation mean.&nbsp; And I beg all of you who read
+your Bibles to search the Scriptures from beginning to end, and try
+to find out what these words mean, and whether the Catechism has not
+kept close, after all, to the words of Scripture.&nbsp; It will be better
+for you, my friends; it will be worth your while, to know exactly what
+being saved means; for to judge by the signs of the times, there are,
+very probably, days coming in which it will be as needful for you and
+for your children to save your souls alive lest you die, as ever it
+was for the Jews in Isaiah&rsquo;s or Jeremiah&rsquo;s time, or for
+the Romans in St. Paul&rsquo;s time; and that in that day you will find
+the Catechism wider, and deeper, and sounder than you have ever suspected
+it to be, and see, I trust, that in these very words it preaches to
+you, and me, and our children after us, the one true Gospel and good
+news, which will stand, and grow, and shine brighter and brighter for
+ever, when all the paltry, narrow, counterfeit gospels which man invents
+in its place have been burnt up by the unquenchable fire with which
+the merciful Lord purges the chaff from His floor.</p>
+<p>I told you this morning what I believe that salvation was,&mdash;to
+know God, and Jesus Christ, whom He has sent.&nbsp; To know God&rsquo;s
+likeness, God&rsquo;s character, what God has shown of His own character,
+what He has done for us.&nbsp; To know His boundless love, and mercy,
+and knowing that, to trust in Him utterly, and submit to Him utterly,
+and obey Him utterly, sure that He loves us, that His will to us is
+goodwill, that His commandments must be life.&nbsp; To know God, and
+therefore to love Him and to serve Him, that is salvation.</p>
+<p>Now what hinders a little child, from the very moment that it can
+think or speak, from entering into that salvation?&nbsp; Not the child&rsquo;s
+own heart.&nbsp; There is evil in the child&mdash;true.&nbsp; Is there
+none in you and me?&nbsp; There is a corrupt nature in the child&mdash;true.&nbsp;
+Is there not in you and me?&nbsp; Woe to us if we have not found it
+out: woe to us if we dare to think that we are in ourselves&mdash;or
+out of ourselves either&mdash;one whit better than our own children.&nbsp;
+What should hinder any child whom you or I ever saw from knowing God,
+and His Name, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit?</p>
+<p>Has he not an earthly father, through whom he may know <i>The</i>
+Father?&nbsp; Is he not an earthly son; and through that may he not
+know <i>The</i> Son?&nbsp; Has he not a conscience, a spirit in him
+which knows good from evil? holiness from wickedness&mdash;far more
+clearly and tenderly than the souls of most grown people do? and can
+he not, therefore, understand you when you speak of a Holy Spirit, a
+Spirit which puts good desires into his heart, and can enable him to
+bring those good desires into practice?</p>
+<p>I know one hindrance at least; and that is his parents&rsquo; sins;
+when the parents&rsquo; harshness or neglect tempts the child to fancy
+that God The Father is such a Father to him as his parents are, and
+that to be a child of God is to look up to his heavenly Father with
+dread and suspicion as to a hard taskmaster whose anger has to be turned
+away, and not with that perfect love, and trust, and respect, and self-sacrifice,
+with which the Lord Jesus Christ fulfilled His Father&rsquo;s will and
+proclaimed His Father&rsquo;s glory: or when the parents&rsquo; unholiness
+and lip-religion teach the child to fancy that the Holy Spirit means
+only certain religious fancies and feelings, or the learning by heart
+of certain words and doctrines, or, worst of all, a spirit of bondage
+unto fear; instead of knowing Him to be, as He is, the Spirit of righteousness,
+and love, and joy, and peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness,
+meekness, temperance: or when, again, parents by their own teaching,
+do despite to the Spirit of Grace in their own child, and destroy their
+child&rsquo;s good conscience toward God, by telling the child that
+it does not really love God, when it loves Him, perhaps, far better
+than they do; by telling the child that its sins have parted it from
+God, when its sins are light, yea, are as nothing in the balance compared
+to the sins they themselves commit every day, while they claim for themselves
+clearer light and knowledge than the child, and thereby condemn themselves
+rather than the child; when they darken and defile the pure and beautiful
+trust and admiration for its Heavenly Father, which God&rsquo;s Spirit
+puts into the child&rsquo;s heart, by telling it that it is doomed to
+I know-not-what horrible misery and torture when it dies; but that it
+can escape from that wretched end by thinking certain thoughts, and
+feeling certain feelings; and so (after stirring up in the child all
+manner of dreadful doubts of God&rsquo;s love and justice, and perhaps
+driving it away from religion altogether by making it believe that it
+has committed sins which it has not committed, and deserves horrible
+tortures which it has not deserved), do perhaps at last awaken in it
+a new love for God, but one which is not like that first love, that
+childlike love; one which, I fear, is hardly a love for God at all,
+but principally a selfish joy and delight at having escaped from coming
+torments.&nbsp; This is the reason, my friends; and this hindrance,
+at least, I know.&nbsp; I will not copy those parents, my friends, and
+tell them, as they tell their children, that they are bringing on themselves
+endless torture; but I must tell them, for the Lord Christ has told
+them, that they are bringing on themselves something&mdash;I know not
+what&mdash;of which it is written, that it were better for them that
+a millstone were hanged about their necks, and that they were drowned
+in the depth of the sea.&nbsp; Oh, my friends, if I speak sternly, almost
+bitterly, when I speak of parents&rsquo; sins, it is because I speak
+for those who cannot speak for themselves.&nbsp; I plead for Christ&rsquo;s
+little ones: I plead for the souls and consciences of those little children
+of whom Christ said, &lsquo;Suffer the little children to come unto
+me;&rsquo; not that they might become His, but because they were His
+already; not that they might win His love, but because He loved them
+from all eternity: not that they might enter into the kingdom of heaven,
+but, because they were in the kingdom of heaven already; because the
+kingdom of heaven was made up of such as them, and the angels who ministered
+unto them always beheld the face of our Father who is in heaven.&nbsp;
+Yes; I plead for those children, of whom the Lord said, &lsquo;Except
+ye be converted,&rsquo; that is, utterly turned and changed, &lsquo;and
+become as little children, ye shall in no wise enter into the kingdom
+of heaven.&rsquo;&nbsp; Deep and blessed words, which are the root-rule
+of all true righteousness; which so few really believe at heart, any
+more than the Pharisees, and Sadducees, and Herodians of old did.&nbsp;
+Up and down, all over England, I hear men of all denominations saying,
+not, &lsquo;Except we grown people be converted and become as little
+children;&rsquo; but, &lsquo;except the little children be converted,
+and become like us, grown people.&rsquo;&nbsp; God grant that the little
+children may not become like too many grown people!&nbsp; God grant
+it, I say.&nbsp; God grant that our children may not become like us!&nbsp;
+God grant that they may keep through youth and manhood, and through
+the grave, and through all worlds to come, the tender and childlike
+heart, which we too often have hardened in ourselves by bigotry and
+superstition, and dead faith, and lip-worship!&nbsp; And I can have
+good hope that God will grant it.&nbsp; I can have hope that God will
+teach our children and our children&rsquo;s children truly to know Him
+whose name is Love and Righteousness, the Father, the Son, and the Holy
+Spirit, as long as I see His providence preserving for us this old Church
+Catechism, to teach our children what we forget to teach them, or what
+we have not faith enough to teach them.</p>
+<p>Yes, I can have hope for England; and hope for those mighty nations
+across the seas, whose earthly mother God has ordained that she should
+be, as long as the Catechism is taught to her children.</p>
+<p>For see.&nbsp; This Catechism does not begin with telling children
+that they are sinners: they will find that out soon enough for themselves,
+poor little things, from their own wayward and self-willed hearts.&nbsp;
+Nor by telling them that man is fallen and corrupt: they will find out
+that also soon enough, from the way in which they see people go on around
+them.&nbsp; It does not even begin by telling them that they ought to
+be good, or what goodness and righteousness is; because it takes for
+granted that they know that already; it takes for granted that The Light
+who lights every man who comes into the world is in them; even the Lord
+Jesus Christ Himself, stirring up in their hearts, as He does in the
+heart of every child, the knowledge of good and the love of good.&nbsp;
+But it begins at once by teaching the child the name of God.&nbsp; It
+goes at once to the root of the matter; to the fountain of goodness
+itself; even to God, the Father of lights.&nbsp; It is so careful of
+God&rsquo;s honour, so careful that the child should learn from the
+first to look up to God with love and trust, that it dare not tell the
+child that God can destroy and punish, before it has told him that God
+is a Father and a Maker; the Father of spirits, who has made him and
+all the world.&nbsp; It dare not tell him that mankind is fallen, before
+it has told him that all the world is redeemed.&nbsp; It dare not talk
+to him of unholiness, before it has taught him that the Holy Spirit
+of God is with him, to make him holy.&nbsp; It tells him of a world,
+a flesh, and a devil: but he has renounced them.&nbsp; He has neither
+part nor lot in them; and he is not to think of them yet.&nbsp; He is
+to think of that in which he has part and lot, of which he is an inheritor.&nbsp;
+He is to know where he is and ought to be, before he knows where he
+is not and ought not to be: he is to think of the name of God, by which
+he can trample world, flesh, and devil under foot, if they dare hereafter
+meddle with his soul.&nbsp; In its God-inspired tenderness and prudence,
+it dare not darken the heart of one little child, or tempt him to hard
+thoughts of God, or to cry, &lsquo;Why hast thou made me thus?&rsquo;
+lest it put a stumbling-block in the way of Christ&rsquo;s little ones,
+and dishonour the name and glory of God.&nbsp; It tells him of the love,
+before it tells him of the wrath; of the order, before it tells him
+of the disorder; of the right, before the wrong; of the health, before
+the disease; of the freedom, before the bondage; of the truth, before
+the lies; of the light, before the darkness; in one word, it tells him
+first of the eternal and good God, who was, and is, and shall be to
+all eternity, before and above the evil devil.&nbsp; It tells him of
+the name of God; and tells him that God is with him, and he with God,
+and bids him believe that, and be saved, from his birth-hour, to endless
+ages.&nbsp; It does not tell him to pray that he may become God&rsquo;s
+child; but to pray, because he is God&rsquo;s child already.&nbsp; It
+does not tell him to love God, in order that he may make God love him;
+but to love God because God loves him already, and has loved him from
+all eternity.&nbsp; It does not tell him to obey Jesus Christ, in order
+that Christ may save him; but to obey Christ because Christ has saved
+him, and bought him with his own blood.&nbsp; It does not tell him to
+do good works, in order that God&rsquo;s Spirit may be pleased with
+him, and come to him, and make him one of the elect; neither does it
+tell him, that some day or other, if he is converted, and feels certain
+religious experiences, he will have a right to consider himself one
+of God&rsquo;s elect: but it tells him to look man and devil in the
+face, he, the poor little ignorant village child, and say boldly in
+the name of God, &lsquo;I am one of God&rsquo;s elect.&nbsp; The Holy
+Spirit of God is sanctifying me, and making me holy.&nbsp; God has saved
+me; and I heartily thank my Heavenly Father, who has called me to this
+state of salvation.&rsquo;&nbsp; It tells him to believe that he is
+safe&mdash;safe in the ark of Christ&rsquo;s Church, as Noah was safe
+in the ark at the deluge; and that the one way to keep himself within
+that ark is to obey Him to whom it belongs, who judges it and will guide
+it for ever, Jesus Christ, the likeness of God; and that as long as
+he does that, neither world, flesh, nor devil, can harm him; even as
+Noah was safe in the ark, and nothing could drown him but his own wilful
+casting himself out of the ark, and trying to free the flood of waters
+by his own strength and cunning.</p>
+<p>It tells him, I say, that he is safe, and saved, even as David, and
+Isaiah, and all holy men who ever lived have been, as long as he trusts
+in God, and clings to God, and obeys God; and that only when he forsakes
+God, and follows his own selfishness and pride, can anything or being
+in earth or hell harm him.</p>
+<p>And do not fancy, my friends, that this is a mere unimportant question
+of words and doctrines, because a baptized and educated child may be
+lost after all, and fall from his state of salvation into a state of
+damnation.&nbsp; Still more, do not fancy that if a child is taught
+that he is already a child of God, regenerated in baptism, and elect
+by God&rsquo;s Spirit, that therefore he will neglect either vital faith
+or good works&mdash;heaven forbid!</p>
+<p>Is it likely to make a child careless, and inclined to neglect vital
+truth, to tell him that God is his Father and loves him utterly, and
+has given His only begotten Son to die for him?&nbsp; Is it not the
+very way, the only way, to stir up in him faith, and real hearty trust
+and affection towards God?&nbsp; How can you teach him to trust God,
+but by telling him that God has shown himself boundlessly and perfectly
+worthy to be trusted by every soul of man; or to love God, but by showing
+him that God loves him already?&nbsp; Is it likely to make a child careless
+of good works, to tell him that God has elected and chosen him, and
+all his brothers and schoolfellows, to be conformed into the likeness
+of Jesus Christ, and that every good, and honourable, and gentle thought
+or feeling which ever crosses his little heart, does not come from himself,
+is not part of his own nature or character, but is nothing less than
+the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, nothing less than the voice of Almighty
+God Himself, speaking to the child&rsquo;s heart, that he may answer
+with Samuel&mdash;&lsquo;Speak, Lord, for thy servant heareth?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Is it likely to make a child careless about losing eternal life, to
+tell him that God has already given to him eternal life, and that that
+life is in His Son Jesus Christ, to whom the child belongs, body, soul,
+and spirit?</p>
+<p>Judge for yourselves, my friends.&nbsp; Think what awe, what reverence,
+purity, dread of sin, would grow up in a child who was really taught
+all this, and yet what faith and love to God, what freedom, and joyfulness,
+and good courage about his own duty and calling in life.</p>
+<p>And then look at the fruits which in general follow a religious education,
+as it is miscalled; and take warning.&nbsp; For if you really train
+up your children in the way in which they should go, be sure that when
+they are old they will not depart from it&mdash;a promise which is not
+fulfilled to most religious education which we see around us now-a-days;
+from which sad fact, if Scripture be inspired and infallible, we can
+only judge that such is not the way in which the children should go;
+and that because it is a wrong way, therefore God will not, and man
+cannot, keep them in it.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON IV.&nbsp; NAMES</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Matthew i. 21.&nbsp; And thou shall call his name Jesus.</p>
+<p>Did it ever seem to you a curious thing that the Catechism begins
+by asking the child its name?&nbsp; &lsquo;What is your name?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Who gave you this name?&rsquo;&nbsp; I think that if you were
+not all of you accustomed to the Church Catechism from your childhood,
+that would seem a strange way of beginning to teach a child about religion.</p>
+<p>But the more I consider, the more sure I am that it is the right
+way to begin teaching a child what the Catechism wishes to teach.</p>
+<p>Do not fancy that it begins by asking the child&rsquo;s name just
+because it must begin somehow, and then go on to religion afterwards.&nbsp;
+Do not fancy that it merely supposes that the clergyman does not know
+the child&rsquo;s name, and must ask it; for this Catechism is intended
+to be taught by parents to their children, and masters to their apprentices
+and servants; by people, therefore, who know the child&rsquo;s name
+perfectly well already, and yet they are to begin by asking the child
+his name.</p>
+<p>Now, why is this?&nbsp; What has a child&rsquo;s name to do with
+his Faith and duty as a Christian?</p>
+<p>You may answer, Because his Christian name is given him when he is
+baptized.</p>
+<p>But <i>why</i> is his Christian name given him when he is baptized?&nbsp;
+Why then rather than at any other time?</p>
+<p>Because it is the old custom of the Church.&nbsp; No doubt it is:
+and a most wise and blessed custom it is; and one which shows us how
+much more about God and man the churchmen in old times knew, than most
+of our religious teachers now-a-days.&nbsp; But how did that old custom
+arise?&nbsp; What put into the minds of church people, for the last
+sixteen hundred years at least, that being baptized and being named
+had anything to do with each other?&nbsp; Men had names of their own
+long before the Lord Jesus came, long before His Baptism was heard of
+on earth;&mdash;the heathens of old had their names&mdash;the heathens
+have names still;&mdash;why, then, did church people feel it right to
+mix a new thing like baptism with a world-old thing like giving a name?</p>
+<p>My friends, I feel and say honestly, that there is more in this matter
+than I understand; and what little I do understand, I could not explain
+fully in one sermon, or in many either.&nbsp; But let this be enough
+for to-day.&nbsp; God grant that I may be able to make you understand
+me.</p>
+<p>Any one&rsquo;s having a name&mdash;a name of his own, a Christian
+name, as we rightly call it&mdash;signifies that he is a person; that
+is, that he has a character of his own, and a responsibility, and a
+calling and duty of his own, given him by God; in one word, that he
+has an immortal soul in him, for which he, and he alone, must answer,
+and receive the rewards of the deeds which it does in the body, whether
+they be good or evil.&nbsp; But names are not given at random, without
+cause or meaning.&nbsp; When Adam named all the beasts, we read that
+whatsoever he called any beast, that <i>was</i> the name of it.&nbsp;
+The names which he gave <i>described</i> each beast, were taken from
+something in its appearance, or its ways and habits, and so each was
+its right name, the name which expressed its nature.&nbsp; And so now,
+when learned men discover animals or plants in foreign countries, they
+do not give them names at random, but take care to invent names for
+them which may describe their natures, and make people understand what
+they are like, as Adam did for the beasts of old.&nbsp; And much more,
+in old times, had the names of men each of them a meaning.&nbsp; If
+it was reasonable to give names full of meaning to each kind of dumb
+animal, which are mere things, and not persons at all, how much more
+to each man separately, for each man is a person of himself; each man
+has a character different from all others, a calling different from
+all others, and therefore he ought to have his own name separate from
+all others: and therefore in old times it was the custom to give each
+child a separate name, which had a meaning in it, was, as it were, a
+description of the child, or of something particular about the child.</p>
+<p>Now, we may see this, above all, in The adorable Name of Jesus.&nbsp;
+That name, above all others, ought to show us what a name means; for
+it is the name of the Son of Man, the one perfect and sinless man, the
+pattern of all men; and therefore it must be a perfect name, and a pattern
+for all names; and it was given to the Lord not by man, but by God;
+not after He was born, but before He was conceived in the womb of the
+blessed Virgin.&nbsp; And therefore, it must show and mean not merely
+some outward accident about Him, something which He seemed to be, or
+looked like, in men&rsquo;s eyes: no, the Name of Jesus must mean what
+the Lord was in the sight of His Father in Heaven; what He was in the
+eternal purpose of God the Father; what He was, really and absolutely,
+in Himself; it must mean and declare the very substance of His being.&nbsp;
+And so, indeed, it does; for The adorable Name of Jesus means nothing
+else but God the Saviour&mdash;God who saves.&nbsp; This is His name,
+and was, and ever will be.&nbsp; This Name He fulfilled on earth, and
+proved it to be His character, His exact description, His very Name,
+in short, which made Him different from all other beings in heaven or
+earth, create or uncreate; and therefore, He bears His name to all eternity,
+for a mark of what He has been, and is, and will be for ever&mdash;God
+the Saviour; and this is the perfect name, the pattern of all other
+names of men.</p>
+<p>Now though the Christian names which we give our children here in
+England, have no especial meaning to them, and have nothing to do with
+what we expect or wish the children to be when they grow up, yet the
+names of people in most other countries in the world have.&nbsp; The
+Jewish names which we find in the Bible have almost all of them a meaning.&nbsp;
+So Simeon, I believe, means &lsquo;Obedient&rsquo;; Jehoshaphat means,
+&lsquo;The Lord will judge&rsquo;; Daniel, &lsquo;God is my judge&rsquo;;
+Isaiah means, &lsquo;The Salvation of the Lord&rsquo;; Isaac means,
+&lsquo;She laughs,&rsquo; as a memorial of Sarah&rsquo;s laughing, when
+she heard that she was to have a child; Ishmael means, &lsquo;The Lord
+hears,&rsquo; in remembrance of God&rsquo;s hearing Hagar&rsquo;s cry
+in the wilderness, when Ishmael was dying of thirst.</p>
+<p>Especially those names of which we read that God commanded them to
+be given, have meanings, and to tell the persons who bore those names
+what God expected of them, or would do for them.&nbsp; So Abraham means,
+&lsquo;The father of many nations.&rsquo;&nbsp; So the children of both
+Isaiah and Hosea had names given them by God, each of them meaning something
+which God was going to do to the nation of the Jews.&nbsp; And so John
+means, &lsquo;Given by the Lord,&rsquo; which name was given to John
+the Baptist by the Angel, before his strange birth, in his mother&rsquo;s
+old age.</p>
+<p>But we must remember that the heathens also gave names to their children,
+though they did not know that their children owed any duty to God, or
+belonged to God, and therefore we cannot call their names Christian
+names.&nbsp; Yes, the heathens did give their children names; some of
+them give their children names still.&nbsp; And there is to me something
+most sad and painful in those heathen names, and yet most full of meaning.&nbsp;
+A solemn lesson to us, to show us what the fall means; what man becomes,
+when he gives way to his fallen nature, and is parted from Christ, the
+Head of man.</p>
+<p>First, these heathens had a dim remembrance that man was made in
+the likeness of God, and lived by Faith in God, and therefore that men&rsquo;s
+names were to express that, as indeed many of their old names do.&nbsp;
+But, alas! the likeness of God in fallen man is like a tree without
+roots, or rather a tree without soil to grow in.&nbsp; God&rsquo;s likeness
+in man can only flourish as long as he is joined to Christ, the perfect
+likeness of God, the true life and the true light of men, the foundation
+which is already laid, and the soil in which man was meant to grow and
+flourish for ever, and as long as he is fed by the Spirit of God, the
+Lord and Giver of Life, who proceeds&mdash;never forget that, or you
+will lose the understanding both of who God is and what man is&mdash;proceeds
+not only from God the Father, but also from God the Son, the Lord Jesus
+Christ.&nbsp; And therefore, in the heathen, God&rsquo;s likeness withered
+and decayed, as a tree withers and decays when torn up from the soil.&nbsp;
+And first, they began to call themselves after the names of false gods,
+which they had invented out of their own carnal fancies.&nbsp; Then
+they called themselves after the names of their dumb animal&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+So, Pharaoh means, &lsquo;The Sun-God&rsquo;; the Ammonites mean, &lsquo;The
+people who worshipped the ram as a god&rsquo;; Potiphar means, &lsquo;A
+fat bull,&rsquo; which the Egyptians used to worship; and I could tell
+you of hundreds of heathen names more, like these, which are ridiculous
+enough to make one smile, if we did not keep in mind what tokens they
+are of sin and ignorance, and the likeness not of God, but of the beasts
+which perish.</p>
+<p>Then comes another set of names, showing a lower fall still, when
+heathens have quite forgotten that man was originally made in God&rsquo;s
+likeness, and are not only content to live after the likeness of the
+beasts which perish, but pride themselves on being like beasts, and
+therefore name their children after dumb animals,&mdash;the girls after
+the gentler and fairer animals, and the boys after ravenous and cruel
+beasts of prey.&nbsp; That has been the custom among many heathen nations;
+perhaps among almost all of them, at some time or other.&nbsp; It is
+the custom now among the Red Indians in North America, where you will
+find one man in a tribe called &lsquo;The Bull,&rsquo; another &lsquo;The
+Panther,&rsquo; and another &lsquo;The Serpent,&rsquo; and so on; showing
+that they would like to be, if they could, as strong as the bull, as
+cruel as the panther, as venomous as the serpent.&nbsp; What wonder
+that those Red Indians, who have so put on the likeness of the beasts,
+are now dying off the face of the earth like the beasts whom they admire
+and imitate?</p>
+<p>And this was the way with our own heathen forefathers before the
+blessed Gospel was preached to them.&nbsp; It is frightful, in reading
+old histories, to find how many Englishmen, our own forefathers, were
+named after fierce wild beasts, and tried, alas! to be like their names&mdash;children
+of wrath, whose feet were swift to shed blood, under whose lips was
+the poison of adders, and destruction and bloodshed following in their
+paths, not knowing the way of peace.&nbsp; The wolf was the common wild
+beast of England then; and there are, I should say, twenty common old
+English names ending in wolf, besides as many more ending in bear, and
+eagle, and raven.&nbsp; Fearful sign! that men of our own flesh and
+blood should have gloried in being like the wolf, the cruellest, the
+greediest, the most mean of savage beasts!&nbsp; How shall we thank
+God enough, who sent to them the knowledge of His Son Jesus Christ,
+and called them to be new men in Christ Jesus, and called them to holy
+baptism, to receive new names, and begin new lives in the righteous
+likeness of God Himself?&mdash;that as by nature they had been the children
+of wrath, so in baptism they might become the children of grace; that
+as from their forefathers they had inherited a corrupt nature, original
+sin, and the likeness of the foul and ravenous beasts which perish,
+they might have power from the Spirit of God to become the sons of God,
+conformed into the likeness of Jesus Christ, in peace, and love, and
+righteousness, and all holiness.</p>
+<p>And yet, in names there is a lower depth still among fallen and heathen
+men; when they lose utterly the last dim notion that God intends men
+to be persons, even as God the Father is a person, and God the Son a
+person, and God the Holy Spirit is a person, and so lose the custom
+of giving their children personal names at all; either giving them,
+after they grow up, mere nicknames, taken from some peculiarity of their
+bodies, or something which they have done, or some place where they
+happen to live; or else, like many tribes of heathen negroes, just name
+them after the day of the week on which they were born, as some way
+of knowing them apart; or, last and most shocking of all, give them
+no names at all, and have no names themselves, knowing each other apart
+as the dumb animals do, only by sight.&nbsp; I can conceive no deeper
+fall into utter brutishness than that; and yet some few of the most
+savage tribes, both in Africa and in the Indian islands, are said&mdash;God
+help them!&mdash;to live in that way, and to have no names;&mdash;blotted,
+indeed, out of the book of life!</p>
+<p>But is this the right state for men?&nbsp; No; it is the wrong state.&nbsp;
+It is a disease into which men are fallen; a disease out of which Christ
+came to raise men; and out of which He does raise us in Holy Baptism.&nbsp;
+Baptism puts the child into its right state&mdash;into the right state
+for a human being, a human soul, a human person.&nbsp; And baptism declares
+what that right state is&mdash;a member of Christ, a child of God, and
+an inheritor of the kingdom of heaven.&nbsp; A member of Christ, and
+therefore a person, because Christ is a person.&nbsp; A child of God,
+and therefore a person, because a child&rsquo;s duty is to love and
+trust and obey his father&mdash;and only a person can do that, not an
+animal or a thing.&nbsp; An inheritor of the kingdom of heaven, and
+therefore bound to cherish all heavenly thoughts and feelings, all righteousness,
+love, and obedience, which only spirits and persons, not animals or
+things, can feel.</p>
+<p>Now can you not see why baptism is the proper time for giving the
+child a name?&nbsp; Because then Christ claims the child for His own;&mdash;because
+having a name shows that the child is a person who has a soul, a will,
+a conscience, a duty; a person who must answer himself for himself alone
+for what he does in the body, whether it be good or evil.&nbsp; And
+that will, and soul, and conscience were given the child by Christ,
+by whom all things are made, who is the Light which lights every man
+who comes into the world.</p>
+<p>Thus in holy baptism God adopts the child for His own in Jesus Christ.&nbsp;
+He declares that the child is regenerate, and has a new life, a life
+from above, a seed of eternal personal life which he himself has not
+by nature.&nbsp; And that seed of eternal life is none other but the
+Holy Spirit of God, the Spirit of the Father and of the Son, the Lord
+and Giver of Life, who does verily and indeed regenerate the child in
+holy baptism, and dwells with his soul, his person, his very self, that
+He may educate the child&rsquo;s character, and raise his affections,
+and subdue his will, and raise him up daily from the death of sin to
+the life of righteousness.</p>
+<p>Therefore, when in the Catechism you solemnly ask the child its name,
+you ask it no light question.&nbsp; You speak as a spirit, a person,
+to its spirit, to its very self, which God wills should never perish,
+but live for ever.&nbsp; You single the child out from all its schoolfellows,
+from all the millions of human beings who have ever lived, or ever will
+live; and you make the child, by answering to his name, confess that
+he is a person, an immortal soul, who must stand alone before the judgment
+seat of God; a person who has a duty and a calling upon God&rsquo;s
+earth, which he must fulfil or pay the forfeit.&nbsp; And then you ask
+the child who gave him his name, and make him declare that his name
+was given him in baptism, wherein he was made a member of Christ and
+a child of God.&nbsp; You make the child confess that he is a person
+in Jesus Christ, that Christ has redeemed him, his very self, and taken
+him to Himself, and made him not merely God&rsquo;s creature, or God&rsquo;s
+slave, but God&rsquo;s child.&nbsp; You make the child confess that
+his duty as a person is not towards himself, to do what <i>he</i> likes,
+and follow his own carnal lusts; but toward God and toward his neighbours,
+who are in God&rsquo;s kingdom of heaven as well as he.&nbsp; And then
+you go on in the rest of the Catechism to teach him how he himself,
+the person to whom you are speaking, may live for ever and ever as a
+person, by faith in other Persons beside himself, even in God the Father,
+Son, and Holy Spirit, as you teach him in the Creed; by doing his duty
+to other persons beside himself, even to God and man, as you teach him
+in the Ten Commandments; and by diligent prayer to another Person beside
+himself, even to God his heavenly Father, to feed and strengthen him
+day by day with that eternal life which was given to him in baptism.&nbsp;
+Thus the whole Catechism turns upon the very first question in it&mdash;&lsquo;What
+is thy name?&rsquo;&nbsp; It explains to the child what is really meant,
+in the sight of God, and of the Lord Jesus Christ, and of the whole
+Church in earth and heaven, by the child&rsquo;s having a name of his
+own, and being a person, and having that name given to him in holy baptism.</p>
+<p>And if this is true of our children, my friends, it is equally true
+of us.&nbsp; You and I are persons, and persons in Christ; each stands
+alone day and night before the judgment-seat of Christ.&nbsp; Each must
+answer for himself.&nbsp; None can deliver his brother, nor make agreement
+unto God for him.&nbsp; Each of us has his calling from his heavenly
+Father; his duty to do which none can do instead of him.&nbsp; Each
+has his own sins, his own temptations, his own sorrows, which he must
+bring single-handed and alone to God his Father, as it is written, &lsquo;The
+heart knoweth its own bitterness, and a stranger intermeddleth not with
+its joy.&rsquo;&nbsp; There is a world, a flesh, and a devil, near to
+us, ready to drag us down, and destroy our personal and spiritual life,
+which God has given us in Christ; a flesh which tempts us to follow
+our own appetites and passions, blindly and lawlessly, like the beasts
+which perish; a world which tempts us to become mere things, without
+free-wills of our own, or consciences of our own, without personal faith
+and personal holiness; the puppets of the circumstances and the customs
+which happen to be round us; blown about like the dead leaf, and swept
+helplessly down the stream of time.&nbsp; And there is a devil, too,
+near us, tempting us to the deepest lie of all,&mdash;to set up ourselves
+apart from God, and to try, as the devil tries, to be persons in our
+own strength, each doing what he chooses, each being his own law, and
+his own master; that is, his own lawlessness, and his own tyrant: and
+if we listen to that devil, that spirit of lawlessness and self-will,
+we shall become his slaves, persons in him, doing his work, and finding
+torment and misery and slavery in it.&nbsp; Awful thought, that so many
+enemies should be against us; yea, that we ourselves should be our own
+enemies!&nbsp; But here baptism gives us hope, baptism gives us courage;
+we are in Christ; God is our Father, and He can and will give us power
+to have victory, and to triumph against the world, the flesh, and the
+devil.&nbsp; His Spirit is given to us in baptism&mdash;that Spirit
+of God who is not merely a force or an influence, but a person, a living,
+loving, holy Person.&nbsp; He is with us, to give our persons, our souls,
+eternal life from His life, eternal holiness from His holiness; that
+so, not merely some part of us, but we our very selves and souls&mdash;we
+the very same persons who were christened, and had a name given us in
+holy baptism, and have been answering to that name all our life, and
+were reminded, whenever we heard that name, that we had a duty of our
+own, a history of our own, hopes, fears, joys, sorrows of our own, which
+none could share with us,&mdash;that we, I say, our own persons, our
+very selves, may be raised up again at the last day, free, pure, strong,
+filled with the life of God, which is eternal life.</p>
+<p>And then, what blessed words are these from the Lord Jesus, which
+we read in the book of Revelation?&nbsp; &lsquo;And I will give to him
+that overcometh, a new name.&rsquo;&nbsp; A new name for him that overcometh
+world, flesh, and devil; that shall be our portion in the world to come.&nbsp;
+A new name, perfect like the name of the Lord Jesus, which shall express
+and mean all that we are to do hereafter, and all that we have done
+well on earth.&nbsp; A name which shall declare to us our calling and
+work in God&rsquo;s Church triumphant, throughout all ages and worlds
+to come: and yet a name which no man knoweth saving he who receiveth
+it.&nbsp; Yes, if we may dare to guess at the meaning of those deep
+words, perhaps in that new name shall be recorded for each man all that
+went on, in the secret depths of the man&rsquo;s own heart, between
+himself and his God, unknown and unnoticed even by the wife of his bosom.&nbsp;
+The cup of cold water given in Christ&rsquo;s name; the little private
+acts of love, and kindness, and self-sacrifice, of which none but God
+knew; the secret prayers, the secret acts of contrition, the secret
+hungerings and thirstings after righteousness, the secret struggles
+and agonies of heart, which he could not, dare not, ought not to tell
+to any human being.&nbsp; All these, he shall find, will go to make
+up his character in the life to come, to determine what work he is to
+do for God in the world to come; as it is written, &lsquo;Be thou faithful
+over a few things, and I will make thee ruler over many things.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+All these, perhaps, shall be expressed and declared in that new name,
+the full meaning of which none will know but the man himself, because
+none but he knows the secret experiences and struggles which went toward
+the making of it; none but he and God; for God will know all, He who
+is the Lord and Saviour of our souls, our persons, our very selves,
+and can preserve them utterly to the fulness of eternal life, because
+He knows them thoroughly and utterly; because He judges not according
+to appearance, but judges righteous judgment; because He sees us not
+merely as we seem to others to be, not even as we seem at times to ourselves
+to be;&mdash;but searches the heart, and can be touched with the feeling
+of its infirmities, seeing that He himself has been tempted even as
+we are, yet without sin; because, blessed thought! He can pierce through
+the very marrow of our being, and discern the thoughts and intents of
+our hearts, and see what we long to be, and what we ought to be; so
+that we can safely and hopefully commend our spirits to His hand, day
+by day and hour by hour, and can trust Him to cleanse us from our secret
+faults, and to renew and strengthen our very selves day by day with
+that eternal life which He gives to all who cast themselves utterly
+upon Him.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON V.&nbsp; SPONSORSHIP</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>1 Cor. xii. 26, 27.&nbsp; Whether one member suffer, all the members
+suffer with it; or whether one member be honoured, all the members rejoice
+with it.&nbsp; Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular.</p>
+<p>I have to tell you that there will be a confirmation held at . .
+. on the . . . All persons of fit age who have not yet been confirmed
+ought to be ready, and I hope and trust that most of them will be ready,
+on that day to profess publicly their faith and loyalty to the Lord
+who died for them.&nbsp; I hope and trust that they will, as soon as
+possible, tell me that they intend to do so, and come to me to talk
+over the matter, and to learn what I can teach them about it.&nbsp;
+They will find in me, I hope, nothing but kindness and fellow-feeling.</p>
+<p>But I have not only to tell young persons of the Confirmation: I
+have to tell all godfathers and godmothers of it also.&nbsp; Have any
+of you here ever stood godfather or godmother to any young person in
+this parish who is not yet confirmed?&nbsp; If you have, now is the
+time for you to fulfil your parts as sponsors.&nbsp; You must help me,
+and help the children&rsquo;s parents, in bringing your godchildren
+to confirmation.&nbsp; It really is your duty.&nbsp; It will be better
+for you if you fulfil it.&nbsp; Better for you, not merely by preventing
+a punishment, but by bringing a blessing.&nbsp; Let me try to show you
+what I mean.</p>
+<p>Now godparents must have some duty, some responsibility or other;&mdash;that
+is plain.&nbsp; If you or I promise and vow things in another person&rsquo;s
+name, we must be bound more or less to see that that other person fulfils
+the promise which we made for him: and so the baptism service warns
+the sponsors as soon as the child is christened, &lsquo;Forasmuch as
+this child has promised,&rsquo; &amp;c.; and then we have a plain explanation
+of what a godfather and godmother&rsquo;s duties are.&nbsp; &lsquo;And
+that your godchild may know these things the better,&rsquo; &amp;c.:
+and finally, &lsquo;you shall take care that this child be brought to
+the bishop to be confirmed.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>That is the duty of godfathers and godmothers.&nbsp; Those who stand
+for any child do it on that understanding, and take upon themselves
+knowingly that duty.</p>
+<p>Now, I will not threaten you, my friends; I will not pretend to tell
+you how God will punish those godfathers and godmothers who do not do
+their duty; because I do not know how he will punish them.&nbsp; He
+has not told us in the Bible; and who am I, to deal out God&rsquo;s
+thunders as if they belonged to me, and judge people of whose real merits
+and dements in God&rsquo;s sight I have no fair means of judging?&nbsp;
+I always dread and dislike threatening any sinner out of this pulpit,
+except those who plainly break the plain laws which are written in those
+Ten Commandments, and hypocrites: because I stand in awe of our Lord&rsquo;s
+own words&mdash;&lsquo;Woe unto you Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites,
+for ye bind heavy burdens, and grievous to be borne, and lay them on
+men&rsquo;s shoulders, while you yourselves touch them not with one
+of your fingers.&rsquo;&nbsp; There is too much of that now-a-days,
+my friends, and I have no mind to add my share to it.&nbsp; And sure
+I am, that any godfathers and godmothers who do their duty, only because
+they are afraid that God will punish them if they do not, will not do
+their duty at all.&nbsp; But sure I am also, and thankful to God, that
+we cannot neglect any duty whatsoever without being punished in some
+way or other for our neglect of it.&nbsp; That is not a curse, but a
+blessing: it is a blessing to us to be punished.&nbsp; The only real
+curse of God in this life is to be left unpunished for our sins.&nbsp;
+It is a blessing for us that our sins find us out.&nbsp; For if our
+sins did not find <i>us</i> out, we should very often, I fear, not find
+our sins out.&nbsp; And, therefore, when I tell godfathers and godmothers,
+not that God will perhaps punish them for their neglect, but that He
+does punish them for it already, I am telling them good news, if they
+will only open their hearts to that good news.</p>
+<p>For God does punish people for neglecting their godchildren.&nbsp;
+Those who have eyes to see may see it round us now, in this very parish,
+and in every parish in England, in the selfishness, distrust, divisions,
+and quarrels which prevail.&nbsp; I do not mean that this parish is
+worse than others, or England worse than other countries.&nbsp; That
+is no concern of ours: our own parish, and our own evils, are quite
+concern enough for us.</p>
+<p>Are people happy together?&nbsp; Do they pull well together?&nbsp;
+Look at the old-standing quarrels, misunderstandings, grudges, prejudices,
+suspicions, which part one man from another, one family from another;
+every man for his own house, and very few for the kingdom of God;&mdash;no,
+not even for the general welfare of the parish!&nbsp; Do not men try
+to better themselves at the expense of the parish&mdash;to the injury
+of the parish?&nbsp; Do not men, when they try to raise their own family,
+seem to think that the simplest way to do it is to pull down their neighbour&rsquo;s
+family; to draw away their custom; oust them from their places, or hurt
+their characters in order to rise upon their fall? so that though they
+are brothers, members of the same church, nation and parish, the greater
+part of them are, in practice, at war with each other&mdash;trying to
+live at each other&rsquo;s expense.&nbsp; Now, is this profitable?&nbsp;
+So far from it, that if you will watch the history, either of the whole
+world, or of this country, or of this one parish, you will find that
+by far the greater part of the misery in it has sprung from this very
+selfishness and separateness&mdash;from the perpetual struggle between
+man and man, and between family and family: so that there have been
+men, and those learned, and thoughtful, and well-meaning men enough,
+who have said that the only cure for the world&rsquo;s quarrelling and
+selfishness was to take all children away from their parents, and bring
+them up in large public schools; ay, and even to try plans which are
+sinful, foul, and wicked, all in order to prevent parents knowing which
+were their own children, that they might care for all the children in
+the parish as much as if they were their own.</p>
+<p>A foolish plan, my friends, and for this one reason, that it is driving
+out one evil by a still greater one.&nbsp; It destroys the root to get
+the fruit; by destroying family life, and love, and obedience, to get
+at the communion of saints, or rather at some ghost of it.&nbsp; The
+real communion of saints is founded on the Fifth Commandment&mdash;&lsquo;Thou
+shalt honour thy father and thy mother;&rsquo; and grows out of it,
+not by destroying it, but by fulfilling it, as the tree grows out of
+the root, without taking away from the life of the root, but rather
+by nourishing and increasing it.&nbsp; Now, the ancient institution
+of godfathers and godmothers would, it seems to me, if it were carried
+out honestly and really, do for us what we certainly have not done for
+ourselves as yet, and bind us all together as one family.&nbsp; It would
+do all the good which those fanciful philosophers of whom I first spoke,
+have dreamt, without any of the evil; and it would do it because it
+goes simply on the belief that the foundation is already laid, and that
+that foundation is Christ.&nbsp; It says, because this child is not
+merely the child of his father and mother, but the child of God, the
+universal Father, therefore other people besides his parents have an
+interest in him: all who are children of God as well as he have an interest
+in him; for they are all his brothers, and have a brother&rsquo;s interest
+in his welfare.&nbsp; Because this child is not merely a member of the
+family whose surname he bears, but a member of Christ, a member of God&rsquo;s
+great adopted family, in the hearts of every one of whom His only begotten
+Son, Jesus Christ, is working; therefore this child ought to be an object
+of awe, and of interest, and love, and care to every other member of
+Christ&rsquo;s Church.&nbsp; Moreover, the child is an inheritor of
+a heavenly kingdom&mdash;a kingdom of grace&mdash;a kingdom of God,&mdash;which
+is love and justice, and peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit&mdash;all
+personal, spiritual, heavenly, God-given graces;&mdash;and he cannot
+have them without being a blessing to all around him; and he cannot
+be without them, without being a curse to all around him.&nbsp; If,
+in after life, when he comes to be confirmed, he claims his inheritance
+in this heavenly kingdom, he will be full of love, justice, peace, joy
+in the Holy Spirit.&nbsp; If he refuses to claim his inheritance, and
+despises his heavenly birthright, and lives as if he were a mere earthly
+creature, only to please himself, and help himself, he will not be full
+of those graces.&nbsp; And what then?&nbsp; That he will be full of
+their opposites, of course.&nbsp; If he has not love, he will be unloving,
+selfish, hard, cold&mdash;to <i>you</i> and yours.&nbsp; If he has not
+justice he will be unjust&mdash;to you and yours.&nbsp; If he is not
+at peace he will be at war, quarrelling, grudging, envying, backbiting&mdash;you
+and yours.&nbsp; If he has not joy in the Holy Spirit, he will have
+joy in an unholy spirit, for he must have joy in some spirit; he must
+take pleasure in some sort of way of thinking and feeling, and some
+sort of life&mdash;in short, in some sort of spirit; and whatsoever
+is not holy is unholy, whatsoever is not good is bad, whatsoever is
+not of God&rsquo;s Holy Spirit is of the Devil;&mdash;and therefore,
+if the child as he grows up has not joy in the Holy Spirit, and does
+not enjoy doing right and pleasing God, and being like the Lord Jesus
+Christ, then he will enjoy doing wrong, and pleasing himself, and being
+unlike the Lord Jesus Christ; and so he will set a bad example, and
+be a temptation to all young people of his own age, ready to lead them
+into sin, and draw them away to those sinful and unholy pleasures in
+which he takes delight,&mdash;whether it be to rioting and drinking,
+or to uncleanness and unchastity, or to sneering and laughing at godliness,
+and at good people.&nbsp; And that, as you know by experience, may be
+the worse for you and the worse for your children.&nbsp; Is that the
+sort of young person with whom you would wish to see your children keeping
+company?&nbsp; Is that the sort of young person next door to whom you
+would wish to live?&nbsp; Is not such a person a curse, just because
+he is a person, a spiritual being with an evil spirit in him, which
+can harm you, and tempt you, and act on you for evil; just as if he
+had been a righteous person, with the holy and good Spirit in him, he
+would have helped you, and taught you, and worked on you for good?&nbsp;
+But so it is: we are members one of another, and if one member goes
+wrong, and gets diseased, and suffers, all the other members are sure
+to suffer more or less with it, sooner or later: you feel it so in your
+bodies&mdash;be sure it is so in God&rsquo;s church.&nbsp; But if one
+member is sound and healthy, all the other members must and will be
+the better for its health, and rejoice with it, and be able to do their
+own work the more freely, and strongly, and heartily.</p>
+<p>Just think for yourselves; consider, you who are grown up, and have
+had experience of life, the harm you have known one bad man do, the
+sorrow he will cause, even to people who never saw him; and the good
+which you have seen one good man, not merely do with his own hands,
+but put into other people&rsquo;s hearts by his example.&nbsp; Is not
+both the good and the harm which is done on earth like the ripple of
+a stone dropt into water, which spreads and spreads for a vast distance
+round, however small the stone may be?&nbsp; Indeed, bold as it may
+seem to say it, I believe that, if we could behold all hearts as the
+Lord Jesus does, we should find that there never was a good man but
+that the whole of Christendom, perhaps all mankind, was sooner or later,
+more or less, the better for him; and that there never was a bad man
+but that all Christendom, perhaps all mankind, was the worse for him.&nbsp;
+So fully and really true it is in everyday practice, that we are members
+one of another.</p>
+<p>Now this is the principle on which the Church acts.&nbsp; For the
+little unconscious infant is treated as what it is, a most solemn and
+important person, who has other relations beside its father and mother,
+as a person who is the brother of all the people round it, and of all
+the Church of God, and who, too, may hereafter do to them boundless
+good or harm, and they to it.</p>
+<p>Therefore we must have some persons to bear witness of that, to remind
+the child himself, and the whole Church, that he is not merely a soul
+by itself to be saved, but that he is a brother, a member of a family;
+that he is bound to that family henceforth, for good and for evil.&nbsp;
+And this the godfathers and godmothers do: they represent and stand
+in the place of the whole Church.&nbsp; In one sense, every Christian
+who meets that child through life, or hears of it, ought to behave,
+as far as he can, as its godfather; ought to help and improve it if
+he can.&nbsp; But what is everybody&rsquo;s business, says the proverb,
+is nobody&rsquo;s business; and therefore these godfathers and godmothers
+are called out from the rest, as examples to the rest, to watch over
+the child, and to help and advise its father and mother in guiding and
+training it: but not by interfering with a parent&rsquo;s rights, God
+forbid! or by drawing away the child&rsquo;s affections from its own
+flesh and blood; for if a child be not taught first to honour its father
+and mother, there is little use in teaching it anything else whatsoever;
+and a godfather&rsquo;s first duty is to see that his godchild obeys
+its earthly parents for the Lord&rsquo;s sake, for that is right, and
+God&rsquo;s will, whatever else is not.</p>
+<p>Now just conceive&mdash;I am sure that you easily may&mdash;what
+a blessing to this parish, or this part of the country, it would be,
+were the duties of godfathers really carried out and practised.&nbsp;
+Every child, beside his father and mother, would have some two or three
+elder friends at least, whom he had known from his childhood, whom he
+could trust, to whom he could go in trouble as to his own flesh and
+blood.&nbsp; The orphan would have, if not relations, still godparents,
+to comfort and protect him.&nbsp; No one could go abroad without meeting,
+if not a godparent, yet the godparent or godchild of a friend or a relation;
+someone, in short, who had an interest in him, and he in them.&nbsp;
+All would be bound together in threefold cords of interest and affection.&nbsp;
+How many spites, family quarrels, mistakes, and ignorances about each
+other would be done away, if people would but thus simply enter into
+that communion of saints to which, by right, they belong, and bear each
+other&rsquo;s burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ.&mdash;Unless
+you think that men are such ill-conditioned creatures that the less
+they mix with each other the better.&nbsp; I do not.&nbsp; I believe
+that the more we mix with each other, and the better we know each other,
+the more we shall feel for each other: that the more we help people,
+the more we shall find that they are worth helping; that the more, in
+a word, we try to live, not after the likeness of the beasts, selfish
+and apart, but after the order and constitution of God&rsquo;s Church,
+to which we belong, and which is, that we are all fellow-members of
+one body, then the more we shall find that God&rsquo;s order is the
+right, good, blessed order, by obeying which we enter into comfort of
+which we never dream as long as we lead selfish, separate, worldly lives;
+as it is written, &lsquo;Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor hath
+it entered into the heart of man to conceive, the things which God has
+prepared for those who love Him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This may seem a fanciful dream, too fair to be possible; but what
+prevents it from being possible, save and except our own selfishness
+and laziness?</p>
+<p>And as for what fruit will spring from it, I have seen, by experience,
+the blessing of godfathership and godmothership, where it is really
+carried out; how it will knit together, in sacred bonds of friendship,
+not merely the children, but the grown persons of different families,
+and give them a fellow-feeling, a mutual interest, which will prevent
+a hundred quarrels and coldnesses among frail human creatures.&nbsp;
+And to those who are childless themselves, what a blessing to have their
+love and self-sacrifice called out, by being bound in holy bonds, if
+not to children of their own, at least to children of God!&mdash;to
+have young people to care for, to teach, to guide, and so to win for
+themselves in the Church of God a name better than that of sons and
+daughters.&nbsp; And have no fear that by bringing your kindness to
+bear especially upon your godchildren you will narrow your love, and
+care less for children in general.&nbsp; Not so, my friends; you will
+find that your love to your godchildren, like love to your own children,
+will make all children lovable in your eyes: you will learn how worthy
+of your love children are, what capacities of good there are in them,
+how truly of such are the kingdom of heaven; and their simplicity will
+often teach you more than you can teach them.&nbsp; Their God-given
+instincts of right and wrong, truth and falsehood, which come from the
+indwelling Word of God, Jesus the Lord, will often enough shame us,
+will teach us more and more the depth of that great saying, &lsquo;Out
+of the mouths of babes and sucklings, Thou, O God, hast perfected Thy
+praise.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now try, I entreat you, all godfathers and godmothers, to carry out
+these hints of mine, and so fulfil your duty to your godchildren, sure
+that you will find it a blessing to yourselves as well as to them.</p>
+<p>After all it is your duty.&nbsp; But do not let the slandering Devil
+slander to you that blessed word, Duty, and make you afraid of it, and
+shrink from it, as if it meant something burdensome, and troublesome,
+and thankless, which you suppose you must do for fear of punishment,
+while you have a right to see how little of it you can do, and try to
+be let off as cheaply as possible.&nbsp; Beware of that evil spirit,
+my friends, for he is very near you, and me, and every man, whenever
+we think of our duty.&nbsp; Very near us he is, that evil Jesuit spirit,
+that spirit of bondage unto fear, which is continually setting us on
+to find out with how <i>little</i> service God will be contented, how
+human slaves may make the cheapest bargain with some stern taskmaster
+above, of whom they dream.&nbsp; And from that temptation there is no
+escape, save into the blessed name of God Himself&mdash;our Father.</p>
+<p>Our Father!&mdash;whenever you think of your duty to God or man,
+think but of those two words.&nbsp; Remember that all duty is duty to
+a Father; your Father; and such a Father!&nbsp; Who gave His only begotten
+Son to die for you, who showed what He was in that Son&mdash;full of
+goodness, perfectly loving, perfectly merciful, perfectly just; and
+then you will not be inclined to ask how <i>little</i> obedience, how
+<i>little</i> love, how <i>little</i> service, He will allow you to
+pay to Him; but how much He will help you to pay to Him.&nbsp; Then
+you will feel that His service is perfect freedom, because it is service
+to a Father who loves you, and will help you to do His will.&nbsp; Then
+you will feel that His commandments are not grievous, because they are
+a Father&rsquo;s commandments, because you are bound to do them, not
+by dread and superstition, but by gratitude, honour, affection, respect,
+trust.&nbsp; Then you will not be thinking of what punishment will come
+if you disobey&mdash;no, nor of what reward will come if you obey&mdash;but
+you will be thinking of the commandment itself, and how to carry it
+out most perfectly, and let the consequences take care of themselves,
+because you know that your <i>Father</i> takes care of them; that He
+loves you, and therefore what He commands must be good for you, utterly
+the best thing for you; that He only gives you a commandment because
+it is good for you; that you are made in God&rsquo;s image, and therefore
+God&rsquo;s will must be for you the path of life, the only rule by
+which you can prosper now and for ever.</p>
+<p>Do try, now, all you who are godfathers and godmothers, and for once
+look on your duty in this light.&nbsp; Be sure that in trying to do
+your duty you will bring a blessing on yourselves, because your duty
+is to a Father in heaven.&nbsp; Be sure that, in trying to better your
+godchildren, you will better yourselves; in trying to teach them, you
+will teach yourselves; in trying to bring them to confirmation, you
+will indeed confirm, root, and strengthen yourselves the more deeply
+in all that is good; because your godchildren are indeed God&rsquo;s
+children, and whatsoever you do for them you do for His only begotten
+Son Jesus Christ, as He Himself says, &lsquo;Inasmuch as ye did it unto
+one of the least of these little ones, ye did it unto Me.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Do not be afraid of trying; you will have a hundred reasons for not
+trying rise in your mind, the Devil will find you a hundred lying excuses:
+&lsquo;It will be so difficult; and you do not like to interfere with
+other people&rsquo;s children; and you have never cared about your godchildren
+yet, and it will seem so odd to begin now; and the children may not
+listen to you; and besides, you do not know enough to teach them; you
+are not good scholar enough, good liver enough, you can&rsquo;t preach
+where you don&rsquo;t practice.&rsquo;&nbsp; Oh, how ready the Devil
+is to help a man to excuses for not doing his duty; how careful he is
+to keep out of a man&rsquo;s mind the one thought which would sweep
+all those excuses to the wind&mdash;the thought that this same duty,
+which he is trying to make look so ugly, is duty to a loving Father.&nbsp;
+Do not listen to his lies; look up to your good Father in heaven; and
+try.&nbsp; It is God&rsquo;s will that these children should be confirmed;
+it is His will that you should help to bring them to confirmation; and
+if it is His will, He will help you to do that will of His.&nbsp; It
+may seem difficult: but try, and the difficulty will vanish, for God
+will make it easy for you.&nbsp; You may be afraid of interfering: believe
+that God&rsquo;s Spirit is working in the hearts of your godchildren,
+and of their parents also; and trust to God&rsquo;s Spirit to make them
+kindly and thankful to you about the matter, and glad to see that you
+take an interest in their children.&nbsp; You may seem not to know enough:
+O, my friends, you know enough, every one of you, if you have courage
+to confess how much you know.&nbsp; Ask God for courage to speak out,
+and He will give it you.&nbsp; And even if you are no scholar, be sure
+that, as the old proverb says, &lsquo;Teaching is the best way of learning.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Any parent, or godfather, or godmother, who will try to teach their
+children God&rsquo;s truth and their duty, will find that in so doing
+they will teach themselves even more than they teach the children.&nbsp;
+I say it because I know it from my own experience.&nbsp; And for the
+rest, again I say, is not God your Father?&nbsp; Therefore, if any man
+be in want of wisdom, or courage, or any other heavenly gift, let him
+ask of God, who giveth liberally and upbraideth not, and he shall receive
+it.&nbsp; For after all, when you ask God to teach you, and strengthen
+you to do your duty, you do but ask Him for a part of that very inheritance
+which He has already given you; a part of your inheritance in that kingdom
+of heaven which is a kingdom of spiritual gifts and graces, into which
+you were baptized as well as your godchildren.</p>
+<p>Try then, each of you, what you can do to bring your own godchildren
+to confirmation, and what you can do to make them fit for confirmation;
+for you are members one of another, and if you will act as such, you
+will find strength to do your duty, and a blessing in your day from
+that heavenly Father from whom every fatherhood in heaven and earth,
+and yours among the rest, is named.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON VI.&nbsp; JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Ephesians ii. 5.&nbsp; By grace ye are saved.</p>
+<p>We all hold that we are justified by faith, that is, by believing;
+and that unless we are justified we cannot be saved.&nbsp; And of all
+men who ever believed this, perhaps those who gave us the Church Catechism
+believed it most strongly.&nbsp; Nay, some of them suffered for it;
+endured persecution, banishment, and a cruel death, because they would
+persist in holding, contrary to the Romanists, that men were justified
+by faith only, and not by the works of the law; and that this was one
+of the root-doctrines of Christianity, which if a man did not believe,
+he would believe nothing else rightly.&nbsp; Does it not seem, then,
+something strange that they should never in this Catechism of theirs
+mention one word about justifying or justification?&nbsp; They do not
+ask the child, &lsquo;How is a man justified?&rsquo; that he may answer,
+&lsquo;By faith alone;&rsquo; they do not even teach him to say, &lsquo;I
+am justified already.&nbsp; I am in a state of justification;&rsquo;
+but not saying one word about that, they teach him to say much more&mdash;they
+teach him to say that he is in a state of salvation, and to thank God
+boldly because he is so; and then go on at once to ask him the articles
+of his belief.&nbsp; And even more strange still, they teach him to
+answer that question, not by repeating any doctrines, but by repeating
+the simple old Apostles&rsquo; Creed.&nbsp; They do not teach him to
+say, as some would now-a-days, &lsquo;I believe in original sin, I believe
+in redemption through Christ&rsquo;s death, I believe in justification
+by faith, I believe in sanctification by the Holy Spirit,&rsquo;&mdash;true
+as these doctrines are; still less do they bid the child say, &lsquo;I
+believe in predestination, and election, and effectual calling, and
+irresistible grace, and vicarious satisfaction, and forensic justification,
+and vital faith, and the three assurances.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Whether these things be true or false, it seemed to the ancient worthies
+who gave us our Catechism that children had no business with them.&nbsp;
+They had their own opinions on these matters, and spoke their opinions
+moderately and wisely, and the sum of their opinions we have in the
+Thirty-nine Articles, which are not meant for children, not even for
+grown persons, excepting scholars and clergymen.&nbsp; Of course every
+grown person is at liberty to study them; but no one in the Church of
+England is required to agree to them, and to swear that they are true,
+except scholars at our old Universities, and clergymen, who are bound
+to have studied such questions.&nbsp; But for the rest of Englishmen
+all the necessary articles of belief (so the old divines considered)
+were contained in the simple old Apostles&rsquo; Creed.</p>
+<p>And why?&nbsp; Because, it seems to me, they were what Englishmen
+ought to be&mdash;what too many Englishmen are too apt to boast of being
+in these days, while they are not so, or anything like it&mdash;and
+that is, honest men and practical men.&nbsp; They had taught the children
+to say that they were members of Christ, children of God, and inheritors
+of the kingdom of heaven; and they had taught the children, when they
+said that, to mean what they said; for they had no notion that &lsquo;I
+am,&rsquo; meant &lsquo;I may possibly be;&rsquo; or that &lsquo;I was
+made,&rsquo; meant &lsquo;There is a chance of my being made some time
+or other.&rsquo;&nbsp; They would not have dared to teach children to
+say things which were most probably not true.&nbsp; So believing really
+what they taught, they believed also that the children were justified.&nbsp;
+For if a child is not justified in being a member of Christ, a child
+of God, and an inheritor of the kingdom of heaven, what is he justified
+in being?&nbsp; Is not that exactly the just, right, and proper state
+for him, and for every man?&mdash;the very state in which all men were
+meant originally to be, in which all men ought to have been?&nbsp; So
+they looked on these children as being in the just, right, and proper
+way, on which God looks with satisfaction and pleasure, and in which
+alone a man can do just, right, and proper things, by the Spirit of
+Christ, which He gives daily and hourly to those who belong to Him and
+trust in Him and in His Father.</p>
+<p>But they knew that the children could only keep in this just, and
+right, and proper state by trusting in God, and looking up to Him daily
+in faith, and love, and obedience.&nbsp; They knew that if the children,
+whether for one hour or for their whole lives, lost trust in God, and
+began trusting in themselves, they would that very moment, then and
+there, become not justified at all, because they would be doing a thing
+which no man is justified in doing, and fall into a state into which
+no man is justified in remaining for one hour&mdash;that is, into an
+unjustifiable state of self-will, and lawlessness, and forgetfulness
+of who and of what they were, and of what God was to them; in one word,
+into a sinful state, which is not a righteous, or just, or good, or
+proper state for any man, but an utterly unrighteous, unjust, wrong,
+improper, mistaken, diseased state, which is certain to breed unrighteous,
+unjust, improper actions in a man, as a limb is certain to corrupt if
+it be cut off from the body, as a little child is certain to come to
+harm if it runs away from its parents, and does just what it likes,
+and eats whatsoever pleases its fancy.&nbsp; So these old divines, being
+practical men, said to themselves, &lsquo;These children are justified
+and right in being what they are, therefore our business is to keep
+them what they are, and we can only do that as long as they have faith
+in God and in His Christ.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now, if they had been mere men of books, they would have said to
+themselves, &lsquo;Then we must teach the children very exactly what
+faith is, that they may know how to tell true faith from false, and
+may be able to judge every day and hour whether they have the right
+sort of faith which will justify them, or some wrong sort which will
+not.&rsquo;&nbsp; And many wise and good men in those times did say
+so, and tormented their own minds, and the minds of weak brethren, with
+long arguments and dry doctrines about faith, till, in their eagerness
+to make out what sort of thing faith ought to be, they seemed quite
+to forget that it must be faith in God, and so seemed to forget too
+who God was, and what He was like.&nbsp; Therefore, they ended by making
+people believe (as too many, I fear, do now-a-days) not that they were
+justified freely by the grace of God, shown forth in the life, and death,
+and resurrection of his Son Jesus Christ; no: but that they were justified
+by believing in justification by faith, and that their salvation depended
+not on being faithful to God and trusting in Him, but in standing up
+fiercely for the doctrine of justification by faith.&nbsp; And so they
+destroyed the doctrine of free grace, while they thought they were fighting
+for it; for they taught men not to look to God for salvation, so much
+as to their own faith, their own frames, and feelings, and experiences;
+and these, as common sense will show you, are just as much something
+in a man, as acts of his own, and part of him, as his good works would
+be; and so by making people fancy that it was having the right sort
+of feelings which justified them, they fell back into the very same
+mistake as the Papists against whom they were so bitter, namely, that
+it is something in a man&rsquo;s self which justifies him, and not simply
+Christ&rsquo;s merits and God&rsquo;s free grace.</p>
+<p>But our old Reformers were of a different mind; and everlasting thanks
+be to Almighty God that they were so.&nbsp; For by being so they have
+made the Church of England (as I always have said, and always will say)
+almost the only Church in Europe, Protestant or other, which thoroughly
+and fully stands up for free grace, and justification by faith alone.&nbsp;
+For these old Reformers were practical men, and took the practical way.&nbsp;
+They knew, perhaps, the old proverb, &lsquo;A man need not be a builder
+to live in a house.&rsquo;&nbsp; At least they acted on it, and instead
+of trying to make the children understand what faith was made up of,
+they tried to make them live in faith itself.&nbsp; Instead of saying,
+&lsquo;How shall we make the children have faith in God by telling them
+what faith is?&rsquo; they said, &lsquo;How shall we make them have
+faith in God by telling them what God is?&rsquo;&nbsp; And therefore,
+instead of puzzling and fretting the children&rsquo;s minds with any
+of the controversies which were then going on between Papists and Protestants,
+or afterwards between Calvinists and Arminians, they taught the children
+simply about God; who He was, and what He had done for them and all
+mankind; that so they might learn to love Him, and look up to Him in
+faith, and trust utterly to Him, and so remain justified and right,
+saved and safe for ever.</p>
+<p>By doing which, my friends, they showed that they knew more about
+faith and about God than if they had written books on books of doctrinal
+arguments (though they wrote those too, and wrote them nobly and well);
+they showed that they had true faith in God, such trust in Him, and
+in the beauty and goodness, justice and love, which He had shown, that
+they only needed to tell the children of it, and they would trust Him
+too, and at once have faith in so good a God.&nbsp; They showed that
+they had such trust in the excellencies, and reasonableness, and fitness
+of His Gospel, that they were sure that it would come home at once to
+the children&rsquo;s hearts.&nbsp; They showed that they had such trust
+in the power of His grace, in His love for the children, in the working
+of His Spirit in the children, that He would bring His Gospel home to
+their hearts, and stir them up by the spirit of adoption to feel that
+they were indeed the children of God, to whom they might freely cry,
+&lsquo;My Father!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And I say that they were not deceived.&nbsp; I say that experience
+has shown that they were right; that the Church Catechism, where it
+is really and honestly taught, gives the children an honest, frank,
+sober, English temper of mind which no other training which I have seen
+gives.&nbsp; I have seen, alas!&nbsp; Church schools fail, ere now,
+in training good children; but as far as I have seen, they have failed
+either because the Catechism was neglected for the sake of cramming
+the children&rsquo;s brains with scholarship, or because the Catechism
+was not honestly taught: because the words were taught by rote, but
+the explanations which were given of it were no explanations at all,
+but another doctrine, which our forefathers knew not: either Dissenting
+or Popish; either a religion of fancies, and feelings, and experiences,
+or one of superstitious notions and superstitious ceremonies which have
+been borrowed from the Church of Rome, and which, I trust in God, will
+be soon returned to their proper owner, if the free, truthful, God-trusting
+English spirit is to remain in our children.&nbsp; I know that there
+are good men among Dissenters, my friends; good men among Romanists.&nbsp;
+I have met with them, and I thank God for them; and what may not be
+good for English children may be good for foreign ones.&nbsp; I judge
+not; to his own master each man stands or falls.&nbsp; But I warn you
+frankly, from experience (not of my own merely&mdash;Heaven forbid!&mdash;but
+from the experience of centuries past), that if you expect to make the
+average of English children good children on any other ground than the
+Church Catechism takes, you will fail.&nbsp; Of course there will be
+some chosen ones here and there, whose hearts God will touch; but you
+will find that the greater part of the children will not be made better
+at all; you will find that the cleverer, and more tender-hearted will
+be made conceited, Pharisaical, self-deceiving (for children are as
+ready to deceive themselves, and play the hypocrite to their own consciences,
+as grown people are); they will catch up cant words and phrases, or
+little outward forms of reverence, and make a religion for themselves
+out of them to drug their own consciences withal; while, when they go
+out into the world, and meet temptation, they will have no real safeguard
+against it, because whatsoever they have been taught, they have not
+been taught that God is really and practically their Father, and they
+His children.</p>
+<p>I have seen many examples of this kind.&nbsp; Perhaps those who have
+eyes to see may have seen one or two in this very parish.&nbsp; Be that
+as it may, I tell you, my friends, that your children shall be taught
+the Church Catechism, with the plain, honest meaning of the words as
+they stand.&nbsp; No less: but as God shall give me grace, no more.&nbsp;
+If it be not enough for them to know that God, He who made heaven and
+earth, is their Father; that His Son Jesus Christ redeemed them and
+all mankind by being born of the Virgin Mary, suffering under Pontius
+Pilate, being crucified, dead, and buried, descending into hell, rising
+again the third day from the dead, ascending into Heaven, and sitting
+on the right hand of God the Father Almighty, in the intent of coming
+from thence to judge the living and the dead; to believe in the Holy
+Spirit, in the holy universal Church in which He keeps us, in the fellowship
+of all Saints in which He knits us together; in the forgiveness of our
+sins which He proclaims to us, in the resurrection of our body which
+He will quicken at the last day, in the life everlasting which is His
+life,&mdash;if, I say, this be not enough for them to believe, and on
+the strength thereof to trust God utterly, and so be justified and saved
+from this evil world, and from the doom and punishment thereof, then
+they must go elsewhere; for I have nothing more to offer them, and trust
+in God that I never shall have.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON VII.&nbsp; DUTY AND SUPERSTITION</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Micah vi. 6-8.&nbsp; Wherewith shall I come before the Lord and bow
+myself before the most High God?&nbsp; Shall I come before him with
+burnt offerings? . . .&nbsp; Will the Lord be pleased with thousands
+of rams? . . .&nbsp; Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression;
+the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?</p>
+<p>He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord
+require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly
+with thy God?</p>
+<p>There are many now-a-days who complain of that part of the Church
+Catechism which speaks of our duty to God and to our neighbour; and
+many more, I fear, who shrink from complaining of the Church Catechism,
+because it is part of the Prayer-book, yet wish in their secret hearts
+that it had said something different about Duty.</p>
+<p>Some wonder why it does not say more about what are called &lsquo;religious
+duties,&rsquo; and &lsquo;acts of worship,&rsquo; &lsquo;mortification,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;penitence,&rsquo; and &lsquo;good works.&rsquo;&nbsp; Others
+wonder no less why it says nothing about what are called &lsquo;Christian
+frames and feelings,&rsquo; and &lsquo;inward experiences.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>For there is a notion abroad in the world, as there is in all evil
+times, that a man&rsquo;s chief duty is to save his own soul after he
+is dead; that his business in this world is merely to see how he can
+get out of it again, without suffering endless torture after his body
+dies.&nbsp; This is called superstition: anxiety about what will happen
+to us after we die.</p>
+<p>Now if you look at the greater number of religious books, whether
+Popish or Protestant, you will find that in practice the main thing,
+almost the one thing, which they are meant to do, is to show the reader
+how he may escape Hell-torments, and reach Heaven&rsquo;s pleasures
+after he dies: not how he may do his Duty to God and his neighbour.&nbsp;
+They speak of that latter, of course: they could not be Christian books
+at all, thank God, without doing so; but they seem to me to tell men
+to do their Duty, not simply because it is right, and a blessing in
+itself, and worth doing for its own sake, but because a man may gain
+something by it after he dies.&nbsp; Therefore, to help their readers
+to gain as much as possible after they die, they are not content with
+the plain Duty laid down in the Bible and in the Catechism, but require
+of men new duties over and above; which may be all very good if they
+help men to do their real Duty, but are simply worth nothing if they
+do not.</p>
+<p>Let me explain myself.&nbsp; I said just now that superstition means
+anxiety about what will happen to us after we die.&nbsp; But people
+commonly understand by superstition, religious ceremonies, like the
+Popish ones, which God has not commanded.&nbsp; And that is not a wrong
+meaning either; for people take to these ceremonies from over-anxiety
+about the next life.&nbsp; The one springs out of the other; the outward
+conduct out of the inward fear; and both spring alike out of a false
+notion of God, which the Devil (whose great aim is to hinder us from
+knowing our Father in Heaven) puts into men&rsquo;s minds.&nbsp; Man
+feels that he is sinful and unrighteous; the light of Christ in his
+heart shows him that, and it shows him at the same time that God is
+sinless and righteous.&nbsp; &lsquo;Then,&rsquo; he says, &lsquo;God
+must hate sin;&rsquo; and there he says true.&nbsp; Then steps in the
+slanderer, Satan, and whispers, &lsquo;But you are sinful; therefore
+God hates you, and wills you harm, and torture, and ruin.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And the poor man believes that lying voice, and will believe it to the
+end, whether he be Christian or heathen, until he believes the Bible
+and the Sacraments, which tell him, &lsquo;God does not hate you: He
+hates your sins, and loves you; He wills not your misery but your happiness;
+and therefore God&rsquo;s will, yea, God&rsquo;s earnest endeavour,
+is to raise you out of those sins of yours, which make you miserable
+now, and which, if you go on in them, must bring of themselves everlasting
+misery to you.&rsquo;&nbsp; Of themselves; not by any arbitrary decree
+of God (whereof the Bible says not one single word from beginning to
+end), that He will inflict on you so much pain for so much sin: but
+by the very nature of sin; for to sin is to be parted from God, in whose
+presence alone is life, and therefore sin is, to be in death.&nbsp;
+Sin is, to be at war with God, who is love and peace; and therefore
+to be in lovelessness, hatred, war, and misery.&nbsp; Sin is, to act
+contrary to the constitution which God gave man, when He said, &lsquo;Let
+us make man in our image, after our likeness;&rsquo; and therefore sin
+is a disease in human nature, and like all other diseases, must, unless
+it is checked, go on everlastingly and perpetually breeding weakness,
+pain and torment.&nbsp; And out of that God is so desirous to raise
+you, that He spared not His only begotten Son, but freely gave Him for
+you, if by any means He might raise you out of that death of sin to
+the life of righteousness&mdash;to a righteous life; to a life of Duty&mdash;to
+a dutiful life, like His Son Jesus Christ&rsquo;s life; for that must
+go on, if you go on in it, producing in you everlastingly and perpetually
+all health and strength, usefulness and happiness in this world and
+all worlds to come.</p>
+<p>But men will not hear that voice.&nbsp; The fact is, that simply
+to do right is too difficult for them, and too humbling also.&nbsp;
+They are too proud to like being righteous only with Christ&rsquo;s
+righteousness, and too slothful also; and so they go about like the
+old Pharisees, to establish a righteousness of their own; one which
+will pamper their self-conceit by seeming very strange, and farfetched,
+and difficult, so as to enable them to thank God every day that they
+are not as other men are; and yet one which shall really not be as difficult
+as the plain homely work of being good sons, good fathers, good husbands,
+good masters, good servants, good subjects, good rulers.&nbsp; And so
+they go about to establish a righteousness of their own (which can be
+no righteousness at all, for God&rsquo;s righteousness is the only righteousness,
+and Christ&rsquo;s righteousness is the only pattern of it), and teach
+men that God does not merely require of men to do justly, and love mercy,
+and walk humbly with their God, but requires of them something more.&nbsp;
+But by this they deny the righteousness of God; for they make out that
+he has not behaved righteously and justly to men, nor showed them what
+is good, but has left them to find it out or invent it for themselves.&nbsp;
+For is it not establishing a righteousness of one&rsquo;s own, to tell
+people that God only requires these Ten Commandments of Christians in
+general, but that if any one chooses to go further, and do certain things
+which are not contained in the Ten Commandments, &lsquo;counsels of
+perfection,&rsquo; as they are called, and &lsquo;good works&rsquo;
+(as if there were no other good works in the world), and so do more
+than it is one&rsquo;s duty to do, and lead a sort of life which is
+called (I know not why) &lsquo;saintly&rsquo; and &lsquo;angelic,&rsquo;
+then one will obtain a &lsquo;peculiar crown,&rsquo; and a higher place
+in Heaven than poor commonplace Christian people, who only do justly,
+and love mercy, and walk humbly with their God?</p>
+<p>And is it not, on the other hand, establishing a righteousness of
+one&rsquo;s own, to say that God requires of us belief in certain doctrines
+about election, and &lsquo;forensic justification,&rsquo; and &lsquo;sensible
+conversion,&rsquo; and certain &lsquo;frames and feelings and experiences;&rsquo;
+and that without all these a man has no right to expect anything but
+endless torture; and all the while to say little or nothing about God&rsquo;s
+requiring of men the Ten Commandments?&nbsp; For my part, I am equally
+shocked and astonished at the doctrine which I have heard round us here&mdash;openly
+from some few, and in practice from more than a few&mdash;that because
+the Ten Commandments are part of the Law, they are done away with, because
+we are not now under the Law but under Grace.&nbsp; What do they mean?&nbsp;
+Is it not written, that not one jot or tittle of the Law shall fail;
+and that Christ came, not to destroy the Law, but to fulfil it?&nbsp;
+What do they mean?&nbsp; That it was harm to break the Ten Commandments
+before Christ came, but no harm to break them now?&nbsp; Do they mean
+that Jews were forbid to murder, steal, and commit adultery, but that
+Christians are not forbidden?&nbsp; One thing I am afraid they do mean,
+for I see them act up to it steadily enough.&nbsp; That Jews were forbidden
+to covet, but that Christians are not; that Jews might not commit fornication,
+but Christians may; that Jews might not lie, but Christians may; that
+Jews might not use false weights and measures, or adulterate goods for
+sale, but that Christians may.&nbsp; My friends, if I am asked the reason
+of the hypocrisy which seems the besetting sin of England, in this day;&mdash;if
+I am asked why rich men, even high religious professors, dare speak
+untruths at public meetings, bribe at elections, and go into parliament
+each man with a lie in his right hand, to serve neither God nor his
+country, but his political party and his religious sect, by conduct
+which he would be ashamed to employ in private life;&mdash;if I am asked
+why the middle classes (and the high religious professors among them,
+just as much as any) are given over to cheating, coveting, puffing their
+own goods by shameless and unmanly boasting, undermining each other
+by the dirtiest means, while the sons of religious professors, both
+among the higher and the middle classes, seem just as liable as any
+other young men to fall into unmanly profligacy;&mdash;if I am asked
+why the poor profess God&rsquo;s gospel and practise the Devil&rsquo;s
+works; and why, in this very parish now, there are women who, while
+they are drunkards, swearers, and adulteresses, will run anywhere to
+hear a sermon, and like nothing better, saving sin, than high-flown
+religious books;&mdash;if I am asked, I say, why the old English honesty
+which used to be our glory and our strength, has decayed so much of
+late years, and a hideous and shameful hypocrisy has taken the place
+of it, I can only answer by pointing to the good old Church Catechism,
+and what it says about our duty to God and to our neighbour, and declaring
+boldly, &lsquo;It is because you have forgotten that.&nbsp; Because
+you have despised that.&nbsp; Because you have fancied that it was beneath
+you to keep God&rsquo;s plain human commandments.&nbsp; You have been
+wanting to &ldquo;save your souls,&rdquo; while you did not care whether
+your souls were saved alive, or whether they were dead, and rotten,
+and damned within you; you have dreamed that you could be what you called
+&ldquo;spiritual,&rdquo; while you were the slaves of sin; you have
+dreamed that you could become what you call &ldquo;saints,&rdquo; while
+you were not yet even decent men and women.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And so all this superstition has had the same effect as the false
+preaching in Ezekiel&rsquo;s time had.&nbsp; It has strengthened the
+hands of the wicked, that he should not turn from his wicked way, by
+promising him life; and it has made the heart of the righteous sad,
+whom God has not made sad.&nbsp; Plain, respectable, God-fearing men
+and women, who have wished simply to do their duty where God has put
+them, have been told that they are still unconverted, still carnal&mdash;that
+they have no share in Christ&mdash;that God&rsquo;s Spirit is not with
+them&mdash;that they are in the way to endless torture: till they have
+been ready one minute to say, &lsquo;Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow
+we die&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;Surely I have cleansed my hands in vain,
+and washed my heart in innocency;&rsquo; and the next minute to say,
+with Job, angrily, &lsquo;Though I die, thou shalt not take my righteousness
+from me!&nbsp; You preachers may call me what names you will; but I
+know that I love what is right, and wish to do my duty;&rsquo; and so
+they have been made perplexed and unhappy, one day fancying themselves
+worse than they really were, and the next fancying themselves better
+than they really were; and by both tempers of mind tempted to disbelieve
+God&rsquo;s Gospel, and throw away the thought of vital religion in
+disgust.</p>
+<p>And now people are raising the cry that Popery is about to overrun
+England.&nbsp; It may be so, my friends.&nbsp; If it is so, I cannot
+wonder at it; if it is so, Englishmen have no one to blame but themselves.&nbsp;
+And whether Popery conquers us or not, some other base superstition
+surely will conquer us if we go on upon our present course, and set
+up any new-fangled, self-invented righteousness of our own, instead
+of the plain Ten Commandments of God.&nbsp; For I tell you plainly they
+are God&rsquo;s everlasting law, the very law of liberty, wherewith
+Christ has made us free; and only by fulfilling them, as Christ did,
+can we be free&mdash;free from sin, the world, the flesh, and the Devil.&nbsp;
+For to break them is to sin: and whosoever commits sin is the slave
+of sin; and whosoever despises these commandments will never enjoy that
+freedom, but be entangled again in the yoke of bondage, and become a
+slave, if not to open and profligate sins, still surely to an evil and
+tormenting conscience, to superstitious anxieties as to whether he shall
+be saved or damned, which make him at last ask, &lsquo;Wherewithal shall
+I come before the Lord?&nbsp; Will the Lord be pleased with this, that
+and the other fantastical action, or great sacrifice of mine?&rsquo;
+or at last, perhaps, the old question, &lsquo;Shall I give my firstborn
+for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?&nbsp;
+Shall I cheat my own family, leave my property away from my children,
+desert them to shut myself up in a convent, or to attempt some great
+religious enterprise?&rsquo;&mdash;Things which have happened a thousand
+times already, and worse, far worse, than them; things which will happen
+again, and worse, far worse than them, as soon as a hypocritical generation
+is seized with that dread and terror of God which is sure to arise in
+the hearts of men who try to invent a righteousness of their own, and
+who forget what God&rsquo;s righteousness is like, and who therefore
+forget what God is like, and who therefore forget what God&rsquo;s name
+is, and who therefore forget that Jesus Christ is God&rsquo;s likeness,
+and that the name of God is &lsquo;Love.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now, I say that the Church Catechism, from beginning to end, is the
+cure for this poison, and in no part more than where it tells us our
+duty to God and our neighbour; and that it does carry out the meaning
+of the text as no other writing does, which I know of, save the Bible
+only.</p>
+<p>For what says the text?</p>
+<p>&lsquo;He hath showed thee, O man, what is good.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Who has showed thee?&nbsp; Who but this very God, from whom thou
+art shrinking; to whom thou art looking up in terror, as at a hard taskmaster,
+reaping where He has not sown, who willeth the death of a sinner, and
+his endless and unspeakable torment?&nbsp; The very God whom thou dreadest
+has stooped to save and teach thee.&nbsp; He hath sent His only begotten
+Son to thee, to show thee, in the person of a man, Jesus Christ, what
+a perfect man is, and what He requires of thee to be.&nbsp; This Lord
+Jesus is with thee, to teach thee to live by faith in thy heavenly Father,
+even as He lived, and to be justified thereby, even as He was justified
+by being declared to be God&rsquo;s well-beloved Son, and by being raised
+from the dead.&nbsp; He will show thee what is good; He has shown thee
+what is good, when He showed thee His own blessed self, His story and
+character written in the four Gospels.&nbsp; This is thy God, and this
+is thy Lord and Master; not a silent God, not a careless God, but a
+revealer of secrets, a teacher, a guide, a &lsquo;most merciful God,
+who showeth to man the thing which he knew not;&rsquo; that same Word
+of God who talked with Adam in the garden, and brought his wife to him;
+who called Abraham, and gave him a child; who sent Moses to make a nation
+of the Jews; who is the King of all the nations upon earth, and has
+appointed them their times and the bounds of their habitation, if haply
+they may feel after Him and find Him; who meanwhile is not far from
+any one of them, seeing that in Him they live, and move, and have their
+being, and are His offspring; who has not left Himself without witness,
+that they may know that He is one who loves, not one who hates, one
+who gives, not one who takes, one who has pity, not one who destroys,
+in that He gives them rain and fruitful seasons, filling their hearts
+with food and gladness.&nbsp; This is thy God, O man! from whose face
+thou desirest to flee away.</p>
+<p>Next, &lsquo;He hath showed thee, O <i>man</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Not
+merely, &lsquo;He hath showed thee, O deep philosopher, or brilliant
+genius;&rsquo;&mdash;not merely, &lsquo;He hath showed thee, O eminent
+saint, or believer who hast been through many deep experiences:&rsquo;
+but, &lsquo;He hath showed thee, O <i>man</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Whosoever
+thou art, if thou be a man, subsisting like Jesus Christ the Son of
+Man, of a reasonable soul and human flesh; thou labourer at the plough,
+tradesman in thy shop, soldier in the battle-field, poor woman working
+in thy cottage, God hath showed thee, and thee, and thee, what is good,
+as surely and fully as He has shown it to scholars and divines, to kings
+and rulers, and the wise and prudent of the earth.</p>
+<p>And He hath showed <i>thee</i>; not you.&nbsp; Not merely to the
+whole of you together; not merely to some of you so that one will have
+to tell the other, and the greater part know only at second-hand and
+by hearsay: but He hath showed to thee, to each of you; to each man,
+woman, and child, in this Church, alone, privately, in the depths of
+thy own heart, He hath showed what is good.&nbsp; He hath sent into
+thine heart a ray of The Light who lighteth every man who comes into
+the world.&nbsp; He has given to thy soul an eye by which to see that
+Light, a conscience which can receive what is good, and shrink from
+what is evil; a spiritual sense, whereby thou canst discern good and
+evil.&nbsp; That conscience, that soul&rsquo;s eye of thine, God has
+regenerated, as He declares to thee in baptism, and He will day by day
+make it clearer and tenderer by the quickening power of His Holy Spirit;
+and that Spirit will renew Himself in thee day by day, if thou askest
+Him, and will quicken and soften thy soul more and more to love what
+is good, and strengthen it more and more to hate and fly from what is
+evil.</p>
+<p>Next, &lsquo;He hath showed thee, O man, what is GOOD.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Not merely what will turn away God&rsquo;s punishments, and buy God&rsquo;s
+rewards; not merely what will be good for thee after thou diest: but
+what is good, good in itself, good for thee now, and good for thee for
+ever; good for thee in health and sickness, joy and sorrow, life and
+death; good for thee through all worlds, present and to come; yea, what
+would be good for thee in hell, if thou couldst be in hell and yet be
+good.&nbsp; Not what is good enough for thy neighbours and not good
+enough for thee, good enough for sinners and not good enough for saints,
+good enough for stupid persons and not good enough for clever ones;
+but what is good in itself and of itself.&nbsp; The one very eternal
+and absolute Good which was with God, and in God, and from God, before
+all worlds, and will be for ever, without changing or growing less or
+greater, eternally The Same Good.&nbsp; The Good which would be just
+as good, and just, and right, and lovely, and glorious, if there were
+no world, no men, no angels, no heaven, no hell, and God were alone
+in his own abyss.&nbsp; That very good which is the exact pattern of
+His Son Jesus Christ, in whose likeness man was made at the beginning,
+God hath showed thee, O man; and hath told thee that it is neither more
+nor less than thy Duty, thy Duty as a man; that thy duty is thy good,
+the good out of which, if thou doest it, all good things such as thou
+canst not now conceive to thyself, must necessarily spring up for thee
+for ever; but which if thou neglectest, thou wilt be in danger of getting
+no good things whatsoever, and of having all evil things, mishap, shame,
+and misery such as thou canst not now conceive of, spring up for thee
+necessarily for ever.</p>
+<p>This seems to me the plain meaning of the text, interpreted by the
+plain teaching of the rest of Scripture.&nbsp; Now see how the Catechism
+agrees with this.</p>
+<p>It takes for granted that God has showed the child what is good:
+that God&rsquo;s Spirit is sanctifying and making good, not only all
+the elect people of God, but him, that one particular child; and it
+makes the child say so.&nbsp; Therefore, when it asks him, &lsquo;What
+is thy duty to God and to thy neighbour?&rsquo; it asks him, &lsquo;My
+child, thou sayest that God&rsquo;s Spirit is with thee, sanctifying
+thee and showing thee what is good, tell me, therefore, what good the
+Holy Spirit has showed thee?&mdash;tell me what He has showed thee to
+be good, and therefore thy duty?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But some may answer, &lsquo;How can you say that the Holy Spirit
+teaches the children their Duty, when it is their schoolmaster, or their
+father, who teaches them the Ten Commandments and the Catechism?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>My friends, we may teach our children the Ten Commandments, or anything
+else we like, but we cannot teach them that that is their <i>duty</i>.&nbsp;
+They must first know what Duty means at all, before they can learn that
+any particular things are parts of their Duty.&nbsp; And, believe me,
+neither you nor I, nor all the men in the world put together, no, nor
+angel, nor archangel, nor any created being, nor the whole universe,
+can teach one child, no, nor our own selves, the meaning of that plain
+word DUTY, nor the meaning of those two plain words, I OUGHT.&nbsp;
+No; that simple thought, that thought which every one of us, even the
+most stupid, even the most sinful has more or less, comes straight to
+him from God the Father of Lights, by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit
+of God, the Spirit of Duty, Faith, and Obedience.</p>
+<p>For mind&mdash;when you teach a child, &lsquo;If you do this wrong
+thing&mdash;stealing, for instance&mdash;God will punish you: but if
+you are honest, God will reward you,&rsquo; you are not teaching the
+child that it is his Duty to be honest, and his Duty not to steal.&nbsp;
+You are teaching him what is quite right and true; namely, that it is
+profitable for him to be honest, and hurtful to him to steal: but you
+are not teaching him as high a spiritual lesson as any soldier knows
+when he rushes upon certain death, knowing that he shall gain nothing,
+and may lose everything thereby, but simply because it is his Duty.&nbsp;
+You are only enticing your child to do right, and frightening him from
+doing wrong; quite necessary and good to be done: but if he is to be
+spiritually honest, honest at heart, honest from a sense of honour,
+and not of fear; in one word, if he is to be really honest at all, or
+even to try to be really honest, something must be done to that child&rsquo;s
+heart which nothing but the Spirit of God can do; he must be taught
+that it is his DUTY to be honest; that honesty is RIGHT, the perfectly
+right, and proper, and beautiful thing for him and for all beings, yea,
+for God Himself; he must be taught to love honesty, and whatsoever else
+is right, for its own sake, and therefore to feel it his Duty.</p>
+<p>And I say that God does that by your children.&nbsp; I say that we
+cannot watch our children without seeing that, though there is in them,
+as in us, a corrupt and wilful flesh, which tempts them downward to
+selfish and self-willed pleasures: yet there is in them generally, more
+than in us their parents, a Spirit which makes them love and admire
+what is right, and take pleasure in it, and feel that it is good to
+be good, and right to do right; which makes them delight in reading
+and hearing of loving, and right, and noble actions; which makes them
+shocked, they hardly know why, at bad words, and bad conduct, and bad
+people.&nbsp; And woe to those who deaden that tenderness of conscience
+in their own children, by their bad examples, or by false doctrines
+which tell the children that they are still unregenerate, children of
+the Devil, not yet Christians; and who so put a stumbling-block in the
+way of Christ&rsquo;s little ones, and do despite to the Spirit of Grace
+by which they are sealed to the day of redemption.&nbsp; I see parents
+thinking that their children are to learn the deceitfulness of the human
+heart from themselves, and the working of God&rsquo;s Spirit from their
+parents; but I often think that the teachers ought to be converted indeed,
+that is, turned right round and become the learners instead of the teachers,
+and learn the workings of God&rsquo;s Spirit from their children, and
+the deceitfulness of the human heart from themselves; if at least the
+Lord Jesus&rsquo;s words have any real force or meaning at all, when
+He said, not, &lsquo;Except the little children be converted, and become
+as you,&rsquo; but, &lsquo;Except ye be converted, and become as one
+of these little children, ye&rsquo; (and not they) &lsquo;shall in no
+wise enter into the kingdom of heaven.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Believe me, my friends, that your children&rsquo;s angels do indeed
+behold the face of their Father which is in heaven; that there is a
+direct communication between Him and them; and that the sign and proof
+of it is, the way in which they understand at once what you tell them
+of their duty, and take to it, as it were, only too readily and hopefully,
+and confidently, as if it were a thing natural and easy to them.&nbsp;
+Alas! it is neither natural nor easy, and they will find out that too
+soon by sad experience: but still, the Divine Light is there, the sense
+of duty is in their minds, and the law of God is written in their hearts
+by the Holy Spirit of God, who is sanctifying them, not merely by teaching
+them to hope for heaven, or to dread hell, but by showing them what
+is good.</p>
+<p>And herein, I say, the simple and noble old Church Catechism, by
+faith in God&rsquo;s Spirit, does indeed perfect praise out of the mouths
+of babes.&nbsp; Without one word about rewards or punishments, heaven
+or hell, it begins to talk to the child, like a true English Catechism
+as it is, about that glorious old English key word, DUTY.&nbsp; It calls
+on the child to confess its own duty, and teaches it that its duty is
+something most human, simple, everyday, commonplace, if you will call
+it so.&nbsp; I rejoice that it is commonplace; I rejoice that in what
+it says about our duty to God, and to our neighbour, it says not one
+word about those counsels of perfection, or those frames and feelings,
+which depend, believe me, principally on the state of people&rsquo;s
+bodily health, on the constitution of their nerves, and the temper of
+their brain: but that it requires nothing except what a little child
+can do as well as a grown person, a labouring man as well as a divine,
+a plain farmer as well as the most refined, devout, imaginative lady.&nbsp;
+May God bless them all; may God help them all to do their Duty in that
+station of life to which it has pleased God to call them; but may God
+grant to them never to forget that there is but one Duty for all, and
+that all of them can do that Duty equally well, whatever their constitution,
+or scholarship, or station of life may be, provided they will but remember
+that God has called them to that station, and not try to invent some
+new and finer one for themselves; provided they remember that they are
+to do in that station neither more nor less than every one else is to
+do in theirs, namely, to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly
+with their God.</p>
+<p>In a word, to be perfect, even as their Father in heaven is perfect.&nbsp;
+To do justly, because God is just, faithful, and true, rewarding every
+man according to his works, and no partial accepter of persons; so that
+in every nation he that feareth God and worketh righteousness is accepted
+by Him.</p>
+<p>To love mercy, because God loves mercy; to be merciful, because our
+Father in heaven is merciful; because He willeth not the death of a
+sinner, but rather that he should turn from his wickedness and live;
+because God came to seek and to save that which is lost, and is good
+to the unthankful and the evil; and because God so loved sinful man,
+that when man hated God, God&rsquo;s answer to man&rsquo;s hate, God&rsquo;s
+vengeance upon man&rsquo;s rebellion, was, to send His only-begotten
+Son, that whosoever believed in Him should not perish, but have everlasting
+life.</p>
+<p>And to walk humbly with your God, because&mdash;and what shall I
+say now?&nbsp; Does God walk humbly?&nbsp; Can there be humility in
+God?&nbsp; Can God obey?&nbsp; And yet it must be so.&nbsp; If, as is
+most certain from Holy Scripture, man, as far as he is what man ought
+to be, is the image and glory of God; if man&rsquo;s justice ought to
+be a copy of God&rsquo;s justice, and man&rsquo;s mercy a copy of God&rsquo;s
+mercy, and all which is good in man a copy of something good in God:
+if, as is most certain, all good on earth is God&rsquo;s likeness, and
+only good because it is God&rsquo;s likeness, and is given by God&rsquo;s
+Spirit,&mdash;then our walking humbly with God, if it be good, must
+be a copy of something in God.&nbsp; But of what?</p>
+<p>That, my friends, is a question which can never be answered but by
+those who believe in the mystery of the ever-blessed Trinity, The Father,
+The Son, and The Holy Ghost.&nbsp; It is too solemn and great a matter
+to be spoken of hastily at the end of a sermon.&nbsp; I will tell you
+what little I seem to see of it next Sunday, with awe and trembling,
+as one who enters upon holy ground.&nbsp; But this I will tell you,
+to bear in mind meanwhile, that if you wish to know or to do what is
+right, you must firmly believe and bear in mind this,&mdash;that God&rsquo;s
+justice is exactly like what would be just in you and me, without any
+difference whatsoever: that God&rsquo;s mercy is exactly like what would
+be merciful in you and me; and that, as I hope to show you next Sunday,
+God&rsquo;s humility, wonderful as it may seem, is exactly like what
+would be humble in you and me.&nbsp; For I warn you, that if you do
+not believe this, you will be tempted to forget God&rsquo;s righteousness,
+and to invent a righteousness of your own, which is no righteousness
+at all, but unrighteousness.&nbsp; For there can be but one righteousness&mdash;mind
+what I say&mdash;only one righteousness, as there can be only one truth,
+and only one reason.&nbsp; Forget that, and you will be tempted to invent
+for yourselves a false justice, which is dishonest and partial; a false
+mercy, which is cruel; a false humility, which is vain and self-conceited;
+and you will be tempted also, as men of all religions and denominations
+have been, to impute to God actions, and thoughts, and tempers, which
+are (as your own consciences, if you would listen to God&rsquo;s Word
+in them, would tell you) unjust, cruel, and proud; and then you will
+be tempted to say that things are justifiable in God, which you would
+not excuse in any other being, by saying: &lsquo;Of course it must be
+right in Him, because He is God, and can do what He will.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+As if the Judge of all the earth would not do Right; as if He could
+be anything, or could do anything, but the Eternal <i>Good</i> which
+is His very being and essence, and which He has shown forth in His Son
+Jesus Christ our Lord, who went about doing good because God was with
+Him.&nbsp; We all know what the good which He did was like.&nbsp; Let
+us believe that God the Father&rsquo;s goodness is the same as Jesus
+Christ&rsquo;s goodness.&nbsp; Let us believe really what we say when
+we confess that Jesus was the brightness of His Father&rsquo;s Glory,
+and the express image of His Person.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON VIII.&nbsp; SONSHIP</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>John v. 19, 20, 30.&nbsp; Then answered Jesus, Verily, verily, I
+say unto you, The Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He seeth the
+Father do: for what things soever He doeth, these also doeth the Son
+likewise.&nbsp; For the Father loveth the Son, and sheweth Him all things
+that Himself doeth.</p>
+<p>I can of mine own self do nothing: as I hear, I judge: and my judgment
+is just; because I seek not mine own will, but the will of my Father
+which is in Heaven.</p>
+<p>This, my friends, is why man should walk humbly and obediently with
+his God; because humility and obedience are the likeness of the Son
+of God, who, though He is equal to His Father, yet to do His Father&rsquo;s
+will humbled Himself, and took on Him the form of a slave, and though
+He is a Son, yet learned obedience by the things which He suffered;
+sacrificing Himself utterly and perfectly to do the commands of His
+Father and our Father, of His God and our God; and sacrificing Himself
+to His Father not as a man merely, but as a son; not because He was
+in the likeness of sinful flesh, but because He was The Everlasting
+Son of His Father; not once only on the cross, but from all eternity
+to all eternity, the Lamb slain before the foundation of the world.&nbsp;
+This is a great mystery; we may understand somewhat more of it by thinking
+over the meaning of those great words, Father and Son.</p>
+<p>Now, first, a son must be of the same nature as his father,&mdash;that
+is certain.&nbsp; Each kind of animal brings forth after its kind: the
+lion begets lions, the sheep, sheep; the son of a man must be a man,
+of one substance with his earthly father; and by the same law, the Son
+of God must be God.&nbsp; Take away that notion: say that the only-begotten
+Son of God is not very God of very God, of one substance with His Father,
+and the word son means nothing.&nbsp; If a son be not of the same substance
+as his father, he is not a son at all.&nbsp; And more, a perfect son
+must be as great and as good as his father, exactly like his father
+in everything.&nbsp; That is the very meaning of father and son; that
+like should beget like.&nbsp; Among fallen and imperfect men, some sons
+are worse and weaker than their fathers: but we all feel that that is
+an evil, a thing to be sorry for, a sad consequence of our fallen state.&nbsp;
+Our reasons and hearts tell us that a son ought to be equal to his father,
+and that it is in some way an affliction, almost a shame, to a father,
+if his children are weaker or worse than he is.&nbsp; But we cannot
+fancy such a thing in God; the only-begotten perfect Son of the Almighty
+and perfect Father must be at least equal to His Father, as great as
+His Father, as good as His Father; the brightness of His Father&rsquo;s
+glory, and the express image of His Father&rsquo;s person.</p>
+<p>But there is another thing about father and son which we must look
+at, and that is this: a good son loves and obeys his father, and the
+better son he is, the more he loves and obeys his father; and therefore
+a perfect son will perfectly love and perfectly obey his father.</p>
+<p>Now, here is the great difference between animals and men.&nbsp;
+Among the higher animals, the mothers always, and the fathers sometimes,
+feed, and help, and protect their young: but we seldom or never find
+that young animals help and protect their parents; certainly, they never
+obey their fathers when they are full grown, but are as ready to tear
+their fathers in pieces as their fathers are to tear them: so that the
+love and obedience of full-grown sons to their fathers is so utterly
+human a thing, so utterly different from anything we find in the brutes,
+that we must believe it to be part of man&rsquo;s immortal soul, part
+of God&rsquo;s likeness in man.</p>
+<p>And in the text our Lord declares that it is so; He declares that
+His obedience to His Father, and His Father&rsquo;s love to Him, is
+the perfect likeness of what goes on between a good son and a good father
+among men; only that it is <i>perfect</i>, because it is between a perfect
+Father and a perfect Son.</p>
+<p>Father and Son!&nbsp; Let philosophers and divines discover what
+they may about God, they will never discover anything so deep as the
+wonder which lies in those two words, Father and Son.&nbsp; So deep,
+and yet so simple!&nbsp; So simple, that the wayfaring man, though poor,
+shall not err therein.&nbsp; &lsquo;Who is God?&nbsp; What is God like?&nbsp;
+Where shall we find Him, or His likeness?&rsquo;&mdash;so has mankind
+been crying in all ages, and getting no answer, or making answers for
+themselves in all sorts of superstitions, idolatries, false philosophies.&nbsp;
+And then the Gospel comes, and answers to every man, to every poor and
+unlearned labourer: Will you know the name of God?&nbsp; It is a Father,
+a Son, and a Holy Spirit of love, joy, peace; a Spirit of perfect satisfaction
+of the Father in the Son, and perfect satisfaction of the Son with the
+Father, which proceeds from both the Father and the Son.&nbsp; It needs
+no scholarship to understand that Name; every one may understand it
+who is a good father; every one may understand it who is a good son,
+who looks up to and obeys his father with that filial spirit of love,
+and obedience, and satisfaction with his father&rsquo;s will, which
+is the likeness of the Holy Spirit of God, and can only flourish in
+any man by the help of the Holy Spirit which proceeds from the Father
+and the Son.</p>
+<p>Father and Son! what more beautiful words are there in the world?&nbsp;
+What more beautiful sight is there in the world than a son who really
+loves his father, really trusts his father, really does his duty to
+his father, really looks up to and obeys his father&rsquo;s will in
+all things? who is ready to sacrifice his own credit, his own pleasure,
+his own success in life, for the sake of his father&rsquo;s comfort
+and honour?&nbsp; How much more fair and noble must be the love and
+trust which is between God the Father and God the Son!</p>
+<p>I wish that some of those who now write so many excellent books for
+young people, would write one made up entirely of stories of good sons
+who have obeyed, and worked for, and suffered for their parents.&nbsp;
+Sure I am that such a book, wisely and well written, would teach young
+people much of the meaning of the blessed name of God, much of their
+duty to God.&nbsp; And yet, after all, my friends, is not such a book
+written already?&nbsp; Have we not the four Gospels, which tell us of
+Jesus Christ, the perfect Son, who came to do the will of a perfect
+Father?&nbsp; Read that; read your Bibles.&nbsp; Read the history of
+the Lord Jesus Christ, keeping in mind always that it is the history
+of the Son of God, and of His obedience to His Father.&nbsp; And when
+in St. John&rsquo;s most wonderful Gospel you meet with deep texts,
+like the one which I have chosen, read them too as carefully, if possible
+more carefully, than the rest; for they are meant for all parents and
+for all children upon earth.&nbsp; Read how The Father loves The Son,
+and gives all things into His hand, and commits all judgment to The
+Son, and gives Him power to have life in Himself, even as The Father
+has life in Himself, and shows Him all things that Himself doeth, that
+all men may honour The Son even as they honour The Father.&nbsp; Read
+how The Son came only to show forth His Father&rsquo;s glory; to be
+the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person: to
+establish His Father&rsquo;s kingdom; to declare the goodness of His
+Father&rsquo;s Name, which is <i>The</i> Father.&nbsp; How He does nothing
+of Himself, but only what He sees His Father do; how He seeks not His
+own will, but the will of the Father who sent Him; how He sacrificed
+all, yea even His most precious body and soul upon the cross, to finish
+the work which His Father gave Him to do.&nbsp; How, being in the form
+of God, and thinking it no robbery to be equal with God, He could boldly
+say, &lsquo;As the Father knoweth me, even so know I the Father.&nbsp;
+I and my Father are one:&rsquo; and still, in the fulness of His filial
+love and obedience, declared that He had no will, no wish, no work,
+no glory, but His Father&rsquo;s; and in the hour of His agony cried
+out, &lsquo;Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me: nevertheless,
+not my will but thine be done.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>My friends, you will be able to understand more and more of the meaning
+of these words just in proportion as you are good sons and good fathers;
+and therefore, just in proportion as you are led and taught by the Holy
+Spirit of God, without whose help no man can be either a good father
+or a good son.&nbsp; A bad son; a disobedient, self-willed, self-conceited
+son, who is seeking his own credit and not his father&rsquo;s, his own
+pleasure and not his parent&rsquo;s comfort; a son who is impatient
+of being kept in order and advised, who despises his parent&rsquo;s
+counsel, and will have none of his reproof,&mdash;to him these words
+of our Lord, the deepest, noblest words which were ever spoken on earth,
+will have no more meaning than if they were written in a foreign language;
+he will not know what our Lord means; he will not be able to see why
+our Lord came and suffered; he will not see any beauty in our Lord&rsquo;s
+character, any righteousness in His sacrificing Himself for His Father;
+and because he has forgotten his duty to his earthly father, he will
+never learn his duty to God.</p>
+<p>For what is the duty of the Lord Jesus Christ is our duty, if we
+are the sons of God in Him.&nbsp; He is The Son of God by an eternal
+never-ceasing generation; we are the sons of God by adoption.&nbsp;
+The way in which we are to look up to God, The Holy Spirit must teach
+us; what is our duty to God The Holy Spirit must teach us.&nbsp; And
+who is The Holy Spirit?&nbsp; He is The Spirit who proceeds from The
+Son as well as from The Father.&nbsp; He is The Spirit of Jesus Christ,
+The Spirit of the Son of God, the Spirit who descended on the Lord Jesus
+when He was baptized, the Spirit which God gave to Him without measure.&nbsp;
+He is the Spirit of The Son of God; and we are sons of God by adoption,
+says Saint Paul; and because we are sons, he says, God has sent forth
+into our hearts the Spirit of His Son, by whom we look up to God as
+our Father; and this Spirit of God&rsquo;s Son, by whom we cry to God,
+Abba, Father, St. Paul calls, in another place, the Spirit of adoption;
+and declares openly that He is the very Spirit of God.</p>
+<p>Therefore, in whatsoever way the Spirit of God is to teach you to
+look up to God, He will teach you to look up to Him as a Father; the
+Father of Spirits, and therefore your Father; for you are a spirit.&nbsp;
+Whatsoever duty to God the Holy Spirit teaches you, He teaches you first,
+and before all things, that it is filial duty, the duty of a son to
+a father, because you are the son of God, and God is your Father.</p>
+<p>Therefore, whatsoever man or book tells you that your duty to God
+is anything but the duty of a son to his father does not speak by the
+Spirit of God.&nbsp; Whatsoever thoughts or feelings in your own hearts
+tell you that your duty to God is anything but the duty of a son to
+his father, and tempt you to distrust God&rsquo;s forgiveness, and shrink
+from Him, and look up to Him as a taskmaster, and an austere and revengeful
+Lord, are not the Spirit of God; no, nor your own spirit, &lsquo;the
+spirit of a man,&rsquo; which is in you; for that was originally made
+in the likeness of God&rsquo;s Spirit, and by it rebellious sons arise
+and go back to their earthly fathers, and trust in them when they have
+nothing else left to trust, and say to themselves, &lsquo;Though all
+the world has cast me off, my parents will not.&nbsp; Though all the
+world despise and hate me, my parents love me still; though I have rebelled
+against them, deserted them, insulted them, I am still my father&rsquo;s
+child.&nbsp; I will go home to my own people, to the house where I was
+born, to the parents who nursed me on their knee, I will go to my father.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Fathers and mothers! if your son or daughter came home to you thus,
+though they had insulted you, disgraced you, and spent their substance
+in riotous living, would you shut your doors upon them?&nbsp; Would
+not all be forgiven and forgotten at once?&nbsp; Would not you call
+your neighbours to rejoice with you, and say, &lsquo;It is good to be
+merry and glad, for this our son was dead and is alive again, he was
+lost and is found?&rsquo;&nbsp; And would not that penitent child be
+more precious to you, though you cannot tell why, than any other of
+your children?&nbsp; Would you not feel a peculiar interest in him henceforth?&nbsp;
+And do you not know that so to forgive would be no weak indulgence,
+but the part of a good father; a good, and noble, and human thing to
+do?&nbsp; Ay, a human thing, and therefore a divine thing, part of God&rsquo;s
+likeness in man.&nbsp; For is it not the likeness of God Himself?&nbsp;
+Has not God Himself, in the Parable of the Prodigal Son, declared that
+He does so forgive His penitent children, at once and utterly, and that
+&lsquo;There is more joy among the angels of God over one sinner that
+repenteth, than over ninety and nine just persons who need no repentance?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+So says the Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God.&nbsp; Let
+who dare dispute His words, or try to water them down, and explain them
+away.</p>
+<p>And why should it not be so?&nbsp; Do you fancy God less of a father
+than you are?&nbsp; Is He not <i>The</i> Father, the perfect Father,
+&lsquo;from whom every fatherhood in heaven and earth is named?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Oh, believe that He is indeed a Father; believe that all the love and
+care which you can show to your children is as much poorer than the
+love and care God shows to you, as your obedience to your earthly parents
+is poorer and weaker than the love and obedience of Jesus Christ to
+His Father.&nbsp; God is as much better a Father than you are, as Jesus
+Christ is a better Son than you are.&nbsp; There is a sum of proportions;
+a rule-of-three sum; work it out for yourselves, and then distrust God&rsquo;s
+love if you dare.</p>
+<p>And believe, that whatsoever makes you distrust God&rsquo;s love
+is neither the Spirit of God who is the spirit of sonship, nor the spirit
+of man: but the spirit of the Devil, who loves to slander God to men,
+that they may shrink from Him, and be afraid to arise and go to their
+Father, to be received again as sons of God; that so, being kept from
+true penitence, they may be kept from true holiness, and from their
+duty to God, which is the duty of sons of God to their Father in heaven.</p>
+<p>Believe no such notions, my friends; howsoever humble and reverent
+they may seem, they are but insults to God; for under pretence of honouring
+Him, they dishonour Him; for He is love, and he who feareth, that is,
+who looks up to God with terror and distrust, is not made perfect in
+love.&nbsp; So says St. John, in the very chapter wherein he tells us
+that God is love, and has manifested His love to us by sending His Son
+to be the Saviour of the world; and that the very reason for our loving
+God is, that He loves us already; and that therefore He who loveth not
+knoweth not God, for God is love.</p>
+<p>Yes, my friends, God is your Father; and God is love; and your duty
+to God is a duty of love and obedience to a Father who so loved you
+and all mankind that He spared not His only begotten Son, but freely
+gave Him for you.&nbsp; &lsquo;Our Father which art in heaven,&rsquo;
+is to be the key-note of all your duty, as it is to be the key-note
+of all your prayers: and therefore the Catechism is right in teaching
+the child that God is his Father, and Jesus Christ the perfect Son of
+God his pattern, and the Holy Spirit of the Father and of the Son his
+teacher and inspirer, before it says one word to the child about duty
+to God, or sin against God.&nbsp; How indeed can it tell him what sin
+is, until it has told him against whom sin is committed, and that if
+he sins against God he sins against a Father, and breaks his duty to
+his Father?&nbsp; And how can it tell him that till it has told him
+that God is his Father?&nbsp; How can it tell him what sin is till it
+has told him what righteousness is?&nbsp; How can it tell him what breaking
+his duty is till it has told him what the duty itself is?&nbsp; But
+the child knows already that God is his Father; and therefore, when
+the Catechism asks him, &lsquo;What is his duty to God?&rsquo; it is
+as much as to say, &lsquo;My child, thou hast confessed already that
+thou hast a good Father in heaven, and thou knowest as well as I (perhaps
+better) what a father means.&nbsp; Tell me, then, how dost thou think
+thou oughtest to behave to such a Father?&rsquo;&nbsp; And the whole
+answer which is put into the child&rsquo;s mouth, is the description
+of duty to a father; of things which there would be no reason for his
+doing to anyone who was not his father; nay, which he could not do honestly
+to anyone else, but only hypocritically, for the sake of flattering,
+and which differs utterly from any notion of duty to God which the heathen
+have ever had just in this, that it is a description of how a son should
+behave to a father.&nbsp; Read it for yourselves, my friends, and judge
+for yourselves; and may God give you all grace to act up to it&mdash;not
+in order that you, by &lsquo;acts of faith,&rsquo; or &lsquo;acts of
+love,&rsquo; or &lsquo;acts of devotion,&rsquo; may persuade God to
+love you; but because He loves you already, with a love boundless as
+Himself; because in Him you live, and move, and have your being, and
+are the offspring of God; because His mercy is over all His works, and
+because He loved the world, and sent His Son, not to condemn the world,
+but that the world through Him might be saved; because He is The Giver,
+The Father of lights, from whom comes every good and perfect gift; because
+all which makes this earth habitable&mdash;all justice, order, wisdom,
+goodness, mercy, humbleness, self-sacrifice&mdash;all which is fair,
+or honourable, or useful, in men or angels, in kings on their thrones
+or in labourers at the plough, in divines in their studies or soldiers
+in the field of battle&mdash;all in the whole universe, which is not
+useless, and hurtful, and base, and damnable, and doomed (blessed thought
+that it is so!) to be burned up in unquenchable fire&mdash;all, I say,
+comes forth from the Father of the spirits of all flesh, the Lord of
+Hosts, who is wonderful in counsel and excellent in working; who spared
+not His only begotten Son, but freely gave Him for us, and will with
+Him freely give us all things.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON IX.&nbsp; THE LORD&rsquo;S PRAYER</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Matt. vi. 9, 10.&nbsp; After this manner pray ye: Our Father which
+art in heaven.</p>
+<p>I have shown you what a simple account of our duty to God and to
+our neighbour the Catechism gives us.&nbsp; I now beg you to remark,
+that simple and everyday as this same duty is, the Catechism warns us
+that we cannot do it without God&rsquo;s special grace, and I beg you
+to remark further, that the Catechism does not say that we cannot do
+these things well without God&rsquo;s special grace, but that we cannot
+do them at all.&nbsp; It does not say that we cannot do all these things
+of ourselves, but that we can do none of them.&nbsp; But I want you
+to remark one thing more, which is very noteworthy: that in this case,
+for the first time throughout the Catechism, the teacher tells the child
+something.&nbsp; All along the teacher has, as I have often shown you,
+been making the child tell him what is right, calling out in the child&rsquo;s
+heart thoughts and knowledge which were there already.&nbsp; Now he
+in his turn tells the child something which he takes for granted is
+not in the child&rsquo;s heart, of which, if it is, has been put into
+it by his teachers, and of which he must be continually reminded, lest
+he should forget it; namely, that he cannot do these of himself; that,
+as St. Paul says, &lsquo;in him,&rsquo; that is, in his flesh, &lsquo;dwells
+no good thing;&rsquo; that he is not able to think or to do anything
+as of himself, but his sufficiency is of God, who works in him to will
+and to do of His good pleasure, who has also given him His Holy Spirit.</p>
+<p>The Catechism, in short, takes for granted that the child knows his
+duty; but it takes for granted also that he does not know how to do
+that duty.&nbsp; It takes for granted, that in every child there is
+as St. Paul says, &lsquo;a law in his members warring against the law
+of his mind, and bringing him into captivity to the law of sin&rsquo;
+(literally, of short coming, or missing the mark) &lsquo;which is in
+his members.&rsquo;&nbsp; Now man&rsquo;s natural inclination is to
+suppose that good thoughts are part of himself, and therefore that a
+good will to put them in practice is in his own power.&nbsp; I blame
+no one for making that mistake: but I warn them, in the name of the
+Bible and of the Catechism, that it is a mistake, and one which every
+man, woman, and child will surely discover to be a mistake, if they
+try to act on it.&nbsp; Good thoughts are not our own; they are Jesus
+Christ&rsquo;s; they come from Him, The Life and The Light of men; they
+are His voice speaking to our hearts, informing us of His laws, showing
+us what is good.&nbsp; And good desires are not our own: they come from
+the Holy Spirit of God, who strives with men, and labours to lift their
+hearts up from selfishness to love; from what is low and foul, to what
+is noble and pure; from what is sinful and contrary to God&rsquo;s will,
+to what is right and according to God&rsquo;s will.</p>
+<p>This is the lesson which you and I and every man have to learn: that
+in ourselves dwells no good thing; but that there is One near us mightier
+than we, from whom all good things do come; and that He loves us, and
+will not only teach us what is good, but give us the power to do the
+good we know.&nbsp; But if we forget that, if we take any credit whatsoever
+to ourselves for the good which comes into our minds, then we shall
+be surely taught our mistake by sore afflictions and by shameful falls;
+by God&rsquo;s leaving us to ourselves, to try our own strength, and
+to find it weakness; to try our own wisdom, and find it folly; to try
+our own fancied love of God, and find that after all our conceit of
+ourselves, we love ourselves better, when it comes to a trial, than
+we love what is right; until, in short, we are driven with St. Paul
+to feel that, howsoever much our hearts may delight in the Law of God,
+there is a corrupt nature in us which fights against our delight in
+God&rsquo;s law, and will surely conquer it, and make us slaves to our
+own fancies, slaves to our passions, slaves to ourselves, ay, slaves
+to the very lowest and meanest part of ourselves: unless we can find
+a deliverer; unless we can find some one stronger than us, who can put
+an end to this hateful, shameful war within us between good wishes and
+bad deeds.</p>
+<p>And then, if we will but cry with St. Paul, &lsquo;Oh, wretched man
+that I am, <i>who</i> shall deliver me from the body of this death?&rsquo;
+we shall surely, sooner or later, hear a voice within our hearts, a
+voice full of love, of comfort, of fellow-feeling for us,&mdash;&lsquo;<i>I</i>
+will deliver thee, my child; <i>I</i>, even I thy Father in heaven;
+I will teach thee, and inform thee in the way wherein thou shouldest
+go; and I will guide thee with mine eye.&rsquo;&nbsp; And then with
+St. Paul we shall be able to answer our own question, and say, &lsquo;Who
+will deliver me?&nbsp; I thank God, that God Himself will deliver me,
+through Jesus Christ our Lord.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This, then, is the reason why we need to pray: because we need to
+be delivered from ourselves.&nbsp; This is the reason why we may pray,
+because God is willing to deliver us from ourselves, if we be willing.</p>
+<p>But every human being round us needs to be delivered from themselves,
+just as much as we do.&nbsp; Without that deliverance we cannot do our
+duty, neither can they.&nbsp; And just in proportion as men are delivered
+from themselves, will mankind do its duty, and the world go right.</p>
+<p>Now their duty is the same as ours; and therefore the prayer which
+is right and good for us is equally right and good for them.&nbsp; And
+what is more, we cannot pray rightly for ourselves unless we pray for
+them in the very same breath; for the Catechism tells us that there
+is one duty for all of us, to love and obey and serve our heavenly Father,
+and to love our neighbour as ourselves, because they are our brothers,
+children of one common Father, members of the same God&rsquo;s family
+as we are, and their interest and ours are bound up together.&nbsp;
+Yes, to love all mankind as ourselves; for though too many of them,
+alas! are not yet in God&rsquo;s family, and strangers to His covenant,
+yet God&rsquo;s will is that they too should come to the knowledge of
+the truth; and therefore for them we can pray hopefully and trustfully,
+&lsquo;Lord have mercy on all men, on Jews, Turks, Infidels, and heretics;
+and bring them home, blessed Lord, to Thy flock, that they may be saved
+and made one fold under one Shepherd, through Jesus Christ our Lord,
+in whom Thou hast declared Thy good will to all the children of men.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This is the right prayer.&nbsp; That all men may do their duty where
+God has put them.&nbsp; That those who, like the heathen, do not know
+their duty, may be taught it; that we who do know it, may have strength
+to do it.</p>
+<p>And therefore it is that the Catechism teaches us the need of prayer,
+immediately after making us confess our duty; and therefore it is that
+it begins by teaching the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer, because that prayer is
+the one, of all prayers which ever have been offered upon earth, which
+perfectly expresses the duty of man, and man&rsquo;s relation to Almighty
+God.</p>
+<p>It is throughout a prayer for strength.&nbsp; It confesses throughout
+what we want strength for, to what use we are to put God&rsquo;s grace
+if He bestows it on us.&nbsp; Our delight in the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer
+will depend on what we consider our duty here on earth to be.</p>
+<p>If we look upon this earth principally as a place where we are to
+pray for all the good things which we can get, our first prayer will
+be, of course, &lsquo;Give us this day our daily bread.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>If we look at this earth principally as a place where we have a chance
+of being saved from punishment and torment after we die, then our first
+prayer will be, &lsquo;Forgive us our sins.&rsquo;&nbsp; And, in fact,
+that is all that too many of our prayers now-a-days seem to consist
+of,&mdash;&lsquo;Oh, my Maker, give me. my daily bread.&nbsp; Oh, my
+Judge, forgive me my sins.&rsquo;&nbsp; Right prayers enough, but spoilt
+by being taken out of their place; spoilt by being prayed before all
+other prayers; spoilt, too, by being prayed for ourselves alone, and
+not for other people also.</p>
+<p>But if we believe, as the Bible and the Catechism tell us, that we
+and all Christian people are God&rsquo;s children, members of God&rsquo;s
+family, set on earth in God&rsquo;s kingdom to do His work by doing
+our duty, each in that station of life to which God has called us, in
+the hope of a just reward hereafter according to our works, then our
+great desire will be for strength to do our duty, and the Lord&rsquo;s
+Prayer will seem to us the most perfect way of asking for that strength;
+and if we believe that we are God&rsquo;s children and He our Father,
+we shall feel sure that we must get strength from Him, and sure that
+we must ask for that strength; and sure that He will give it us if we
+do ask.</p>
+<p>But if His will is to give it us, why ask Him at all?&nbsp; Why pray
+at all, if God already knows our necessities, and is able and willing
+to supply them?</p>
+<p>My friends, the longer I live, the more certain I am that the only
+reason for praying at all is because God is our Father; the more certain
+I am that we shall never have any heart to pray unless we believe that
+God is our Father.&nbsp; If we forget that, we may utter to Him selfish
+cries for bread; or when we look at His great power, we may become terrified,
+and utter selfish cries to Him not to harm us, without any real shame
+or sorrow for sin: but few of us will have any heart to persevere in
+those cries.&nbsp; People will say to themselves, &lsquo;If God is evil,
+He will not care to have mercy on me: and if He is good, there is no
+use wearying Him by asking Him what He has already intended to give
+me: why should I pray at all?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The only answer is, &lsquo;Pray, because God is your Father, and
+you His child.&rsquo;&nbsp; The only answer; but the most complete answer.&nbsp;
+I will engage to say, that if anyone here is ever troubled with doubts
+about prayer, those two simple words, &lsquo;Our Father,&rsquo; if he
+can once really believe them in their full richness and depth, will
+make the doubts vanish in a moment, and prayer seem the most natural
+and reasonable of all acts.&nbsp; It is because we are God&rsquo;s children,
+not merely His creatures, that He will have us pray.&nbsp; Because He
+is educating us to know Him; to know Him not merely to be an Almighty
+Power, but a living, loving Person; not merely an irresistible Fate,
+but a Father who delights in the love of His children, who wishes to
+shape them into His own likeness, and make them fellow-workers with
+Him; therefore it is that He will have us pray.&nbsp; Doubtless he <i>could</i>
+have given us everything without our asking; for He <i>does</i> already
+give us almost everything without our asking.&nbsp; But He wishes to
+educate us as His children; to make us trust in Him; to make us love
+Him; to make us work for Him of our own free wills, in the great battle
+which He is carrying on against evil; and that He can only do by teaching
+us to pray to Him.&nbsp; I say it reverently, but firmly.&nbsp; As far
+as we can see, God cannot educate us to know Him, The living, willing,
+loving Father, unless He teaches us to open our hearts to Him, and to
+ask Him freely for what we want, just <i>because</i> He knows what we
+want already.</p>
+<p>If I have not made this plain enough to any of you, my friends, let
+me go back to the simple, practical explanation of it which God Himself
+has given us in those two words&mdash;father and child.</p>
+<p>Should you like to have a child who never spoke to you, never asked
+you for anything?&nbsp; Of course not.&nbsp; And why?&nbsp; &lsquo;Because,&rsquo;
+you would say, &lsquo;one might as well have a dumb animal in one&rsquo;s
+family instead of a child, if it is never to talk and ask questions
+and advice.&rsquo;&nbsp; Most true and reasonable, my friends.&nbsp;
+And as you would say concerning your children, so says God of His.&nbsp;
+You feel that unless you teach your children to ask you for all they
+want, even though you know their necessities before they ask, and their
+ignorance in asking, you will never call out their love and trust towards
+you.&nbsp; You know that if you want really to have your child to please
+and obey you, not as a mere tame animal, but as a willing, reasonable,
+loving child, you must make him know that you are training him; and
+you must teach him to come to you of his own accord to be trained, to
+be taught his duty, and set right where he is wrong: and even so does
+God with you.&nbsp; If you will only consider the way in which any child
+must be educated by its human parents, then you will at once see why
+prayer to our Heavenly Father is a necessary part of our education in
+the kingdom of heaven.</p>
+<p>Now the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer, just this sort of prayer, is man&rsquo;s
+cry to his Heavenly Father to train him, to educate him, to take charge
+of him, daily and hourly, body and soul and spirit.&nbsp; It is a prayer
+for grace, for special grace; that is, for help, daily and hourly, in
+each particular duty and circumstance; for help from God specially suited
+to enable us to do our duty.&nbsp; And the whole of the prayer is of
+this kind, and not, as some think, the latter part only.</p>
+<p>It is too often said that the three first sentences are not prayers
+for man, but rather praises to God.&nbsp; My friends, they cannot be
+one without being the other.&nbsp; You cannot, I believe, praise God
+aright without praying for men; you cannot pray for men aright without
+praising God; at least, you cannot use the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer without
+doing both at once, without at once declaring the glory of God and praying
+for the welfare of all mankind.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Hallowed be Thy name.&rsquo;&nbsp; Is not that a prayer for
+men as well as praise to God?&nbsp; Yes, my friends, when you say, &lsquo;Our
+Father, hallowed be Thy name,&rsquo; you pray that all men may come
+at last to look up to God as their Father, to love, serve, and obey
+God as His children; and for what higher blessing can you pray?&nbsp;
+Ay, and you pray, too, that men may learn at last the deep meaning of
+that word&mdash;father; that they may see how Godlike and noble a trust
+God lays on them when He gives them children to educate and make Christian
+men; you pray that the hearts of all fathers may be turned to the children,
+and the hearts of all children to the fathers; you pray for the welfare,
+and the holiness, and the peace of every home on earth; you pray for
+the welfare of generations yet unborn, when you pray, &lsquo;Our Father,
+hallowed be Thy name.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thy kingdom come.&rsquo;&nbsp; Is not that too, if we will
+look at it steadfastly, prayer for our neighbours, prayer for all mankind,
+and still prayer for ourselves; prayer for grace, prayer for the life
+and health of our own souls?</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thy kingdom come.&rsquo;&mdash;That kingdom of the Father
+which Jesus Christ proved by His works on earth to be a kingdom of justice
+and righteousness, of love and fellow-feeling.&nbsp; When we pray, &lsquo;Thy
+kingdom come,&rsquo; it is as if we said, &lsquo;Son of God, root out
+of this sinful earth all self-will and lawlessness, all injustice and
+cruelty; root out all carelessness, ignorance, and hardness of heart;
+root out all hatred, envy, slander; root them out of all men&rsquo;s
+hearts; out of my heart, for I have the seeds of them in me.&nbsp; Make
+me, and all men round me, day by day, more sure that Thou art indeed
+our King; that Thou hast indeed taught us the laws of Thy Father&rsquo;s
+kingdom; and that, only in keeping them and loving them is there health,
+and righteousness, and safety for any soul of man, for any nation under
+the sun.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Thy will be done;&rsquo;&mdash;no, not
+merely &lsquo;Thy will be done;&rsquo; but done &lsquo;on earth as it
+is in heaven;&rsquo; done, not merely as the trees and the animals,
+the wind and clouds, do Thy will, by blindly following their natures,
+but done as angels and blessed spirits do it, of their own will.&nbsp;
+They obey Thee as living, willing, loving persons; as Thy sons: teach
+us to obey Thee in like manner; lovingly, because we love Thy will;
+willingly, because our wills are turned to Thy will; and therefore,
+oh Heavenly Father, take charge of these wayward wills and minds of
+ours, of these selfish, self-willed, ignorant, hasty hearts of ours,
+and cleanse them and renew them by Thy Spirit, and change them into
+Thy likeness day by day.&nbsp; Make us all clean hearts, oh God, and
+renew within us a right spirit, the copy of Thine own Holy Spirit.&nbsp;
+Cast us not away from Thy presence, for from Thee alone comes our soul&rsquo;s
+life; take not from us Thy Holy Spirit, who is The Lord and Giver of
+Life; whose will is Thy will; who alone can strengthen and change us
+to do Thy will on earth, as saints and angels do in heaven, and to be
+fellow-workers with each other, fellow-workers with Thee, O God, even
+as those blessed spirits are who minister day and night to all Thy creatures.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Give us this day our daily bread.&rsquo;&nbsp; People sometimes
+divide the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer into two parts&mdash;the ascriptions
+and the petitions&mdash;and consider that after we have sufficiently
+glorified and praised God in the first three sentences of the prayer,
+then we are at liberty to begin asking something for ourselves, and
+to say &lsquo;Give us day by day our daily bread.&rsquo;&nbsp; I cannot
+think so, my friends.&nbsp; I have been showing you that &lsquo;Hallowed
+be Thy name, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done,&rsquo; if we do but
+recollect that they are spoken to our Father, are just as much prayers
+for all mankind, as they are hymns of honour to God; and so I say of
+these latter: &lsquo;Give us&mdash;Forgive us&mdash;Lead us not&mdash;Deliver
+us&rsquo;&mdash;that if we will but remember that they, too, are spoken
+to our Father, we shall find that they are just as much hymns of honour
+to God as prayers for mankind.</p>
+<p>Yes, my friends, when we say, &lsquo;Give us this day our daily bread,&rsquo;
+we do indeed honour God and the name of God.&nbsp; We declare that He
+is Love, that He is The Giver, The absolutely and boundlessly <i>generous
+and magnanimous</i> Being.&nbsp; And what higher glory and honour or
+praise can we ascribe, even to God Himself, than to say that of Him?&nbsp;
+Next, we pray not for ourselves only, but for our neighbours; for England,
+for Christendom, for the heathen who know not God, and for generations
+yet unborn.&nbsp; We pray that God would so guide, and teach, and preserve
+the children of men, as to enable them to fulfil in every country and
+every age the work which He gave them to do, when He said, &lsquo;Be
+fruitful, and multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+We know that our Father has commanded us to labour.&nbsp; We know that
+our Father has so well ordered this glorious earth, that whosoever labours
+may reap the just fruit of his labour; therefore we pray that God would
+prosper our righteous plans for earning our own living.&nbsp; We pray
+to Him not only so to order the earth that it may bring forth its fruits
+in due season, but that men may be in a fit state to enjoy those fruits,
+that God may not be forced for their good to withhold from them blessings
+which they might abuse to their ruin.&nbsp; But we pray, also, &lsquo;Give
+<i>us:&rsquo;</i> not me only, but <i>us</i>; and therefore we pray
+that He would prosper our neighbour&rsquo;s plans as well as ours.&nbsp;
+So we confess that we believe God to be no respecter of persons; we
+confess that we believe He will not take bread out of others&rsquo;
+mouths to give it to us; we declare that God&rsquo;s curse is on all
+selfishness and oppression of man by man; we renounce our own selfishness,
+the lust which our fallen nature has to rise upon others&rsquo; fall,
+and say, &lsquo;Father, we are all children at Thy common table.&nbsp;
+Thou alone canst prosper the richest and the wisest; Thou alone canst
+prosper the poorest and the weakest; Thou wilt do equal justice to all
+some day, and we confess that Thou art just in so doing; we only ask
+Thee to do it now, and to give us and all mankind that which is good
+for them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Thus we pray not for this generation only, but for generations yet
+unborn; not for this nation of England only, but for heathens and savages
+beyond the seas.&nbsp; When we say, &lsquo;Give us our daily bread,&rsquo;
+we pray for every child here and on earth, that he may receive such
+an education as may enable him to get his daily bread.&nbsp; We pray
+for learned men in their studies, that they may discover arts and sciences
+which shall enrich and comfort nations yet unborn.&nbsp; We pray for
+merchants on the seas, that they may discover new markets for trade,
+new lands to colonize and fill with Christian men, and extend the blessings
+of industry and civilization to the savage who lives as the beasts which
+perish and dwindles down off the face of the earth by famine, disease,
+and war, the victim of his own idleness, ignorance, and improvidence.</p>
+<p>And all the while we are praying for the widow and the orphan, that
+God would send them friends in time of need; for the houseless wanderer,
+for the shipwrecked sailor, for sick persons, for feeble infants, that
+God would send help to them who cannot help themselves, and soften our
+hearts and the hearts of all around us, that we may never turn our faces
+away from any poor man, lest the face of the Lord be turned away from
+us.</p>
+<p>So far we have been praying to our Heavenly Father, first as a Father,
+then as a King, then as an Inspirer, then as a Giver; and next we pray
+to Him as a <i>For</i>giver&mdash;&lsquo;Forgive us our trespasses.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+We have been confessing in these four petitions what God&rsquo;s goodwill
+to man is; what God wishes man to be, how man ought to live and believe.&nbsp;
+And then comes the recollection of sin.&nbsp; We must confess what God&rsquo;s
+law is before we can confess that we have broken it; and now we do confess
+that we have broken it.&nbsp; We know that God is our Father.&nbsp;
+How often have we forgotten that He is a father; how often have we forgotten
+to be good fathers ourselves.</p>
+<p>We are in God&rsquo;s kingdom.&nbsp; How often have we behaved as
+if we were our own kings, and had no masters over us but our own fancies,
+tempers, appetites!&nbsp; We are to do His will on earth as it is done
+in heaven.&nbsp; How have we been doing our own will!&mdash;pleasing
+ourselves, breaking loose from His laws, trying to do right of our own
+wills and in our own strength, instead of asking His Spirit to strengthen,
+and cleanse, and renew our wills, and so have ended by doing not the
+right which we knew to be right, but the wrong which we knew to be wrong.&nbsp;
+God is a giver.&nbsp; How often have we looked on ourselves as takers,
+and fancied that we must as it were steal the good things of this world
+from God, lest He should forget to give us what was fitting!&nbsp; How
+often have we forgotten that God gives to all men, as well as to us;
+and while we were praying, give <i>me</i> my daily bread, kept others
+out of their daily bread!</p>
+<p>Oh, my friends, we cannot blame ourselves too much for all these
+sins; we cannot think them too heinous.&nbsp; We cannot confess them
+too openly; we cannot cry too humbly and earnestly for forgiveness.&nbsp;
+But we never shall feel the full sinfulness of sin; we never shall thoroughly
+humble ourselves in confession and repentance, unless we remember that
+all our sins have been sins against a Father, and a forgiving Father,
+and that it is His especial glory, the very beauty and excellence in
+Him, which ought to have kept us from disobeying Him, that He does forgive
+those who disobey Him.</p>
+<p>And, lastly, in like manner, when you say, &lsquo;Lead us not into
+temptation, but deliver,&rsquo; &amp;c., you are not only entreating
+God to lead you, but you are honouring and praising Him, you are setting
+forth His glory, and declaring that He is a God who does <i>lead</i>,
+and a God who does not leave His poor creatures to wander their own
+foolish way, but guides men, in spite of all their sins, full of condescension
+and pity, care and tender love.&nbsp; You do not only ask God to deliver
+you from evil, but you declare that He is righteous, and hates evil;
+that He is love, and desires to deliver you from evil; One who spared
+not His only-begotten Son, but gave Him freely for us, to deliver us
+from evil; and raised Him up, and delivered all power into His hand,
+that He might fight His Father&rsquo;s battle against all which is hurtful
+to man and hateful to God, till death itself shall be destroyed, and
+all enemies put under the feet of the Saviour God.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON X.&nbsp; THE DOXOLOGY</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Psalm viii. 1 and <i>sqq</i>.&nbsp; O Lord our Governor, how excellent
+is Thy name in all the earth, Thou that hast set Thy glory above the
+heavens!</p>
+<p>Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast Thou ordained strength,
+because of Thine enemies, that Thou mightest still the enemy and the
+avenger.</p>
+<p>This is the text which I have chosen to-day, because I think it will
+help us to understand the end of the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer, which tells
+us to say to our Father in Heaven, &lsquo;Father, Thine is the kingdom;
+Father, Thine is the power; Father, Thine is the glory.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The man who wrote this psalm had been looking up at the sky, spangled
+with countless stars, with the moon, as if she were the queen of them
+all, walking in her brightness.&nbsp; He had been looking round, too,
+on this wonderful earth, with its countless beasts, and birds, and insects,
+trees, herbs, and flowers, each growing, and thriving, and breeding
+after their kind, according to the law which God had given to each of
+them, without any help of man.&nbsp; And then he had thought of men,
+how small, weak, ignorant, foolish, sinful they were, and said to himself,
+&lsquo;Why should God care for men more than for these beasts, and birds,
+and insects round?&nbsp; Not because he is the largest and strongest
+thing in the world; for I will consider Thy heavens, even the work of
+Thy hands, the moon and the stars, which Thou hast ordained, how much
+greater, more beautiful they are than poor human beings.&nbsp; May not
+glorious beings, angels, be dwelling in them, compared to whom man is
+no better than a beast?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And yet he says to himself, &lsquo;I know that God, though He has
+put man lower than the angels, has crowned him with glory and honour.&nbsp;
+I know that, whatever glorious creatures may live in the sun, and moon,
+and stars, God has given man the dominion and power here, on <i>this</i>
+world.&nbsp; I know that even to babes and sucklings God has given a
+strength, because of His enemies&mdash;that He may silence the enemy
+and the avenger; and I know that by so doing, God has set His glory
+<i>above</i> the heavens, and has shown forth His glory more in these
+little children, to whom He gives strength and wisdom, than He has in
+sun, and moon, and stars.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now how is that?&nbsp; The Catechism, I think, will tell us.&nbsp;
+The Doxology, at the end of the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer, will tell us, if
+we consider it.</p>
+<p>If you will listen to me, I will try and show you what I mean.</p>
+<p>Suppose I took one of your children, and showed him that large bright
+star, which you may see now every evening, shining in the south-west,
+and said to him, &lsquo;My child, that star, which looks to you only
+a bright speck, is in reality a world&mdash;a world fourteen hundred
+times as big as our world.&nbsp; We have but one moon to light our earth;
+that little speck has four moons, each of them larger than ours, which
+light it by night.&nbsp; That little speck of a star seems to you to
+be standing still; in reality, it is travelling through the sky at the
+rate of 25,000 miles an hour.&rsquo;&nbsp; What do you think the child&rsquo;s
+feeling would be?&nbsp; If he were a dull child, he might only be astonished;
+but if he were a sensible and thoughtful child, do you not think that
+a feeling of awe, almost of fear, would come over him, when he thought
+how small and weak and helpless he was, in comparison of those mighty
+and glorious stars above his head?</p>
+<p>And next, if I turned the child round, and bade him look at that
+comet or fiery star, which has appeared lately low down in the north-west,
+and said, &lsquo;My child, that comet, which seems to you to hang just
+above the next parish, is really eighty millions of miles off from us.&nbsp;
+That bright spot at the lower part of it is a fiery world as large as
+the moon,&mdash;that tail of fiery light which you see streaming up
+from it, and which looks a few feet long, is a stream of fiery vapour,
+stretching, most likely, hundreds of thousands of miles through the
+boundless space.&nbsp; It seems to you to be sinking behind the trees,
+so slowly that you cannot see it move.&nbsp; It is really rushing towards
+us now, with its vast train of light, at the rate of some eighty thousand
+miles an hour.&rsquo;&nbsp; And suppose then, if, to make the child
+more astonished than ever, I went on&mdash;&lsquo;Yes, my child, every
+single tiny star which is twinkling over your head is a sun, a sun as
+large, or larger than our own sun, perhaps with worlds moving round
+it, as our world moves round our sun, but so many millions of miles
+far off, that the strongest spy-glass cannot make these stars look any
+larger, or show us the worlds which we believe are moving round them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Do you not think that just in proportion to the child&rsquo;s quickness
+and understanding, he would be awed, almost terrified?</p>
+<p>And lastly, suppose that to puzzle and astonish him still more, I
+took a chance drop of water out of any standing pool, and showed him
+through a magnifying-glass, in that single drop of water, dozens, perhaps
+hundreds, of living creatures so small that it is impossible to see
+them with the naked eye, each of them of some beautiful and wonderful
+shape, unlike anything which you ever saw or dreamed of, but each of
+them alive, each of them moving, feeding, breeding, after its kind,
+each fulfilling the nature which God has given to them, and told him,
+&lsquo;All the whole world, the air which you breathe, the leaves on
+the trees, the soil under your feet, ay, even often the food which you
+eat, and your own flesh and blood, are as full of wonderful things as
+that drop of water is.&nbsp; You fancy that all the life in the world
+is made up of the men and women in it, and the few beasts, and birds,
+and insects, which you see about you in the fields.&nbsp; But these
+living things which you do see are not a millionth part of the whole
+number of God&rsquo;s creatures; and not one smallest plant or tiniest
+insect dies, but what it passes into a new life, and becomes food for
+other creatures, even smaller than, though just as wonderful as itself.&nbsp;
+Every day fresh living creatures are being discovered, filling earth,
+and sea, and air, till men&rsquo;s brains are weary with counting them,
+and dizzy with watching their unspeakable beauty, and strangeness, and
+fitness for the work which God has given each of them to do.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And then suppose I said to the child, &lsquo;God cares for each of
+these tiny living creatures.&nbsp; How do you know that He does not
+care for them as much as He does for you?&nbsp; God made them for His
+own pleasure, that He might rejoice in the work of His own hands.&nbsp;
+How do you know that He does not rejoice in them as much as in you?&nbsp;
+Those mighty worlds and suns above your head, which you call stars,
+how do you know that they are not as much more glorious and precious
+in God&rsquo;s sight than you are, as they are larger and more beautiful
+than you are?&nbsp; And mind! all these things, from the tiniest insects
+in the water-drop, to the most vast star or comet in the sky, all obey
+God.&nbsp; They have not fallen, as you have; they have not sinned,
+as you have; they have not broken the law, by which God intended them
+to live, as you have.&nbsp; The Bible tells you so; and the discoveries
+of learned men prove that the Bible is right, when it declares that
+they all continue to this day according to His ordinance; for all things
+serve Him; that sun, and moon, and stars, and light are praising Him;
+that fire and hail, snow and vapour, wind and storm, mountains and all
+hills, fruitful trees and all cedars, beasts and all cattle, worms and
+feathered fowl, are showing forth His glory day and night; because He
+has made them sure for ever and ever, each according to its kind, and
+given them a law which shall not be broken; for all His works praise
+Him, and show the glory of His kingdom, and the mightiness of His power,
+that His power, His glory, and the mightiness of His kingdom might be
+known unto the children of men.</p>
+<p>And you!&mdash;They keep God&rsquo;s ordinance, and you have broken
+it; they fulfil God&rsquo;s word, you fulfil your own fancies.&nbsp;
+They have a law which shall not be broken, you break God&rsquo;s law
+daily.&nbsp; Are not they better than you?&nbsp; Is not, not merely
+sun and stars, but even the meanest gnat which hums in the air, better
+than man, more worthy of God&rsquo;s love than man?&nbsp; For man has
+sinned, and they have not.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Do you not think that I should sadden, and terrify the child, and
+make him ready to cry out, &lsquo;Whither shall I flee from the wrath
+of this great Almighty God; who has made this wondrous heaven and earth,
+and all of it obeys Him, except me&mdash;I a rebel against Him who made
+and rules all this?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>My friends, I only say, suppose that I spoke thus to your children.&nbsp;
+For God forbid that I should speak thus to any human being, without
+having first taught him the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer, without first having
+taught him to say, &lsquo;I believe in Jesus Christ, Very God of Very
+God, who was born of the Virgin Mary, and took man&rsquo;s nature on
+Him;&rsquo; without having taught him to say, &lsquo;Our Father which
+art in heaven, Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for
+ever and ever, Amen.&rsquo;&nbsp; So it is, and so let it be: for so
+it is well, and so I am safe, sinner and rebel though I be.</p>
+<p>I would not say it, unless I had taught him this; for then I should
+be speaking the Devil&rsquo;s words, and doing the Devil&rsquo;s work:
+for these are the thoughts of which he always takes advantage, whenever
+he finds them in men&rsquo;s hearts; because he is the enemy who hates
+men, and the avenger who punishes them for their bad thoughts, by leading
+them on into dark and fearful deeds; because he is the Devil, the Slanderer,
+as his name means, and slanders God to men, and tries always to make
+them believe that God does not care for men, and grudges them blessings;
+in order that he may make men dread God, and shrink from Him into their
+own pride, or their own carnal lusts and fancies.</p>
+<p>These are the thoughts of which the Devil took advantage in the heathen
+in old times, and tempted them to forget God&mdash;God, who had not
+left Himself without a witness, in that He gave them rain and fruitful
+seasons, filling their hearts with food and gladness&mdash;God, whose
+unseen glory, even His eternal power and Godhead, may be clearly seen
+from the creation of the world, being understood from the things which
+are made&mdash;God, in whom, as St. Paul told the heathen, they lived
+and moved, and had their being, and were the offspring of God.&nbsp;
+This&mdash;that man is the offspring of God, and has a Father in heaven&mdash;is
+the great truth which the Devil has been trying to hide from men in
+every age, and by a hundred different devices.&nbsp; By making them
+forget this, he tempted them to worship the creature instead of the
+Creator; to pray to sun and moon and stars, to send them fair weather,
+good crops, prosperous fortune: to look up to the heaven above them,
+and down to the earth beneath their feet, in slavish dread and anxiety:
+and pray to the sun, not to blast them to the seas, not to sweep them
+away; to the rivers and springs, not to let them perish from drought;
+to earthquakes, not to swallow them up; ay, even to try to appease those
+dark fierce powers, with whom they thought the great awful world was
+filled, by cruel sacrifices of human beings; so that they offered their
+sons and their daughters to devils, and burned their own children in
+the fire to Moloch, the cruel angry Fire King, whom they fancied was
+lord of the earthquakes and the burning mountains.&nbsp; So did the
+Canaanites of old, and so did the Jews after them; whensoever they had
+forgotten that God was their Father, who had bought them, and that the
+kingdom, and the power, and the glory, throughout heaven and earth,
+were His, then at once they began to be afraid of heaven and earth,
+and worshipped Baalim, and Astaroth, and the Host of Heaven, which were
+the sun and moon and stars, and Moloch the Fire King, and Thammuz the
+Lord of the Spring-time, and with forms of worship which showed plainly
+enough, either by their cruelty or their filthy profligacy, who was
+the author of them, and that man, when he forgets that heaven and earth
+belong to his Father, is in danger of becoming a slave to his own lowest
+lusts and passions.</p>
+<p>And do not fancy, my friends, that because you and I are not likely
+to worship sun and moon and stars as the old heathen did, that therefore
+we cannot commit the same sin as they did.</p>
+<p>My friends, I believe that we are in more danger of committing it
+in England just now than ever we were; that learned men especially are
+in danger of so doing, because they know so far more of the wonders
+and the vastness of God&rsquo;s creation than the heathens of old knew.</p>
+<p>But you are not learned, you will say: you are plain people, who
+know nothing about these wonderful discoveries which men make by telescopes
+and magnifying-glasses, but use your own eyes in a plain way to get
+your daily bread, and you feel no such temptations.&nbsp; You believe,
+of course, that the kingdom and power and glory of all we see is God&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>Yes; but do you believe too that He whom people are too apt to call
+God, just because they have no other name to call Him, is your Father?&nbsp;
+That it is your Father&rsquo;s will which governs the weather, which
+makes the earth bear fruit and gladden the heart of man with good and
+fruitful seasons?</p>
+<p>Alas, my friends, if we will open our eyes, see things in their true
+light, and call things by their true name, we shall see many a man in
+England now honouring the creature more than the Creator; trusting in
+the seasons and the soil more than he does in God, and so sinning in
+just the same way as the heathen of old.</p>
+<p>When people say to themselves, &lsquo;I must get land, I must get
+money, by any means; honestly if I can, if not, dishonestly; for have
+it I must;&rsquo; what are they doing then but denying that the kingdom,
+the power, and the glory of this earth belong to the Righteous God,
+and that He, and not the lying Devil, gives them to whomsoever He will?</p>
+<p>When people say to themselves (as who does not at moments?) &lsquo;To
+be rich is to be safe; a man&rsquo;s life does consist in the abundance
+of what he possesses;&rsquo; what are they doing but saying that man
+does <i>not</i> live by every word which proceeds out of the mouth of
+God, but by what he can get for himself and keep for himself?&nbsp;
+When they are fretful and anxious about their crops, when they even
+repine and complain of Providence, as I have known men do because they
+do not prosper as they wish, what are they doing but saying in their
+hearts, &lsquo;The weather and the seasons are the lords and masters
+of my good fortune, or bad fortune.&nbsp; I depend on them, and not
+on God, for comfort and for wealth, and my Heavenly Father does <i>not</i>
+know what I have need of?&rsquo;&nbsp; When parents send their girls
+out to field-work, without any care about whom they talk with, to have
+their minds corrupted by hearing filthiness and seeing immodest behaviour,
+what are they doing but offering their daughters in sacrifice, not even
+to Moloch, but to Mammon; saying to themselves, &lsquo;My daughter&rsquo;s
+modesty, my daughter&rsquo;s virtue, is not of as much value as the
+paltry money which I can earn by leaving her alone to learn wickedness,
+instead of keeping watch over her, if she does work, that she may be
+none the worse for her day&rsquo;s labour.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>I might go on and give you a thousand instances more, but they all
+come alike to this; that whensoever you fancy that you cannot earn your
+daily bread without doing wrong yourself, or leaving your children to
+learn wrong, then you do not believe that the kingdom, the power, and
+the glory of this earth on which you work is your Heavenly Father&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+For if you did, you would be certain that gains, large or small, got
+by breaking the least of His commandments, could never prosper you,
+but must bring a curse and a punishment with them; and you would be
+sure also, that because God is your Father, and this earth and all herein
+is His, that He would feed you with food sufficient for you, if you
+do but seek first His kingdom&mdash;that is, try to learn His laws;
+and seek first His righteousness&mdash;that is, strive and pray day
+by day to become righteous even as He is righteous.</p>
+<p>Yes, my friends, this is one meaning, though only one, of St. John&rsquo;s
+words, &lsquo;This is the victory which overcometh the world, even our
+faith.&rsquo;&nbsp; We all see the world full of pleasant things, for
+which we long; of necessary things, too, without which we should starve
+and die.&nbsp; And then the temptation comes to us to snatch at these
+things for ourselves by any means in our power, right or wrong; like
+the dumb animals who break out of their owners&rsquo; field into the
+next, if they do but see better pasturage there, or fight and quarrel
+between themselves for food, each trying to get the most for himself
+and rob his neighbour.&nbsp; So live the beasts, and so you and I, and
+every human being shall be tempted to live, if we follow our natures,
+if we forget that we are God&rsquo;s children, in God&rsquo;s kingdom,
+under the laws of a Heavenly Father, who has shown forth His own love
+and justice, His own kingdom, and power, and glory, in the person of
+the Lord Jesus Christ.&nbsp; But if we remember that, if we remember
+daily that the kingdom, and power, and glory is our Father&rsquo;s,
+then we shall neither fear storms and blights, bad crops, or anything
+else which is of the earth earthly.&nbsp; We shall fear nothing of that
+kind, which can only kill the body, but only fear the evil Devil, lest,
+by making us distrust and disobey our Heavenly Father, he should, after
+he has killed, destroy both body and soul in hell.&nbsp; And as long
+as we fear him, as long as we renounce him, as long as we trust utterly
+in our Heavenly Father&rsquo;s love and justice, and in the love and
+justice of His dear Son, the Man Christ Jesus, to whom all power is
+given in heaven and earth&mdash;then out of the youngest child among
+us will God&rsquo;s praise be perfected; for the youngest child among
+us, by faith in God his Father, may look upon all heaven and earth,
+and say, &lsquo;Great, and wonderful, and awful as this earth and skies
+may be, I am more precious in the sight of God than sun, and moon, and
+stars; for they are things: but I am a person, a spirit, an immortal
+soul, made in the likeness of God, redeemed into the likeness of God,
+sanctified into the likeness of God.&nbsp; This great earth was here
+thousands and thousands of years before I was born, and it will be here
+perhaps millions and millions of years after I am dead; but it cannot
+harm <i>me</i>; it cannot kill <i>me</i>.&nbsp; When earth, and sun,
+and stars are past away, I shall live for ever; for I am the immortal
+child of an Immortal Father, the child of the everlasting God.&nbsp;
+These things He only made: but me He begot unto everlasting life, in
+Jesus Christ my Lord.&nbsp; I seem to depend on this earth for food,
+for clothing, for comfort, for life itself: and yet I do not do so in
+reality; for man doth not live by bread alone, but by <i>every</i> word
+which proceeds out of the mouth of God my Father.&nbsp; In Him I have
+eternal life: a life which this earth did not give, and cannot take
+away; a life which, by the mercy of my Father in heaven, I trust and
+hope to be living when sun and earth, stars and comets, are returned
+again to their dust, and blotted from the face of heaven.&nbsp; For
+the kingdom, the glory, and the power of this world, and all other worlds,
+past, present, and to come, belong to Him who spared not His only-begotten
+Son, but freely gave Him for us, and will with Him freely give us all
+things.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And thus, my friends, may God&rsquo;s praise be perfected out of
+the mouth of any Christian child, when He declares that God put man
+a little lower than the angels only to crown him with the glory and
+worship of having the only-begotten Son of God take man&rsquo;s nature
+upon Him, and walk this earth as a man, and live, and die, and rise
+again as a man, that so He might raise fallen man again to the glory
+and honour which God appointed for men from the beginning, when He said,
+Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have
+dominion over the fish of the sea and the fowl of the air, and the beast
+of the earth; and be fruitful and multiply, and replenish the earth
+and subdue it.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XI.&nbsp; AHAB AND NABOTH</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>1 Kings xxi. 2, 3.&nbsp; And Ahab spake unto Naboth, saying, Give
+me thy vineyard, that I may have it for a garden of herbs, because it
+is near unto my house: and I will give thee for it a better vineyard
+than it; or, if it seem good to thee, I will give thee the worth of
+it in money.&nbsp; And Naboth said unto Ahab, The Lord forbid it me,
+that I should give the inheritance of my fathers unto thee.</p>
+<p>You heard to-day read for the first lesson, the story of Naboth and
+King Ahab.&nbsp; Most of you know it well.&nbsp; Naboth&rsquo;s vineyard
+has passed into a proverb for something which we covet.</p>
+<p>It is good that it should be so.&nbsp; We cannot know our Bible too
+well; we cannot have Bible words and Bible thoughts too much worked
+into our ways of talking and thinking about everyday matters.&nbsp;
+As far as I can see, the best days of England, the best days of every
+Christian country of which I ever read, have been days when men were
+not ashamed of their Bibles; when they were ready to live by their Bibles;
+to ask advice of their Bibles about buying and selling, about making
+war and peace, about all the business of life; and were not ashamed
+to quote texts of Scripture in the parliament, and in the market, and
+in the battle-field, as God&rsquo;s law, God&rsquo;s rule, God&rsquo;s
+word about the matter in hand, which was, therefore, sure to be the
+right word and the right rule.&nbsp; People are grown ashamed of doing
+so now-a-days; but that does not alter the matter one jot.&nbsp; We
+may deny God, but He cannot deny Himself.&nbsp; His laws are everlasting,
+and He is ruling and judging us by them now, all day long, just as much
+as He ruled and judged those Jews by them of old.&nbsp; The God of Abraham
+is our God; the God of Moses is our God; the God of Ahab and Naboth
+is our God; neither He nor His government are altered in the least since
+their time, and they never will alter for ever, and ever, and ever;
+and if we do not choose to believe that now in this life, we shall be
+made to believe it by some very ugly and painful schooling in the life
+to come.</p>
+<p>What laws of God, now, can we learn from this story?</p>
+<p>First, we may learn what a sacred thing <i>property</i> is.&nbsp;
+That a man&rsquo;s possessions (if they be justly come by) belong to
+him, in the sight of God as well as in the sight of man, and that God
+will uphold and avenge the man&rsquo;s right.</p>
+<p>Naboth, you see, stands simply on his right to his own property.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;The Lord forbid it me, that I should give the inheritance of
+my fathers unto thee.&rsquo;&nbsp; I do not think that he meant that
+God had actually forbidden him: it seems to have been only some sort
+of oath which he used.&nbsp; He may certainly have had reasons for thinking
+it wrong to part with his lands; hurtful, perhaps, to his family after
+him.&nbsp; Yet, as Ahab had promised him a better vineyard for it, or
+its worth in money, I cannot help thinking that Naboth&rsquo;s reason
+was the one which shows on the face of his words.&nbsp; It was the inheritance
+of his fathers, this vineyard.&nbsp; They had all worked in it, generation
+after generation; perhaps, according to the Jewish custom, they were
+buried somewhere in it; at least, it had been theirs and now was his;
+he had worked in it, and played in it&mdash;perhaps since he was a child&mdash;and
+he loved it; it was part and parcel of his father&rsquo;s house to him,
+a sacred spot.</p>
+<p>And so it should be.&nbsp; It is a holy feeling which makes a man
+cling to the bit of land which he has inherited from his parents, even
+to the cottage, though it be only a hired one, where he has lived for
+many a year, and where he has planted and tilled, perhaps with some
+that he loved, who are now dead and gone, or grown up and gone out into
+the world, till the little old cottage-garden is full of remembrances
+to him of past joys and past sorrows.&nbsp; The feeling which makes
+a man cling to his home and to his own land is a good feeling, and breeds
+good in the man.&nbsp; It makes him respect himself; it keeps him from
+being reckless and unsettled.&nbsp; It is a feeling which should not
+be broken through.&nbsp; It is seldom pleasant to see land change hands;
+it is seldom pleasant to see people turned out of their cottages.&nbsp;
+It must often be so, but let it be as seldom as possible.&nbsp; One
+likes to see a family take root in a place, and grow and thrive there,
+one generation after another; and you will find, my friends, that families
+do take root and thrive in a place just in proportion as they fear God
+and do righteousness.&nbsp; The Psalms tell you, again and again, that
+the way to abide in the land, and prosper in it, is to trust in the
+Lord and be doing good; and that the wicked are soon rooted out, and
+their names perish out of the land.&nbsp; One sees that come true daily.</p>
+<p>But to return to Naboth.&nbsp; He loved his own land, and therefore
+he had a right to keep it.&nbsp; We may say it was but a fancy of his,
+if he could have a better vineyard, or the worth of it in money.&nbsp;
+Remember, at least, that God respected that fancy of his, and justified
+it, and avenged it.&nbsp; When (after Naboth&rsquo;s death) Elijah accused
+Ahab, in God&rsquo;s name, he put two counts into the indictment; for
+Ahab had committed two sins.&nbsp; &lsquo;Hast thou killed, and also
+taken possession?&rsquo;&nbsp; Killing was one sin; taking possession
+was another.</p>
+<p>And so Ahab learnt two weighty and bitter lessons.&nbsp; He learnt
+that God&rsquo;s Law stands for ever, though man&rsquo;s law be broken
+or be forgotten by disuse.&nbsp; For you must understand, that these
+Jews were a free people, even as we are.&nbsp; They were not like the
+nations round about them, or as the Russians are now&mdash;slaves to
+their king, and holding their property only at his will.&nbsp; The law
+of Moses had made them a free people, who held their property each man
+from God, by God&rsquo;s Law, which had said, &lsquo;Thou shalt not
+steal.&nbsp; Thou shalt not covet.&nbsp; Cursed is he who removes his
+neighbour&rsquo;s landmark.&rsquo;&nbsp; And their kings were bound
+to govern by Moses&rsquo; law, just as our kings and rulers are bound
+to govern by the old constitutions of England, and to do equal justice
+by rich and poor.&nbsp; But the wicked kings of Israel were trying to
+break through that law, and make themselves tyrants and despots, such
+as the Czar of Russia is now.&nbsp; First, Jeroboam began by trying
+to wean his people from Moses&rsquo; law, by preventing their going
+up to worship at Jerusalem, and making them worship instead the golden
+calves at Dan and at Bethel.&nbsp; For he knew that if he could make
+idolaters of them, he should soon make slaves of them; and he succeeded;
+and the kingdom of Israel grew more miserable year by year; and now
+Ahab, his wicked successor, was breaking down the laws of property and
+wrongfully taking away his subjects&rsquo; lands.&nbsp; Perhaps he said
+in his heart, &lsquo;I am king; there is no law stronger than I.&nbsp;
+I have a right to do what I like.&rsquo;&nbsp; If he did so, he found
+that he was mistaken.&nbsp; He found that though he forgot Moses&rsquo;
+law, God had not; that the law stood there still, because it was founded
+on eternal justice, which proceeds for ever out of the mouth of God;
+and by the Law, which he had chosen to forget, he was judged; by the
+Law of God, which deals equal justice to rich and poor, which is, like
+God Himself, no acceptor of persons; but says, &lsquo;Thou shalt not
+covet,&rsquo; to the king upon his throne as sternly as to the beggar
+on the dunghill.</p>
+<p>And that Law stands still, my friends, doubt it not.&nbsp; Thanks
+to the wisdom and justice of our forefathers who built the laws of England
+on those old Ten Commandments, which hang for a sign thereof in every
+church to this day.&nbsp; Thanks to them, I say, and to God, the root
+of the law of England is, equal justice between man and man, be he high
+or low; and it is a thing to bless God for every day of our lives, that
+here the poor man&rsquo;s little is as safe as the rich man&rsquo;s
+wealth: but there is many a sin of oppression, many a sin of covetousness,
+my friends, which no law of man can touch.&nbsp; Make laws as artfully
+as you will, bad men can always slip through them, and escape the spirit
+of them, while they obey the letter: and I suppose it will be so to
+the world&rsquo;s end; and that, let the laws be as perfect as they
+may, if any man wishes to cheat or oppress his neighbour, he will surely
+be able to work his wicked will in some way or other.&nbsp; Well then,
+my friends, if man&rsquo;s law is weak, God&rsquo;s is not;&mdash;if
+man&rsquo;s law has flaws and gaps in it, through which covetousness
+can creep, God&rsquo;s has none;&mdash;even if (which God forbid) man&rsquo;s
+law died out, and sinners were left to sin without fear of punishment,
+still God&rsquo;s Law stands sure, and the eye of the living God slumbers
+not, and the hand of the living God never grows weary, and out of the
+everlasting heaven His voice is saying, day and night, for ever, &lsquo;I
+endure for ever.&nbsp; I sit on the throne judging right; a sceptre
+of righteousness is the sceptre of My kingdom.&nbsp; I judge the world
+in justice, and minister true judgment unto the people.&nbsp; I also
+will be a refuge for the oppressed, even a refuge in due time of trouble.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>O hear those words, my friends! hear and obey, if you love life,
+and wish to see good days; and never, never say a thing is right, simply
+because the law cannot punish you for it.&nbsp; Never say in your hearts
+when you are tempted to be hard, cruel, covetous, over-reaching, &lsquo;What
+harm?&nbsp; I break no law by it.&rsquo;&nbsp; There is a law, whether
+you see it or not; you break a law, whether you confess it or not; a
+law which is as a wall of iron clothed with thunder, though man&rsquo;s
+law be but a flimsy net of thread; and that law, and not any Acts of
+Parliament, shall judge you in the day when the secrets of all hearts
+shall be disclosed, and every man shall receive the due reward of the
+deeds done in the body, not according as they were allowed or not by
+the Statute Book, but according as they were good or evil.</p>
+<p>Another lesson we may learn from this story: that if we give way
+to our passions, we give way to the Devil also.&nbsp; Ahab gave way
+to his passion; he knew that he was wrong; for when Naboth refused to
+sell him the vineyard, he did not dare openly to rob him of it; he went
+to his house heavy of heart, and fretted, like a spoilt child, because
+he could not get what he wanted.&nbsp; It was but a little thing, and
+he might have been content to go without it.&nbsp; He was king of all
+Israel, and what was one small vineyard more or less to him?&nbsp; But
+prosperity had spoilt him; he must needs have every toy on which he
+set his heart, and he was weak enough to fret that he could not get
+more, when he had too much already.&nbsp; But he knew that he could
+not get it; that, king as he was, Naboth&rsquo;s property was his own,
+and that God&rsquo;s everlasting Law stood between him and the thing
+he coveted.&nbsp; Well for him if he had been contented with fretting.&nbsp;
+But, my friends&mdash;and be you rich or poor, take heed to my words&mdash;whenever
+any man gives way to selfishness, and self-seeking, to a proud, covetous,
+envious, peevish temper, the Devil is sure to glide up and whisper in
+his ear thoughts which will make him worse&mdash;worse, ay, than he
+ever dreamt of being.&nbsp; First comes the flesh, and then the Devil;
+and if the flesh opens the door of the heart, the Devil steps in quickly
+enough.&nbsp; First comes the flesh: fleshly, carnal pride at being
+thwarted; fleshly, carnal longing for a thing, which longs all the more
+for it because one cannot have it; fleshly, carnal peevishness and ill-temper,
+at not having just the pleasant thing one happens to like.&nbsp; That
+is a state of mind which is a bird-call for all the devils; and when
+they see a man in that temper, they flock to him, I believe, as crows
+do to carrion.&nbsp; It is astonishing, humbling, awful, my friends,
+what horrible thoughts will cross one&rsquo;s mind if once one gives
+way to that selfish, proud, angry, longing temper; thoughts of which
+we are ashamed the next moment; temptations to sin at which we shudder,
+they seem so unlike ourselves, not parts of ourselves at all.&nbsp;
+When the dark fit is past, one can hardly believe that such wicked thoughts
+ever crossed one&rsquo;s mind.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t think that they are
+part of ourselves; I believe them to be the whispers of the Devil himself;
+and when they pass away, I believe that it is the Lord Jesus Christ
+who drives them away.&nbsp; But if any man gives way to them, determines
+to keep his sullenness, and so gives place to the Devil; then those
+thoughts do not pass; they take hold of a man, possess him, as the Bible
+calls it, and make him in his madness do things which&mdash;alas! who
+has not done things in his day, of which he has repented all his life
+after?&mdash;things for which he would gladly cut off his right hand
+for the sake of being able to say, &lsquo;I never did that?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+But the thing is done&mdash;done to all eternity: he has given place
+to the Devil, and the Devil has made him do in five minutes work which
+he could not undo in five thousand years; and all that is left is, when
+he comes to himself, to cast himself on God&rsquo;s boundless mercy,
+and Christ&rsquo;s boundless atonement, and cry, &lsquo;My sins are
+like scarlet, Thou alone canst make them whiter than snow: my sin is
+ever before me; only let it not be ever before Thee, O God!&nbsp; Punish
+me, if thou seest fit; but oh forgive, for there is mercy with Thee,
+and infinite redemption!&rsquo;&nbsp; And, thanks be to God&rsquo;s
+great love, he will not cry in vain.&nbsp; Yet, oh, my friends, do not
+give place to the Devil, unless you wish, forgiven or not, to repent
+of it to the latest day you live.</p>
+<p>And this was Ahab&rsquo;s fate.&nbsp; He knew, I say, that he was
+wrong; he knew that Naboth&rsquo;s property was his own, and dare not
+openly rob him of it; and he went to his house, heavy of heart, and
+refused to eat; and while he was in such a temper as that, the Devil
+lost no time in sending an evil spirit to him.&nbsp; It was a woman
+whom he sent, Jezebel, Ahab&rsquo;s own wife: but she was, as far as
+we can see, a woman of a devilish spirit, cruel, proud, profligate,
+and unjust, as well as a worshipper of the filthy idols of the Canaanites.&nbsp;
+Ahab&rsquo;s first sin was in having married this wicked heathen woman:
+now his sin punished itself; she tempted him through his pride and self-conceit;
+she taunted him into sin: &lsquo;Dost thou now govern the kingdom of
+Israel?&nbsp; I will give thee the vineyard of Naboth.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+You all remember how she did so; by falsely accusing Naboth of blasphemy.&nbsp;
+Ahab seems to have taken no part in Naboth&rsquo;s murder.&nbsp; Perhaps
+he was afraid; but he was a weak man, and Jezebel was a strong and fierce
+spirit, and ruled him, and led him in this matter, as she did in making
+him worship idols with her; and he was content to be led.&nbsp; He was
+content to let others do the wickedness he had not courage to carry
+out himself.&nbsp; He forgot that, as is well said, &lsquo;He who does
+a thing by another, does it by himself;&rsquo; that if you let others
+sin for you, you sin for yourself.&nbsp; Would to God, my friends, that
+we would all remember this!&nbsp; How often people wink at wrong-doing
+in those with whom they have dealings, in those whom they employ, in
+their servants, in their children, because it is convenient to them.&nbsp;
+They shut their eyes, and their hearts too, and say to themselves, &lsquo;At
+all events, it is his doing and not mine; and it is his concern; I am
+not answerable for other people&rsquo;s sins.&nbsp; I would not do such
+a thing myself, certainly; but as it is done, I may as well make the
+best of it.&nbsp; If I gain by it, I need not be so very sharp in looking
+into the matter.&rsquo;&nbsp; And so you see men who really wish to
+be honest and kindly themselves, making no scruple of profiting by other
+people&rsquo;s dishonesty and cruelty.&nbsp; Now the law punishes the
+receiver of stolen goods almost as severely as the thief himself: but
+there are many receivers of stolen goods, my friends, whom the law cannot
+touch.&nbsp; The world, at times, seems to me to be full of them; for
+every one, my friends, who hushes up a cruel or a dishonest matter,
+because he himself is a gainer by it, he is no better than the receiver
+of stolen goods, and he will find in the day of the Lord, that the sin
+will lie at his door, as Jezebel&rsquo;s sin lay at Ahab&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+There was no need for Ahab to say, &lsquo;Jezebel did it, and not I.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The prophet did not even give him time to excuse himself: &lsquo;Thus
+saith the Lord, Hast thou killed, and also taken possession?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+By taking possession of Naboth&rsquo;s vineyard, and so profiting by
+his murder, he made himself partaker in that murder, and had to hear
+the terrible sentence, &lsquo;In the place where dogs licked the blood
+of Naboth, dogs shall lick thy blood, even thine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Oh, my friends, whatsoever you do, keep clean hands and a pure heart.&nbsp;
+If you touch pitch, it will surely stick to you.&nbsp; Let no gain tempt
+you to be partaker of others men&rsquo;s sins; never fancy that, because
+men cannot lay the blame on the right person, God cannot.&nbsp; God
+will surely lay the burden on the man who helped to make the burden;
+God will surely require part payment from the man who profited by the
+bargain; so keep yourselves clear of other men&rsquo;s sins, that you
+may be clear also of their condemnation.</p>
+<p>So Ahab had committed a horrible and great sin, and had received
+sentence for it, and now, as I said before, there was nothing to be
+done but to repent; and he did so, after his fashion.</p>
+<p>Ahab, it seems, was not an utterly bad man; he was a weak man, fond
+of his own pleasure, a slave to his own passions, and easily led, sometimes
+to good, but generally to evil.&nbsp; And God did not execute full vengeance
+on him: his repentance was a poor one enough; but such as it was, the
+good and merciful God gave him credit for it as far as it went, and
+promised him that the worst part of his sentence, the ruin of his family,
+should not come in his time.&nbsp; But still the sentence against him
+stood, and was fulfilled.&nbsp; Not long after, as we read in the second
+lesson, he was killed in battle, and that not bravely and with honour
+(for if he had been, that would have been but a slight punishment, my
+friends), but shamefully by a chance shot, after he had disguised himself,
+in the cowardice of his guilty conscience, and tried to throw all the
+danger on his ally, good King Jehoshaphat of Judah; &lsquo;and they
+washed his chariot in the pool of Samaria, and the dogs licked up his
+blood, according to the word of the Lord, which he spake by Elijah the
+prophet.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So ends one of the most clear and terrible stories in the whole Bible,
+of God&rsquo;s impartial justice.&nbsp; May God give us all grace to
+lay it to heart!&nbsp; We are all tempted, as Ahab was; rich or poor,
+our temptation is alike to give place to the Devil, and let him lead
+us into dark and deep sin, by giving way to our own fancies, longings,
+pride, and temper.&nbsp; We are all tempted, as Ahab was, to over-reach
+our neighbours in some way; I do not mean always in cheating them, but
+in being unfair to them, in caring more for ourselves than for them;
+thinking of ourselves first, and of them last; trying to make ourselves
+comfortable, or to feed our own pride, at their expense.&nbsp; Oh, my
+friends, whenever we are tempted to be selfish and grasping, be sure
+that we are opening a door to the very Devil of hell himself, though
+he may look so smooth, and gentle, and respectable, that perhaps we
+shall not know him when he comes to us, and shall take his counsels
+for the counsel of an angel of light.&nbsp; But be sure that if it is
+selfishness which has opened the door of our heart, not God, but the
+Devil, will come in, let him disguise himself as cunningly as he will;
+and our only hope is to flee to Him in whom there was no selfishness,
+the Lord Jesus Christ, who came not to do His own will, but His Father&rsquo;s;
+not to glorify Himself, but His Father; not to save His own life, but
+to sacrifice it freely, for us, His selfish, weak, greedy, wandering
+sheep.&nbsp; Pray to Him to give you His Spirit, that glorious spirit
+of love, and duty, and self-sacrifice, by which all the good deeds on
+earth are done; which teaches a man not to care about himself, but about
+others; to help others, to feel for others, to rejoice in their happiness,
+to grieve over their sorrows, to give to them, rather than take from
+them&mdash;in one word, The Holy Spirit of God, which may He pour out
+on you, and me, and all mankind, that we may live justly and lovingly,
+as children of one just and loving Father in heaven.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XII.&nbsp; THE LIGHT OF GOD</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>[<i>Preached for the Chelsea National Schools</i>.]</p>
+<p>Ephesians v. 13.&nbsp; All things which are reproved are made manifest
+by the light: for whatsoever is made manifest is light.</p>
+<p>This is a noble text, a royal text; one of those texts which forbid
+us to clip and cramp Scripture to suit any narrow notions of our own;
+which open before us boundless vistas of God&rsquo;s love, of human
+knowledge, of the future of mankind.&nbsp; There are many such texts,
+many more than we fancy; but this is one which is especially valuable
+at the present time; one especially fit for a sermon on education; for
+it is, as it were, the scriptural charter of the advocate of education.&nbsp;
+It enables him boldly to say, &lsquo;There is nothing I will refuse
+to teach; there is nothing which man shall forbid me to teach; there
+is nothing which God has made in heaven or earth about which I will
+not tell the truth boldly to the young.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>For light comes from God.&nbsp; God is light, and in Him is no darkness
+at all.&nbsp; And therefore He wishes to give light to His children.&nbsp;
+He willeth not that the least of them should be kept in darkness about
+any matter.&nbsp; Darkness is of the Devil; and he who keeps any human
+soul in darkness, let his pretences be as reverent and as religious
+as they may, is doing the Devil&rsquo;s work.&nbsp; Nothing, then, which
+God has made will we conceal from the young.</p>
+<p>True, there are errors of which we will not speak to the young; but
+they are not made by God: they are the works of darkness.&nbsp; Our
+duty is to teach the young what God has made, what He has done, what
+He has ordained; to make them freely partakers of whatsoever light God
+has given us.&nbsp; Then, by means of that light, they will be able
+to reprove the works of darkness.</p>
+<p>For whatsoever is made manifest is light.&nbsp; Our version says;
+&lsquo;Whatsoever makes manifest is light.&rsquo;&nbsp; That is true,
+a noble truth; but I should not be honest, if I did not confess that
+that is not what St. Paul says here.&nbsp; He says, &lsquo;That which
+<i>is</i> made manifest is light.&rsquo;&nbsp; On this the best commentators
+and scholars agree.&nbsp; Our old translators have made a mistake, though
+in grammar only, and have substituted one great truth for another equally
+great.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Whatsoever is made manifest is light.&rsquo;&nbsp; We should
+have expected this, if we are really Christians.&nbsp; If we have faith
+in God; if we believe that God is worthy of our faith&mdash;a God whom
+we can trust; in whom is neither caprice, deceit, nor darkness, but
+pure and perfect light;&mdash;if we believe that we are His children,
+and that He wishes us to be, like Himself, full of light, knowing what
+we are and what the world is, because we know who God is;&mdash;if we
+believe that He sent His Son into the world to reveal Him, to unveil
+Him, to draw aside the veil which dark superstition and ignorance had
+spread between man and God, and to show us the glory of God;&mdash;if
+we believe this, then we shall be ready to expect that whatsoever is
+made manifest would be light; for if God be light, all that He has made
+must be light also.&nbsp; Like must beget like, and therefore light
+must beget light, good beget good, love beget love; and therefore we
+ought to expect that as true and sound knowledge increases, our views
+of God will be more full of light.</p>
+<p>Yes, my friends; under the influence of true science God will be
+no longer looked upon, as He was in those superstitions which we well
+call dark, as a proud, angry, capricious being, as a stern taskmaster,
+as one far removed from the sympathy of men: but as one of whom we may
+cheerfully say, Thy name be hallowed, for Thy name is Father; Thy kingdom
+come, for it is a Father&rsquo;s kingdom; Thy will be done, for it is
+a Father&rsquo;s will; and in doing Thy will alone men claim their true
+dignity of being the sons of God.</p>
+<p>Our views of our fellow-men will be more cheerful also; more full
+of sympathy, comprehension, charity, hope; in one word, more full of
+light.&nbsp; If it be true (and it is true) that God loves all, then
+we should expect to find in all something worthy of our love.&nbsp;
+If it be true that God willeth that none should perish, we should expect
+to find in each man something which ought not to perish.&nbsp; If it
+be true that God stooped from heaven, yea stoops from heaven eternally,
+to seek and to save that which is lost, then we should have good hope
+that our efforts to seek to save that which is lost will not be in vain.&nbsp;
+We shall have hope in every good work we undertake, for we shall know
+that in it we are fellow-workers with God.</p>
+<p>Our notions of the world&mdash;of God&rsquo;s whole universe, will
+become full of light likewise.&nbsp; Do we believe that this earth was
+made by Jesus Christ?&mdash;by Him who was full of grace and truth?&nbsp;
+Do we believe our Bibles, when they tell us, that He hath given all
+created things a law which cannot be broken; that they continue as at
+the beginning, for all things serve Him?&nbsp; Do we believe this?&nbsp;
+Then we must look on this earth, yea on the whole universe of God, as,
+like its Master, full of grace and truth; not as old monks and hermits
+fancied it, a dark, deceiving, evil earth, filled with snares and temptations;
+a world from which a man ought to hide himself in the wilderness, and
+find his own safety in ignorance.&nbsp; Not thus, but as the old Hebrews
+thought of it, as a glorious and a divine universe, in which the Spirit
+of God, the Lord and Giver of life, creates eternal melody, bringing
+for ever life out of death, light out of darkness, letting his breath
+go forth that new generations may be made, and herein renew the face
+of the earth.</p>
+<p>And experience teaches us that this has been the case; that for near
+one thousand eight hundred years there has been a steady progress in
+the mind of the Christian race, and that this progress has been in the
+direction of light.</p>
+<p>Has it not been so in our notions of God?&nbsp; What has the history
+of theology been for near one thousand eight hundred years?&nbsp; Has
+it not been a gradual justification of God, a gradual vindication of
+His character from those dark and horrid notions of the Deity which
+were borrowed from the Pagans, and from the Jewish Rabbis? a gradual
+return to the perfect good news of a good God, which was preached by
+St. John and by St. Paul?&mdash;In one word, a gradual manifestation
+of God; and a gradual discovery that when God is manifested, behold,
+God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all?</p>
+<p>That progress, alas! is not yet perfect.&nbsp; We still see through
+a glass darkly, and we are still too apt to impute to God Himself the
+darkness of those very hearts of ours in which He is so dimly mirrored.&nbsp;
+And there are men still, even in Protestant England, who love darkness
+rather than light, and teach men that God is dark, and in Him are only
+scattered spots of light, and those visible only to a favoured few;
+men who, whether from ignorance, or covetousness, or lust of power,
+preach such a deity as the old Pharisees worshipped, when they crucified
+the Lord of Glory, and offer to deliver men, forsooth, out of the hands
+of this dreadful phantom of their own dark imaginations.</p>
+<p>Let them be.&nbsp; Let the dead bury their dead, and let us follow
+Christ.&nbsp; Believe indeed that He is the likeness of God&rsquo;s
+glory, and the express image of God&rsquo;s person, and you will be
+safe from the dark dreams with which they ensnare diseased and superstitious
+consciences.&nbsp; Let them be.&nbsp; Light is stronger than darkness;
+Love stronger than cruelty.&nbsp; Perfect God stronger than fallen man;
+and the day shall come when all shall be light in the Lord; when all
+mankind shall know God, from the least unto the greatest, and lifting
+up free foreheads to Him who made them, and redeemed them by His Son,
+shall in spirit and in truth, worship The Father.</p>
+<p>Does not experience again show us that in the case of our fellow-men,
+whatsoever is made manifest, is light?</p>
+<p>How easy it was, a thousand years ago&mdash;a hundred years ago even,
+to have dark thoughts about our fellow-men, simply because we did not
+know them!&nbsp; Easy it was, while the nations were kept apart by war,
+even by mere difficulty of travelling, for Christians to curse Jews,
+Turks, Infidels, and Heretics, and believe that God willed their eternal
+perdition, even though the glorious collect for Good Friday gave their
+inhumanity the lie.&nbsp; Easy to persecute those to whose opinions
+we could not, or would not, take the trouble to give a fair hearing.&nbsp;
+Easy to condemn the negro to perpetual slavery, when we knew nothing
+of him but his black face; or to hang by hundreds the ragged street-boys,
+while we disdained to inquire into the circumstances which had degraded
+them; or to treat madmen as wild beasts, instead of taming them by wise
+and gentle sympathy.</p>
+<p>But with a closer knowledge of our fellow-creatures has come toleration,
+pity, sympathy.&nbsp; And as that sympathy has been freely obeyed, it
+has justified itself more and more.&nbsp; The more we have tried to
+help our fellow-men, the more easy we have found it to help them.&nbsp;
+The more we have trusted them, the more trustworthy we have found them.&nbsp;
+The more we have treated them as human beings, the more humanity we
+have found in them.&nbsp; And thus man, in proportion as he becomes
+manifest to man, is seen, in spite of all defects and sins, to be hallowed
+with a light from God who made him.</p>
+<p>And if it has been thus, in the case of God and of humanity, has
+it not been equally so in the case of the physical world?&nbsp; Where
+are now all those unnatural superstitions&mdash;the monkish contempt
+for marriage and social life, the ghosts and devils; the astrology,
+the magic, and other dreams of which I will not speak here, which made
+this world, in the eyes of our forefathers, a doleful and dreadful puzzle;
+and which made man the sport of arbitrary powers, of cruel beings, who
+could torment and destroy us, but over whom we could have no righteous
+power in return?&nbsp; Where are all those dark dreams gone which maddened
+our forefathers into witch-hunting panics, and which on the Continent
+created a priestly science of witch-finding and witch-destroying, the
+literature whereof (and it is a large one) presents perhaps the most
+hideous instance known of human cruelty, cowardice, and cunning?&nbsp;
+Where, I ask, are those dreams now?&nbsp; So utterly vanished, that
+very few people in this church know what a great part they played in
+the thoughts of our forefathers; how ghosts, devils, witches, magic,
+and astrology, filled the minds, not only of the ignorant, but of the
+most learned, for centuries.</p>
+<p>And now, behold, nature being made manifest, is light.&nbsp; Science
+has taught men to admire where they used to dread; to rule where they
+used to obey; to employ for harmless uses what they were once afraid
+to touch; and, where they once saw only fiends, to see the orderly and
+beneficent laws of the all-good and almighty God.&nbsp; Everywhere,
+as the work of nature is unfolded to our eyes, we see beauty, order,
+mutual use, the offspring of perfect Love as well as perfect Wisdom.&nbsp;
+Everywhere we are finding means to employ the secret forces of nature
+for our own benefit, or to ward off physical evils which seemed to our
+forefathers as inevitable, supernatural; and even the pestilence, instead
+of being, as was once fancied, the capricious and miraculous infliction
+of some demon&mdash;the pestilence itself is found to be an orderly
+result of the same laws by which the sun shines and the herb grows;
+a product of nature; and therefore subject to man, to be prevented and
+extirpated by him, if he will.</p>
+<p>Yes, my friends, let us teach these things to our children, to all
+children.&nbsp; Let us tell them to go to the Light, and see their Heavenly
+Father&rsquo;s works manifested, and know that they are, as He is, <i>Light</i>.&nbsp;
+I say, let us teach our children freely and boldly to know these things,
+and grow up in the light of them.&nbsp; Let us leave those to sneer
+at the triumphs of modern science, who trade upon the ignorance and
+the cowardice of mankind, and who say, &lsquo;Provided you make a child
+religious, what matter if he does fancy the sun goes round the earth?&nbsp;
+Why occupy his head, perhaps disturb his simple faith, by giving him
+a smattering of secular science?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Specious enough is that argument: but shortsighted more than enough.&nbsp;
+It is of a piece with the wisdom which shrinks from telling children
+that God is love, lest they should not be sufficiently afraid of Him;
+which forbids their young hearts to expand freely towards their fellow-creatures:
+which puts into their mouths the watchwords of sects and parties, and
+thinks to keep them purer Christians by making them Pharisees from the
+cradle.</p>
+<p>My friends, we may try to train up children as Pharisees: but we
+shall discover, after twenty years of mistaken labour, that we have
+only made them Sadducees.&nbsp; The path to infidelity in manhood is
+superstition in youth.&nbsp; You may tell the child never to mind whether
+the sun moves round the earth or not: but the day will come when he
+will mind in spite of you; and if he then finds that you have deceived
+him, that you have even left him in wilful ignorance, all your moral
+influence over him is gone, and all your religious lessons probably
+gone also.&nbsp; So true is it, that lies are by their very nature self-destructive.&nbsp;
+For all truth is of God; and no lie is of the truth, and therefore no
+lie can possibly help God or God&rsquo;s work in any human soul.&nbsp;
+For as the child ceases to respect his teachers he ceases to respect
+what they believe.&nbsp; His innate instinct of truth and honour, his
+innate longing to believe, to look up to some one better than himself,
+have been shocked and shaken once and for all; and it may require long
+years, and sad years, to bring him back to the faith of his childhood.&nbsp;
+Again I say it, we must not fear to tell the children the whole truth;
+in these days above all others which the world has yet seen.&nbsp; You
+cannot prevent their finding out the truth: then for our own sake, let
+us, their authorized teachers, be the first to tell it them.&nbsp; Let
+them in after life connect the thought of their clergyman, their schoolmaster,
+their church, with their first lessons in the free and right use of
+their God-given faculties, with their first glimpses into the boundless
+mysteries of art and science.&nbsp; Let them learn from us to regard
+all their powers as their Heavenly Father&rsquo;s gift; all art, all
+science, all discoveries, as their Heavenly Father&rsquo;s revelation
+to men.&nbsp; Let them learn from us not to shrink from the light, not
+to peep at it by stealth, but to claim it as their birthright; to welcome
+it, to live and grow in it to the full stature of men&mdash;rational,
+free, Christian English men.&nbsp; This, I believe, must be the method
+of a truly Protestant education.</p>
+<p>I said Protestant&mdash;I say it again.&nbsp; What is the watchword
+of Protestantism?&nbsp; It is this.&nbsp; That no lie is of the truth.&nbsp;
+There are those who complain of us English that we attach too high a
+value to TRUTH.&nbsp; They say that falsehood is an evil: but not so
+great a one as we fancy.&nbsp; We accept the imputation.&nbsp; We answer
+boldly that there can be no greater evil than falsehood, no greater
+blessing than truth; and that by God&rsquo;s help we will teach the
+same to our children, and to our children&rsquo;s children.&nbsp; Free
+inquiry, religious as well as civil liberty&mdash;this is the spirit
+of Protestantism.&nbsp; This our fathers have bequeathed to us; this
+we will bequeath to our children;&mdash;to know that all truth is of
+God, that no lie is of the truth.&nbsp; Our enemies may call us heretics,
+unbelievers, rebellious, political squabblers.&nbsp; They may say in
+scorn, You Protestants know not whither you are going; you have broken
+yourselves off from the old Catholic tree, and now, in the wild exercise
+of your own private judgment, you are losing all that standard of doctrine,
+all unity of belief.&nbsp; Our answer will be&mdash;It is not so: but
+even if it were so&mdash;even if we did not know whither we were going&mdash;we
+should go forward still.&nbsp; For though we know not, God knows.&nbsp;
+We have committed ourselves to God, the living God; and He has led us;
+and we believe that He will lead us.&nbsp; He has taught us; and we
+believe that He will teach us still.&nbsp; He has prospered us, and
+we believe that He will prosper us still: and therefore we will train
+up our children after us to go on the path which has brought us hither,
+freely to use their minds, boldly to prove all things, and hold fast
+that which is good; manfully to go forward, following Truth whithersoever
+she may lead them; trusting in God, the Father of Lights, asking Him
+for wisdom, who giveth to all liberally, and upbraideth not; and it
+shall be given them.</p>
+<p>I have been asked to preach this day for the National Schools of
+this parish.&nbsp; I do so willingly, because I believe that in them
+this course of education is pursued, that conjoined with a sound teaching
+in the principles of our Protestant church, and a wholesome and kindly
+moral training, there is free and full secular instruction as far as
+the ages of the children will allow.&nbsp; Were it not the case, I could
+not plead for these schools; above all at this time, when the battle
+between ancient superstition and modern enlightenment in this land seems
+fast coming to a crisis and a death struggle.&nbsp; I could not ask
+you to help any school on earth in which I had not fair proof that the
+teachers taught, on physical and human as well as on moral subjects,
+the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help them
+God.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XIII.&nbsp; PROVIDENCE</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Matthew vi. 31, 32, 33.&nbsp; Be not anxious, saying, What shall
+we eat? or, what shall we drink, or wherewithal shall we be clothed?
+(for after all these things do the heathen seek:) for your Heavenly
+Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things.&nbsp; But seek
+ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things
+shall be added unto you.</p>
+<p>We must first consider carefully what this text really means; what
+&lsquo;taking no thought for the morrow&rsquo; really is.&nbsp; Now,
+it cannot mean that we are to be altogether careless and imprudent;
+for all Scripture, and especially Solomon&rsquo;s Proverbs, give us
+the very opposite advice, and one part of God&rsquo;s Word cannot contradict
+the other.&nbsp; The whole of Solomon&rsquo;s Proverbs is made up of
+lessons in prudence and foresight; and surely our Lord did not come
+to do away with Solomon&rsquo;s Proverbs, but to fulfil them.&nbsp;
+And more, Solomon declares again and again, that prudence and foresight
+are the gifts of God; and God&rsquo;s gifts are surely meant to be used.&nbsp;
+Isaiah, too, tells us that the common work of the farm, tilling the
+ground, sowing, and reaping, were taught to men by God; and says of
+the ploughman, that &lsquo;His God doth instruct him to discretion and
+doth teach him.&rsquo;&nbsp; Neither can God mean us to sit idle with
+folded hands waiting to be fed by miracles.&nbsp; Would He have given
+to man reason, and skill, and the power of bettering his mortal condition
+by ten thousand instructions if He had not meant him to use those gifts?&nbsp;
+We find that, at the beginning, Adam is put into the garden, not to
+sit idle in it, nor to feed merely on the fruits which fall from the
+trees, as the dumb animals do, but to dress it, and to keep it; to use
+his own reason to improve his own condition, and the land on which God
+had placed him.&nbsp; Was not the very first command given to man to
+replenish the earth and subdue it?&nbsp; And do we not find in the very
+end of Scripture the Apostles working with their own hands for their
+daily bread?</p>
+<p>But what use of many words?&nbsp; It is absurd to believe anything
+else; absurd to believe that man was meant to live like the butterfly,
+flitting without care from flower to flower, and, like the butterfly,
+die helpless at the first shower or the first winter&rsquo;s frost.&nbsp;
+Whatever the text means, it cannot mean that.</p>
+<p>And it does not mean that.&nbsp; I suppose, that three hundred years
+ago (when the Bible was translated out of the Greek tongue, in which
+the Apostles wrote, into English), &lsquo;taking thought&rsquo; meant
+something different from what it does now: but the plain meaning of
+the text, if it be put into such English as we talk now, is, &lsquo;Do
+not <i>fret</i> about the morrow.&nbsp; Be not anxious about the morrow.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+There is no doubt at all, as any scholar can tell you, that that is
+the plain meaning of the word in our modern English, and that our Lord
+is not telling us to be imprudent or idle, but not to be anxious and
+fretful about the morrow.</p>
+<p>And more, I think if we look carefully at these words, we shall find
+that they tell us the very reason why we are to work, and to look forward,
+and to believe that God will bless our labour.</p>
+<p>And what is this reason?&nbsp; It is this, that we have a <i>Father</i>
+in heaven; not a mere Maker, not a mere Master, but a <i>Father</i>.&nbsp;
+All turns on that one Gospel of all Gospels, <i>your Father in heaven</i>.&nbsp;
+For our Lord seems to me to say, &lsquo;Be not anxious for your life,
+what ye shall eat, or drink, or wear.&nbsp; Is not the life more than
+meat?&nbsp; Has not your Heavenly Father given you a higher life than
+the mere life which must be kept up by food, which He has given to the
+animals?&nbsp; He has made you reasonable souls; He has given to you
+wisdom from His own wisdom, and a share of the Light which lights every
+man who comes into the world, the Light of Christ His Son; He has created
+you in His own likeness, that like Him you may make things, be makers
+and inventors, each in his place and calling, each according to his
+talents and powers, even as your Heavenly Father, the Maker and Creator
+of all things.&nbsp; And if He has given you all these wonderful powers
+of mind and soul, surely He has given you the less blessing, the mere
+power to earn your own food?&nbsp; If He has made you so much wiser
+than the beasts, surely He has made you as wise as the beasts.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;And is not the body more than raiment?&rsquo;&nbsp; Has He not
+given you bodies which can speak, write, build, work, plant, in a thousand
+cunning and wonderful ways; bodies which can do a thousand nobler things
+than merely keep themselves warm, as the beasts do?&nbsp; Then be sure,
+if He has given you the greater power, He has given you the less also.&nbsp;
+And as for fine clothes and rich ornaments, &lsquo;Is not the body more
+than raiment?&rsquo;&nbsp; Is not your body a far more beautiful and
+nobler thing than all the gay clothes with which you can bedizen it?&nbsp;
+If your bodies be fair, strong, healthy, useful, it matters little what
+clothes you put upon them.&nbsp; Why will you not have faith in your
+Heavenly Father?&nbsp; Why will you not have faith in the great honour
+which He put on you when He said at first, &lsquo;Let us make man in
+our image, after our likeness, and let him have dominion over all things
+on the earth&rsquo;?&nbsp; Be sure, that God would not have made man,
+and given him all these powers, and sent him upon this earth, unless
+this earth had been a right good and fit place for him.&nbsp; Be sure
+that if you obey the laws of this earth where God has put you, you will
+never need to be anxious or fret; but you will prosper right well, you
+and your children after you.&nbsp; For &lsquo;Consider the fowls of
+the air, they neither sow, nor reap, and gather into barns, and yet
+your Heavenly Father feeds them; and are ye not much better than they?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Surely you are, for you <i>can</i> sow, and reap, and gather into barns.&nbsp;
+And if God makes the earth work so well that it feeds the fowls who
+cannot help themselves, how much more will the earth feed you who <i>can</i>
+help yourselves, because God has given you understanding and prudence?&nbsp;
+But as for anxiety, fretting, repining, complaining to God, &lsquo;Why
+hast Thou made me thus?&rsquo; what use in that?&nbsp; &lsquo;Which
+of you by taking thought can add one cubit to his stature?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Will all the fretting and anxiety in the world make you one foot or
+one inch taller than you are?&nbsp; Will it make you stronger, wiser,
+more able to help yourself?&nbsp; You are what you are: you can do what
+God has given you power to do.&nbsp; Trust Him that He has made you
+strong enough and wise enough to earn your daily bread, and to prosper
+right well, if you will, upon this earth which He has made.&nbsp; And
+why be anxious about clothing?&nbsp; &lsquo;Consider the lilies of the
+field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin; and yet Solomon
+in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.&rsquo;&nbsp; But
+man <i>can</i> toil, man <i>can</i> spin; your Heavenly Father has given
+to man the power of providing clothes for himself, and not for himself
+only, but for others; so that while the man who tills the soil feeds
+the man who spins and weaves, the man who spins and weaves shall clothe
+the man who tills the soil; and the town shall work for the country,
+while the country feeds the town; and every man, if he does but labour
+where God has put him, shall produce comforts for human beings whom
+he never saw, who live perhaps in foreign lands across the sea.&nbsp;
+For the Heavenly Father has knit together the great family of man in
+one blessed bond of mutual need and mutual usefulness all over the world;
+so that no member of it can do without the other, and each member of
+it&mdash;each individual man&mdash;let him work at what thing he will,
+can make many times more of that thing than he needs for himself, and
+so help others while he earns his own living; and so wealth and comfort
+ought to increase year by year among the whole family of men, ay, and
+would increase, if it were not for sin.&nbsp; Yes, my friends, if it
+were not for that same <i>sin</i>&mdash;if it were not that men do not
+seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, there would be
+no end, no bound to the wealth, the comfort, the happiness of the children
+of men.&nbsp; Even as it is, in spite of all man&rsquo;s sin, the world
+does prosper marvellously, miraculously; in spite of all the waste,
+destruction, idleness, ignorance, injustice, and folly which goes on
+in the world, mankind increases and replenishes the earth, and improves
+in comfort and in happiness; in spite of all, God is stronger than the
+Devil, life stronger than death, wisdom stronger than folly, order stronger
+than disorder, fruitfulness stronger than destruction; and they will
+be so, more and more, till the last great day, when Christ shall have
+put all enemies under His feet, and death is swallowed up in victory,
+and all mankind is one fold under one Shepherd, Jesus Christ, the righteous
+King of all.</p>
+<p>But some may ask, What does our Lord mean when He says, &lsquo;That
+if we sought first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, all these
+things should be added to us?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>I cannot tell you altogether, my friends; for eye hath not seen,
+nor ear heard, nor hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive
+what God has prepared for those who love Him.&nbsp; But this I can tell
+you, that these things are taken <i>from</i> men, instead of being added
+to them, by their not seeking first God&rsquo;s kingdom and His righteousness.&nbsp;
+I can tell you, as the Prophet does, that it is the sins of man which
+withhold good things from him; because though, as the Prophet says in
+the same place, God sends the good things, and the former and latter
+rain in their season, and reserves to men still the appointed weeks
+of harvest, yet men will not fear that same Lord their God; and therefore
+those good things are wasted, and mankind remains too often miserable
+in spite of God&rsquo;s goodness, and starving in the midst of God&rsquo;s
+plenty.</p>
+<p>If you wish to know what I mean, look but once at this present war.&nbsp;
+I do not complain of the war.&nbsp; I honour the war.&nbsp; I thank
+God from the bottom of my heart for this great and glorious victory,
+and I call on you to thank Him, too, for it.&nbsp; I am none of those
+who think war sinful.&nbsp; I cannot do so, for I swore at my baptism
+to fight manfully under Christ&rsquo;s banner against the world, the
+flesh, and the Devil; and if we cannot reach the Devil and his works
+by any other means, we must reach them as we are doing now, by sharp
+shot and cold steel, and we must hold it an honourable thing, and few
+things more honourable on earth, for a man to die fighting against evil
+men, and an evil world-devouring empire, like that of Babylon of old,
+or this of Russia now, that he may save not merely us who sit here now,
+but our children&rsquo;s children, and generations yet unborn, from
+Russian tyranny, and Russian falsehood, and Russian profligacy, and
+Russian superstition.&nbsp; I say, I do not complain of this war; but
+I ask you to look at the mere waste which it brings, the mere waste
+of God&rsquo;s blessings.&nbsp; Consider all the skilful men now employed
+in making cannon, shot, and powder to kill mortal men, who might every
+one of them, in time of peace, have been employed in making things which
+would feed, and clothe, and comfort mortal man.&nbsp; Consider that
+very powder and shot itself, the fruit of so much labour and money,
+made simply to be shot away, once for all, as if a man should spend
+months in making some precious vessel, and then dash it to pieces the
+moment it was made.&nbsp; Consider that Sevastopol alone; the millions
+of money which it must have cost&mdash;the stone, the timber, the iron,
+all used there&mdash;in making a mere robber&rsquo;s den, which might
+all have been spent in giving employment and sustenance to whole provinces
+of poor starving Russians.&nbsp; Consider those tens of thousands of
+men, labouring day and night for months at those deadly earthworks,
+whose strong arms might have been all tilling God&rsquo;s earth, and
+growing food for the use of man.&nbsp; And then see the waste, the want,
+the misery which that one place, Sevastopol, has caused upon God&rsquo;s
+earth.</p>
+<p>And consider, too, the souls of mortal men, who have been wasted
+there&mdash;no man knows how many, nor will know till the judgment day.&nbsp;
+Two hundred thousand, at the least, they say, wasted about that accursed
+place, within the last twelve months.&nbsp; Two hundred thousand cunning
+brains, two hundred thousand strong right hands, two hundred thousand
+willing hearts: what good might not each of those men have done if he
+had been labouring peacefully at home, in his right place in God&rsquo;s
+family!&nbsp; What might he not have invented, made, carried over land
+and sea?&nbsp; None dead there but might have been of use in his generation;
+and doubtless many a one who would have done good with all his might,
+who would have been a blessing to those around him; and now what is
+left of him on earth but a few bones beneath the sod?&nbsp; Wasted&mdash;utterly
+wasted!&nbsp; Oh, consider how precious is one man; consider how much
+good the weakest and stupidest of us all might do, if he set himself
+with his whole soul to do good; consider that the weakest and stupidest
+of us, even if he has no care for good, cannot earn his day&rsquo;s
+wages without doing some good to the bodies of his fellow-men; and then
+judge of the loss to mankind by this one single siege of one single
+town; and think how many stomachs must be the emptier, how many backs
+the barer, for this one war; and then see how man wastes God&rsquo;s
+gifts, and wastes most of all that most precious gift of all, men, living
+men, with minds, and reasons, and immortal souls.</p>
+<p>And whence has all this waste come?&nbsp; Simply because these Russian
+rulers have chosen to seek first, not God&rsquo;s kingdom, but their
+own.&nbsp; Instead of behaving like God&rsquo;s ministers and God&rsquo;s
+stewards, and asking, &lsquo;How would God our King have us rule His
+kingdom?&rsquo; they have laboured for their own power, conquering all
+the nations round them, removing their neighbour&rsquo;s landmark, and
+wasting the wealth of their country on armies, and fortresses, and fleets,
+with which they intended to conquer more and more of the earth which
+did not belong to them.&nbsp; Because, instead of seeking God&rsquo;s
+righteousness, and saying to themselves, &lsquo;How shall we be righteous,
+even as our Heavenly Father is righteous, and how shall we teach this
+great people to be righteous likewise?&rsquo; they have sought their
+own pleasure, and lived in profligacy, covetous and cheating almost
+beyond belief; and instead of behaving righteously to the people, or
+teaching them to be righteous, they have crushed down the people, stupefied
+and corrupted them by slavery, and maddened them by superstitions which
+are not the righteousness of God, till they have made them easy tools
+in their unjust wars, and are able to drive them, even by force, like
+sheep to the slaughter, to die miserably in a cause in which, even if
+those unhappy slaves conquered, they would only rivet their own chains
+more tightly, and put more power into the hands of the very rulers who
+are robbing them of their earnings, dishonouring their daughters, and
+driving off their sons to die in a foreign land.&nbsp; Ah, my friends,
+if these men had but sought first the kingdom of God and His righteousness;
+if the great wealth, and the wonderful industry and prudence of Russia
+had been but spent in doing justly, and loving mercy, what a rich and
+honourable country of brave and industrious Christian men might Russia
+be; a blessing, and not a curse, to half the earth of God!</p>
+<p>Let us pray that she will become so, some day; and we may have hope
+for her, for she is but young, and has time yet for repentance.</p>
+<p>But some may say&mdash;indeed, we are all ready enough to say&mdash;&lsquo;Then
+the evil of this war is the Russians&rsquo; fault, and not ours; and
+so in every other case.&nbsp; In every other evil and misery they are
+rather other people&rsquo;s fault than ours.&nbsp; If we do our duty
+well enough, and if other people would but do theirs, all would be well.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>We are all apt to say this in our hearts.&nbsp; But our Lord does
+not say so.&nbsp; His promise is to all mankind: but His promise is
+to each of us also.&nbsp; When He says, Seek ye first God&rsquo;s kingdom
+and righteousness, He speaks to you and to me, to every soul now here.&nbsp;
+Believe it, my friends.&nbsp; The more that I see of life, the more
+I see how much of our sorrow is our own fault; how much of our happiness
+is in our own hands; and the more I see how little use there is in finding
+fault with this government, or that, the more I see how much use there
+is in every man&rsquo;s finding fault with himself, and taking his share
+of the blame.</p>
+<p>I do not doubt that if the whole people of England, for the last
+forty years, had sought first God&rsquo;s kingdom and God&rsquo;s righteousness,
+and said to themselves in every matter, not merely &lsquo;What is profitable
+for us to do?&rsquo; but &lsquo;What is <i>right</i> for us to do?&rsquo;
+we should have been spared the expenses and the sorrows of this war:
+but as for blaming our government, my friends,&mdash;what they are we
+are; we choose them, Englishmen like ourselves, and they truly <i>represent
+us</i>.&nbsp; Not one complaint can we make against them, which we may
+not as justly make against ourselves; and if we had been in their places,
+we should have done what they did; for the seeds of the same sins are
+in us; and we yield, each in his own household and his own business,
+to the same temptations as they, to the sins which so easily beset Englishmen
+at this present time.&nbsp; I say, frankly, I see not one charge brought
+against them in the newspapers which might not quite as justly be brought
+against me, and, for aught I know, against every one of us here; and
+while we are not faithful over a few things, what right have we to complain
+of them for not having been faithful over many things?&nbsp; Believe,
+rather (I believe it), that if we had been in their place, we should
+have done far worse than they; and ask yourselves, &lsquo;Do <i>I</i>
+seek first God&rsquo;s kingdom and God&rsquo;s righteousness; for if
+I do not, what right have I to lay the blame of my bad success on other
+men&rsquo;s not seeking them?&rsquo;&nbsp; To each of us, as much as
+to our government, or to the Russian empire, is Christ&rsquo;s command;
+and each of us must take the consequences, if we break it.&nbsp; Let
+us look at ourselves, and mend ourselves, and try whether God&rsquo;s
+promise will not hold true for us, each in his station, let the world
+round us go as it will.&nbsp; Be sure that God is just, and that every
+man bears his own burden: that the righteous should be as the wicked,
+that be far from Thee, O God!&nbsp; Shall not the judge of all the earth
+do right?&nbsp; Be sure that those who trust in Him shall never be confounded,
+though the earth be moved, and the mountains carried into the midst
+of the sea, as it is written, &lsquo;Trust in the Lord, and be doing
+good; dwell in the land, and work where God has placed thee, and verily
+thou shalt be fed.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But have we done so, my friends? have we sought first God&rsquo;s
+kingdom and His righteousness? have we not rather forgotten the meaning
+of the text, and what God&rsquo;s kingdom is, and what His righteousness
+is?&nbsp; Do not most people fancy that God&rsquo;s kingdom only means
+some pleasant place to which people are to go after they die? and that
+seeking God&rsquo;s righteousness only means having Christ&rsquo;s righteousness
+imputed to us (as they call it), without our being righteous and good
+ourselves?&nbsp; Do not most of us fancy that this very text means,
+&lsquo;Do you take care of your souls, and God will take care of your
+bodies; do you see after the salvation of your souls, and God will see
+after the salvation of your bodies&rsquo;? a meaning which, in the first
+place, is not true, for God will do no such thing; and all the religion
+in the world will not prevent a man&rsquo;s having to work for his daily
+bread, or pay his debts for him without money; and a meaning which,
+in the second place, people themselves do not believe; for religious
+professors in general now are just as keen about money as irreligious
+ones, and even more so; so that covetousness and cunning, ambition and
+greediness to rise in life, seem now-a-days to go hand in hand with
+a high religious profession; and those who fancy themselves the children
+of light have become just as wise in their generation as the children
+of this world whom they despise.</p>
+<p>No, my friends, that is not the meaning of the text; and when I ask
+you, Have you obeyed the text? I do not ask you that question; but one
+which I believe is something far more spiritual and more deep, something
+at least which is far more heart-searching, and likely to prick a man&rsquo;s
+conscience, perhaps to make him angry with me who ask.</p>
+<p>Do you seek first God&rsquo;s kingdom, or your own profit, your own
+pleasure, your own reputation?&nbsp; Do you believe that you are in
+God&rsquo;s kingdom, that He is your King, and has called you to the
+station in which you are to do good and useful work for Him upon this
+earth of His?&nbsp; Whatever be your calling, whether you be servant,
+labourer, farmer, tradesman, gentleman, maid, wife, or widow, father,
+son, or husband, do you ask yourself every day, &lsquo;Now what are
+the laws of God&rsquo;s kingdom about this station of mine? what is
+my duty here? how can I obey God, and His laws here, and do what He
+requires of me, and so be a good servant, a good labourer, a good tradesman,
+a good master, a good parish officer, a good wife, a good parent, pleasing
+to God, useful to my neighbours and to my countrymen?&rsquo;&nbsp; Or
+do you say to yourselves, &lsquo;How can I get the greatest quantity
+of money and pleasure out of my station, with the least trouble to myself?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+My dearest friends, ask yourselves, each of you, in which of these two
+ways do you look at your own station in life?</p>
+<p>And do you seek first God&rsquo;s righteousness?&nbsp; There can
+be no mistake as to what God&rsquo;s righteousness is; for God&rsquo;s
+righteousness must be Christ&rsquo;s righteousness, seeing that He is
+the express image of His Father.&nbsp; Now do you ask yourselves, &lsquo;How
+am I to be righteous in my station, as Christ was in His? how can I
+do my Heavenly Father&rsquo;s will, as Christ did? how can I behave
+like Christ in my station? how would the Lord Jesus Christ have behaved,
+if He had been in my place, when He was on earth?&rsquo;&nbsp; My friends,
+that is the question, the searching question, the question which must
+convince us all of sin, and show us so many faults of our own to complain
+of, that we shall find no time to throw stones at our neighbours.&nbsp;
+How would the Lord Jesus Christ have behaved, if He had been in my place
+when He was upon earth?</p>
+<p>My dear friends, till we can all of us answer that question somewhat
+better than we can now, we have no need to look as far as Russia, or
+as our forefathers&rsquo; mistakes, or our rulers&rsquo; mistakes, to
+find out why this trouble and that trouble come upon us: for we shall
+find the reason in our own selfish, greedy, self-willed hearts.</p>
+<p>Oh, my friends, let us each search our own lives, and repent, and
+amend, and resolve to do our duty, as sons of God, in the station to
+which God has called us, by the help of the Spirit of God, which He
+has promised freely to those who ask Him.&nbsp; And now, this day, as
+we thank God for this great victory, let us thank Him, not with our
+lips merely, but with our lives, by living such lives as He loves to
+see, such lives as He meant us to live, lives of loyalty to God, and
+of usefulness to our brethren, and of industry and prudence in our calling,
+and so help forward, each of us, however humble our station, the glory
+of God; because we shall each of us, in the cottage and in the field,
+in the shop and in the mansion, in this our little parish, and therefore
+in the great nation of which it is a part, help forward the fulfilment
+of those blessed words, Our Father which art in heaven; Thy kingdom
+come; Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven; and therefore, also,
+the fulfilment of the words which come after them, and not before them;
+Give us this day our daily bread.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XIV.&nbsp; ENGLAND&rsquo;S STRENGTH</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>2 Kings xix. 34.&nbsp; I will defend this city, to save it for mine
+own sake.</p>
+<p>The first lesson for this morning&rsquo;s service is of the grandest
+in the whole Old Testament; grander perhaps than all, except the story
+of the passage of the Red Sea, and the giving of the Law on Sinai.&nbsp;
+It follows out the story which you heard in the first lesson for last
+Sunday afternoon, of the invasion of Judea by the Assyrians.&nbsp; You
+heard then how this great Assyrian conqueror, Sennacherib, after taking
+all the fortified towns of Judah, and sweeping the whole country with
+fire and sword, sent three of his generals up to the very walls of Jerusalem,
+commanding King Hezekiah to surrender at discretion, and throw himself
+and his people on Sennacherib&rsquo;s mercy; how proudly and boastfully
+he taunted the Jews with their weakness; how, like the Russian emperor
+now, he called in religion as the excuse for his conquests and robberies,
+saying, as if God&rsquo;s blessings were on them, &lsquo;Am I now come
+up without the Lord against this place to destroy it?&nbsp; The Lord
+said to me, Go up against this place to destroy it;&rsquo; while all
+the time what he really trusted in (as his own words showed) was what
+the Russian emperors trust in, their own strength and the number of
+their armies.</p>
+<p>Jerusalem was thus in utter need and danger; the vast army of the
+Assyrians was encamped at Lachish, not more than ten miles off; and
+however strong the walls of Jerusalem might be, and however advantageously
+it might stand on its high hill, with lofty rocks and cliffs on three
+sides of it, yet Hezekiah knew well that no strength of his could stand
+more than a few days against Sennacherib&rsquo;s army.&nbsp; For these
+Assyrians had brought the art of war to a greater perfection than any
+nation of the old world: they lived for war, and studied, it seems,
+only how to conquer.&nbsp; And they have left behind them very remarkable
+proofs of what sort of men they were, of which I think it right to tell
+you all; for they are most instructive, not merely because they prove
+the truth of Isaiah&rsquo;s account, but because they explain it, and
+help us in many ways to understand his prophecies.&nbsp; They are a
+number of sculptures and paintings, representing Sennacherib, his army,
+and his different conquests, which were painted by his command, in his
+palace; and having been lately discovered there, among the ruins of
+Nineveh, have been brought to England, and are now in the British Museum,
+while copies of many of them are in the Crystal Palace.&nbsp; There
+we see these terrible Assyrian conquerors defeating their enemies, torturing
+and slaughtering their prisoners, swimming rivers, beating down castles,
+sweeping on from land to land like a devouring fire, while over their
+heads fly fierce spirits who protect and prosper their cruelties, and
+eagles who trail in their claws the entrails of the slain.&nbsp; The
+very expression of their faces is frightful for its fierceness; the
+countenances of a &lsquo;bitter and hasty nation,&rsquo; as the Prophet
+calls them, whose feet were swift to shed blood.&nbsp; And as for the
+art of war, and their power of taking walled towns like Jerusalem, you
+may see them in these pictures battering down and undermining forts
+and castles, with instruments so well made and powerful, that all other
+nations who came after them, for more than two thousand years, seem
+to have been content to copy from them, and hardly to have improved
+on the old Assyrian engines.</p>
+<p>Such, and so terrible, they came up against Jerusalem: to attempt
+to fight them would have been useless madness; and Hezekiah had but
+one means of escaping from them, and that was to cast himself and his
+people upon the boundless mercy, and faithfulness, and power of God.</p>
+<p>And Hezekiah had his answer by Isaiah the prophet: and more than
+an answer.&nbsp; The Lord took the matter into His own hand, and showed
+Sennacherib which was the stronger, his soldiers and horses and engines,
+or the Lord God; and so that terrible Assyrian army came utterly to
+nought, and vanished off the face of the earth.</p>
+<p>Now, my friends, has this noble history no lesson in it for us?&nbsp;
+God forbid!&nbsp; It has a lesson which ought to come nearer to our
+hearts than to the hearts of any nation: for though we or our forefathers
+have never been, for nearly three hundred years, in such utter need
+and danger as Jerusalem was, yet be sure that we might have been so,
+again and again, had it not been for the mercy of the same God who delivered
+Jerusalem from the Assyrians.&nbsp; It is now three hundred years ago
+that the Lord delivered this country from as terrible an invader as
+Sennacherib himself; when He three times scattered by storms the fleets
+of the King of Spain, which were coming to lay waste this land with
+fire and sword: and since then no foreign foe has set foot on English
+soil, and we almost alone, of all the nations of Europe, have been preserved
+from those horrors of war, even to speak of which is dreadful!&nbsp;
+Oh, my friends! we know not half God&rsquo;s goodness to us!</p>
+<p>And if you ask me, why God has so blest and favoured this land, I
+can only answer&mdash;and I am not ashamed or afraid to answer&mdash;I
+believe it is on account of the Church of England; it is because God
+has put His name here in a peculiar way, as He did among the Jews of
+old, and that He is jealous for His Church, and for the special knowledge
+of His Gospel and His Law, which He has given us in our Prayer-book
+and in our Church Catechism, lighting therein a candle in England which
+I believe will never be put out.&nbsp; It is not merely that we are
+a Protestant country,&mdash;great blessing as that is,&mdash;it is,
+I believe, that there is something in the Church of England which there
+is not in Protestant countries abroad, unless perhaps Sweden: for every
+one of them (except Sweden and ourselves) has suffered, from time to
+time, invading armies, and the unspeakable horrors of war.&nbsp; In
+some of them the light of the Gospel has been quenched utterly, and
+in others it lingers like a candle flickering down into the socket.&nbsp;
+By horrible persecutions, and murder, and war, and pillage, have those
+nations been tormented from time to time; and who are we, that we should
+escape?&nbsp; Certainly from no righteousness of our own.&nbsp; Some
+may say, It is our great wealth which has made us strong.&nbsp; My friends,
+believe it not.&nbsp; Look at Spain, which was once the richest of all
+nations; and did her riches preserve her?&nbsp; Has she not dwindled
+down into the most miserable and helpless of all nations?&nbsp; Has
+not her very wealth vanished from her, because she sold herself to work
+all unrighteousness with greediness?</p>
+<p>Some may say, It is our freedom which makes us strong.&nbsp; My friends,
+believe it not.&nbsp; Freedom is a vast blessing from God, but freedom
+alone will preserve no nation.&nbsp; How many free nations have fallen
+into every sort of misery, ay, into bitter slavery, in spite of all
+their freedom.&nbsp; How many free nations in Europe lie now in bondage,
+gnawing their tongues for pain, and weary with waiting for the deliverance
+which does not come?&nbsp; No, my friends, freedom is of little use
+without something else&mdash;and that is loyalty; reverence for law
+and obedience to the powers that be, because men believe those powers
+to be ordained of God; because men believe that Christ is their King,
+and they His ministers and stewards, and that He it is who appoints
+all orders and degrees of men in His Holy Church.&nbsp; True freedom
+can only live with true loyalty and obedience, such as our Prayer-book,
+our Catechism, our Church of England preaches to us.&nbsp; It is a Church
+meant for free men, who stand each face to face with their Heavenly
+Father: but it is a Church meant also for loyal men, who look on the
+law as the ordinance of God, and on their rulers as the ministers of
+God; and if our freedom has had anything to do (as no doubt it has)
+with our prosperity, I believe that we owe the greater part of our freedom
+to the teaching and the general tone of mind which our Prayer-book has
+given to us and to our forefathers for now three hundred years.</p>
+<p>Not that we have listened to that teaching, or acted up to it: God
+knows, we have been but too like the Jews in Isaiah&rsquo;s time, who
+had the Law of God, and yet did every man what was right in his own
+eyes; we, like them, have been hypocritical; we, like them, have neglected
+the poor, and the widow, and the orphan; we, like them, have been too
+apt to pay tithe of mint and anise, and neglect the weightier matters
+of the law, justice, mercy, and judgment.&nbsp; When we read that awful
+first chapter of Isaiah, we may well tremble; for all the charges which
+he brings against the Jews of his time would just as well apply to us;
+but yet we can trust in the Lord, as Isaiah did, and believe that He
+will be jealous for His land, and for His name&rsquo;s sake, and not
+suffer the nations to say of us, &lsquo;Where is now their God?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+We can trust Him, that if He turn His hand on us, as He did on the Jews
+of old, and bring us into danger and trouble, yet it will be in love
+and mercy, that He may purge away our dross, and take away all our alloy,
+and restore our rulers as at the first, and our counsellors as at the
+beginning, that we may be called, &lsquo;The city of righteousness,
+the faithful city.&rsquo;&nbsp; True, we must not fancy that we have
+any righteousness of our own, that we merit God&rsquo;s favour above
+other people; our consciences ought to tell us that cannot be; our Bibles
+tell us that is an empty boast.&nbsp; Did we not hear this morning,
+&lsquo;Bring forth fruits meet for repentance: and think not to say
+within yourselves, We have Abraham to our father; for God is able of
+these stones to raise up children to Abraham.&rsquo;&nbsp; But we may
+comfort ourselves with the thought that there is One standing among
+us (though we see Him not) who will, ay, and does, &lsquo;baptize us
+with the Holy Ghost and with fire, whose fan is in His hand, and He
+will thoroughly purge His floor, and gather the wheat into His garner,&rsquo;
+for the use of our children after us, and the generations yet unborn,
+while the chaff, all among us which is empty, and light, and rotten,
+and useless, He will burn up (thanks be to His holy name) with fire
+unquenchable, which neither the falsehood and folly of man, nor the
+malice of the Devil, can put out, but which will purge this land of
+all its sins.</p>
+<p>This is our hope, and this is the cause of our thankfulness.&nbsp;
+For who but we should be thankful this day that we are Englishmen, members
+of Christ&rsquo;s Church of England, inhabitants of, perhaps, the only
+country in Europe which is not now perplexed with fear of change, while
+men&rsquo;s hearts fail them for dread, and looking for those things
+which are coming on the earth? a country which has never seen, as all
+the countries round have seen, a foreign army trampling down their crops,
+burning their farms, cutting down their trees, plundering their towns,
+destroying in a day the labour of years, while women are dishonoured,
+men tortured to make them give up their money, the able-bodied driven
+from their homes, ruined and wanderers, and the sick and aged left to
+perish of famine and neglect.&nbsp; My friends, all these things were
+going on but last year upon the Danube.&nbsp; They are going on now
+in Asia: even with all the mercy and moderation of our soldiers and
+sailors, we have not been able to avoid inflicting some of these very
+miseries upon our own enemies; and yet here we are, going about our
+business in peace and safety in a land in which we and our forefathers
+have found, now for many a year, that just laws make a quiet and prosperous
+people; that the effect of righteousness is peace, and the fruit of
+righteousness, quietness and assurance for ever;&mdash;a land in which
+the good are not terrified, the industrious hampered, and the greedy
+and lawless made eager and restless by expectation of change in government;
+but every man can boldly and hopefully work in his calling, and &lsquo;whatsoever
+his hand finds to do, do it with all his might,&rsquo; in fair hope
+that the money which he earns in his manhood he will be able to enjoy
+quietly in his old age, and hand it down safely to his children, and
+his children&rsquo;s children;&mdash;a land which for hundreds of years
+has not felt the unspeakable horrors of war; a land which even now is
+safely and peacefully gathering in its harvest, while so many countries
+lie wasted with fire and sword.&nbsp; Oh, my friends, who made us to
+differ from others, or what have we that we did not receive?&nbsp; Not
+to ourselves do we owe our blessings; hardly even to our wise forefathers:
+but to God Himself, and the Spirit of God which was with them, and is
+with us still, in spite of all our shortcomings.&nbsp; We owe it to
+our wise Constitution, to our wise Church, the principle of which is
+that God is Judge and Christ is King, in peace as well as in war, in
+times of quiet as well as in times of change; I say, to our wise Constitution
+and to our wise Church, which teach us that all power is of God; that
+all men who have power, great or small, are His stewards; that all orders
+and degrees of men in His Holy Church, from the queen on the throne
+to the labourer in the harvest-field, are called by God to their ministry
+and vocation, and are responsible to God for their conduct therein.&nbsp;
+How then shall we show forth our thankfulness, not only in our lips,
+but in our lives?&nbsp; How, but by believing that very principle, that
+very truth which He has taught us, and by which England stands, that
+we are God&rsquo;s people, and God&rsquo;s servants?&nbsp; He has indeed
+showed us what is good, and our fathers before us; and what does the
+Lord require of us in return, but to do the good which He has showed
+us, to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with our God?</p>
+<p>Oh, my friends, come frankly and joyfully to the Lord&rsquo;s Table
+this day.&nbsp; Confess your sins and shortcomings to Him, and entreat
+Him to enable you to live more worthily of your many blessings.&nbsp;
+Offer to Him the sacrifice of your praise and thankfulness, imperfect
+though it is, and join with angels and archangels in blessing Him for
+what He is, and what He has been to you: and then receive your share
+of <i>His</i> most perfect sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, the
+bread and the wine which tell you that you are members of His Church;
+that His body gives you whatsoever life and strength your souls have;
+that His blood washes out all your sins and shortcomings; that His Spirit
+shall be renewed in you day by day, to teach you to do the good work
+which He has prepared already for you, and to walk in the old paths
+which have led our forefathers, and will lead us too, I trust, safe
+through the chances and changes of this mortal life, and the fall of
+mighty kingdoms, towards that perfect City of God which is eternal in
+the heavens.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XV.&nbsp; THE LIFE OF GOD</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Ephesians iv. 17, 18.&nbsp; That ye walk not as other Gentiles walk,
+in the vanity of their mind, being alienated from the life of God through
+the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart.</p>
+<p>You heard these words read in the Epistle for to-day.&nbsp; I cannot
+expect that you all understood them.&nbsp; It is no shame to you that
+you did not.&nbsp; Some of them are long and hard Latin words.&nbsp;
+Some of them, though they are plain English enough, are hard to understand
+because they have to do with deep matters, which can only be understood
+by the help of God&rsquo;s Spirit.&nbsp; And even with the help of God&rsquo;s
+Spirit we cannot any of us expect to understand <i>all</i> which they
+mean: we cannot expect to be as wise as St. Paul; for we must be as
+good as St. Paul before we can be as wise about goodness as he was.&nbsp;
+I do not pretend to understand all the text myself: no, not half, nor
+a tenth part of what it very likely means.&nbsp; But I do seem to myself
+to understand a little about it, by the help and blessing of God; and
+what little of it I do understand, I will try to make you understand
+also.</p>
+<p>For the words in the text belong to you as much as to me, or to St.
+Paul himself.&nbsp; What is true for one man, is true for every man.&nbsp;
+What is right for one man, is right for every man.&nbsp; What God promises
+for one man, He promises to every man.&nbsp; Man or woman, black or
+white, rich or poor, scholar or unlearned, there is no respect of persons
+with Him.&nbsp; &lsquo;In Christ Jesus,&rsquo; says St. Paul, &lsquo;there
+is neither male nor female, slave nor freeman, Jew who fancies that
+God&rsquo;s promises belong to him alone, or Gentile who knows nothing
+about them, clever learned Greek, or stupid ignorant Barbarian.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>It is enough for God that we are all men and women bearing the flesh,
+and blood, and human nature which His Son Jesus Christ wore on earth.&nbsp;
+If we are baptized, we belong to Him: if we are not baptized, we ought
+to be; for we belong to Him just as much.&nbsp; Every man may be baptized;
+every man may be regenerate; God calls all to His grace and adoption
+and holy baptism, which is the sign and seal of His adoption; and therefore,
+what is right for the regenerate baptized man, is right for the unregenerate
+unbaptized man; for the Christian and for the heathen there is but one
+way, one duty, one life for both, and that is the life of God, of which
+St. Paul speaks in the text.</p>
+<p>Now of this life of God I will speak hereafter; but I mention it
+now, because it is the thing to which I wish to bring your thoughts
+before the end of the sermon.</p>
+<p>But first, let us see what St. Paul means, when he talks about the
+Gentiles in his day.&nbsp; For that also has to do with us.&nbsp; I
+said that every man, Christian or heathen, has the same duty, and is
+bound to do the same right; every man, Christian or heathen, if he sins,
+breaks his duty in the same way, and does the same wrong.&nbsp; There
+is but one righteousness, the life of God; there is but one sin, and
+that is being alienated from the life of God.&nbsp; One man may commit
+different sorts of sins from another; one may lie, another may steal:
+one may be proud, another may be covetous: but all these different sins
+come from the same root of sin; they are all flowers of the same plant.&nbsp;
+And St. Paul tells us what that one root of sin, what that same Devil&rsquo;s
+plant, is, which produces all sin in Christian or Heathen, in Churchman
+or Dissenter, in man or woman&mdash;the one disease, from which has
+come all the sin which ever was done by man, woman, or child since the
+world was made.</p>
+<p>Now, what is this one disease, to which every man, you and I, are
+all liable?&nbsp; Why it is that we are every one of us worse than we
+ought to be, worse than we know how to be, and, strangest of all, worse
+than we wish and like to be.</p>
+<p>Just as far as we are like the heathen of old, we shall be worse
+than we know how to be.&nbsp; For we are all ready enough to turn heathens
+again, at any moment, my friends; and the best Christian in this church
+knows best that what I say is true; that he is beset by the very same
+temptations which ruined the old heathens, and that if he gave way to
+them a moment they would ruin him likewise.&nbsp; For what does St.
+Paul say was the matter with the old heathens?</p>
+<p>First he says, &lsquo;Their understanding was darkened.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+But what part of it?&nbsp; What was it that they had got dark about
+and could not understand?&nbsp; For in some matters they were as clever
+as we, and cleverer.&nbsp; What part of their understanding was it which
+was darkened?&nbsp; St. Paul tells us in the first chapter of the Epistle
+to the Romans.&nbsp; It was their hearts&mdash;their reason, as we should
+say.&nbsp; It was about God, and the life of God, that they were dark.&nbsp;
+They had not been always dark about God, but they were <i>darkened</i>;
+they grew more and more dark about Him, generation after generation;
+they gave themselves up more and more to their corrupt and fallen nature,
+and so the children grew worse than their fathers, and their children
+again worse than them, till they had lost all notion of what God was
+like.&nbsp; For from the very first all heathens have had some notion
+of what God is like, and have had a notion also, which none but God
+could have given them, that men ought to be like God.&nbsp; God taught,
+or if I may so speak, tried to teach, the heathen, from the very first.&nbsp;
+If God had not taught them, they would not have been to blame for knowing
+nothing of God.&nbsp; For as Job says, &lsquo;Can man by searching find
+out God?&rsquo;&nbsp; Surely not; God must teach us about Himself.&nbsp;
+Never forget that man cannot find God; God must show Himself to man
+of His own free grace and will.&nbsp; God must reveal and unveil Himself
+to us, or we shall never even fancy that there is a God.&nbsp; And God
+did so to the heathen.&nbsp; Even before the Flood, God&rsquo;s Spirit
+strove with man; and after the Flood we read how the Lord, Jesus Christ
+the Son of God, revealed Himself in many different ways to heathens.&nbsp;
+To Pharaoh, king of Egypt, in Abraham&rsquo;s times; and again to Abimelech,
+king of Gerar; and again to Pharaoh and his servants, in Joseph&rsquo;s
+time; and to Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, and to Cyrus, king of
+Persia; and no doubt to thousands more.&nbsp; Indeed, no man, heathen
+or Christian, ever thought a single true thought, or felt a single right
+feeling, about God or man, or man&rsquo;s duty to God and his neighbour,
+unless God revealed it to him (whether or not He also revealed <i>Himself</i>
+to the man and showed him <i>who</i> it was who was putting the right
+thought into his mind): for every right thought and feeling about God,
+and goodness, and duty, are the very voice of God Himself, the word
+of God whereof St. John speaks, and Moses and the prophets speak, speaking
+to the heart of sinful man, to enlighten and to teach him.&nbsp; And
+therefore, St. Paul says, the sinful heathen were without excuse, because,
+he says, &lsquo;that which may be known of God is manifest, that is
+plain, among them, for God hath showed it to them.&nbsp; For the invisible
+things of Him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being
+understood by the things which are made, even His eternal power and
+Godhead; so that they are without excuse.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;But these
+heathens,&rsquo; he says, &lsquo;did not like to retain God in their
+knowledge; and when they knew God, did not glorify Him as God, and changed
+the glory of the Incorruptible God into the likeness of corruptible
+man, and beasts and creeping things.&rsquo;&nbsp; And so they were alienated
+from the life of God; that is, they became strangers to God&rsquo;s
+life; they forgot what God&rsquo;s life and character was like: or if
+they even did awake a moment, and recollect dimly what God was like,
+they hated that thought.&nbsp; They hated to think that God was what
+He was, and shut their eyes, and stopped their ears as fast as possible.</p>
+<p>And what happened to them in the meantime?&nbsp; What was the fruit
+of their wilfully forgetting what God&rsquo;s life was?&nbsp; St. Paul
+tells us that they fell into the most horrible sins&mdash;sins too dreadful
+and shameful to be spoken of; and that their common life, even when
+they did not run into such fearful evils, was profligate, fierce, and
+miserable.&nbsp; And yet St. Paul tells us all the while they knew the
+judgment of God, that those who do such things are worthy of death.</p>
+<p>Now we know that St. Paul speaks truth, from the writings of heathens;
+for God raised up from time to time, even among the heathen Greeks and
+Romans, witnesses for Himself, to testify of Him and of His life, and
+to testify against the sins of the world, such men as Socrates and Plato
+among the Greeks, whose writings St. Paul knew thoroughly, and whom,
+I have no doubt, he had in his mind when he wrote his first chapter
+of Romans, and told the heathen that they were without excuse.&nbsp;
+And among the Romans, also, He raised up, in the same way, witnesses
+for Himself, such as Juvenal and Persius, and others, whom scholars
+know well.&nbsp; And to these men, heathens though they were, God certainly
+did teach a great deal about Himself, and gave them courage to rebuke
+the sins of kings and rich men, even at the danger of their lives; and
+to some of them he gave courage even to suffer martyrdom for the message
+which God had given them, and which their neighbours hated to hear.&nbsp;
+And this was the message which God sent by them to the heathen: that
+God was good and righteous, and that therefore His everlasting wrath
+must be awaiting sinners.&nbsp; They rebuked their heathen neighbours
+for those very same horrible crimes which St. Paul mentions; and then
+they said, as St. Paul does, &lsquo;How you make your own sins worse
+by blasphemies against God!&nbsp; You sin yourselves, and then, to excuse
+yourselves, you invent fables and lies about God, and pretend that God
+is as wicked as you are, in order to drug your own consciences, by making
+God the pattern of your own wickedness.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>These men saw that man ought to be like God; and they saw that God
+was righteous and good; and they saw, therefore, that unrighteousness
+and sin must end in ruin and everlasting misery.&nbsp; So much God had
+taught them, but not much more; but to St. Paul he had taught more.&nbsp;
+Those wise and righteous heathen could show their sinful neighbours
+that sin was death, and that God was righteous.&nbsp; But they could
+not tell them how to rise out of the death of sin, into God&rsquo;s
+life of righteousness.&nbsp; They could preach the terrors of the Law,
+but they did not know the good news of the Gospel, and therefore they
+did not succeed; they did not convert their neighbours to God.&nbsp;
+Then came St. Paul and preached to the very same people, and he did
+convert them to God; for he had good news for them, of things which
+prophets and kings had desired to see, and had not seen them, and to
+hear, and had not heard them.</p>
+<p>For God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spoke to the fathers
+by the prophets, at last spoke to all men by a Son, His only-begotten
+Son, the exact likeness of His Father, the brightness of His glory,
+and the express image of His person.&nbsp; He sent Him to be a man:
+very man of the substance of His mother, the Blessed Virgin Mary, at
+the same time that He was Very God, of the substance of His Father,
+begotten before all worlds.</p>
+<p>And so God, and the life of God, was manifested in the flesh and
+reasonable soul of a man; and from that time there is no doubt what
+the life of God is; for the life of God is the life of Jesus Christ.&nbsp;
+There is no doubt now what God is like, for God is like Jesus Christ.&nbsp;
+No one can now say, &lsquo;I cannot see God, how then can you expect
+me to be like God?&rsquo; for He who has seen Jesus Christ, as His character
+stands in the Gospels, has seen God the Father.&nbsp; No one can say
+now, &lsquo;How can a man be like God, and live a life like God&rsquo;s
+life?&rsquo; for if any one of you say that, I can answer him: &lsquo;A
+man can be like God; you can be like God; for there was once a man on
+earth, Jesus, the son of the Blessed Virgin, who was perfectly like
+God.&rsquo;&nbsp; And if you answer, &lsquo;But He was like God, because
+He was God,&rsquo; I can say, &lsquo;And that is the very reason why
+you can be like God also.&rsquo;&nbsp; If Jesus Christ had been only
+a man, you could no more become like Him than you can become clever
+because another man is clever, or strong because another man is strong:
+but because He was God The Son of God, He can give you, to make you
+like God, the same Holy Spirit which made Him like God; for that Holy
+Spirit proceeds from Him, the Son, as well as from the Father, and the
+Father has committed all power to the Son; and therefore that same Man
+Christ Jesus has power to change your heart, and renew it, and shape
+it to be like Him, and like His Father, by the power of His Spirit,
+that you may be like God as He was like God, and live the life of God
+which He lived; so that the Lord Jesus Christ, because He was a man
+like God, showed that all men can become like God; and because He was
+God, Very God of Very God, He is able to make all who come to Him men
+like Himself, men like God, and raise them up body and soul to the everlasting
+life of God, that He may be the firstborn among many brethren.</p>
+<p>Now what is this everlasting life of God, which the Lord Jesus Christ
+lived perfectly, and which He can and will make every one of us live,
+in proportion as we give up our hearts and wills to Him, and ask Him
+to take charge of us, and shape us, and teach us?&nbsp; When we read
+that blessed story of Him who was born in a stable, and laid in a manger,
+who went about doing good, because God was with Him, who condescended
+of His own freewill to be mocked, and scourged, and spit upon, and crucified,
+that He might take away the sins of the whole world, who prayed for
+His murderers, and blest those who cursed Him&mdash;what sort of life
+does this life of God, which He lived, seem to us?&nbsp; Is it not a
+life of love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, patience,
+meekness?&nbsp; Surely it is; then that is the likeness of God.&nbsp;
+God is love.&nbsp; And the Lord Jesus&rsquo; life was a life of love&mdash;utter,
+perfect, untiring love.&nbsp; He did His Father&rsquo;s will perfectly,
+because He loved men perfectly, and to the death.&nbsp; He died for
+those who hated Him, and so He showed forth to man the name and glory
+of God; for God is love.&nbsp; The name of the Father, and of the Son,
+and of the Holy Ghost is love; for love is justice and righteousness,
+as it is written, &lsquo;Love worketh no ill to his neighbour: therefore
+love is the fulfilling of the law.&rsquo;&nbsp; And God is perfect love,
+because He is perfect righteousness; and perfect righteousness, because
+He is perfect love; for His love and His justice are not two different
+things, two different parts of God, as some say, who fancy that God&rsquo;s
+justice had to be satisfied in one way, and His love in another, and
+talk of God as if His justice fought against His love, and desired the
+death of a sinner, and then His love fought against His justice, and
+desired to save a sinner.&nbsp; No wonder that those who hold such doctrines
+go further still, and talk as if God the Father desired to destroy mankind,
+and would have done it if God the Son had not interposed, and suffered
+Himself instead; till they can fancy that they are Christians, and know
+God, while they use the hideous words of a certain hymn, which speaks
+of</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&lsquo;The streaming drops of Jesu&rsquo;s blood<br />Which calmed
+the Father&rsquo;s frowning face.&rsquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>May God deliver and preserve us and our children from all such blasphemous
+fables, which, like the fables of the old heathen, change the glory
+of the Incorruptible God into the likeness of a corruptible man, which
+deny the true faith, that God has neither parts nor passions, by talking
+of His love and His justice as two different things; which confound
+His persons by saying that the Son alone does what the Father and the
+Holy Spirit do also, while they divide His substance by making the will
+of the Son different from the will of the Father, and deny that such
+as the Father is, such is the Son, and such is the Holy Ghost, all three
+one perfect Love, and one perfect Justice, because they are all three
+one God, and God is love, and love is righteousness.</p>
+<p>Believe me, my friends, this is no mere question of words, which
+only has to do with scholars in their libraries; it is a question, the
+question of life and death for you, and me, and every living soul in
+this church,&mdash;Do we know what the life of God is? are we living
+it? or are we alienated from it, careless about it, disliking it?</p>
+<p>For, as I said at the beginning of my sermon, we are all ready enough
+to turn heathens again; and if we grow to forget or dislike the life
+of God, we shall be heathen at heart.&nbsp; We may talk about Him with
+our lips, we may quarrel and curse each other about religious differences;
+but let us make as great a profession as we may, if we do not love the
+life of God we shall be heathen at heart, and we shall, sooner or later,
+fall into sin.&nbsp; The heathens fell into sin just in proportion as
+their hearts were turned away from the life of God, and so shall we.&nbsp;
+And how shall we know whether our hearts are turned away, or whether
+they are right with God?&nbsp; Thus: What are the fruits of God&rsquo;s
+Spirit? what sort of life does the Spirit of God make man live?&nbsp;
+For the Spirit of God is God, and therefore the life of God is the life
+which God&rsquo;s Spirit makes men live; and what is that? a life of
+love and righteousness.</p>
+<p>The old heathens did not like such a life, therefore they did not
+like to retain God in their knowledge.&nbsp; They knew that man ought
+to be like God: and St. Paul says, they ought to have known what God
+was like; that He was Love; for St. Paul told them He left not Himself
+without witness, in that He sent them rain and fruitful seasons, filling
+their hearts with food and gladness.&nbsp; That was, in St. Paul&rsquo;s
+eyes, God&rsquo;s plainest witness of Himself&mdash;the sign that God
+was Love, making His sun shine on the just and on the unjust, and good
+to the unthankful and the evil&mdash;in one word, perfect, because He
+is perfect Love.&nbsp; But they preferred to be selfish, covetous, envious,
+revengeful, delighting to indulge themselves in filthy pleasures, to
+oppress and defraud each other.&nbsp; Do you?</p>
+<p>For you can, I can, every baptized man can take his choice between
+the selfish life of the heathens and the loving life of God: we may
+either keep to the old pattern of man, which is corrupt according to
+the deceitful lusts; or we may put on the new pattern of man, which
+is after God&rsquo;s likeness, and founded upon righteousness and truthful
+holiness.</p>
+<p>Every baptized man may choose.&nbsp; For he is not only bound to
+live the life of God: every man, as the old heathen philosophers knew,
+is bound to live it: but more.&nbsp; The baptized man <i>can</i> live
+it: that is the good news of his baptism.&nbsp; <i>You can</i> live
+the life of God, for you know what the life of God is&mdash;it is the
+life of Jesus Christ.&nbsp; <i>You can</i> live the life of God, for
+the Spirit of God is with you, to cleanse your soul and life, day by
+day, till they are like the soul and life of Christ.</p>
+<p>Then you will be, as the apostle says, &lsquo;a partaker of a divine
+nature.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then&mdash;and it is an awful thing to say&mdash;a
+thing past hope, past belief, but I must say it&mdash;for it is in the
+Bible, it is the word of the Blessed Lord Himself, and of His beloved
+apostle, St. John: &lsquo;If a man love Me, he will keep my commandments,
+and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our abode
+with him.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;And this is His commandment,&rsquo; says
+St. John, &lsquo;That we should love one another.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;God
+is Love, and he who dwelleth in Love dwelleth in God, and God in him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>God is Love.&nbsp; As I told you just now, the heathens of old might
+have known that, if they had chosen to open their eyes and see.&nbsp;
+But they would not see.&nbsp; They were dark, cruel, and unloving, and
+therefore they fancied that God was dark, cruel, and unloving also.&nbsp;
+They did not love Love, and therefore they did not love God, for God
+is Love.&nbsp; And therefore they did not love loving: they did not
+enjoy loving; and so they lost the Spirit of God, which is the Spirit
+of Love.&nbsp; And therefore they did not love each other, but lived
+in hatred and suspicion, and selfishness, and darkness.&nbsp; They were
+but heathen.&nbsp; But if even they ought to have known that God was
+Love, how much more we?&nbsp; For we know of a deed of God&rsquo;s love,
+such as those poor heathen never dreamed of.&nbsp; God so loved the
+world, that He gave His only-begotten Son to die for it.&nbsp; Then
+God showed what His eternal life was&mdash;a life of love: then God
+showed what our eternal life is&mdash;to know Him who is Love, and Jesus
+Christ, whom He sent to show forth His love: then God showed that it
+is the duty and in the power of every man to live the life of God, the
+life of Love; for He sent forth into the world His Spirit, the Spirit
+of Love, to fill with love the heart of every man and woman who sees
+that Love is the image of God, and longs to be loving, and therefore
+longs to be like God; as it is written, &lsquo;Blessed are those who
+hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled:&rsquo;
+for righteousness is keeping Christ&rsquo;s commandment, and Christ&rsquo;s
+commandment is, that we love one another.&nbsp; And to those who long
+to do that, God&rsquo;s Spirit will come to fill them with love; and
+where the Spirit of God is, there is also the Father, and there is also
+the Son; for God&rsquo;s substance cannot be divided, as the Athanasian
+creed tells us (and blessed and cheering words they are); and he who
+hath the Holy Spirit of Love with him hath both the Father and the Son;
+as it is written: &lsquo;If a man love Me, my Father will love him,
+and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And then, if we have God abiding with us, and filling us with His
+Eternal Life, what more do we need for life, or death, or eternity,
+or eternities of eternities?&nbsp; For we shall live in and with and
+by God, who can never die or change, an everlasting life of love, whereof
+St. Paul says, that though prophecies shall fail, and tongues shall
+cease, and knowledge shall vanish away, because all that we know now
+is but in part, and all that we see now is through a glass darkly, yet
+Love shall never fail, but abide for ever and ever.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XVI.&nbsp; GOD&rsquo;S OFFSPRING</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Galatians iv. 7.&nbsp; Wherefore thou art no more a servant, but
+a son; and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ.</p>
+<p>I say, writes St. Paul, in the epistle which you heard read just
+now, &lsquo;that the heir, as long as he is a child, differs nothing
+from a servant, though he be lord of all; but is under tutors and governors,
+until the time appointed by his father.&nbsp; Even so,&rsquo; he says,
+we, &lsquo;when we were children, were in bondage under the elements
+of the world: but when the fulness of time was come, God sent forth
+His Son made of a woman, made under a law, to redeem them that were
+under a law, that we might receive the adoption of sons.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When we were children.&nbsp; He is not speaking of the Jews only;
+for these Galatians to whom he was writing were not Jews at all, any
+more than we are.&nbsp; He was speaking to men simply as men.&nbsp;
+He was speaking to the Galatians as we have a right to speak to all
+men.</p>
+<p>Nor does he mean merely when we were children in age.&nbsp; The Greek
+word which he uses, means infants, people not come to years of discretion.&nbsp;
+Indeed, the word which he uses means very often a simpleton, an ignorant
+or foolish person; one who does not know who and what he is, what is
+his duty, or how to do it.</p>
+<p>Now this, he says, was the state of men before Christ came; this
+is the state of all men by nature still; the state of all poor heathens,
+whether in England or in foreign countries.</p>
+<p>They are children&mdash;that is, ignorant and unable to take care
+of themselves; because they do not know what they are.&nbsp; St. Paul
+tells us what they are.&nbsp; That they are all God&rsquo;s offspring,
+though they know it not.&nbsp; He likens them to young children, who,
+though they are their father&rsquo;s heirs, have no more liberty than
+slaves have; but are kept under tutors and masters, till they have arrived
+at years of discretion, and are fit to take their places as their father&rsquo;s
+<i>sons</i>, and to go out into the world, and have the management of
+their own affairs, and a share in their father&rsquo;s property, which
+they may use for themselves, instead of being merely fed and clothed
+by, and kept in subjection to him, whether they will or not.&nbsp; This
+is what he means by receiving the adoption of sons.&nbsp; He does not
+mean that we are not God&rsquo;s children till we find out that we are
+God&rsquo;s children.&nbsp; That is what some people say; but that is
+the very exact contrary to what St. Paul used to say.&nbsp; He told
+the heathen Athenians that they were God&rsquo;s children.&nbsp; He
+put them in mind that one of their own heathen poets had told them so,
+and had said, &lsquo;We are also God&rsquo;s offspring.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And so in this chapter he says, You were God&rsquo;s children all along,
+though you did not know it.&nbsp; You were God&rsquo;s heirs all along,
+although you differed nothing from slaves; for as long as you were in
+your heathen ignorance and foolishness, God had to treat you as His
+slaves, not as His children; and so you were in bondage under the elements
+of the world, till the fulness of time was come.</p>
+<p>And, then, God sent His Son, born of a woman, born under a law, to
+redeem those who were under a law&mdash;that is, all mankind.&nbsp;
+The Jews were keeping, or pretending to keep, Moses&rsquo; law, and
+trying to please God by that.&nbsp; The heathens were keeping all manner
+of old superstitious laws and customs about religion which their forefathers
+had handed down to them.&nbsp; But heathens, and indeed Jews too, at
+that time, all agreed in one thing.&nbsp; These laws and customs of
+theirs about religion all went upon the notion of their being God&rsquo;s
+slaves, and not his children.&nbsp; They thought that God did not love
+them; that they must buy His favours.&nbsp; They thought religion meant
+a plan for making God love them.</p>
+<p>Then appeared the love of God in Jesus Christ.&nbsp; As at this very
+Christmas time, the Son of God, Jesus Christ the Lord, in whose likeness
+man was made at the beginning, was born into the world, to redeem us
+and all mankind.&nbsp; He told them of their Heavenly Father; He preached
+to them the good news of the kingdom of God; that God had not forgotten
+them, did not hate them, would freely forgive them all that was past;
+and why?&nbsp; Because He was their Father, and loved them, and loved
+them so that He spared not His only begotten Son, but freely gave Him
+for them.&nbsp; And now God looks at us human beings, not as we are
+in ourselves, sinful and corrupt, but he looks at us in the light of
+Jesus Christ, who has taken our nature upon Him, and redeemed it, and
+raised it up again, so that God can look on it now without disgust,
+and henceforth no one need be ashamed of being a man; for to be a man
+is to be in the likeness of God.&nbsp; Man was created in the image
+and likeness of God, and who is the image and likeness of God but Jesus
+Christ?&nbsp; Therefore man was created at first in Jesus Christ, and
+now, as St. Paul says, he is created anew in Jesus Christ; and now to
+be a man is to partake of the same flesh and blood which the Lord Jesus
+Christ wore for us, when He was made very man of the substance of his
+mother, and that without spot of sin, to show that man need not be sinful,
+that man was meant by God to be holy and pure from sin, and that by
+the Holy Spirit of Jesus Christ we, every one of us, can become pure
+from sin.&nbsp; This is the blessedness of Christmas-day.&nbsp; That
+one man, at least, has been born into the world spotless and free from
+sin, that He might be the firstborn of many brethren.&nbsp; This is
+the good news of Christmas-day.&nbsp; That now, in Christ&rsquo;s light,
+and for Christ&rsquo;s sake, our Father looks on us as His sons, and
+not His slaves.</p>
+<p>Therefore is every child who comes into the world baptized freely
+into the name of God.&nbsp; Baptism is a sign and warrant that God loves
+that child; that God looks on it as His child, not for itself or its
+own sake, but because it belongs to Jesus Christ, who, by becoming a
+man, redeemed all mankind, and made them His property and His brothers.&nbsp;
+Therefore every child, when it is brought to be baptized, promises,
+by its godfathers and godmothers, repentance and faith, when it comes
+to years of understanding.&nbsp; It is not God&rsquo;s slave, as the
+beasts are.&nbsp; It is God&rsquo;s child.&nbsp; But God does not wish
+it to remain merely His child, under tutors and governors, forced to
+do what is right outwardly, and whether it likes or not.&nbsp; God wishes
+each of us to become His son, His grown-up and reasonable son.&nbsp;
+To know who we are;&mdash;to work in His kingdom for Him;&mdash;to guide
+and manage our own wills, and hearts, and lives in obedience to Him;&mdash;to
+claim and take our share as men of God of the inheritance which He has
+given us.&nbsp; And that we can only do by faith in Jesus Christ.&nbsp;
+We must trust in Him, our Lord, our King, our Saviour, our Pattern.&nbsp;
+We must confess that we are nothing in ourselves, that we owe all to
+Him.&nbsp; We must follow in his footsteps, giving up our wills to God&rsquo;s
+will, doing not our own works, but the good works which God has prepared
+for us to walk in; and then we shall be truly confirmed; not mere children
+of God, under tutors, governors, schoolmasters and lawgivers, but free,
+reasonable, willing, hearty Christians, perfect men of God, the sons
+of God without rebuke.</p>
+<p>Oh, my friends, will you claim your share in the Spirit of God, whom
+the Lord bought for us with His precious blood, that Spirit who was
+given you at your baptism, which may be daily renewed in you, if you
+pray for it; who will strengthen and lift you up to lead lives worthy
+of your high calling?&nbsp; Or will you, like Esau of old, despise your
+birthright, and neglect to pray that God&rsquo;s Spirit may be renewed
+in you, and so lose more and more day by day the thought that God is
+your Father, and the love of holy and godlike things?&nbsp; Alas! take
+care that, like Esau, you hereafter find no room for repentance, though
+you seek it carefully with tears!&nbsp; It is a fearful thing to despise
+the mercies of the living God; and when you are called to be His sons,
+to fall back under the terrors of His law, in slavish fears and a guilty
+conscience, and remorse which cannot repent.</p>
+<p>And do not give way to false humility, says St. Paul.&nbsp; Do not
+say, &lsquo;This is too high an honour for us to claim.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Do not say, &lsquo;It seems too conceited and assuming for us miserable
+sinners to call ourselves sons of God.&nbsp; We shall please God better,
+and show ourselves more reverent to Him, by calling ourselves His slaves,
+and crouching and trembling before Him, as if we expected Him to strike
+us dead, and making all sorts of painful and tiresome religious observances,
+and vain repetitions of prayers, to win His favour;&rsquo; or by saying,
+&lsquo;We dare not call ourselves God&rsquo;s children yet; we are not
+spiritual enough; but when we have gone through all the necessary changes
+of heart, and frames, and feeling, and have been convinced of sin, and
+converted, and received the earnest, God&rsquo;s Spirit, by which we
+cry, Abba, Father! <i>then</i> we shall have a right to call ourselves
+God&rsquo;s children.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Not so, says St. Paul, all through this very Epistle to the Galatians.&nbsp;
+That is not being reverent to God.&nbsp; It is insulting Him.&nbsp;
+For it is despising the honour which He has given you, and trying to
+get another honour of your own invention, by observances, and frames,
+and feelings of your own.&nbsp; Do not say, &lsquo;When we have received
+the earnest of God&rsquo;s Spirit, by which we can cry, Abba, Father!
+<i>then</i> we shall become God&rsquo;s children;&rsquo; for it is just
+because you <i>are</i> God&rsquo;s children already&mdash;just because
+you have been God&rsquo;s children all along, that God has taught you
+to call Him Father.&nbsp; The Lord Jesus Christ told men that God was
+their Father.&nbsp; Not merely to the Apostles, but to poor, ignorant,
+sinful wretches, publicans and harlots, He spoke of their Father in
+heaven, who, because He is a perfect Father, sends His sun to shine
+on the evil and the good, and His rain to fall on the just and on the
+unjust.&nbsp; The Lord Jesus Christ taught men&mdash;all men, not merely
+saints and Apostles, but all men, when they prayed&mdash;to begin, &lsquo;Our
+Father.&rsquo;&nbsp; He told them that that was the manner in which
+they were to pray, and therefore no other way of praying can we expect
+God to hear.&nbsp; No slavish, terrified, superstitious coaxing and
+flattering will help you with God.&nbsp; He has told you to call Him
+your Father; and if you speak to Him in any other way, you insult Him,
+and trample under foot the riches of His grace.</p>
+<p>This is the good news which the Bible preaches.&nbsp; This is the
+witness of God&rsquo;s Spirit, proclaiming that we are the sons of God;
+and, says St. Paul in another place, &lsquo;our spirit witnesses&rsquo;
+to that glorious news as well.&nbsp; We feel, we know&mdash;why, we
+cannot tell, but we feel and know that we are the sons of God.&nbsp;
+When we are most calm, most humble, most free from ill-temper and self-conceit,
+most busy about our rightful work, then the feeling comes over us&mdash;I
+have a Father in heaven.&nbsp; And that feeling gives us a strength,
+a peace, a sure trust and hope, which no other thought can give.&nbsp;
+Yes, we are ready to say, I may be miserable and unfortunate, but the
+Great God of heaven and earth is my Father; and what can happen to me?&nbsp;
+I may be borne down with the remembrance of my great sins; I may find
+it almost too hard to fight against all my bad habits; but the Great
+God who made heaven and earth is my Father, and I am His son.&nbsp;
+He will forgive me for the past; He will help me to conquer for the
+future.&nbsp; If I do but remember that I am God&rsquo;s son, and claim
+my Father&rsquo;s promises, neither the world, nor the devil, nor my
+own sinful flesh, can ever prevail against me.</p>
+<p>This thought, and the peace which it brings, St. Paul tells us is
+none of our own; we did not put it into our own hearts; from God it
+comes, that blessed thought, that He is our Father.&nbsp; We could never
+have found it out for ourselves.&nbsp; It is the Spirit of the Son of
+God, the Spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ, which gives us courage to
+say, &lsquo;Our Father which art in heaven,&rsquo; which makes us feel
+that those words are true, and must be true, and are worth all other
+words in the world put together&mdash;that God is our Father, and we
+his sons.&nbsp; Oh, my friends, believe earnestly this blessed news!
+the news of Christmas-day, that you are not God&rsquo;s slaves, but
+his sons, heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ;&mdash;joint-heirs
+with Christ!&nbsp; In what?&nbsp; Who can tell?&nbsp; But what an inheritance
+of glory and bliss that must be, which the Lord Jesus Christ Himself
+is to inherit with us&mdash;an inheritance such as eye hath not seen,
+and incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not away, preserved in
+heaven for us; an inheritance of all that is wise, loving, noble, holy,
+peaceful&mdash;all that can make us happy, all that can make us like
+God Himself.&nbsp; Oh, what can we expect, if we neglect so great salvation?&nbsp;
+What can we expect, if when the Great God of heaven and earth tells
+us that we are His children, we turn away and fall down, become like
+the brutes, and the savages, or worse, like the evil spirits who rebel
+against God, instead of growing up to become the sons of God, perfect
+even as our Father in heaven is perfect?&nbsp; May He keep us all from
+that great sin!&nbsp; May He awaken each and every one of you to know
+the glory and honour which Jesus Christ brought for you when He was
+born at Bethlehem&mdash;the glory and honour which was proclaimed to
+belong to you when you were christened at that font!&nbsp; May He awaken
+you to know that you are the sons of God, and to look up to Him with
+loving, trustful, obedient souls, saying from your hearts, morning and
+night &lsquo;Our Father which art in heaven,&rsquo; and feeling that
+those words give you daily strength to conquer your sins, and feel assurance
+of hope that your Heavenly Father will help and prosper you, His family,
+every time you struggle to obey His commandments, and follow the example
+of His perfect and spotless Son, Jesus Christ the Lord!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XVII.&nbsp; DEATH IN LIFE</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Romans viii. 12, 13.&nbsp; Brethren, we are debtors, not to the flesh,
+to live after the flesh.&nbsp; For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall
+die: but if ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body,
+ye shall live.</p>
+<p>Does it seem strange to you that St. Paul should warn you, that you
+are not debtors to your own flesh?&nbsp; It is not strange, when you
+come to understand him; certainly not unnecessary: for as in his time,
+so now, most people do live as if they were debtors to their own flesh,
+as if their great duty, their one duty in life, was to please their
+own bodies, and brains, and tempers, and fancies, and feelings.&nbsp;
+Poor people have not much time to indulge their brains; and no time
+at all, happily for them, to indulge their fancies and feelings, as
+rich people do when they grow idle, and dainty, and luxurious.&nbsp;
+But still, too many of them live as if they were debtors to their own
+flesh; as if their own bodies and their own tempers were the masters
+of them, and ought to be their masters.&nbsp; Young men, for instance,
+how often they do things in secret of which it is a shame even to speak,
+just because it is pleasant.&nbsp; Young women, how often do they sell
+themselves and their own modesty, just for the pleasure of being flattered
+and courted, and of getting a few fine clothes.&nbsp; How often do men,
+just for the pleasure of drink, besot their souls and bodies, madden
+their tempers, neglect their families, make themselves every Saturday
+night, and often half the week, too, lower than the beasts which perish.&nbsp;
+And then, when a clergyman complains of them, they think him unreasonable;
+and by so thinking, show that he is right, and St. Paul right: for if
+I say to you, My dear young people (and I do say it), if you give way
+to filthy living and filthy talking, and to drunkenness, and to vanity
+about fine clothes, you will surely die&mdash;do you not say in your
+hearts, &lsquo;How unreasonable: how hard on us!&nbsp; If we can enjoy
+ourselves a little, why should we not?&nbsp; It is our right, and do
+it we will; and if it is wrong, it ought not to be wrong.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Why, what is that but saying, that you ought to do just what your body
+likes: that you are debtors to your flesh; and that your flesh, and
+not God&rsquo;s law, is your master.&nbsp; So again, when people grow
+older, perhaps they are more prudent about bad living, and more careful
+of their money: but still they live after the flesh.&nbsp; One man sets
+his heart on making money, and cares for nothing but that; breaks God&rsquo;s
+law for that, as if that was the thing to which he was a debtor, bound
+by some law which he could not avoid to scrape and scrape money together
+for ever.&nbsp; Another (and how often we see that) is a slave to his
+own pride and temper, which are just as much bred in his flesh: if he
+has been injured by any one, if he has taken a dislike against any one,
+he cannot forget and forgive: the man may be upright and kindly on many
+other points; prudent, too, and sober, and thoroughly master of himself
+on most matters; and yet you will find that when he gets on that one
+point, he is not master of himself; for his flesh is master of him:
+he may be a strong-minded, shrewd man upon most matters but just that
+one point: some old quarrel, or grudge, or suspicion, is, as we say,
+his weak point: and if you touch on that, the man&rsquo;s eye will kindle,
+and his face redden, and his lip tremble, and he will show that he is
+not master of himself: but that he is over-mastered by his fleshly passion,
+by the suspiciousness, or revengefulness, or touchiness, which every
+dumb animal has as well as he, which is not part of his man&rsquo;s
+nature, not part of God&rsquo;s image in him, but which is like the
+beasts which perish.</p>
+<p>Now, my friends, suppose I said to you, &lsquo;If you give way to
+such tempers; if you give way to pride, suspicion, sullen spite, settled
+dislike of any human being, you will surely die;&rsquo; should you not,
+some of you, be inclined to think me very unreasonable, and to say in
+your hearts, &lsquo;Have I not a right to be angry?&nbsp; Have I not
+a right to give a man as good as he brings?&rsquo; so confessing that
+I am right, after all, and that some of you think that you are debtors
+to your flesh, and its tempers, and do not see that you are meant to
+be masters, and not slaves, of your tempers and feelings.</p>
+<p>Again.&nbsp; Among poor women, as well as among rich ones, as they
+grow older, how much gossiping, tale-bearing, slandering, there is,
+and that too among people who call themselves religious.&nbsp; Yes,
+I say slandering; I put that in too; for I am certain that where the
+first two grow, the third is not far off.&nbsp; If gossiping is the
+root, tale-bearing and harsh judgment is the stem, and plain lying and
+slandering, and bearing false witness against one&rsquo;s neighbour,
+is the fruit.</p>
+<p>Now I say, because St. Paul says it, &lsquo;that those who do such
+things shall surely die.&rsquo;&nbsp; And do not some of you think me
+unreasonable in that, and say in your heart, &lsquo;What! are we to
+be tongue-tied?&nbsp; Shall we not speak our minds?&rsquo;&nbsp; Be
+it so, my good women, only remember this: that as long as you say that,
+you confess that you are not masters of your tongues, but your tongues
+are masters of you, and that you freely confess you owe service to your
+tongue, and not to God.&nbsp; Do not therefore complain of me for saying
+the very same thing, namely, that you think you are debtors to your
+flesh&mdash;to the tongues in your mouths, and must needs do what those
+same little unruly members choose, of which St James has said, &lsquo;The
+tongue is a fire, a world of iniquity, and it sets on fire the whole
+course of nature, and is set on fire of hell.&rsquo;&nbsp; And again:
+&lsquo;If any person among you seem to be religious, and bridles not
+his tongue, but deceives himself, that person&rsquo;s religion is vain.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Again:&mdash;and, my good women, you must not think me hard on you,
+for you know in your hearts that I am not hard on you; but I must speak
+a word on a sin which I am afraid is growing in this parish, and in
+too many parishes in England; and that is deceiving kind and charitable
+persons, in order to get more help from them.&nbsp; God knows the temptation
+must be sore to poor people at times.&nbsp; And yet you will surely
+find in the long run, that &lsquo;honesty is the best policy.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Deceit is always a losing game.&nbsp; A lie is sure to be found out;
+as the Lord Jesus Himself says, &lsquo;There is nothing hid which shall
+not be made manifest;&rsquo; and what we do in secret, is sure, unless
+we repent and amend it, to be proclaimed on the housetop: and many a
+poor soul, in her haste and greediness to get much, ends by getting
+nothing at all.&nbsp; And if it were not so;&mdash;if you were able
+to deceive any human being out of the riches of the world: yet know,
+that a man&rsquo;s life does <i>not</i> consist in the abundance of
+the things which he possesses.&nbsp; And know that if you will not believe
+that,&mdash;if you will fancy that your business is to get all you can
+for your mortal bodies, by fair means or foul,&mdash;if you will fancy
+that you are thus debtors to your own flesh, you will surely die: but
+if you, through the Spirit, do mortify the deeds of the body, you shall
+live.</p>
+<p>And by this time some of you are asking, &lsquo;Live?&nbsp; Die?&nbsp;
+What does all this mean?&nbsp; When we die we shall die, good or bad;
+and in the meantime we shall live till we die.&nbsp; And you do not
+mean to tell us that we shall shorten our lives by our own tempers,
+or our tale-bearing, though we might, perhaps, by drunkenness?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>My friends, if such a question rises in your mind, be sure that it,
+too, is a hint that you think yourself a debtor to the flesh&mdash;to
+live according to the flesh.&nbsp; For tell me, tell yourselves fairly,
+is your flesh, your body, the part of yourself which you can see and
+handle, <i>You</i>?&mdash;You know that it is not.&nbsp; When a neighbour&rsquo;s
+body dies, you say, perhaps, &lsquo;<i>He</i> is dead,&rsquo; but you
+say it carelessly; and when one whom you know well, and love, dies,&mdash;when
+a parent, a wife, a child, dies, you feel very differently about them,
+even if you do not speak differently.&nbsp; You feel and know that he,
+the person whom you loved and understood, and felt with, and felt for,
+here on earth, is not dead at all; you feel (and in proportion as the
+friend you have lost was loving, and good, and full of feeling for you,
+you feel it all the more strongly) that your friend, or your child,
+or the wife of your bosom, is alive still&mdash;where you know not,
+but you feel they are alive; that they are very near you;&mdash;that
+they are thinking of you, watching you, caring for you,&mdash;perhaps
+grieving over you when you go wrong&mdash;perhaps rejoicing over you
+when you go right,&mdash;perhaps helping you, though you cannot see
+them, in some wonderful way.&nbsp; You know that only their mortal flesh
+is dead.&nbsp; That their mortal flesh was all you put into the grave;
+but that <i>they</i> themselves, their souls and spirits, which were
+their very and real selves, are alive for evermore; and you trust and
+hope to meet them when you die;&mdash;ay, to meet them body and soul
+too, at the last day, the very same persons whom you knew here on earth,
+though the flesh which they wore here in this life has crumbled into
+dust years and ages before.</p>
+<p>Is not this true?&nbsp; Is not this a blessed life-giving thought&mdash;I
+had almost said the most blessed and life-giving thought man can have&mdash;that
+those whom we have loved and lost are not dead, but only gone before;
+that they live still to God and with God; that only their flesh has
+perished, and they themselves are alive for evermore?</p>
+<p>Now believe me, my friends, as surely as a man&rsquo;s flesh can
+die and be buried, while he himself, his soul, lives for ever, just
+so a man&rsquo;s self, his soul, can die, while his flesh lives on upon
+earth.&nbsp; You do not think so, but the Bible thinks so.&nbsp; The
+Bible talks of men being <i>dead</i> in trespasses and sins, while their
+flesh and body is alive and walking this earth.&nbsp; It talks, too,
+of a worse state, of men twice dead; of men, who, after God has brought
+their souls to life, let those souls of theirs die down again within
+them, and rot away, as far as we can see, hopelessly and for ever.&nbsp;
+And what is it which kills a man&rsquo;s soul within him on this side
+the grave, and makes him dead while he has a name to live?&nbsp; <i>Sin</i>,
+evil-doing, the disease of the soul, the death of the soul, yea, the
+death of the man himself.&nbsp; And what is sin but living according
+to the flesh, and not according to the spirit?&nbsp; What is sin but
+living as the dumb animals do, as if we were debtors to our own flesh,
+to fulfil its lusts, and to please our own appetites, fancies, and tempers,
+instead of remembering that we are debtors to God, who made us, and
+blesses us all day long;&mdash;debtors to our Lord Jesus Christ, who
+bought us with His own blood, that we might please Him and obey Him;&mdash;debtors
+to God&rsquo;s Holy Spirit, who puts into our minds good desires;&mdash;debtors
+to our baptism vows, in which we were consecrated to God, that He, and
+not this flesh of ours, might be our Master for ever?</p>
+<p>This is sin; to give way to those selfish and evil tempers, against
+which I warned you in the beginning of my sermon, and which, if any
+man indulges in them, will surely and steadily, bit by bit, kill that
+man&rsquo;s soul within him, and leave the man dead in trespasses and
+sins, while his body walks this earth.</p>
+<p>My friends, do not fancy these are merely farfetched words out of
+a book, made to sound difficult and terrible in order to frighten you.&nbsp;
+God forbid!&nbsp; When Scripture says this, it speaks a plain and simple
+truth, and one which I know to be a truth from experience.&nbsp; I speak
+that which I know, and testify that which I have seen.&nbsp; I have
+seen (and what sadder or more fearful sight?) dead men and dying walk
+this earth in flesh and blood; men busy enough, shrewd enough upon some
+points, priding themselves, perhaps, upon their cleverness and knowledge
+of the world, of whom all one could say was, The man is dead; the man
+is lost, unless God brings him to life again by His quickening Spirit:
+for goodness is dead in him; the powers of his soul are dead in him;
+the hope of being a better man is dead in him; all that God wishes to
+see him be and do, is dead; God&rsquo;s likeness and glory in him is
+dead: he thinks himself wise, and he is a fool in God&rsquo;s sight;
+for he sees not God&rsquo;s law, which is the only wisdom: he thinks
+himself strong, but he is utterly weak and helpless; for he is the slave
+of his own tempers, the slave of his own foul lust, the slave of his
+own pride and vanity, the slave of his own covetousness.&nbsp; Oh, my
+friends, people are apt to be afraid of what they call seeing a ghost&mdash;that
+is, a spirit without a body: they fancy that it would be a very shocking
+thing to meet one; but as for me, I know a far more dreadful sight;
+and that is, a careless and a hardened sinner&mdash;a body without a
+spirit.&nbsp; Which is uglier and ghastlier&mdash;a spirit without a
+body, or a body without a spirit?&nbsp; And yet such one meets, I dare
+not think how often.</p>
+<p>What sadder sight, if you recollect that men need not be thus; that
+God hates seeing them thus; that they become thus, and die down in sin,
+in spite of God, with all heaven above, and God the Lord thereof, crying
+to them, Why wilt thou die?&nbsp; What sadder sight?&nbsp; How many
+have I seen, living, to all intents and purposes, as if they had no
+souls; as if there were no God, no Law of God, no Right, no Wrong; caring
+for nothing, perhaps, but drink and bad women; or caring for nothing
+but scraping together a little more money than their neighbours; or
+caring for nothing but dress, and vanity, and gossiping, and tale-bearing;
+and yet, when one came to know them, one saw that <i>that</i> was not
+what God intended them to be; that He had given them hearts which they
+had hardened, good feelings which they had crushed, sound brains which
+they had left idle, till one was ready to weep over them, as over something
+beautiful and noble ruined and lost; and looked on them as one would
+on a grand tree struck by lightning, decayed and dead, useless, and
+only fit to be burned, with just enough of its proper shape to show
+what a tree it ought to have been.&nbsp; And so it is with men and women:
+hardly a day passes but one sees some one of whom one says, with a sigh,
+&lsquo;What a worthy, loveable, useful person, that might have been!
+what a blessing to himself and all around him! and now, by following
+his fallen nature, and indulging it, he is neither worthy, nor loveable,
+nor useful; neither a blessing to himself nor to any human being: he
+might have been good for so much, and now he is good for nothing; for
+the spirit, the immortal soul which God gave him, is dead within him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>My friends, I would not say this, unless I could say more.&nbsp;
+I would not say sad words, if I could not follow them up by joyful and
+hopeful ones.&nbsp; It is written, &lsquo;If ye live after the flesh,
+ye shall die;&rsquo; but it is written also, &lsquo;If ye, through the
+Spirit, do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+It is promised&mdash;promised, my friends, &lsquo;Awake, thou that sleepest,
+and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Through the Spirit, through God&rsquo;s Spirit, every soul here can
+live, now and for ever.&nbsp; Through God&rsquo;s Spirit, Christ not
+only can, but will, give you light.&nbsp; And that Spirit is near you,
+with you.&nbsp; Your baptism is the blessed sign, the everlasting pledge,
+that God&rsquo;s Spirit is with you.&nbsp; Oh, believe that, and take
+heart.&nbsp; I will not say, you do not know how much good there is
+in you; for in us dwells no good thing, and every good thought and feeling
+comes only from the Spirit of God: but I will say boldly to every one
+of you, you do not know how much good there may be in you, if you will
+listen to those good thoughts of God&rsquo;s Spirit; you do not know
+how wise, how right, how strong, how happy, how useful, you may become;
+you do not know what a blessing each of you may become to yourselves,
+and to all around you.&nbsp; Only make up your mind to live by God&rsquo;s
+law; only make up your mind, in all things, small and great, to go God&rsquo;s
+way, and not your own.&nbsp; Only make up your mind to listen, not to
+your own flesh, temper, and brain, which say this and that is pleasant,
+but to listen to God&rsquo;s Spirit, which says this is right, and that
+is wrong: this is your duty, do it.&nbsp; Search out your own besetting
+sins; and if you cannot find them out for yourself, ask God to show
+you them; ask Him to give you truth in the inward parts, and make you
+to understand wisdom in the secret places of your heart.&nbsp; Pray
+God&rsquo;s Spirit to quicken your soul, and bring it to life, that
+it may see and love what is good, and see and hate what is wrong; and
+instead of being most hard on your neighbour&rsquo;s sin, to which you
+are not tempted, be most hard on your own sin, on the sin to which you
+are most tempted, whatsoever that may be.&nbsp; You have your besetting
+sin, doubt it not; every one has.&nbsp; I know that I have.&nbsp; I
+know that I have inclinations, tempers, longings, to which if I gave
+way, my soul would rot and die within me, and make me a curse to myself,
+and you, and every one I came near; and all I can do is to pray God&rsquo;s
+Spirit to help me to fight those besetting sins of mine, and crush them,
+and stamp them down, whenever they rise and try to master me, and make
+me live after the flesh.&nbsp; It is a hard fight; and may God forgive
+me, for I fight it ill enough: but it is my only hope for my soul&rsquo;s
+life, my only hope of remaining a man worth being called a man, or doing
+my duty at all by myself and you, and all mankind.&nbsp; And it is your
+only hope, too.&nbsp; Pray for God&rsquo;s Spirit, God&rsquo;s strength,
+God&rsquo;s life, to give your souls life, day by day, that you may
+fight against your sins, whatsoever they are, lest they kill your souls,
+long before disease and old age kill your bodies.&nbsp; Make up your
+minds to it.&nbsp; Make up your minds to mortify the deeds of the body;
+to say to your own bodies, tempers, longings, fancies, &lsquo;I will
+not go your way: you shall go God&rsquo;s way.&nbsp; I am not your debtor;
+I owe you nothing; I am God&rsquo;s debtor, and owe Him everything,
+and I will pay Him honestly with the service of my body, soul, and spirit.&nbsp;
+I will do my duty, and you, my flesh, must and shall do it also, whether
+it is pleasant at first, or not:&rsquo; and be sure it will be pleasant
+at last, if not at first.&nbsp; Keep God always before your eyes.&nbsp;
+Ask yourself in every action, &lsquo;What is right, what is my duty,
+what would God have me do?&rsquo;&nbsp; And so far from finding it unpleasant,
+you will find that you are saving yourself a thousand troubles, and
+sorrows, and petty anxieties which now torment you; you will find that
+in God&rsquo;s presence is life, the only life worth having, and that
+at His right hand are pleasures for evermore.&nbsp; Oh, be sure, my
+friends, that in real happiness you will not lose, but gain without
+end.&nbsp; If to have a clear conscience, and a quiet mind; if to be
+free from anxiety and discontent, free from fear and shame; if to be
+loved, respected, looked up to, by all whose good word is worth having,
+and to know that God approves of you, that all day long God is with
+you, and you with God, that His loving and mighty arms are under you,
+that He has promised to keep you in all your ways, to prosper all you
+do, and reward you for ever,&mdash;if this be not happiness, my friends,
+what is?</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XVIII.&nbsp; SHAME</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Romans x. 11.&nbsp; For the Scripture saith, Whosoever believeth
+on Him shall not be ashamed.</p>
+<p>My friends, what this text really means is one thing; what we may
+choose to think it means is another thing&mdash;perhaps a very different
+thing.&nbsp; I will try and show you what I believe it really means.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Whosoever believeth on Him shall not be ashamed.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+It seems as if St. Paul thought, that not being ashamed had to do with
+salvation, and being saved; ay, that they were almost the same thing:
+for he says just before, if thou doest so and so, thou shalt be saved;
+for with the heart man believeth unto righteousness, and with the mouth
+confession is made unto salvation; <i>for</i> the Scripture saith, &lsquo;Whosoever
+believeth on Him shall not be ashamed;&rsquo; as if being ashamed was
+the very thing from which we were to be saved.&nbsp; And certainly that
+wise and great man, whoever he was (some say he was St. Ambrose, Bishop
+of Milan, in Italy), who wrote the <i>Te Deum</i>, thought the same;
+for how does he end the <i>Te Deum</i>?&nbsp; &lsquo;O Lord, in Thee
+have I trusted: let me never be confounded,&rsquo; that is, brought
+to shame.&nbsp; You see, after he has spoken of God, and the everlasting
+glory of God, of Cherubim and Seraphim, that is, all the powers of the
+earth and the powers of the heavens, of Apostles, Prophets, Martyrs,
+the Holy Church, all praising God, and crying &lsquo;Holy, holy, holy.&nbsp;
+Lord God of Hosts, Heaven and Earth are full of the majesty of Thy glory;&rsquo;
+after he has spoken of the mystery of the Trinity, Father and Son and
+Holy Ghost, of Christ&rsquo;s redemption and incarnation, and ascension
+and glory; of His judging the world; of His government, and His lifting
+up His people for ever; after he has prayed God to keep them this day
+without sin, and to let His mercy lighten upon them; after all this,
+at the end of this glorious hymn, all that he has to say is, &lsquo;O
+Lord, in Thee have I trusted: let me never be confounded.&rsquo;&mdash;All
+he has to say: but that is a great deal: he does not say that merely
+because he wants to say something more, and has nothing else to say.&nbsp;
+Not so.&nbsp; In all great hymns and writings like this, the end is
+almost sure to be the strongest part of all, to have the very pith and
+marrow of the whole matter in it, as I believe this end of the <i>Te
+Deum</i> has; and I believe that whoever wrote it thought that being
+confounded, and brought to shame, was just the most horrible and wretched
+thing which could happen to him, or any man, and the thing above all
+others from which he was most bound to pray God to save him and every
+human being.</p>
+<p>Now, how is this?&nbsp; First, let us look at what coming to shame
+is; and next, how believing in Christ will save us from it.</p>
+<p>Now, every man and woman of us here, who has one spark of good feeling
+in them, will surely agree, that coming to shame is dreadful; and that
+there is no pain or torment on earth like the pain of being ashamed
+of oneself: nothing so painful.&nbsp; And I will prove it to you.&nbsp;
+You call a man a brave man, if he is afraid of nothing: but there is
+one thing the very bravest man is afraid of, and that is of disgrace,
+of coming to shame.&nbsp; Ay, my friends, so terrible is the torment
+of shame, that you may see brave men,&mdash;men who would face death
+in battle, men who would have a limb cut off without a groan, you may
+see such, in spite of all their courage, gnash their teeth, and writhe
+in agony, and weep bitter tears, simply because they are ashamed of
+themselves, so terrible and unbearable is the torment of shame.&nbsp;
+It may drive a man to do good or evil: it may drive him to do good;
+as when, rather than come to shame, and be disgraced, soldiers will
+face death in battle willingly and cheerfully, and do deeds of daring
+beyond belief: or it may drive him to do evil; rather than come to shame,
+men have killed themselves, choosing, unhappy and mistaken men, rather
+to face the torment of hell than the torment of disgrace.&nbsp; They
+are mistaken enough, God knows.&nbsp; But shame, like all powerful things,
+will work for harm as well as for good; and just as a wholesome and
+godly shame may be the beginning of a man&rsquo;s repentance and righteousness,
+so may an unwholesome and ungodly shame be the cause of his despair
+and ruin.&nbsp; But judge for yourselves; think over your past lives.&nbsp;
+Were you ever once&mdash;were it but for five minutes&mdash;utterly
+ashamed of yourself?&nbsp; If you were, did you ever feel any torment
+like <i>that</i>?&nbsp; In all other misery and torment one feels hope;
+one says, &lsquo;Still life is worth having, and when the sorrow wears
+away I shall be cheerful and enjoy myself again:&rsquo; but when one
+has come to shame, when one is not only disgraced in the eyes of other
+people, but disgraced (which is a thousand times worse) in one&rsquo;s
+own eyes; when one feels that people have real reason to despise one,
+then one feels for the time as if life was <i>not</i> worth having;
+as if one did not care whether one died or not, or what became of one:
+and yet as if dying would do one no good, change of place would do one
+no good, time&rsquo;s running on would do one no good; as if what was
+done could not be undone, and the shame would be with one still, and
+torment one still, wherever one was, and if one was to live a million
+years: ay, that it would be everlasting: one feels, in a word, that
+real shame and deserved disgrace is verily and indeed an everlasting
+torment.&nbsp; And it is this, and the feeling of this, which explains
+why poor wretches will kill themselves, as Judas Iscariot did, and rush
+into hell itself, under the horror and pain of shame and disgrace.&nbsp;
+They feel a hell within them so hot, that they actually fancy that they
+can be no worse off beyond the grave than they are on this side of it.&nbsp;
+They are mistaken: but that is the reason; the misery of disgrace is
+so intolerable, that they are willing, like that wretched Judas, to
+try any mad and desperate chance to escape it.</p>
+<p>So much for shame&rsquo;s being a dreadful and horrible thing.&nbsp;
+But again, it is a spiritual thing: it grows and works not in our fleshly
+bodies, but in our spirits, our consciences, our immortal souls.&nbsp;
+You may see this by thinking of people who are not afraid of shame.&nbsp;
+You do not respect them, or think them the better for that.&nbsp; Not
+at all.&nbsp; If a man is not afraid of shame; if a man, when he is
+found out, and exposed, and comes to shame, does not care for it, but
+&lsquo;brazens out his own shame,&rsquo; as we say, we do not call him
+brave; we call him what he is, a base impudent person, lost to all good
+feeling.&nbsp; Why, what harder name can we call any man or woman, than
+to say that they are &lsquo;shameless,&rsquo; dead to shame?&nbsp; We
+know that it is the very sign of their being dead in sin, the very sign
+of God&rsquo;s Spirit having left them; that till they are made to feel
+shame there is no hope of their mending or repenting, or of any good
+being put into them, or coming out of them.&nbsp; So that this feeling
+of shame is a spiritual feeling, which has to do with a man&rsquo;s
+immortal soul, with his conscience, and the voice of God in his heart.</p>
+<p>Now, consider this: that there will surely come to you and me, and
+every living soul, a day of judgment; a day in which we shall be judged.&nbsp;
+Think honestly of those two words.&nbsp; First, a day, not a mere time,
+much less a night.&nbsp; Now, in a day there is light, by which men
+can see, and a sun in heaven which shows all things clearly.&nbsp; In
+that day, that brightest and clearest of all days, we shall see what
+we really have been, and what we really have done; and for aught we
+know, every one round us, every one with whom we have ever had to do,
+will see it also.&nbsp; The secrets of all our hearts will be disclosed;
+and we shall stand before heaven and earth simply for what we are, and
+neither more nor less.&nbsp; That is a fearful thought!&nbsp; Shall
+we come to shame in that day?&nbsp; And it will be a day of judgment:
+in it we shall be judged.&nbsp; I do not mean merely condemned, for
+we may be acquitted: or punished, for we may be rewarded; those things
+come after being judged.&nbsp; First, let us think of what being judged
+is.&nbsp; A judge&rsquo;s business is to decide on what we have done,
+or whether we have broken the law or not; to hear witnesses for us and
+against us, to sum up the evidence, and set forth the evidence for us
+and the evidence against us.&nbsp; And our judge will be the Son of
+Man, the Lord Jesus Christ, who is sharper than a two-edged sword, piercing
+through the very joints and marrow, and discerning the secret intents
+of the heart; neither is anything hid from Him, for all things are naked
+and open in the sight of Him with whom we have to do.&nbsp; With whom
+we <i>have</i> to do, mind: not merely with whom we <i>shall</i> have
+to do; for He sees all <i>now</i>, He knows all now.&nbsp; Ever since
+we were born, there has not been a thought in our heart but He has known
+it altogether.&nbsp; And He is utterly just&mdash;no respecter of persons;
+like His own wisdom, without partiality and without hypocrisy.&nbsp;
+O Lord! who shall stand in that day?&nbsp; O Lord! if thou be extreme
+to mark what is done amiss, who shall abide it?&nbsp; O Lord! in thee
+have I trusted: let me never be confounded!</p>
+<p>For this is being confounded; this is shame itself.&nbsp; This is
+the intolerable, horrible, hellish shame and torment, wherein is weeping
+and gnashing of teeth; this is the everlasting shame and contempt to
+which, as Daniel prophesied, too many should awake in that day&mdash;to
+be found guilty in that day before God and Christ, before our neighbours
+and our relations, and worst of all, before ourselves.&nbsp; Worst of
+all, I say, before ourselves.&nbsp; It would be dreadful enough to have
+all the bad things we ever did or thought told openly against us to
+all our neighbours and friends, and to see them turn away from us;&mdash;dreadful
+to find out at last (what we forget all day long) that God knows them
+already; but more dreadful to know them all ourselves, and see our sins
+in all their shamefulness, in the light of God, as God Himself sees
+them;&mdash;more dreadful still to see the loving God and the loving
+Christ turn away from us;&mdash;but most dreadful of all to turn away
+from ourselves; to be utterly discontented with ourselves; ashamed of
+ourselves; to see that all our misery is our own fault, that we have
+been our own enemies; to despise ourselves, and hate ourselves for ever;
+to try for ever to get rid of ourselves, and escape from ourselves as
+from some ugly and foul place in which we were ashamed to be seen for
+a moment: and yet not to be able to get rid of ourselves.&nbsp; Yes,
+that will be the true misery of a lost soul, to be ashamed of itself,
+and hate itself.&nbsp; Who shall deliver a man from the body of that
+death?</p>
+<p>I thank God, through Jesus Christ our Lord.&nbsp; I thank God, that
+at least now, here, in this life, we can be delivered.&nbsp; There is
+but one hope for us all; one way for us all, not to come to utter shame.&nbsp;
+And this is in the Lord Jesus Christ, who has said, &lsquo;Though your
+sins be red as scarlet they shall be white as wool; and their sins and
+their iniquities will I remember no more.&rsquo;&nbsp; One hope, to
+cast ourselves utterly on His boundless love and mercy, and cry to Him,
+&lsquo;Blot these sins of mine out of Thy book, by Thy most precious
+blood, which is a full atonement for the sins of the whole world; and
+blot them out of my heart by Thy Holy Spirit, that I may hate them and
+renounce them, and flee from them, and give them up, and be Thy servant,
+and do Thy work, and have Thy righteousness, and do righteous things
+like Thee.&rsquo;&nbsp; And then, my friends, how or why we cannot understand;
+but it is God&rsquo;s own promise, who cannot lie, that He will really
+and actually forgive these sins of ours, and blot them out as if we
+had never done them, and give us clean hearts and right spirits, to
+live new lives, right lives, lives like His own life; so that our past
+sinful lives shall be behind us like a dream, and we shall find them
+forgotten and forgiven in the day of judgment;&mdash;wonderful mercy!
+but listen to it&mdash;it is God&rsquo;s own promise&mdash;&lsquo;If
+the wicked man turneth away from all his sins that he hath committed,
+and keep all my statutes, and do that which is lawful and right, he
+shall surely live, he shall not die.&nbsp; All his transgressions that
+he hath committed, they shall not be mentioned to him: in his righteousness
+that he hath done he shall live.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>They shall not be mentioned to him.&nbsp; My friends, if, as I have
+been showing, the great misery, the great horror of all, is having our
+sins mentioned to us in That Day, and being made utterly ashamed by
+them, what greater mercy can we want than this&mdash;not to have them
+mentioned to us, and not to come to shame; not to be plagued for ever
+with the hideous ghosts of our past bad thoughts, bad words, bad deeds,
+coming all day long to stare us in the face, and cry to us while the
+accusing Devil holds them up to us, as if in a looking-glass&mdash;&lsquo;Look
+at your own picture.&nbsp; This is what you are.&nbsp; This fool, this
+idler, this mean, covetous, hard-hearted man, who cared only for himself;&mdash;this
+stupid man, who never cared to know his duty or do his duty;&mdash;this
+proud, passionate, revengeful man, who returned evil for evil, took
+his brothers by the throat, and exacted from them the uttermost farthing;&mdash;this
+ridiculous, foolish, useless, disagreeable, unlovely, unlovable person,
+who went through the world neither knowing what he ought to do, nor
+whither he was going, but was utterly blind and in a dream; this person
+is you yourself.&nbsp; Look at your own likeness, and be confounded,
+and utterly ashamed for ever!&rsquo;&nbsp; What greater misery than
+that?&nbsp; What greater blessing than to escape that?&nbsp; What greater
+blessing than to be able to answer the accusing Devil, &lsquo;Not so,
+liar!&nbsp; This is not my likeness.&nbsp; This ugly, ridiculous, hateful
+person is not I.&nbsp; I was such a one once, but I am not now.&nbsp;
+I am another man now; and God knows that I am, though you may try to
+shame me by telling me that I am the same man.&nbsp; I was wrong, but
+I am right now; I was as a sheep going astray, but now I am returned
+to the Shepherd and Overseer of my soul, to whom I belonged all the
+while; and now I am right, in the right road; for with the heart I have
+believed God unto righteousness, and He has given me a clean heart,
+and a right spirit, and has purged me, and will purge me, till I am
+clean, and washed me till I am whiter than snow; I do not deny one of
+my old sins; I did them, I know that; I confess them to thee now, oh
+accusing Devil; but I confessed them to God, ay, and to man too, long
+ago, and by confessing them to Him I was saved from them; for with the
+mouth confession is made unto salvation.&nbsp; And what is more; I have
+not only confessed my own sins, but I have confessed Christ&rsquo;s
+righteousness; and I confess it now.&nbsp; I confess, I say, that Christ
+is perfectly righteous and good, the Perfect Pattern of what I ought
+to be; and because He is perfectly good, He does not wish to see me
+remain bad and sinful, that He may taunt me and torment me with my sins,
+as thou the accusing Devil dost: but He wishes to make me and every
+man good like Himself, blest like Himself; and He can do it, and will
+do it, if we will but give up our hearts to Him; and I have given up
+my heart to Him.&nbsp; All I ask of Him is to be made good and kept
+good, set right and kept right; and I can trust in Him utterly to do
+that; for He is faithful and just to forgive me my sins, and cleanse
+me from all unrighteousness.&nbsp; Therefore, accuse me not, Devil!
+for thou hast no share in me: I belong to Christ, and not to thee.&nbsp;
+And set not my old sins before my face; for God has set them behind
+His back, because I have renounced them, and sworn an oath against them,
+and Christ has nailed them to His cross, and now they are none of mine
+and none of thine, but are cast long ago into the everlasting fire of
+God, and burnt up and done with for ever; and I am a new man, and God&rsquo;s
+man; and He has justified me, and will justify me, and make me just
+and right; and neither thou, nor any man, has a right to impute to me
+my past sins, for God does not impute them to me; and neither thou,
+nor any man, has a right to condemn me, for God has justified me.&nbsp;
+And if it please God to humble me more (for I know I want humbling every
+day), and to show me more how much I owe to Him&mdash;if it please Him,
+I say, to bring to light any of my past sins, I shall take it patiently
+as a wholesome chastening of my Heavenly Father&rsquo;s; and I trust
+to all God&rsquo;s people, and to angels, and the spirits of just men
+made perfect, that they will look on my past sins as God looks on them,
+mercifully and lovingly, as things past and dead, forgiven and blotted
+out of God&rsquo;s book, by the precious blood of Christ, and look on
+me as I am in Christ, not having any righteousness of my own, but Christ&rsquo;s
+righteousness, which comes by the inspiration of His own Holy Spirit.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Thus, my friends, we may answer the Devil, when he stands up to accuse
+us, and confound us in the Day of Judgment.&nbsp; Thus we may answer
+him now, when, in melancholy moments, he sets our sins before our face,
+and begins taunting us, and crying, &lsquo;See what a wretch you are,
+what a hypocrite, too.&nbsp; What would all the world think of you,
+if they knew as much against you as I do?&nbsp; What would the world
+think of you, if they saw into that dirty heart of yours?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+For we can answer him&mdash;&lsquo;Whatever the world would think, I
+know what God Himself thinks: He thinks of me as of a son who, after
+wasting his substance, and feeding on husks with the swine, has come
+home to his Father&rsquo;s house, and cried, Father, I have sinned against
+heaven, and before Thee, and am no more worthy to be called Thy son;
+and I know that that same good Heavenly Father, instead of shaming me,
+reproaching me, shutting His doors against me, has seen me afar off,
+and taken me home again without one harsh word, and called to all the
+angels in heaven, saying, &ldquo;It is meet that we rejoice and be glad,
+for this My son was dead and is alive again, he was lost and is found.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And while Almighty God, who made heaven and earth, is saying that of
+me, it matters little what the lying Devil may say.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Only, only, if you be wandering from your Father&rsquo;s house, come
+home; if you be wrong, entreat to be made right.&nbsp; If you are in
+your Father&rsquo;s house, stay there; if you are right, pray and struggle
+to keep right; if the old account is blotted out, then, for your soul&rsquo;s
+sake, run up no fresh account to stand against you after all in the
+Day of Judgment; if you have the hope in you of not coming to shame,
+you must purify yourselves, even as God is pure; if you believe really
+with your heart, you must believe unto righteousness; that is, you must
+trust God to make you righteous and good: there is no use trusting Him
+to make you anything else, for He will make you nothing else; being
+good Himself, He will only make you good: but as for trusting in Him
+to leave you bad, to leave you quiet in your sins, and then to save
+you after all, that is trusting that God will do a most unjust, and
+what is more, a most cruel thing to you; that is trusting God to do
+the Devil&rsquo;s work; that is a blasphemous false trust, which will
+be utterly confounded in the Day of Judgment, and will cover you with
+double shame.&nbsp; The whole question for each of us is, &lsquo;Do
+we believe unto righteousness?&rsquo;&nbsp; Is righteousness what we
+want?&nbsp; Is to be made good men what we want?&nbsp; If not, no confessing
+with the mouth will be unto salvation, for how can a man be saved in
+his sins?&nbsp; If an animal is diseased can it be saved from dying
+without curing the disease?&nbsp; If a tree be decayed, can it be saved
+from dying without curing the decay?&nbsp; If a man be bad and sinful,
+can he be saved from eternal death without curing his badness and sinfulness?&nbsp;
+How can a man be saved from his sins but by becoming sinless?&nbsp;
+As well ask, Can a man be saved from his sins without being saved from
+his sins?&nbsp; But if you wish really to be saved from your sins, and
+taken out of them, and cured of them, that you may be made good men,
+righteous men, useful men, just men, loving men, Godlike men;&mdash;then
+trust in God for that, and you will find that your trust will be unto
+righteousness, for you will become righteous men; and confess God with
+your mouth for that, saying, &lsquo;I believe in God my Father; I believe
+in Jesus Christ His Son, who died, and rose, and ascended on high for
+me; I believe in God&rsquo;s Holy Spirit, which is with me, to make
+me right;&rsquo; and your confession will be unto salvation, for you
+will be saved from your sins.</p>
+<p>Always say to yourself this one thing, &lsquo;Good I will become,
+whatever it cost me; and in God&rsquo;s goodness I trust to make me
+good, for I am sure He wishes to see me good, more than I do myself;
+and you will find that because you have confessed, in that best and
+most honest of ways, that God is good, and have so given Him real glory,
+and real honour, and real praise, He will save you from the sins which
+torment you: and that because you have really trusted in Him, you shall
+never come, either in this world, or the world to come, to that worst
+misery, the being ashamed of yourself.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XIX.&nbsp; FORGIVENESS</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Psalm li. 16, 17.&nbsp; Thou desirest not sacrifice; else would I
+give it: thou delightest not in burnt offering.</p>
+<p>The sacrifice of God is a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite
+heart, O God, Thou wilt not despise.</p>
+<p>You all heard just now the story of Nathan and David, and you must
+have all felt how beautiful, and noble, and just it was; how it declares
+that there is but one everlasting God&rsquo;s law of justice, which
+is above all men, even the greatest; and that what is right for the
+poor man is right for the king upon his throne, for God is no respecter
+of persons.</p>
+<p>And you must have admired, too, the frankness, and fulness, and humbleness
+of David&rsquo;s repentance, and liked and loved the man still, in spite
+of his sins, as much almost as you did when you heard of him as a shepherd
+boy slaying the giant, or a wanderer and an outlaw among the hills and
+forests of Jud&aelig;a.</p>
+<p>But did it now seem strange to you that David&rsquo;s repentance,
+which was so complete when it did come, should have come no sooner?&nbsp;
+Did he need Nathan to tell him that he had done wrong?&nbsp; He seduced
+another man&rsquo;s wife, and that man one of his most faithful servants,
+one of the most brave and loyal generals of his army; and then, over
+and above his adultery, he had plotted the man&rsquo;s death, and had
+had him killed and put out of the way in as base, and ungrateful, and
+treacherous a fashion as I ever heard of.&nbsp; His whole conduct in
+the matter had been simply villanous.&nbsp; There is no word too bad
+for it.&nbsp; And do you fancy that he had to wait the greater part
+of a year before the thought came into his head that that was not the
+fashion in which a man ought to behave, much more a king?&mdash;that
+God&rsquo;s blessing was not on such doings as those?&mdash;and after
+all not find out for himself that he was wrong, but have to be told
+of it by Nathan?</p>
+<p>Surely, if he had any common sense, any feeling of right and wrong
+left in him, he must have known that he had done a bad thing; and his
+guilty conscience must have tormented him many a time and oft during
+those months, long before Nathan came to him.&nbsp; Now, that he had
+the feeling of right and wrong left in him, we cannot doubt; for when
+Nathan told him the parable of the rich man who spared all his own flocks
+and herds, and took the poor man&rsquo;s one ewe lamb, his heart told
+him that <i>that</i> was wrong and unjust, and he cried out, &lsquo;The
+man who has done this thing shall surely die.&rsquo;&nbsp; And surely
+that feeling of right and wrong could not have been quite asleep in
+him all those months, and have been awakened then for the first time.</p>
+<p>But more; if we look at two psalms which he wrote about that time,
+we shall find that his conscience had <i>not</i> been dead in him, but
+had been tormenting him bitterly; and that he had been trying to escape
+from it, and afterwards to repent&mdash;only in a wrong way.</p>
+<p>If we look at the Thirty-second Psalm, we shall see there he had
+begun, by trying to deceive himself, to excuse himself before God.&nbsp;
+But that had only made him the more miserable.&nbsp; &lsquo;When I kept
+silence, my bones waxed old through my daily complaining.&nbsp; For
+Thy hand was heavy on me night and day: my moisture was turned to the
+drought of summer.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then he had tried sacrifices.&nbsp;
+He had fancied, I suppose, that he could make God pleased with him again
+by showing great devoutness, by offering bullocks and goats without
+number, as sin-offerings and peace-offerings; but that made him no happier.&nbsp;
+At last he found out that God required no sacrifice but a broken heart.&nbsp;
+That was what God wanted&mdash;a broken and a contrite heart; for David
+to be utterly ashamed of himself, utterly broken down and silenced,
+so that he had nothing left to plead&mdash;neither past good deeds,
+nor present devoutness, nor sacrifices: nothing but, &lsquo;O God, I
+deserve all Thou canst lay on me, and more.&nbsp; Have mercy on me&mdash;mercy
+is all I ask.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>There was nothing for him, you see, but to make a clean breast of
+it; to face his sin, and all its shame and abomination, and confess
+it all, and throw himself on God&rsquo;s mercy.&nbsp; And when he did
+that, there, then, and at once, as Nathan told him, God put away his
+sin.&nbsp; As David says himself, &lsquo;I said, I will confess my sins
+unto the Lord, and so Thou forgavest the wickedness of my sin.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>As it is written, &lsquo;If we confess our sins, God is faithful
+and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And now, my friends, what lesson may we learn from this?&nbsp; It
+is easy to say, We have not sinned as deeply as David, and therefore
+his story has nothing to do with us.&nbsp; My friends, whether we have
+sinned as deeply as David or not, his story has to do with you, and
+me, and every soul in this church, and every soul in the whole world,
+or it would not be in the Bible.&nbsp; For no prophecy of Scripture
+is of private interpretation; that is, it does not only point at one
+man here and another there: but those who wrote it were moved by the
+Holy Ghost, who lays down the eternal universal laws of holiness, of
+right and good, which are right and good for you, and me, and all mankind;
+and therefore David&rsquo;s story has to do with you and me every time
+we do wrong, and know that we have done wrong.</p>
+<p>Now, my friends, when you have done a wrong thing, you know your
+conscience torments you with it; you are uneasy, and discontented with
+yourselves, perhaps cross with those about you; you hardly know why:
+or rather, though you do know why, you do not like to tell yourself
+why.</p>
+<p>The bad thing which you have done, or the bad tempers which you have
+given way to, or the person whom you have quarrelled with, hang in your
+mind, and darken all your thoughts: and you try not to remember them:
+but conscience <i>makes</i> you remember them, and will not let the
+dark thought fly away; till you can enjoy nothing, because your heart
+is not clean and clear; there is something in the background which makes
+you sad whenever you try to be happy.&nbsp; Then a man tries first to
+deceive himself.&nbsp; He says to himself, &lsquo;No, that sin is not
+what makes me unhappy&mdash;not that;&rsquo; and he tries to find out
+any and every reason for his uncomfortable feelings, except the very
+thing which he knows all the while in the bottom of his heart <i>is</i>
+the real reason.&nbsp; He says, &lsquo;Well, perhaps I am unhappy because
+I have done something wrong: what wrong can I have done?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And so he sets to work to find out every sin except <i>the</i> sin which
+is the cause of all, because that one he does not like to face: it is
+too real, and ugly, and humbling to his proud spirit; and perhaps he
+is afraid of having to give it up.&nbsp; So I have known a man confess
+himself a sinner, a miserable sinner, freely enough, and then break
+out into a rage with you, if you dare to speak a word of the one sin
+which you know that he has actually committed.&nbsp; &lsquo;No, sir,&rsquo;
+he will say, &lsquo;whatever I may be wrong in, I am right <i>there</i>.&nbsp;
+I have committed sins too many, I know: but you cannot charge me with
+that, at least;&rsquo;&mdash;and all the more because he knows that
+everybody round <i>is</i> charging him with it, and that the thing is
+as notorious as the sun in heaven.&nbsp; But that makes him, in his
+pride, all the more determined not to confess himself in the wrong on
+that one point; and he will go and confess to God, and perhaps to man,
+all manner of secret sins, nay, even invent sins for himself out of
+things which are no sins, and confess himself humbly in the wrong where
+perhaps he is all right, just to drug his conscience, and be able to
+say, &lsquo;I have repented,&rsquo;&mdash;repented, that is, of everything
+but what he and all the world know that he ought to repent of.</p>
+<p>But still his conscience is not easy: he has no peace of mind: he
+is like David: &lsquo;While I held my peace, my bones waxed old through
+my daily complaining.&rsquo;&nbsp; God&rsquo;s hand is heavy on him
+day and night, and his moisture is like the drought in summer: his heart
+feels hard and dry; he cannot enjoy himself; he is moody; he lies awake
+and frets at night, and goes listlessly and heavily about his business
+in the morning; his heart is not right with God, and he knows it; God
+and he are not at peace, and he knows it.</p>
+<p>Then he tries to repent: but it is a false, useless sort of repentance.&nbsp;
+He says to Himself, as David did, &lsquo;Well, then, I will make my
+peace with God: I will please Him.&nbsp; I have done one wrong thing.&nbsp;
+I will do two right ones to make up for it.&rsquo;&nbsp; If he is a
+rich man, he perhaps tries David&rsquo;s plan of burnt-offerings and
+sacrifices.&nbsp; He says, &lsquo;I will give away a great deal in charity;
+I will build a church; I will take a great deal of trouble about societies,
+and speak at religious meetings, and show God how much I really do care
+for Him after all, and what great sacrifices I can make for Him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Or, if he is a poor man, he will say, &lsquo;Well, then, I will try
+and be more religious; I will think more about my soul, and come to
+church as often as I can, and say my prayers regularly, and read good
+books; and perhaps that will make my peace with God.&nbsp; At all events,
+God shall see that I am not as bad as I look; not altogether bad; that
+I do care for Him, and for doing right.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But, rich or poor, the man finds out by bitter experience how truly
+David said, &lsquo;Thou requirest no sacrifice, else would I give it
+Thee.&nbsp; Thou delightest not in burnt-offerings.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Not that they are not good and excellent; but that they are not good
+coming from him, because his heart is still unrepentant, because, instead
+of confessing his sin and throwing himself on God&rsquo;s mercy, he
+is trying to win God round to overlook his sin.&nbsp; So almsgiving,
+and ordinances, and prayer give the poor man no peace.&nbsp; He rises
+from his knees unrefreshed.&nbsp; He goes out of church with as heavy
+a heart as he went in, and he finds that for all his praying he does
+not become a better man, any more than a happier man.&nbsp; There is
+still that darkness over his soul, like a black cloud spread between
+him and God.</p>
+<p>My friends, if any of you find yourselves in this sad case, the only
+remedy which I can give you, the only remedy which I ever found do <i>me</i>
+any good, or give me back my peace of mind, is David&rsquo;s remedy;
+the one which he found out at last, and which he spoke of in these blessed
+Psalms.&nbsp; Confess your sin to God.&nbsp; Bring it all out.&nbsp;
+Make a clean breast of it&mdash;whatever it may cost you, make a clean
+breast of it.&nbsp; Only be but <i>honest</i> with God, and all will
+come right at once.&nbsp; Say, not with your lips only, but from the
+very bottom of your heart, say, &lsquo;Oh, good God, Heavenly Father,
+I have <i>nothing</i> to say; I am wrong, and yet I do not know how
+wrong I am; but Thou knowest.&nbsp; Thou seest all my sin a thousand
+times more clearly than I do; and if I look black and foul to myself,
+oh God, how much more black and how foul must I look to Thee! I know
+not.&nbsp; All I know is, that I am utterly wrong, and Thou utterly
+right.&nbsp; I am shapen in sin, conceived in iniquity.&nbsp; My heart
+it is that is wrong.&nbsp; Not merely this or that wrong which I have
+done; but my heart, my temper, which will have its own way, which cares
+for itself, and not for Thee.&nbsp; I have nothing to plead; nothing
+to throw into the other scale.&nbsp; For if I have ever done right,
+it was Thou didst right in me, and not me myself, and only my sins are
+my own doing; so the good in me is all Thine, and the bad in me all
+my own, and in <i>me</i> dwells no good thing.&nbsp; And as for excusing
+myself by saying that I love Thee, I had better tell the truth, since
+Thou knowest it already&mdash;I do <i>not</i> love Thee.&nbsp; Oh God,
+I love myself, my pitiful, miserable self, well enough, and too well:
+but as for loving Thee&mdash;how many of my good deeds have been done
+for love of Thee?&nbsp; I have done right from fear of hell, from hope
+of heaven; or to win Thy blessings: but how often have I done right
+really and purely for Thy sake?&nbsp; I am ashamed to think!&nbsp; My
+only comfort, my only hope, is, that whether I love Thee or not, Thou
+lovest me, and hast sent Thy Son to seek and save me.&nbsp; Help me
+now.&nbsp; Save me now out of my sin, and darkness, and self-conceit.&nbsp;
+Show Thy love to me by setting this wrong heart of mine right.&nbsp;
+Give me a clean heart, oh God, and renew a right spirit within me.&nbsp;
+If I be wrong myself, how can I make myself right?&nbsp; No; Thou must
+do it.&nbsp; Thou must purge me, or I shall never be clean; Thou must
+make me to understand wisdom in the secret depth of my heart, or I shall
+never see my way.&nbsp; Thou must, for I cannot; and base and bad as
+I am, I can believe that Thou wilt condescend to help me and teach me,
+because I know Thy love in Jesus Christ my Lord.&nbsp; And <i>then</i>
+Thou wilt be pleased with my sacrifices and oblations, because they
+come from a right heart&mdash;a truly humble, honest, penitent heart,
+which is not trying to deceive God, or plaster over its own baseness
+and weakness, but confesses all, and yet trusts in God&rsquo;s boundless
+love.&nbsp; Then my alms will rise as a sweet savour before Thee, oh
+God; then sacraments will strengthen me, ordinances will teach me, good
+books will speak to my soul, and my prayers will be answered by peace
+of mind, and a clear conscience, and the sweet and strengthening sense
+that I am in my Heavenly Father&rsquo;s house, about my Heavenly Father&rsquo;s
+business, and that His smile is over me, and His blessing on me, as
+long as I remain loyal to Him and to His laws.&rsquo;&nbsp; Feel thus,
+my friends, and speak to God thus, and see if the dark stupefying cloud
+does not pass away from your heart&mdash;see if there and then does
+not come sunshine and strength, and the sweet assurance that you are
+indeed forgiven.</p>
+<p>But how about this old sin, which caused the man all this trouble?&nbsp;
+He began by trying to forget it.&nbsp; I think, if he be a true penitent,
+he will not wish to forget it any more.&nbsp; He will not torment himself
+about it, for he knows that God has forgiven him.&nbsp; But the more
+he feels God has forgiven him, the less likely he will be to forgive
+himself.&nbsp; The more sure he feels of God&rsquo;s love and mercy,
+the more utterly ashamed of himself he will be.&nbsp; And what is more,
+it is not wise to forget our own sins, when God has not forgotten them.&nbsp;
+For God does not forget our sins, though He forgives them; and a very
+bad thing it would be for us if He did, my friends.&nbsp; For the wages
+of sin is death: and even if God does not slay us for our sins, He is
+certain to punish us for them in some way, lest we should forget that
+sin is sin, and fancy that God&rsquo;s mercy is only careless indulgence.&nbsp;
+So God did to David.&nbsp; He then told him that though he was forgiven
+he would still be punished, &lsquo;The Lord has put away thy sin; nevertheless,
+the child that shall be born unto thee shall surely die.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Punishment and forgiveness went together.&nbsp; Ay, if we will look
+at it rightly, David&rsquo;s being punished was the very sign that God
+had forgiven him.&nbsp; Oh, believe that, my friends; face it; thank
+God for it.&nbsp; I at least do, when I look back upon my past life,
+and see that for every wrong I have ever done, I have been punished:
+not punished a tenth part as much as I deserve; but still punished,
+more or less, and made to smart for my own folly, and to learn, by hard
+unmistakable experience, that it will not pay me, or any man, to break
+the least of God&rsquo;s laws; and I thank God for it.&nbsp; I tell
+you to thank God also, whensoever you are punished for your sins.&nbsp;
+It is a sign that God cares for you, that God loves you, that God is
+training and educating you, that God is your Father, and He is dealing
+with you as with His sons.&nbsp; For what son is there whom His Father
+does not chastise?&nbsp; It is a bitter lesson, no doubt; but we have
+deserved it: then let us bear it like men.&nbsp; No doubt it is bitter:
+but there is a blessing in it.&nbsp; No chastisement at first seems
+pleasant, says the Apostle, but rather grievous: yet afterwards it yields
+the peaceable fruit of righteousness to those who are exercised thereby.&nbsp;
+Be exercised by it, then.&nbsp; Let God teach you in His own way, even
+if it seem a harsh and painful way.&nbsp; We have had earthly fathers,
+says the Apostle, who corrected us, and we gave them reverence.&nbsp;
+Shall we not much rather be in subjection to God, the Father of Spirits,
+and live?&nbsp; For suffering and punishment is the way to Eternal Life&mdash;to
+that true Eternal Life which is knowing God and God&rsquo;s love, and
+becoming like God.&nbsp; As the Apostle says, God chastens us only for
+our profit, that we may be partakers of His holiness.&nbsp; And as king
+Hezekiah says of affliction, &lsquo;Lord, by <i>these</i> things,&rsquo;
+by sorrow and chastisement, &lsquo;men live; and in all these things
+is the life of the spirit.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>May God give to you, and me, and all mankind, as often as we do wrong,
+honest and good hearts to confess our sins thoroughly, and take our
+punishment meekly, and trust in God&rsquo;s boundless mercy, in order
+that if we humble ourselves under His rod, and learn His lessons faithfully
+in this life, we may not need a worse punishment in the life to come,
+but be accepted in the last great Day for the sake of Jesus Christ,
+our blessed Lord and Saviour.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XX.&nbsp; THE TRUE GENTLEMAN</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>1 Cor. xii. 31; xiii. 1.&nbsp; Covet earnestly the best gifts: and
+yet shew I unto you a more excellent way.&nbsp; Though I speak with
+the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become
+as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.</p>
+<p>My friends, let me say a few plain words this morning to young and
+old, rich and poor, upon this text.</p>
+<p>Now you all, I suppose, think it a good thing to be gentlemen and
+ladies.&nbsp; All of you, I say.&nbsp; There is not a poor man in this
+church, perhaps, who has not before now said in his heart, &lsquo;Ah,
+if I were but a gentleman!&rsquo; or a poor woman who has not said in
+her heart, &lsquo;Ah, if I were but a lady!&rsquo;&nbsp; You see round
+you in the world thousands plotting and labouring all their lives long
+to make money and grow rich, that they may become (as they think) gentlemen,
+or, at least, their sons after them.&nbsp; And those here who are what
+the world calls gentlemen and ladies, know very well that those names
+are names which are very precious to them; and would sooner give up
+house, land, money, all the comforts upon earth, than give up being
+called gentlemen and ladies; and these last know, I trust, what some
+poor people do not know, and what no man knows who fancies that he can
+make a gentleman of himself merely by gaining money, and setting up
+a fine house, and a good table, and horses and carriages, and indulging
+the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eye, and the pride of life;
+for these last ought to know that the right to be called gentlemen and
+ladies is something which this world did not give, and cannot take away;
+so that if they were brought to utter poverty and rags, or forced to
+dig the ground for their own livelihood, they would be gentlemen and
+ladies still, if they ever had been really and truly such; and what
+is more, they would make every one who met them feel that they were
+gentlemen and ladies, in spite of all their poverty.</p>
+<p>Now, people do not often understand clearly why this is.&nbsp; They
+feel, more or less, that so it is; but they cannot explain it.&nbsp;
+I could tell you why they cannot; but I will not take up your time.&nbsp;
+But if they cannot explain it, there are those who can.&nbsp; St. Paul
+explains it in the Epistle.&nbsp; The Lord Jesus Himself explains it
+in the Gospel.&nbsp; They tell us why money will not make a gentleman.&nbsp;
+They tell us why poverty will not unmake one: but they tell us more.&nbsp;
+They tell us the one only thing which makes a true gentleman.&nbsp;
+And they tell us more still.&nbsp; They tell us how every one of us,
+down to the poorest and most ignorant man and woman in this church,
+may become true gentlemen and ladies, in the sight of God and of all
+reasonable men; and that, not only in this life, but after death, for
+ever, and ever, and ever.&nbsp; And that is by charity, by love.</p>
+<p>Now, if you will look two or three chapters back, in the Epistle
+to the Corinthians&mdash;at the 11th and 12th chapters&mdash;you will
+see that these Corinthians were behaving to each other very much as
+people are apt to do in England now.&nbsp; They all wanted to rise in
+life, and they wanted to rise upon each other&rsquo;s shoulders.&nbsp;
+Each man and woman wanted to set themselves up above their neighbours,
+and to look down upon them.&nbsp; The rich looked down on the poor,
+and kept apart from them at the Lord&rsquo;s Supper; and no doubt the
+poor envied the rich heartily enough in return.&nbsp; And these Corinthians
+were very religious, and some of them, too, very clever.&nbsp; So those
+who, being poor, could not set themselves up above their neighbours
+on the score of wealth, wanted to set themselves up on the score of
+their spiritual gifts.&nbsp; One looked down on his neighbours because
+he was a deeper scholar than they; another, because he had the gift
+of tongues, and understood more languages than they; another could prophesy
+better than any of them, and so, because he was a very eloquent preacher,
+he tried to get power over his neighbours, and abuse the talents which
+God had given him, to pamper his own pride and vanity, and love of managing
+and ordering people, and of being run after by silly women (as St. Paul
+calls them), ever learning and never coming to the knowledge of the
+truth.&nbsp; And of the rest, one party sided with one preacher, or
+one teacher, and another with another; and each party looked down on
+the other, and judged them harshly, and said bitter things of them,
+till, as St. Paul says, they were all split up by heresies, that is,
+by divisions, party spirit, envying, and grudging in the very Church
+of God, and at the very Table of The Lord.</p>
+<p>Now says St. Paul, &lsquo;Covet earnestly the best gifts: and yet
+show I you a more excellent way;&rsquo; and that is charity; love.&nbsp;
+As much as to say, I do not complain of any of you for trying to be
+the best that you can, for trying to be as wise as you can be, as eloquent
+as you can be, as learned as you can be: I do not complain of you for
+trying to rise; but I <i>do</i> complain of you for trying to rise upon
+each other&rsquo;s shoulders.&nbsp; I do complain of you for each trying
+to set up himself, and trying to make use of his neighbours instead
+of helping them; and, when God gives you gifts to do good to others
+with, trying to do good only to yourselves with them.</p>
+<p>For he says, you are all members of one body; and all the talents,
+gifts, understanding, power, money, which God has bestowed on you, He
+has given you only that you may help your neighbours with them.&nbsp;
+Of course there is no harm in longing and praying for great gifts, longing
+and praying to be very wise, or very eloquent; but only that you may
+do all the more good.&nbsp; And, after all, says St. Paul, there is
+something more worth longing for, not merely than money, but more worth
+longing for than the wisdom of a prophet, or the tongue of an angel;
+and that is charity.&nbsp; If you have <i>that</i>, you will be able
+to do as much good as God requires of you in your station; and if you
+have not that, you will not do what God requires of you, even though
+you spoke with the tongues of men and of angels.&nbsp; Even though you
+had the gift of prophecy, and understood all mysteries, and all knowledge;
+even though you had all faith, so that you could remove mountains; even
+though you had all good works, and gave all your goods to feed the poor,
+and your body to be burned as a martyr for the sake of religion, and
+had not charity, you would be nothing.&nbsp; Nothing, says St. Paul,
+but sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal&mdash;an empty vessel, which
+makes the more noise the less there is in it.&nbsp; If you have charity,
+says St. Paul, you will be able to do your share of good where God has
+put you, though you may be poor, and ignorant, and stupid, and weak;
+but if you have not charity, all the wisdom and learning, righteousness
+and eloquence in the world, will only give you greater power of doing
+harm.</p>
+<p>Yes, he says, I show you a more excellent way to be really great;
+a way by which the poorest may be as great as the richest,&mdash;the
+simple cottager&rsquo;s wife as great as the most accomplished lady;
+and that is charity, which comes from the Spirit of God.&nbsp; Pray
+for that&mdash;try after that; and if you want to know what sort of
+a spirit it is that you are to pray for and try after, I will tell you.&nbsp;
+Charity is the very opposite of the selfish, covetous, ambitious, proud,
+grudging spirit of this world.&nbsp; Charity suffers long, and is kind:
+charity does not envy: charity does not boast, is not puffed up: does
+not behave itself unseemly; that is, is never rude, or overbearing,
+or careless about hurting people&rsquo;s feelings by hard words or looks:
+seeketh not its own; that is, is not always looking on its own rights,
+and thinking about itself, and trying to help itself; is not easily
+provoked: thinketh no evil, that is, is not suspicious, ready to make
+out the worst case against every one; rejoiceth not in iniquity, but
+rejoiceth in the truth; that is, is not glad, as too many are, to see
+people do wrong, and to laugh and sneer over their failings: but rejoiceth
+in the truth, tries to find out the truth about every one, and judge
+them honestly, and make fair allowances for them: covereth all things;
+that is, tries to hide a neighbour&rsquo;s sins as far as is right,
+instead of gossiping over them, and blazoning them up and down, as too
+many do: believeth all things; that is, gives every one credit for meaning
+well as long as it can: hopeth all things; that is, never gives any
+one up as past mending: endureth all things, keeps its temper, and keeps
+its tongue; not rendering evil for evil, or railing for railing, but,
+on the contrary, blessing; and so overcomes evil with good.</p>
+<p>In one word, while the spirit of the world thinks of itself, and
+helps itself, Charity, which is the Spirit of God, thinks of other people,
+and helps other people.&nbsp; And now:&mdash;to be always thinking of
+other people&rsquo;s feelings, and always caring for other people&rsquo;s
+comfort, what is that but the mark, and the only mark, of a true gentleman,
+and a true lady?&nbsp; There is none other, my friends, and there never
+will be.&nbsp; But the poorest man or woman can do that; the poorest
+man or woman can be courteous and tender, careful not to pain people,
+ready and willing to help every one to the best of their power; and
+therefore, the poorest man or woman can be a true gentleman or a true
+lady in the sight of God, by the inspiration of the Spirit of God, whose
+name is Charity.</p>
+<p>They can be.&nbsp; And thanks be to the grace of God, they often
+are.&nbsp; I can say that I have seen among plain sailors and labouring
+men as perfect gentlemen (of God&rsquo;s sort) as man need see; but
+then they were <i>always</i> pious and God-fearing men; and so the Spirit
+of God had made up to them for any want of scholarship and rank.&nbsp;
+They were gentlemen, because God&rsquo;s Spirit had made them gentle.&nbsp;
+For recollect all, both rich and poor, what that word gentleman means.&nbsp;
+It is simply a man who is gentle; who, let him be as brave or as wise
+as he will, yet, as St. Paul says, &lsquo;suffers long and is kind;
+does not boast, does not behave himself unseemly; is not easily provoked,
+thinketh no evil.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And recollect, too, what that word lady means.&nbsp; Most of you
+perhaps do not know.&nbsp; I will tell you.&nbsp; It means, in the ancient
+English tongue, a person who gives away bread; who deals out loaves
+to the poor.&nbsp; I have often thought that most beautiful, and full
+of meaning, a very message from God to all ladies, to tell them what
+they ought to be; and not to them only, but to the poorest woman in
+the parish; for who is too poor to help her neighbours?</p>
+<p>You see there is a difference between a Christian man&rsquo;s duty
+in this and a Christian woman&rsquo;s duty, though they both spring
+from the same spirit.&nbsp; The man, unless he be a clergyman, has not
+so much time as a woman for actually helping his neighbours by acts
+of charity.&nbsp; He must till the ground, sail the seas, attend to
+his business, fight the Queen&rsquo;s enemies; and the way in which
+the Holy Spirit of Charity will show in him will be more in his temper
+and his language; by making him patient, cheerful, respectful, condescending,
+courteous, reasonable, with every one whom he has to do with: but the
+woman has time to show acts of charity which the man has not.&nbsp;
+She can teach in the schools, sit by the sick bed, work with her hands
+for the suffering and the helpless, even though she cannot with her
+head.&nbsp; Above all, she can give those kind looks and kind words
+which comfort the broken heart better than money and bodily comforts
+can do.&nbsp; And she does do it, thank God!&nbsp; I do not merely mean
+in such noble instances of divine charity and self-sacrifice as those
+ladies who have gone out to nurse the wounded soldiers in the East&mdash;true
+ladies, indeed, of whom I fear more than one, ere they return, will
+be added to the noble army of martyrs, to receive in return for the
+great love which they have shown on earth, the full enjoyment of God&rsquo;s
+love in heaven:&mdash;not these only, but poor women&mdash;women who
+could not write their own names&mdash;women who had hardly clothes wherewith
+to keep themselves warm&mdash;women who were toiling all day long to
+feed and clothe their own children, till one wondered when in the twenty-four
+hours they could find five spare minutes for helping their neighbours;&mdash;such
+poor women have I seen, who in the midst of their own daily work and
+daily care, had still a heart open to hear every one&rsquo;s troubles;
+a head always planning little comforts and pleasures for others; and
+hands always busy in doing good.&nbsp; Instead of being made hard and
+selfish by their own troubles, they had been taught by them, as the
+Lord Jesus was, to feel for the troubles of all around them, and went
+about like ministering angels in the Spirit of God, which is peace on
+earth and goodwill towards men.</p>
+<p>Oh, my friends, such poor women seemed to me most glorious, most
+honourable, most venerable!&nbsp; What was all rank or fashion, beauty
+or accomplishments, when compared with the great honour which the Lord
+Jesus Christ was putting upon those poor women, by transforming them
+thus into His own most blessed likeness, and giving them grace to go
+about, as He the Lord Jesus did, doing good, because God was with them!</p>
+<p>Then I felt that such women, poor, and worn, and hard-handed as they
+were, were ladies in the sight of that Heavenly Father, who is no respecter
+of persons; and felt how truly a wise ancient has said,&mdash;&lsquo;It
+is virtue, yea, virtue, gentlemen, which maketh gentlemen; which maketh
+the poor rich, the strong weak, the simple wise, the base-born noble.&nbsp;
+This rank neither the whirling wheel of Fortune can destroy, nor the
+deceitful cavillings of worldlings separate; neither sickness abate,
+nor time abolish.&rsquo;&nbsp; No; for it is written, that though prophecies
+shall fail, tongues cease, knowledge vanish away, and all that we now
+know is but in part, yet charity shall never fail those who are full
+of the Spirit of Love, but abide with them for ever and ever, bringing
+forth fruit through all eternity to everlasting life.</p>
+<p>But what sort of virtue?&nbsp; Do not mistake that.&nbsp; Not what
+the world calls virtue; not mere legal respectability, which says, I
+do unto others as they do unto me; which is often merely the whitening
+outside the sepulchre, and leaves the heart within unrenewed, unrighteous,
+full of pride and ambition, conceit, cunning, and envy, and unbelief
+in God: not that virtue, but the virtue which the Apostle tells us to
+add to our faith, the virtue from above, which is the same as the wisdom
+from above, which is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, easy to be
+entreated; in one word, the Holy Spirit of God, the Spirit of Divine
+Love and Charity, which seeketh not its own, which St. Paul has described
+to us in this epistle; the Holy Spirit of God, with which the Lord Jesus
+was filled without measure, and which He manifested to all the world
+in His most blessed life and death.</p>
+<p>Ah, my friends, this is not an easy lesson to learn.&nbsp; Christ&rsquo;s
+disciples and apostles could not learn it all at once.&nbsp; They tried
+to hinder little children from coming to Him.&nbsp; They rebuked the
+blind man who called after Him.&nbsp; How could the great Prophet of
+Nazareth stoop to trouble Himself about such poor insignificant people?&nbsp;
+They could not conceive, either, why the Lord Jesus should choose to
+die shamefully, when He might have lived in honour: it seemed unworthy
+of Him.&nbsp; They were shocked at His words. &lsquo;That be far from
+Thee, Lord,&rsquo; said Peter.&nbsp; Afterwards, when they really understood
+what that word &lsquo;Lord,&rsquo; meant, and what sort of a man a true
+and perfect Lord ought to be, then they saw how fit, and proper, and
+glorious, Christ&rsquo;s self-sacrifice was.&nbsp; When, too, they learnt
+to look on Him, not merely as a great prophet, but as the Son of the
+Living God, then they understood His conduct, and saw that it behoved
+an only-begotten Son of God to suffer all these things before He entered
+into His glory.</p>
+<p>But the Scribes and Pharisees never understood it.&nbsp; To the last
+they were puzzled and angered by that very self-sacrifice of His: He
+must be a bad man, they thought, or He would not care so much for bad
+men.&nbsp; &lsquo;A friend of publicans and sinners,&rsquo; they called
+Him, thinking that a shameful blame to Him, while it was really the
+very highest praise.&nbsp; But if they could not see the beauty of His
+conduct, can we?&nbsp; It is very difficult, I do not deny it, my friends,
+for the selfishness and pride of fallen man: it is difficult to see
+that the Cross was the most glorious throne that was even set up on
+earth, and that the crown of thorns was worth all the crowns of czars
+and emperors: difficult, indeed, not to stumble at the stumbling-block
+of the Cross, and to say, &lsquo;It cannot surely be more blessed to
+give than to receive:&rsquo; difficult, not to say in our hearts, &lsquo;The
+way to be great is surely to rise above other men, not to stoop below
+them; to make use of them, and not to make ourselves slaves to them.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And yet the Lord Jesus Christ did so; He took on Himself the form of
+a slave, and made Himself of no reputation: and what was fit and good
+for Him, must surely be fit and good for us.&nbsp; But it is a hard
+lesson to the pride of fallen creatures: very hard.&nbsp; And nothing,
+I believe, but sorrow will teach it us: sorrow is teaching it some of
+us now.&nbsp; We surely are beginning to see, that to suffer patiently
+for conscience sake, is the most beautiful thing on earth or in heaven:
+we begin to see that those poor soldiers, dying by inches of cold and
+weariness, without a murmur, because it was their Duty, were doing a
+nobler work even than they did when they fought at Alma and Inkermann;
+and that those ladies who are drudging in the hospitals, far away from
+home, amid filth and pestilence, are doing, if possible, a nobler work
+still, a nobler work than if they were queens or empresses, because
+they have taken up the Cross and followed Christ; because they are not
+seeking their own good, but the good of others.&nbsp; And if we will
+not learn it from those glorious examples, God will force us to learn
+it, I trust, every one of us, by sorrow and disappointment.&nbsp; Ah,
+my friends, might one not learn it at once, if one would but open one&rsquo;s
+eyes and look at things as they are?&nbsp; Every one is longing for
+something; each has his little plan for himself, of what he would like
+to be, and like to do, and says to himself all day long, &lsquo;If I
+could but get <i>that</i> one thing, I should be happy: If I could but
+get that, then I should want no more!&rsquo;&nbsp; Foolish man, self-deceived
+by his own lusts!&nbsp; Perhaps he cannot get what he wants, and therefore
+he cannot enjoy what he has, and is moody, discontented, peevish, a
+torment to himself, and perhaps a torment to his family.&nbsp; Or perhaps
+he does get what he wants: and is he happy after all?&nbsp; Not he.&nbsp;
+He is like the greedy Israelites of old, when they longed for the quails;
+and God sent the quails: but while the meat was yet in their mouths,
+they loathed it.&nbsp; So it is with a man&rsquo;s fancy.&nbsp; He gets
+what he fancies; and he plays with it for a day, as a child with a new
+toy, and most probably <i>spoils</i> it, and next day throws it away
+to run after some new pleasure, which will cheat him in just the same
+way as the last did; and so happiness flits away ahead before him; and
+he is like the simple boy in the parable, who was to find a crock of
+gold where the rainbow touched the ground: but as he moved on, the rainbow
+moved on too, and kept always a field off from him.&nbsp; You may smile:
+but just as foolish is every soul of us, who fancies that he will become
+happy by making himself great; admired, rich, comfortable, in short,
+by making himself anything whatsoever, or getting anything whatsoever
+for himself.&nbsp; Just as foolish is every poor soul, and just as unhappy,
+as long as he will go on thinking about himself, instead of copying
+the Lord Jesus Christ, and thinking about others; as long as he will
+keep to the pattern of the old selfish Adam, which is corrupt according
+to the deceitful lusts, the longings and fancies which deceive a man
+into expecting to be happy when he will not be happy; instead of putting
+on the new man, which after God&rsquo;s likeness is created in righteousness
+and true holiness: and what is true holiness but that very charity of
+which St. Paul has been preaching to us, the spirit of love, and mercy,
+and gentleness, and condescension, and patience, and active benevolence?</p>
+<p>Ah, my friends, do not forget what I said just now; that a man could
+not become happy by making himself anything.&nbsp; No.&nbsp; Not by
+making himself anything: but he may by letting God make him something.&nbsp;
+If he will let God make him a new creature in Jesus Christ, then he
+will be more than happy&mdash;he will be blessed: then he will be a
+blessing to himself, and a blessing to every one whom he meets: then
+all vain longing, and selfishness, and pride, and ambition, and covetousness,
+and peevishness and disappointment, will vanish out of his heart, and
+he will work manfully and contentedly where God has placed him&mdash;cheerful
+and open-hearted, civil and patient, always thinking about others, and
+not about himself; trying to be about his Master&rsquo;s business, which
+is doing good; and always finding too, that his Master Christ sets him
+some good work to do day by day, and gives him strength to do it.&nbsp;
+And how can a man get that blessed and noble state of mind?&nbsp; By
+prayer and practice.&nbsp; You must ask for strength from God: but then
+you must believe that He answers your prayer, and gives you that strength;
+and therefore you must try and use it.&nbsp; There is no more use in
+praying without practising than there is in practising without praying.&nbsp;
+You cannot learn to walk without walking: no more can you learn to do
+good without trying to do good.</p>
+<p>Ask, then, of God, grace and help to do good: Pray to Him this very
+day to take all selfishness and meanness out of your hearts, and to
+give you instead His Holy Spirit of Love and Charity, which alone can
+make you noble in His sight; and try this day, try every day of your
+lives, to do some good to those around you.&nbsp; Oh make a rule, and
+pray to God to help you to keep it, never, if possible, to lie down
+at night without being able to say, &lsquo;I have made one human being
+at least a little wiser, or a little happier, or a little better this
+day.&rsquo;&nbsp; You will find it easier than you think, and pleasanter:
+easier, because if you wish to do God&rsquo;s work, God will surely
+find you work to do; and pleasanter, because in return for the little
+trouble it may cost you, or the little choking of foolish vulgar pride
+it may cost you, you will have a peace of mind, a quiet of temper, a
+cheerfulness and hopefulness about yourself and all around you, such
+as you never felt before; and over and above that, if you look for a
+reward in the life to come, recollect this&mdash;what we have to hope
+for in the life to come is, to enter into the joy of our Lord.&nbsp;
+And how did He fulfil that joy, but by humbling Himself, and taking
+the form of a slave, and coming not to be ministered to but to minister,
+and to give His whole life, even to the death upon the cross, a ransom
+for many?&nbsp; Be sure, that unless you take up His cross, you will
+not share His crown.&nbsp; Be sure, that unless you follow in His footsteps,
+you will never reach the place where He is.&nbsp; If you wish to enter
+into the joy of your Lord, be sure that His joy is now, as it was in
+Jud&aelig;a of old, over every sinner that repenteth, every mourner
+that is comforted, every hungry mouth that is fed, every poor soul,
+sick or in prison, who is visited.</p>
+<p>That is the joy of your Lord&mdash;to show mercy; and that must be
+your joy too, if you wish to enter into His joy.&nbsp; Surely that is
+plain.&nbsp; You must rejoice in doing the same work that He rejoices
+in, and then His joy and yours will be the same; then you will enter
+into His joy, and He will enter into yours; then, as St. John says,
+you will dwell in Christ, and Christ in you, because you love the brethren;
+and you will hear through all eternity the blessed words, &lsquo;Inasmuch
+as ye did it unto one of the least of these little ones, ye did it unto
+Me.&rsquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XXI.&nbsp; TOLERATION</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>[<i>Preached at Bideford</i>, 1854]</p>
+<p>Philippians iii. 15, 16.&nbsp; And if in any thing ye shall be otherwise
+minded, God shall reveal even this to you.&nbsp; Nevertheless, whereto
+we have already attained, let us walk by the same rule, let us mind
+the same thing.</p>
+<p>My friends, allow me to speak a few plain and honest words, ere we
+part, on a matter which is near to, and probably important to, many
+of us here.&nbsp; We all know how the Christian Church has in all ages
+been torn in pieces by religious quarrels; we all know too well how
+painfully these religious quarrels have been brought home to our very
+doors and hearts of late.</p>
+<p>Now, we all deplore, or profess to deplore, these differences and
+controversies.&nbsp; But we may do that in two ways: we may say, &lsquo;I
+am very sorry that all Christians do not think alike,&rsquo; when all
+we mean is, &lsquo;I am very sorry that all Christians do not think
+just as I do, for I am right and infallible, whosoever else is wrong.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The fallen heart of man is too apt to say that, my friends, in its pride
+and narrowness, and while it cries out against the Pope of Rome, sets
+itself up as Pope in his stead.</p>
+<p>But there is surely another and a better way of deploring these differences:
+and that is, to say to oneself, &lsquo;I am sorry, bitterly sorry, that
+Christians cannot differ without quarrelling and hating one another
+over and above.&rsquo;&nbsp; And then comes the deeper home-thought,
+&lsquo;And how much more sorry I am that I myself cannot differ from
+my fellow-Christians without growing angry with them, suspecting them,
+despising them, treating them as if they were not my fellow-Christians
+at all.&rsquo;&nbsp; Yes, my friends, this is what we have to do first
+when we think of religious controversies, to examine our own hearts
+and deeds and words; to see whether we too have not been making bitterness
+more bitter, and, as the old proverb says, &lsquo;stirring the fire
+with a sword;&rsquo; and to repent humbly and utterly of every harsh
+word, hasty judgment, ungenerous suspicion, as sins, not only against
+men, but against God the Father of Lights, who worketh in each of His
+children to will and to do of His good pleasure.</p>
+<p>But some will say, &lsquo;We cannot give up what we believe to be
+right and true.&rsquo;&nbsp; God forbid that you should try to do so,
+my friends; for if you really believe it, you cannot, even if you try;
+and by trying you will only make yourselves dishonest.&nbsp; But does
+not that hold as good of the man who differs from you?&nbsp; God will
+not surely lay down one law for you, and another for him?&nbsp; &lsquo;But
+we are right, and he is wrong.&rsquo;&nbsp; Be it so.&nbsp; You do not
+surely mean that you are quite right; perfect and infallible?&nbsp;
+You mean that you are right on the whole, and as far as you see.&nbsp;
+And how can you tell but that he is right on the whole, and as far as
+he sees?&nbsp; You will answer that both cannot be right; that yes and
+no cannot be both true; that a thing cannot be black and white also.</p>
+<p>My friends, my friends&mdash;but where is the religious controversy,
+the two sides whereof are as clearly opposite to each other as yes and
+no, black and white?&nbsp; I know none now; I have hardly found one
+in the records of the Protestant Church since first Luther and our Reformers
+protested against Romish idolatry.&nbsp; On that last matter there should
+be no doubt, as long as the first two commandments stand in the Decalogue;
+but, with that exception, it would be difficult to find a dispute in
+which the truth lay altogether with one party.&nbsp; The truth rather
+lies, in general, not so much halfway between the two combatants, as
+in some third place, which neither of them sees; which perhaps God does
+not intend them to see in this life, while He leaves his servants each
+to work out some one side of Christian truth, dividing to every man
+severally as He will, according to the powers of each mind, and the
+needs of each situation.</p>
+<p>True we have the infallible rule of Scripture: but are our own interpretations
+of it so sure to be infallible?&nbsp; Inspired, infinite, inexhaustible
+as it is, can we pretend to have fathomed all its abysses, to have comprehended
+all its boundless treasures?&nbsp; The pretence is folly.&nbsp; True,
+again, it contains all things necessary to salvation; and those so plainly
+set forth, that he who runs may read, and the wayfaring man, though
+poor, shall not err therein.&nbsp; And yet does it not contain things
+whereof even St. Paul himself said, that he only knew in part, and prophesied
+in part, and saw as through a glass darkly; and are we to suppose that
+they are among the truths necessary to salvation?&nbsp; Now are not
+the points about which there has been, and is still, most dispute, just
+of this very number?&nbsp; Do they belong to the simple fundamental
+truths of the Gospel?&nbsp; No.&nbsp; Are they such plain matters that
+the wayfaring man, though poor, can make up his mind on them for himself?&nbsp;
+No.&nbsp; Are they one of them laid down directly in Scripture, like
+the Ten Commandments, the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer, or the Creeds?&nbsp;
+No.&nbsp; They are every one, as it seems to me, whether they be right
+or wrong, abstruse deductions, delicate theories, built up on single
+and obscure texts.&nbsp; Surely, if they had been necessary for salvation,
+the Lord would have spoken on them in a tone and in words about which
+there should be no more mistake than about the thunders of Sinai, and
+the tables of stone fresh from the finger-mark of God.&nbsp; And He
+has spoken to us, my friends, on other matters, if not on these.&nbsp;
+His promises are clear enough, and short enough, though high as heaven
+and wide as the universe.&nbsp; There is one God, and one Mediator between
+God and man, the man Christ Jesus, the only-begotten Son of God; and
+whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ, is born of God; and if
+any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous,
+and He is the propitiation for our sins.&nbsp; And again, &lsquo;If
+any man lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth liberally, and upbraideth
+not, and he shall receive it.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;For if ye, being
+evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, much more shall
+your Heavenly Father give His Holy Spirit to them who ask Him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>These are God&rsquo;s promises&mdash;simple and clear enough: and
+what are God&rsquo;s demands?&nbsp; Are they numerous, intricate, burdensome,
+a yoke which neither we nor our fathers have been able to bear?&nbsp;
+God forbid again!&mdash;&lsquo;He hath showed thee, oh man, what is
+good.&nbsp; And what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly
+and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?&rsquo;&nbsp; And
+lest thou shouldest mistake in the least the meaning of these words,
+He hath showed thee all this, and more, by a living example fairer than
+all the sons of men, and through lips full of grace, in the blessed
+life and blessed death of His Son Jesus Christ, the brightness of His
+glory, and the express image of His person.&nbsp; To this, at least,
+we have already attained.&nbsp; Let us walk by this rule, let us all
+mind this same thing, and if in anything else we are differently minded,
+God in His own good time will reveal even that to us.</p>
+<p>Is not this enough, my friends?&nbsp; Then why should we bite and
+tear each other about that which is over and above this?&nbsp; If any
+man believes this, and acts on it, let us hail him as a brother.&nbsp;
+After all, let our differences be what they will, have we not one Lord,
+one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is above all,
+and through all, and in us all?&nbsp; If this is not bond enough between
+man and man, what bond would we have?&nbsp; Oh, my friends, when we
+consider this our little life, how full of ignorance it is and darkness;
+within us, rebellion, inconstancy, confusion, daily sins and shortcomings;
+and without us, disappointment, fear of loneliness, loss of friends,
+loss of all which makes life worth having,&mdash;who are we that we
+should deny proudly one single tie which binds us to any other human
+being?&nbsp; Who are we that we should refuse one hand stretched out
+to grasp our own?&nbsp; Who are we that we should say, &lsquo;Stand
+back, for I am holier than thou?&rsquo;&nbsp; Who are we that we should
+judge another? to his own master let him stand or fall&mdash;&lsquo;yea,
+and he shall stand,&rsquo; says the Apostle, &lsquo;for God is able
+to make him stand.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Think of those last words, my friends, they are strong and startling;
+but we must not shrink from them.&nbsp; They tell us that God may be
+as near those whom we heap with hard names, as He is near to us; that
+He may intend that they should triumph, not over us, but with us over
+evil.&nbsp; And if God be with them, who dare be against them?&nbsp;
+Shall we be more dainty than God?&nbsp; And therefore I have never been
+able to hear, without a shudder, words which I have heard, and from
+really Christian men too: &lsquo;I can wish well to a pious man of a
+different denomination from mine; I can honour and admire the fruits
+of God&rsquo;s Spirit in him; but I cannot co-operate with him.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+When I hear such language from really good men, I confess I am puzzled.&nbsp;
+I have no doubt that their reasons seem to them very sound; but what
+they are I cannot conceive.&nbsp; I cannot conceive why I should not
+hold out the right hand of fellowship and brotherhood to every man who
+fears God and works righteousness, of whatsoever denomination he may
+be.&nbsp; We believe the Apostles&rsquo; Creed, surely?&nbsp; Then think
+of the meaning of that one word, The Holy Spirit.&nbsp; To whom are
+we to attribute any man&rsquo;s good deeds, except to the Holy Spirit?&nbsp;
+We dare not say that he does them by an innate and natural virtue of
+his own, for that would be to fall at once into the Pelagian heresy;
+neither dare we attribute his good deeds to an evil spirit, and say,
+&lsquo;However good they may look, they must be bad, for he belongs
+to a denomination who cannot have God&rsquo;s Spirit.&rsquo;&nbsp; We
+dare not; for that would be to approach fearfully near to the unpardonable
+sin itself, the sin against the Holy Ghost, the bigotry which says,
+&lsquo;He casteth out devils by the Prince of the devils.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Surely if we be Christians, and Churchmen, we confess (for the Bible
+and the Prayer-book declare) that every good deed of man comes down
+from the One Fountain of Good, from God, the Father of Lights, by the
+inspiration of His Holy Spirit.</p>
+<p>Then think, my friends, think what words we have said.&nbsp; We confess
+that the great, absolute, almighty, eternal God, in whose hand suns
+and stars, ages and generations, hell and heaven, and all which is and
+has been, and ever will be, are but as a grain of sand; who has but
+to take away His breath, and the whole universe would become nothing
+and nowhere; the utterly holy and righteous God, who is of purer eyes
+than to behold iniquity, who charges His angels with folly, and the
+heavens are not clean in His sight&mdash;we confess, I say, that this
+great God has condescended to visit that man&rsquo;s soul, and cherish
+it, and teach it, and shape it (be it ever so little) into His own likeness:
+and shall we dare to stand aloof from him from whom God does not stand
+aloof?&nbsp; Shall we refuse to walk with one who walks with God?&nbsp;
+Shall we refuse to work with one who is a fellow-worker with God, to
+love one whom God loves, to take by the hand one whose guest God has
+become?&nbsp; Shall we be more dainty than God? more fastidious than
+God? more righteous than God? more separate from sinners than God?&nbsp;
+Oh, my friends, let us pray that we may love God better, and know His
+likeness more clearly; that we may be more ready to recognise, and admire,
+and welcome every, even the smallest trace of that likeness in any human
+being, remembering that it is the likeness of Christ, who was not merely
+The Teacher of all in every nation who fear God and work righteousness,
+but the Saviour who ate and drank with publicans and sinners: and then
+we shall be more careful how we call unclean what God Himself has cleansed
+with His own presence, His own grace, His own quickening and renewing
+and sanctifying Spirit.</p>
+<p>Be sure, be sure, my friends, that in proportion as we really love
+the Lord Jesus Christ, we shall love those who love Him, be it in never
+so clumsy or mistaken a fashion; and love those too whom He loved enough
+to die for them, and whom He loves now enough to teach and strengthen.&nbsp;
+We shall say to them, not &lsquo;Wherein do we differ?&rsquo; but &lsquo;Wherein
+do we agree?&rsquo;&nbsp; Not, &lsquo;Because I cannot worship with
+you, therefore I will not work with you;&rsquo; but rather, &lsquo;I
+wish that I could worship with you; I will whenever and wherever I can,
+as far as you allow me, as far as the law allows me, as far as your
+worship is not in my eyes an actually sinful thing: but, be that as
+it may, we can at least do together something better even than worshipping,
+and that is, working.&nbsp; We can surely do good together.&nbsp; Together,
+let our denomination or party be what it may, we can feed the hungry,
+clothe the naked, reform the prisoner, humanize the degraded, save yearly
+the lives of thousands by labouring for the public health, and educate
+the minds and morals of the masses, though our religious differences
+(shame on us that it should be so!) force us to part when we begin to
+talk to them about the world to come.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>For are we not brothers after all?&nbsp; Has not God made us of one
+blood, English men, with English hearts?&nbsp; Has not Christ redeemed
+us with one and the same sacrifice?&nbsp; Has not the Holy Spirit given
+us one and the same desire of doing good?&nbsp; And shall we not use
+that spirit hand in hand?&nbsp; Look, look at the opportunities of doing
+good which are around you; look at God&rsquo;s field of good works,
+white already to the harvest; and the labourers are few.&nbsp; Shall
+these few, instead of going manfully to work, stand idly quarrelling
+about the shape of their instruments, and their favourite modes of using
+them?&nbsp; God forbid!&nbsp; True, there are errors against which we
+are bound to protest to the uttermost; but how few?&nbsp; The one real
+enemy we have all to fight is sin&mdash;evil-doing.&nbsp; If any man
+or doctrine makes men worse&mdash;makes men do worse deeds, protest
+then, if you will, and spare not, and shrink not: for sin must be of
+the Devil, whatever else is not.&nbsp; And therefore we are bound to
+protest against any doctrine which parts man from God, and, under whatsoever
+pretence of reverence or purity, draws again the veil between him and
+his Heavenly Father, and denies him free access to the Throne of Grace,
+and the feet of Jesus, that he may carry thither his own sins, his own
+doubts, his own sorrows, and speak (wondrous condescension of redeeming
+grace!) speak with God face to face, and yet live.&nbsp; For this we
+must protest; for this we must die, if needs be; for if we lose this,
+we lose all which our reforming forefathers won for us at the stake,
+ay, we lose our own souls; for we lose righteousness and strength, and
+the power to do the will of God.</p>
+<p>For to shut a man out from free access to God and Christ is to make
+him certainly false, dishonest, cowardly, degraded, slavish, and sinful;
+as modern Popery has made, and always will make, those over whom it
+really gains power.&nbsp; This is the root of our hereditary protest
+against Popery; not merely because we do not agree with certain of its
+doctrines, but because we know from experience, that as now taught by
+the Jesuits, with whom it has identified itself, its general tendency
+is to make men bad men, ignorant, dishonest, rebellious; unworthy citizens
+of a free and loyal state.</p>
+<p>And there are practices against which congregations have a right
+to protest, not only as Christians, but as free Englishmen.&nbsp; Congregations
+have a right to protest against any minister who introduces obsolete
+ceremonies which empty his church and drive away his people.&nbsp; Those
+ceremonies may be quite harmless in themselves, as I really believe
+most of them are; many of them may be beautiful, and, if properly understood,
+useful, as I think they are; but a thing may be good in itself, and
+yet become bad by being used at a wrong time, and in a way which produces
+harm.&nbsp; And it is shocking, to say the least, to see churches emptied
+and parishes thrown into war for the sake of such matters.&nbsp; The
+lightest word which can be used for such conduct is, pedantry; but I
+fear at times lest the Lord in heaven should be using a far more awful
+word, and when He sees weak brethren driven from the fold of the Church
+by the self-will and obstinacy of the very men who profess to desire
+to bring all into the Church, as the only place where salvation is to
+be found,&mdash;I fear, I say, when I see such deeds, lest the Lord
+should repeat against them His own awful words: &lsquo;If any man scandalize
+one of these little ones who believeth on Me, it were better for him
+that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned
+in the depths of the sea.&rsquo;&nbsp; What sadder mistake?&nbsp; Those
+who have sworn to seek out Christ&rsquo;s lambs scattered up and down
+this wicked world, shall they be the very ones to frighten those lambs
+out of the fold, instead of alluring them back into it?&nbsp; Shall
+the shepherd play the part, not even of the hireling who flees and leaves
+the sheep to themselves, but of the very wolf who scatters the flock?&nbsp;
+God forbid!&nbsp; The Church, like the Sabbath, was made for man, my
+friends: not man for the Church; and the Son of Man, as He is Lord of
+the Sabbath, is Lord of the Church, and will have mercy in its dealings
+rather than sacrifice.&nbsp; The minister, my friends, was made for
+the people: and not the people for the minister.&nbsp; What else does
+the very name &lsquo;minister&rsquo; mean?&nbsp; Not a lord who has
+dominion, but a servant, a servant to all, who must give up again and
+again his private notions of what he thinks best in itself for the sake
+of what will be best for his flock; who must be, like St. Paul, a Jew
+to the Jews; under the law to those who are still under the law; and
+yet again without law to those who are without law (though not without
+law to God, but under the law to Christ); weak with the weak; strong
+with the strong; that he may gain men of all sorts of opinions and characters
+by agreeing with them as far as he honestly can, and showing his sympathy
+with each as much as he can; and so become all things to all men, that
+he may by all means save some.&nbsp; Oh, my friends, who can read honestly
+that glorious First Epistle to the Corinthians and not see how a man
+may have the most intense earnestness, the strongest doctrinal certainty,
+and yet at the same time the greatest freedom, and charity, and liberality
+about minor matters of ceremonies and Church arrangements, and practical
+methods of usefulness; glad even that Christ be preached by his enemies,
+and out of spite to him, because any way Christ is preached?</p>
+<p>But, my friends, if it is the right of free Englishmen to protest
+against such doings, how shall it be done?&nbsp; Surely in gentleness,
+calmness, reverence, as by men who know that they are standing on holy
+ground, and dealing with sacred things, before the Throne of God, and
+beneath the eye of Jesus Christ.&nbsp; Not surely, as it has been too
+often done, in bitterness, and wrath, and clamour, and evil-speaking,
+with really unjust suspicions, exaggerations, slanders, (and those,
+too, anonymous,) in the columns of the public prints.&nbsp; My friends,
+these are not God&rsquo;s weapons.&nbsp; Not such is Ithuriel&rsquo;s
+magic spear, the very touch of which unmasks falsehood.&nbsp; This is
+to try to cast out Satan by Satan, to make evil worse by fighting it
+with fresh evil.&nbsp; Oh, my friends, if there is one counsel which
+I would press on all here more earnestly than another, it is this&mdash;never,
+never, howsoever great may be the temptation, to indulge in anonymous
+attacks on any human being.&nbsp; No man has a right to do it who prays
+daily to his Father in heaven, Lead us not into temptation.&nbsp; For
+it is to lead oneself into temptation, and that too sore to resist;
+into the temptation to say something which one dare not say, and ought
+not to say, were one&rsquo;s name known; the temptation to forget not
+only the charity of Christians, but even the courtesies of civilized
+life; and to shoot, from behind the safe hedge of anonymousness, coward
+and envenomed shafts, of which we should be ashamed, did the world know
+that they were ours; of which we shall surely be ashamed in that great
+day, when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed.&nbsp; I speak
+strongly: but only because I know by bitter experience the terrible
+truth of my own words.</p>
+<p>And consider, my friends, can any good result come from handling
+sacred matters with such harsh and fierce hands as they have been handled
+of late?&nbsp; For ourselves, such evil tempers only excite, irritate,
+blind us: they prevent our doing justice to the opposite side&mdash;(I
+speak of all parties)&mdash;they put us into an unwholesome state of
+suspicion, and tempt us to pass harsh judgments upon men as righteous,
+and perhaps far more righteous, than ourselves: they stir up our pride
+to special plead our case, to make the best of our own side, and the
+worst of our opponents&rsquo;: they defile our very prayers; till, when
+we ought to be praying God to bless all mankind, we catch ourselves
+unawares calling on Him to curse our enemies.</p>
+<p>For those who are without&mdash;for the infidel, the profligate,
+the careless&mdash;oh, what a scandal to them!&nbsp; What an excuse
+for them to blaspheme the holy name whereby we are called, and ask,
+as of old, &lsquo;Is this then the Gospel of Peace?&nbsp; See how these
+Christians hate one another!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>While for the young, oh, my friends, what a scandal, again, to them!&nbsp;
+If you had seen (as I have) pious parents destroying in their own childrens&rsquo;
+minds all faith, all reverence for holy things, by mixing themselves
+up in religious controversies, and indulging by their own firesides
+in fierce denunciations of men no worse than themselves;&mdash;if you
+will watch (as you may) young people taking refuge, some in utter frivolity,
+saying, &lsquo;What am I to believe?&nbsp; When religionists have settled
+what religion is, it will be time enough for me to think of it: meanwhile,
+let me eat and drink, for to-morrow I die;&rsquo;&mdash;and others,
+the children of strong Protestant parents, taking refuge in the apostate
+Church of Rome, and saying, &lsquo;If Englishmen do not know what to
+believe, Rome does; if I cannot find certainty in Protestantism, I can
+in Popery;&rsquo;&mdash;if you will consider honestly and earnestly
+these sad tragedies, you will look on it as a sacred duty to the children
+whom God has given you, to keep aloof as much as possible from all those
+points on which Christians differ, and make your children feel from
+their earliest years that there are points, and those the great, vital
+root points, on which all more or less agree, which many members of
+the Romish Church have held, and, I doubt not, now hold, as firmly as
+Protestants,&mdash;adoption by one common Father, justification by the
+blood of one common Saviour, sanctification by one common Holy Spirit.</p>
+<p>And believe me, my friends, that just in proportion as you delight
+in, and live by, these great doctrines, all controversies will become
+less and less important in your eyes.&nbsp; The more you value the living
+body of Christianity, the less you will think of its temporary garments;
+the more you feel the power of God&rsquo;s Spirit, the less scrupulous
+will you be about the peculiar form in which He may manifest Himself.&nbsp;
+Personal trust in Christ Jesus, personal love to Christ Jesus, personal
+belief that He and He only, is governing this poor diseased and confused
+world; that He is really fighting against all evil in it; that He really
+rules all nations, and fashions the hearts of all of them, and understands
+all their works, and has appointed them their times and the bounds of
+their habitation, if haply they may feel after Him and find Him: personal
+and living belief that the just and loving Lord Christ reigneth, be
+the peoples never so unquiet;&mdash;this, this will keep your minds
+clear, and sober, and charitable, and will make you turn with disgust
+from platform squabbles and newspaper controversies, to do the duty
+which lies nearest you; to walk soberly and righteously with your God,
+and train up your children in His faith and fear, not merely to be scholars,
+not merely to be devotees, but to be Christian Englishmen; courteous
+and gentle, and yet manful and self-restraining; fearing God and regarding
+man; growing up healthy under that solemn sense of national duty which
+is the only safeguard of national freedom.</p>
+<p>And, meanwhile, you will leave all who differ from you in the hands
+of a God who wills their salvation far more than you can do; who accepts,
+in every nation, those who fear Him and work righteousness; who is merciful
+in this&mdash;that He rewards every man according to his work; and who,
+if our brothers be otherwise minded from us, will reveal even that to
+them, if we be right: or, again, to us, if they be right.&nbsp; For
+we may have to learn from them, as well as they from us; and both have
+to learn much from God, in the day when all controversies and doubts
+shall vanish like a cloud; when we shall see no longer in part, and
+through a glass darkly, but face to face; while all things shall be
+bright in the sunshine of God&rsquo;s presence and of the countenance
+of His Son Jesus Christ our Lord.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SERMON XXII.&nbsp; PUBLIC SPIRIT</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>(<i>Preached at Bideford</i>, 1855.)</p>
+<p>1 Corinthians xii. 25, 26.&nbsp; That there should be no division
+in the body; but that the members should have the same care, one of
+another.&nbsp; And whether one member suffer, all suffer with it; or
+whether one member be honoured, all rejoice with it.</p>
+<p>I have been asked to preach in behalf of the Provident Society of
+this town.&nbsp; I shall begin by asking you to think over with me a
+matter which may seem at first sight to have very little to do with
+you or with a provident society, but which, nevertheless, I believe
+has very much to do with both, and is full of wholesome spiritual instruction
+for us all.</p>
+<p>Did it ever happen to any of you, to see a mob of several thousands
+put to instant flight by a mere handful of soldiers?&nbsp; And did you
+ever ask yourself how that apparent miracle could come to pass?&nbsp;
+The first answer which occurred to you, perhaps, was, that the soldiers
+were well armed, and the mob was not: but soon, I am sure, you felt
+that you were doing the soldiers an injustice; that they would have
+behaved just as bravely if every man in that mob had been as well armed
+as they, and have resisted till they were overpowered by mere numbers.&nbsp;
+You felt, I am sure, that there was something in the hearts and spirits
+of those soldiers which there was not in the hearts of the mob; that
+though the mob might be boiling over with the greediest passions, the
+fiercest fury, while the soldiers were calm, cheerful, and caring for
+nothing but doing their duty, yet that there was a thought within them
+which was stronger than all the rage and greediness of the thousands
+whom they faced; that, in short, the seeming miracle was a moral and
+a spiritual miracle.</p>
+<p>What, then, is this wonder-working thought which makes the soldier
+strong?</p>
+<p>Courage, you answer, and the sense of duty.&nbsp; True; but what
+has called out the sense of duty?&nbsp; What has inspired the courage?&nbsp;
+There was a time, perhaps, when each of those soldiers was no braver
+or more steady than the mob in front of them.&nbsp; Has it never happened
+to you to know some young country lad, both before and after he has
+become a soldier?&nbsp; Look at him in his native village (if you will
+let me draw for you the sketch of a history, which, alas! is the history
+of thousands), perhaps one of the worst and idlest lads in it&mdash;unwilling
+to work steadily, haunting the public-house and the worst of company;
+wandering out at night to poach and caring for nothing but satisfying
+his gross animal appetites; afraid to look you in the face, hardly able
+to give an intelligible, certainly not a civil answer; his countenance
+expressing only vacancy, sensuality, cunning, suspicion, utter want
+of self-respect.</p>
+<p>It is a sad sight, but how common a sight, even in this favoured
+land!</p>
+<p>At last he vanishes; he has been engaged in some drunken affray,
+or in some low intrigue, and has fled for fear of the law, and enlisted
+as a soldier.</p>
+<p>A year or two passes, and you meet the same lad again&mdash;if indeed
+he is the same.&nbsp; For a strange change has come over him: he walks
+erect, he speaks clearly, he looks you boldly in the face, with eyes
+full of intelligence and self-respect; he is become civil and courteous
+now; he touches his cap to you &lsquo;like a soldier;&rsquo; he can
+afford now to be respectful to others, because he respects himself,
+and expects you to respect him.&nbsp; You talk to him, and find that
+the change is not merely outward, but inward; not owing to mere mechanical
+drill but to something which has been going on in his heart; and ten
+to one, the first thing that he begins to talk to you about, with honest
+pride, is his regiment.&nbsp; His regiment.&nbsp; Yes, there is the
+secret which has worked these wonders; there is the talisman which has
+humanized and civilized and raised from the mire the once savage boor.&nbsp;
+He belongs to a regiment; in one word, he has become the member of a
+body.</p>
+<p>The member of a body, in which if one member suffers, all suffer
+with it; if one member be honoured, all rejoice with it.&nbsp; A body,
+which has a life of its own, and a government of its own, a duty of
+its own, a history of its own, an allegiance to a sovereign, all which
+are now his life, his duty, his history, his allegiance; he does not
+now merely serve himself and his own selfish lusts: he serves the Queen.&nbsp;
+His nature is not changed, but the thought that he is the member of
+an honourable body has raised him above his nature.&nbsp; If he forgets
+that, and thinks only of himself, he will become selfish sluttish, drunken,
+cowardly, a bad soldier; as long as he remembers it, he is a hero.&nbsp;
+He can face mobs now, and worse than mobs: he can face hunger and thirst,
+fatigue, danger, death itself, because he is the member of a body.&nbsp;
+For those know little, little of human nature and its weakness, who
+fancy that mere brute courage, as of an angry lion, will ever avail,
+or availed a few short weeks ago, to spur our thousands up the steeps
+of Alma, or across the fatal plain of Balaklava, athwart the corpses
+of their comrades, upon the deadly throats of Russian guns.&nbsp; A
+nobler feeling, a more heavenly thought was needed (and when needed,
+thanks to God, it came!) to keep each raw lad, nursed in the lap of
+peace, true to his country and his Queen through the valley of the shadow
+of death.&nbsp; Not mere animal fierceness: but that tattered rag which
+floated above his head, inscribed with the glorious names of Egypt or
+Corunna, Toulouse or Waterloo, that it was which raised him into a hero:
+he had seen those victories; the men who conquered there were dead long
+since: but the regiment still lived, its history still lived, its honour
+lived, and that history, that honour were his, as well as those old
+dead warriors&rsquo;: he had fought side by side with them in spirit,
+though not in the flesh; and now his turn was come, and he must do as
+they did, and for their sakes, and count his own life a worthless thing
+for the sake of the body which he belonged to: he, but two years ago
+the idle, selfish country lad, now stumbling cheerful on in the teeth
+of the iron hail, across ground slippery with his comrades&rsquo; blood,
+not knowing whether the next moment his own blood might not swell the
+ghastly stream.&nbsp; What matter?&nbsp; They might kill him, but they
+could not kill the regiment: it would live on and conquer; ay, and should
+conquer, if his life could help on its victory; and then its honour
+would be his, its reward be his, even when his corpse lay pierced with
+wounds, stiffening beneath a foreign sky.</p>
+<p>Here, my friends, is one example of the blessed power of fellow feeling,
+public spirit, the sense of belonging to a body whose members have not
+merely a common interest, but a common duty, a common honour.</p>
+<p>This Christian country, thank God! gives daily many another example
+of the same: and every place, and every station affords to each one
+of us opportunities,&mdash;more, alas, I fear, than we shall ever take
+full advantage of: but I have chosen the case of the soldier, not merely
+because it is perhaps the most striking and affecting, but because I
+wish to see, and trust in God that I shall see, those who remain at
+home in safety emulating the public spirit and self-sacrifice which
+our soldiers are showing abroad; and by sacrifices more peaceful and
+easy, but still well-pleasing unto God, showing that they too have been
+raised above selfishness, by the glorious thought that they are members
+of a body.</p>
+<p>For, are we not members of a body, my friends?&nbsp; Are we not members
+of the Body of bodies, members of Christ, children of God, inheritors
+of the Kingdom of Heaven?&nbsp; Members of Christ&mdash;we, and the
+poor for whom I plead, as well as we; perhaps, considering their many
+trials and our few trials, more faithfully and loyally by far than we
+are.&nbsp; There are some here, I doubt not, to whom that word, that
+argument, is enough: to whom it is enough to say, Remember that the
+Lord whom you love loves that shivering, starving wretch as well as
+He loves you, to open and exhaust at once their heart, their purse,
+their labour of love.&nbsp; God&rsquo;s blessing be upon all such!&nbsp;
+But it would be hypocrisy in me, my friends, to speak to this, or any
+congregation, as if all were of that temper of mind.&nbsp; It is not
+one in ten, alas! in the present divided state of religious parties,
+who feels the mere name of Christ enough of a bond to make him sacrifice
+himself for his fellow Christians, as a soldier does for his fellow
+soldiers.&nbsp; Not one in ten, alas! feels that he owes the same allegiance
+to Christ as the soldier does to his Queen; that the honour of Christianity
+is his honour, the history of Christianity his history, the life of
+Christianity his life.&nbsp; Would that it were so: but it is not so.&nbsp;
+And I must appeal to feelings in you less wide, honourable and righteous
+though they are: I must appeal to your public spirit as townsmen of
+this place.</p>
+<p>I have a right as a clergyman to do so: I have a duty as a clergyman
+to do so.&nbsp; For your being townsmen of this place is not a mere
+material accident depending on your living in one house instead of another.&nbsp;
+It is a spiritual matter; it is a question of eternity.&nbsp; Your souls
+and spirits influence each other; your tastes, opinions, tempers, habits,
+make those of your neighbours better or worse; you feel it in yourselves
+daily.&nbsp; Look at it as a proof that, whether you will or not, you
+are one body, of which all the members must more or less suffer and
+rejoice together; that you have a common weal, a common interest; that
+God has knit you together; that you cannot part yourselves even if you
+will; and that you can be happy and prosperous only by acknowledging
+each other as brothers, and by doing to each other as you would they
+should do unto you.</p>
+<p>It may be hard at times to bring this thought home to our minds:
+but it is none the less true because we forget it; and if we do not
+choose to bring it home to our own minds, it will be sooner or later
+brought home to them whether we choose or not.</p>
+<p>For bear in mind, that St. Paul does not say, if one member suffers,
+all the rest ought to suffer with it: he says that they do suffer with
+it.&nbsp; He does not say merely, that we ought to feel for our fellow
+townsmen; he says, that God has so tempered the body together as to
+force one member to have the same care of the others as of itself; that
+if we do not care to feel for them, we shall be made to feel with them.&nbsp;
+One limb cannot choose whether or not it will feel the disease of another
+limb.&nbsp; If one limb be in pain, the whole body <i>must</i> be uneasy,
+whether it will or not.&nbsp; And if one class in a town, or parish,
+or county, be degraded, or in want, the whole town, or parish, or county,
+must be the worse for it.&nbsp; St. Paul is not preaching up sentimental
+sympathy: he is telling you of a plain fact.&nbsp; He is not saying,
+&lsquo;It is a very fine and saintly thing, and will increase your chance
+of heaven, to help the poor.&rsquo;&nbsp; He is saying, &lsquo;If you
+neglect the poor, you neglect yourself; if you degrade the poor, you
+degrade yourself.&nbsp; His poverty, his carelessness, his immorality,
+his dirt, his ill-health, will punish <i>you</i>; for you and he are
+members of the same body, knit together inextricably for weal or woe,
+by the eternal laws according to which the Lord Jesus Christ has constituted
+human society; and if you break those laws, they will avenge themselves.&rsquo;&mdash;My
+friends, do we not see them avenge themselves daily?&nbsp; The slave-holder
+refuses to acknowledge that his slave is a member of the same body as
+himself; but he does not go unpunished: the degradation to which he
+has brought his slave degrades him, by throwing open to him. the downward
+path of lust, laziness, ungoverned and tyrannous tempers, and the other
+sins which have in all ages, slowly but surely, worked the just ruin
+of slave-holding states.&nbsp; The sinner is his own tempter, and the
+sinner is his own executioner: he lies in wait for his own life (says
+Solomon) when he lies in wait for his brother&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Do you
+see the same law working in our own free country?&nbsp; If you leave
+the poor careless and filthy, you can obtain no good servants: if you
+leave them profligate, they make your sons profligate also: if you leave
+them tempted by want, your property is unsafe: if you leave them uneducated,
+reckless, improvident, you cannot get your work properly done, and have
+to waste time and money in watching your workmen instead of trusting
+them.&nbsp; Why, what are all poor-rates and county-rates, if you will
+consider, but God&rsquo;s plain proof to us, that the poor are members
+of the same body as ourselves; and that if we will not help them of
+our own free will, we shall find it necessary to help them against our
+will: that if we will not pay a little to prevent them becoming pauperized
+or criminal, we must pay a great deal to keep them when they have become
+so?&nbsp; We may draw a lesson&mdash;and a most instructive one it is&mdash;from
+the city of Liverpool, in which it was lately proved that crime&mdash;and
+especially the crime of uneducated boys and girls&mdash;had cost, in
+the last few years, the city many times more than it would cost to educate,
+civilize, and depauperize the whole rising generation of that city,
+and had been a tax upon the capital and industry of Liverpool, so enormous
+that they would have submitted to it from no Government on earth; and
+yet they had been blindly inflicting it upon themselves for years, simply
+because they chose to forget that they were their brothers&rsquo; keepers.</p>
+<p>Look again at preventible epidemics, like cholera.&nbsp; All the
+great towns of England have discovered, what you I fear are discovering
+also, that the expense of a pestilence, and of the widows and orphans
+which it creates, is far greater than the expense of putting a town
+into such a state of cleanliness as would defy the entrance of the disease.&nbsp;
+So it is throughout the world.&nbsp; Nothing is more expensive than
+penuriousness; nothing more anxious than carelessness; and every duty
+which is bidden to wait, returns with seven fresh duties at its back.</p>
+<p>Yes, my friends, we are members of a body; and we must realize that
+fact by painful experience, if we refuse to realize it in public spirit
+and brotherly kindness, and the approval of a good conscience, and the
+knowledge that we are living like our Lord and Master Jesus Christ,
+who laboured for all but Himself, cared for all but Himself; who counted
+not His own life dear to Himself that by laying it down He might redeem
+into His own likeness the beings whom He had made; and who has placed
+us on this earth, each in his own station, each in his own parish, that
+we might follow in His footsteps, and live by His Spirit, which is the
+spirit of love and fellow-feeling, that new and risen life of His, which
+is the life of duty, honour, and self-sacrifice.</p>
+<p>Yes.&nbsp; Let us look rather at this brighter side of the question,
+my friends, than at the darker.&nbsp; I will preach the Gospel to you
+rather than the Law.&nbsp; I will appeal to your higher feelings rather
+than to your lower; to your love rather than your fear; to your honour
+rather than your self-interest.&nbsp; It will be pleasanter for me:
+it will meet with a more cordial response, I doubt not, from you.</p>
+<p>Some dislike appeals to honour.&nbsp; I cannot, as long as St. Paul
+himself appeals to it so often, both in the individual and in bodies.&nbsp;
+His whole Epistle to Philemon is an appeal, most delicate and graceful,
+to Philemon&rsquo;s sense of honour&mdash;to the thought of what he
+owed Paul, of what Paul wished him to repay, not with money, but with
+generosity.</p>
+<p>And his appeal to the Corinthians is a direct appeal to their honour:
+not to fears of any punishment, or wrath of God, but to the respect
+which they owed to themselves as members of a body, the Church of Corinth;
+and to the respect which they owed to that body as a whole, and which
+they had disgraced by allowing an open scandal in it.</p>
+<p>And his appeal was successful: they took it just as it was meant;
+and he rejoices in the thought that they did so.&nbsp; &lsquo;For this,
+that ye sorrowed after a godly sort, what carefulness it wrought in
+you, yea, what clearing of yourselves, what indignation, what fear,
+what vehement desire, what zeal, what revenge!&nbsp; In all things you
+have approved yourselves to be clear in this matter,&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Noble words, and nobly answered.&nbsp; My friends, you, too, are
+members of a body: go, and do likewise in the matter of this Society&rsquo;s
+failing funds.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>May I boldly ask you to alter this to-day?&nbsp; This, remember,
+is no common day.&nbsp; It is a day of thankfulness.&nbsp; The thankfulness
+which you professed, and I doubt not many of you felt, on Thursday night,
+has not evaporated, I trust, by Sunday morning.&nbsp; You have not yet
+forgotten&mdash;I trust that there is many a one who will never forget&mdash;what
+you owe as townsmen of this place, to God who has preserved you safe
+through the dangers and sorrows of the past autumn.&nbsp; You owe more
+than one debt to God.&nbsp; You owe, all England owes, thanks to Him
+for the late bounteous harvest, thanks to Him for the present prosperous
+seed-time: think what our state might have been with scarcity, as well
+as war, upon us, and pay part of your debt this day.&nbsp; You owe a
+thank-offering for the cessation of the cholera; a thank-offering for
+the sparing of your own lives;&mdash;pay it now.&nbsp; You owe a thank-offering
+for the glorious victories of our armies:&mdash;pay it now.&nbsp; You
+belong, too, to an honourable body, which has a noble history, and sets
+you many a noble example; show yourselves worthy of that body, that
+history, those examples, now.</p>
+<p>And what fitter place than this very church to awaken within you
+the thought of duty and of public spirit?&mdash;this church which stands
+as God&rsquo;s own sign that you are the townsmen, the representatives,
+ay, some of you the very descendants, of many a noble spirit of old
+time?&mdash;this church, in which God&rsquo;s blessing has been invoked
+on deeds of patriotism and enterprise, of which the whole world now
+bears the fruit?&mdash;these walls, in which Elizabeth&rsquo;s heroes,
+your ancestors, have prayed before sailing against the Spanish Armada,&mdash;these
+walls, which saw the baptism of the first red Indian convert, and the
+gathering in, as it were, of the firstfruits of the heathen,&mdash;these
+walls, in which the early settlers of Virginia have invoked God&rsquo;s
+blessing on those tiny ventures which were destined to become the seeds
+of a mighty nation, and the starting-point of the United States,&mdash;these
+walls, which still bear the monument of your heroic townsman Strange,
+who expended for his plague-stricken brethren, talents, time, wealth,
+and at last life itself.&nbsp; For, to return, and to apply, I hope,
+to your consciences, the example of the soldier with which I began this
+Sermon:&mdash;shall it be only on the battle-field that the power of
+fellow-feeling is shown forth?&nbsp; Shall public spirit be only strong
+when it has to destroy, and not when it has to save and comfort?&nbsp;
+God forbid!&nbsp; Surely you here have a common corporate life, common
+history, common allegiance, common interest, which should inspire you
+to do your duty, whatsoever it may be, for the good of your native place,
+and to show that you feel an honourable self-respect in the thought
+that you belong to an ancient and once famous town, which though it
+may be outstripped awhile in the race of commerce, need never be outstripped,
+if you will be worthy sons of your worthy ancestors, in that race to
+which St. Paul exhorts us; the race of justice and benevolence, the
+noble rivalry of noble deeds.</p>
+<p>Oh, look, I beseech you, upon this church as its old worshippers,
+the forefathers of many of you who sit here this day, were wont to look
+on it.&nbsp; Remember that this church is the sign that you are one
+town, one parish, one body; that century after century, this church
+has stood to witness to your fathers, and your fathers&rsquo; fathers,
+that all who kneel within these walls are brothers, rich or poor; that
+all are children of one Father, redeemed by one Saviour, taught by one
+Spirit.&nbsp; This, this is the blessed truth of which the parish church
+is token, as nought else can be&mdash;that you are one body, members
+one of another, and that God&rsquo;s blessing is on your union and fellow-feeling;
+that God smiles on your bearing each other&rsquo;s burdens, and so fulfilling
+the law of Christ.&nbsp; Look on this church, and do to others as this
+church witnesses that God has done for you.</p>
+<p>And now, some of you may perhaps have been disappointed, some a little
+scornful, at my having used so many words about so small a matter, and
+talked of battles, legends, heroes of old time, all merely to induct
+you to help this Society with a paltry extra thirty pounds.&nbsp; Be
+it so.&nbsp; I shall be glad if you think so.&nbsp; If the matter be
+so small, it is the more easily done; if the sum be paltry, it is the
+more easily found.&nbsp; If my reasons are very huge and loud-sounding,
+and the result at which I aim very light, the result ought to follow
+all the more certainly; for believe me, my friends, the reasons are
+good ones, Scriptural ones, practical ones, and ought to produce the
+result.&nbsp; I give you the strongest arguments for showing your Christian,
+English public spirit; and then I ask you to show it in a very small
+matter.&nbsp; But be sure that to do what I ask of you to do to-day
+is just as much your duty, small as it may seem, as it would be, were
+you soldiers, to venture your lives in the cause of your native land.&nbsp;
+Duty, be it in a small matter or a great, is duty still; the command
+of Heaven, the eldest voice of God.&nbsp; And, believe me, my friends,
+that it is only they who are faithful in a few things who will be faithful
+over many things; only they who do their duty in everyday and trivial
+matters who will fulfil them on great occasions.&nbsp; We all honour
+and admire the heroes of Alma and Balaklava; we all trust in God that
+we should have done our duty also in their place.&nbsp; The best test
+of that, my friends, is, can we do our duty in our own place?&nbsp;
+Here the duty is undeniable, plain, easy.&nbsp; Here is a Society instituted
+for one purpose, which has, in order to exist, to appropriate the funds
+destined for quite a different purpose.&nbsp; Both purposes are excellent;
+but they are different.&nbsp; The Offertory money is meant for the sick,
+the widow, and the orphan; for those who <i>cannot</i> help themselves.&nbsp;
+The Provident Society is meant to encourage those who <i>can</i> help
+themselves to do so.&nbsp; Every farthing, therefore, taken from the
+Offertory money is taken from the widow and the orphan.&nbsp; I ask
+you whether this is right and just?&nbsp; I appeal, not merely to your
+prudence and good sense, in asking you to promote prudence and good
+sense among the poor by the Provident Society; I appeal to your honour
+and compassion, on behalf of the sick, the widow, and orphan, that they
+may have the full enjoyment of the funds intended for them.&nbsp; Again,
+I say, this may seem a small matter to you, and I may seem to be using
+too many words about it.&nbsp; Small?&nbsp; Nothing is small which affects
+not merely the temporal happiness, but the eternal welfare, of an immortal
+soul.&nbsp; My friends, my friends, if any one of you had to support
+yourself and your children on four, seven, or even (mighty sum!) ten
+shillings a week, it would not seem a small matter to you then.&nbsp;
+A few shillings more or less would be to you <i>then</i> a treasure
+won or lost; a matter to you of whether you should keep a house over
+your children&rsquo;s heads, whether you should keep shoes upon their
+feet, and clothes upon their backs; whether you should see them, as
+they grew up, tempted by want into theft or profligacy; whether you
+should rise in the morning free enough from the sickening load of anxiety,
+and the care which eats out the core of life, and makes men deaf and
+blind (as it does many a one) to all pleasant sights, and sounds, and
+thoughts, till the very sunlight seems blotted out of heaven by that
+black cloud of care&mdash;care&mdash;care&mdash;which rises with you
+in the morning, and dogs you at your work all day (even if you are happy
+enough to have work), and sits on your pillow all night long, ready
+to whisper in your ear each time you wake; &lsquo;<i>Be</i> anxious
+and troubled about many things!&nbsp; What wilt thou eat, and what wilt
+thou drink, and wherewithal wilt thou be clothed?&nbsp; For thou hast
+<i>no</i> Heavenly Father, none above who knowest that thou needest
+these things before thou askest Him.&rsquo;&nbsp; Oh, my friends, if
+you had felt but for a single day, that terrible temptation, the temptation
+of poverty, and debt, and care, which leads so many a one to sell their
+souls for a few paltry pence, to them of as much value as pounds would
+be to you;&mdash;if, I say, you had once felt that temptation in all
+its weight, you would not merely sacrifice, as I ask you now to do,
+some superfluity, which you will never miss; you would, I do believe,
+if you had human hearts within you, be ready to sacrifice even the comforts
+of life to prevent him whose heart may be breaking slowly, not a hundred
+yards from your own door, (and more hearts break in this world than
+you fancy, my friends,) from passing through that same dark shadow of
+want, and care, and temptation where the Devil stands calling to the
+poor man all day long, &lsquo;Fall down, and worship me; and I will
+relieve those wants of thine which man neglects!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>I have no more to say.&nbsp; I leave the rest to your own good feeling,
+as townsmen of this ancient and honourable place,&mdash;remembering
+always who it was who said, &lsquo;Inasmuch as ye have done it unto
+one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto Me.&rsquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SERMONS FOR THE TIMES***</p>
+<pre>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Sermons for the Times, by Charles Kingsley
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Sermons for the Times
+
+Author: Charles Kingsley
+
+Release Date: February 29, 2004 [eBook #11381]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SERMONS FOR THE TIMES***
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+SERMONS FOR THE TIMES
+
+
+
+
+Contents:
+ Fathers and Children
+ Salvation
+ A Good Conscience
+ Names
+ Sponsorship
+ Justification by Faith
+ Duty and Superstition
+ Sonship
+ The Lord's Prayer
+ The Doxology
+ Ahab and Naboth
+ The Light of God
+ Providence
+ England's Strength
+ The Life of God
+ God's Offspring
+ Death in Life
+ Shame
+ Forgiveness
+ The True Gentleman
+ Toleration
+ Public Spirit
+
+
+
+SERMON I. 'FATHERS AND CHILDREN'
+
+
+
+Malachi iv. 5, 6. Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before
+the coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord: And he shall
+turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the
+children to their fathers, lest I come and smite the earth with a
+curse.
+
+These words are especially solemn words. They stand in an
+especially solemn and important part of the Bible. They are the
+last words of the Old Testament. I cannot but think that it was
+God's will that they should stand where they are, and nowhere else.
+Malachi, the prophet who wrote them, did not know perhaps that he
+was the last of the Old Testament prophets. He did not know that no
+prophet would arise among the Jews for 400 years, till the time when
+John the Baptist came preaching repentance. But God knew. And by
+God's ordinance these words stand at the end of the Old Testament,
+to make us understand the beginning of the New Testament. For the
+Old Testament ends by saying that God would send to the Jews Elijah
+the prophet. And the New Testament begins by telling us of John the
+Baptist's coming as a prophet, in the spirit and power of Elias; and
+how the Lord Jesus himself declared plainly that John the Baptist
+was Elijah who was to come; that is, the Elijah of whom Malachi
+prophesies in my text.
+
+Therefore, we may be certain that this text tells us what John the
+Baptist's work was; that John the Baptist came to turn the hearts of
+the fathers to the children, and the hearts of the children to the
+fathers; lest the Lord should come and smite the land with a curse.
+
+Some may be ready to answer to this, 'Of course John the Baptist
+came to warn parents of behaving wrongly to their children, if they
+were careless or cruel; and children to their parents, if they were
+disobedient or ungrateful. Of course he would tell bad parents and
+children to repent, just as he came to tell all other kinds of
+sinners to repent. But that was only a part of John the Baptist's
+work. He came to be the forerunner of the Messiah, the Saviour, the
+Redeemer.'
+
+Be it so, my friends. I only hope that you really do believe that
+John the Baptist did come to proclaim that a Saviour was born into
+the world--provided only that you remember all the while who that
+Saviour was. John the Baptist tells you who He was. If you will
+only remember that, and get the thought of it into your hearts, you
+will not be inclined to put any words of your own in place of the
+prophet Malachi's, or to fancy that you can describe better than
+Malachi what John the Baptist's work was to be; and that turning the
+hearts of the fathers to the children, and the hearts of the
+children to the fathers, was only a small part of John the Baptist's
+work, instead of being, as Malachi says it was, his principal work,
+his very work, the work which must be done, lest the Lord, instead
+of saving the land, should come and smite it with a curse.
+
+Yes--you must remember who it was that John the Baptist came to bear
+record of, and to manifest or show to the Jews. The Angels on the
+first Christmas Eve told us--they said it was _The Lord_, 'Unto
+you,' they said, 'is born a Saviour, who is Christ, _The Lord_.'
+
+John the Baptist told you and all mankind who it was--that it was
+The Lord. 'The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye
+the way of _the Lord_!'
+
+_The Lord_. What Lord--Which Lord? John the Baptist knew. Simeon,
+Anna, Nathaniel, all righteous and faithful hearts who waited for
+the salvation of the Lord, knew. The Pharisees and Sadducees did
+not know. The men who wrote our Creeds, our Prayer Book, our Church
+Catechism, knew. The Pharisees and the Sadducees in our day, who
+fancy themselves wiser than the Creeds, and the Prayer Book, and the
+Church Catechism, do not know. May God grant that we may all know,
+not only with our lips, but with our hearts, our faith, our love,
+our lives, who The Lord is.
+
+Jesus Christ, the babe of Bethlehem, is The Lord. But who is He?
+The Bible tells us; when we have heard what the Bible tells us we
+shall be able better to understand the text. The Lord is He of whom
+it is written, 'And God said, Let us make man in our image, after
+our likeness.' And who is God's image and God's likeness? The New
+Testament tells us--Jesus Christ. In Him man was made. He is the
+Son of Man, who is in heaven--the true perfect pattern of man: but
+He is also the image and likeness of God, the brightness of His
+Father's glory, and the express image of His person. He is The
+Lord. He is the Lord who instituted marriage, and said, 'It is not
+good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help-meet for
+him.' He is the Lord who said to man, 'Be fruitful and multiply:
+fill the earth and subdue it.' He is the Lord who said to the first
+murderer, 'Thy brother's blood crieth against thee from the ground.'
+He is the Lord who talked with Abraham face to face as a man talks
+with his friend; who blest him by giving him a son in his old age,
+that he might be the father of many nations. He is the Lord who, on
+Mount Sinai, gave those Ten Commandments, the foundation of all law
+and right order between man and God, between man and man:--'Thou
+shalt honour thy father and thy mother. Thou shalt do no murder.
+Thou shalt not commit adultery. Thou shalt not steal. Thou shalt
+not bear false witness in courts of law or elsewhere. Thou shalt
+not covet thy neighbour's property.'
+
+This is The Lord. Not a God far away from men; who does not feel
+for them, nor feel with them; not a God who despises men, or has an
+ill-will to men, and must be won over to change his mind, and have
+mercy on them, by many supplications and tears, and fear and
+trembling, and superstitious ceremonies. But this is The Lord, this
+is the babe of Bethlehem, this is He whose way John the Baptist came
+to prepare--even He of whom it is written, that He possessed wisdom,
+the simple, practical human wisdom, useful for this everyday earthly
+life of ours, which Solomon sets forth in his Proverbs, in the
+beginning before His works of old; and that when He appointed the
+foundations of the earth, that Wisdom was by Him, as one brought up
+with Him, and she was daily His delight; rejoicing alway before Him;
+rejoicing in the _habitable_ parts of the earth; and her delights
+were _with the sons of men_.
+
+In one word, He is the Lord, in whose likeness man is made. Man's
+justice is a pattern of His; man's love is a pattern of His; man's
+industry a pattern of His; man's Sabbath-rest, in some unspeakable
+and eternal way, a pattern of His. Man's family ties are patterns
+of His. God the Father is He, said St. Paul, from whom every
+fathership in heaven and earth is named, that we may be such fathers
+to our children as God is to us. God The Son is He who is not
+ashamed to call us brethren, and to declare to us the glorious news,
+that in Him we, too, are the sons of God, that we may be such sons
+to our heavenly Father--ay, and to our earthly fathers also, as the
+Lord Jesus was to His Father.
+
+Yes--and even more wonderful still, and more blessed still, the Lord
+is not ashamed to call himself a husband. Our human wedlock and
+married love is a pattern of some divine mystery. 'Husbands love
+your wives, as Christ also loved the Church, and gave Himself for
+it, that He might present it to Himself a glorious Church, not
+having spot or wrinkle, but that it should be holy and without
+blemish.' Blessed words, which we cannot pretend to explain or
+understand, but can only believe and adore, and find, as we shall
+find, in proportion as we are loving and faithful in wedlock, that
+God's Spirit bears witness with our spirit, that they are
+reasonable, blessed, true; true for ever.
+
+This, then, was the Lord who was coming to judge these Jews; not
+merely a god, but _The_ God. The Lord, in whose likeness man was
+made; who had appointed men to be fathers, sons, husbands, citizens
+of a nation, owners of property, subject to laws, and yet _makers_
+of laws; because all these things, in some wonderful way, are parts
+of His likeness. He was coming to this nation of the Jews first,
+and then to all the nations of the earth, to judge them, Malachi
+said, with a great and terrible day. To lay the axe to the root of
+the tree; to cut down from the very root the evil principles which
+were working in society. His fan was in His hand; and He would
+thoroughly purge His floor; and gather His wheat into the garner,
+for the use of future generations: but the chaff, all that was
+empty, light, and useless, He would burn up and destroy utterly out
+of the way, with unquenchable fire. He would inquire of every man,
+How have you kept my image; my likeness, in which I made you? What
+sort of husbands, fathers, sons, neighbours, subjects, and
+governors, have you been? And above all, Malachi says, the root
+question of all would be, what sort of fathers have you been to your
+children? What sort of children to your fathers? Does that seem to
+you a small question, my friends? Would you have rather expected to
+hear John the Baptist ask, what sort of saints they had been? What
+sort of doctrines they were professing?
+
+A small question? Look at these two little words, Father and Son.
+Father and Son! Are they not the most deep and awful, as well as
+the most blessed and hopeful words on earth? Do they not tell us
+the very mystery of God's being? Are they not the very name of God,
+God The Father and God The Son, knit together by one Holy Spirit of
+Love to each other and to all, who proceeds alike from The Father
+and from The Son? And then, will you think it a light matter to ask
+fallen creatures made in the likeness of that perfect Father and
+that perfect Son, what sort of fathers and sons they have been? God
+help us all, and give us grace to ask ourselves that question
+morning and night, before the great and terrible day of the Lord
+come, lest He come and smite this land with a curse.
+
+I have been led to think deeply and to speak openly upon this solemn
+matter, my friends, by seeing, as who can help seeing, the great
+division and estrangement between the old and the young which is
+growing up in our days. I do not, alas! I cannot, deny the
+complaints which old people commonly make. Old people complain that
+young people are grown too independent, disobedient, saucy, and what
+not. It is too true, frightfully, miserably true, that there is not
+the same reverence for parents as there was a generation back;--that
+the children break loose from their parents, spend their parents'
+money, choose their own road in life, their own politics, their own
+religion, alas! too often, for themselves;--that young people now
+presume to do and say a hundred things which they would not have
+dreamed in old times. And they are ready enough to cry out that all
+this is a sign of the last days, of which, they say, St. Paul speaks
+in 2 Tim. iii. 4--when men 'shall be disobedient to parents,
+unthankful, boasters, heady, high-minded, despisers of those who are
+good, lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God.' My friends, my
+friends, it is far better for us who have children, instead of
+prying into the times and seasons which God has kept in His own
+hand, to read our Bibles faithfully, and when we quote a text, quote
+the whole of it, and not just those bits of it which help us to
+throw blame on other people. What St. Paul really says, is that 'in
+the last days evil times will come;' just as they had come, he
+shows, when he wrote; and what he means I will try and show you
+presently. And, moreover, remember that Malachi says, that the
+hearts of the parents in Judea needed turning to their children, as
+well as the hearts of the children to their parents. Take care lest
+it be not so in England now. Remember that St. Paul, in that same
+solemn passage, gives other marks of 'last days,' which have to do
+with parents as well as with children, and some which can only have
+to do with parents--for they are the sins of grown-up and elderly
+people, and not of young ones. He says, that in those days men
+shall also be 'covetous, proud, without natural affection, breakers
+of their word, blasphemers; having a form of godliness, but denying
+the power thereof.' Will none of these hard words hit some grown
+people in our day? Will not they fill some of us with dread, lest
+the parents now-a-days should be as much in fault as the children of
+whom they complain; lest the parents' sins should be but too often
+the cause of the children's sins? Read through St. Paul's sad list
+of sins, and see how every young man's sin in it has some old man's
+sin corresponding to it. St. Paul does not part his list, and I
+dare not, and cannot. St. Paul mixes the parents' and the
+children's sins together in his words, and I fear that we do the
+same in our actions.
+
+Oh! beware, beware, you who complain of the behaviour of children
+now-a-days, lest your children have as much cause to complain of
+you. Are your children selfish, lovers of themselves?--See that you
+have not set them the example by your own covetousness or laziness.
+Are they boastful?--See that your pride has not taught them.
+Incontinent and profligate?--See that your own fierceness has not
+taught them. If they see you unable to master your own temper, they
+will not care to try to master their appetites. Are they
+disobedient and unthankful?--See, well, then that your want of
+natural affection to them, your neglect, and harshness, and want of
+feeling and tenderness, has not made the balance of unkindness
+fearfully even between you. Are your children disobedient to you?--
+See that you have not taught them to be so, by breaking your word to
+them, by letting them see you deceitful to others, till they have
+lost all trust in you, all reverence for you. Above all, are your
+children lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God?--Oh! beware,
+beware, lest you have made them so,--lest you have been blasphemers
+against God, even when you have been fancying that you talked
+religion. Beware lest you have been teaching them dark, cruel,
+superstitious thoughts about God,--making them look up to Him not as
+their heavenly Father, but as a stern taskmaster whom they must
+obey, not from gratitude, but from fear of hell, and so have made
+God look so unlovely in their eyes that 'there is no beauty in Him
+that they should desire Him.' Can you wonder at their loving
+pleasure rather than loving God, when you show them nothing in God's
+character to love, but everything to dread and shrink from? And
+last of all, are your children despisers of those who are good,
+inclined to laugh at religion, to suspect and sneer at pious people,
+and call them hypocrites? Oh! beware, beware, lest your lip-
+religion, your dead faith, your inconsistent practice, has not been
+the cause of it. If you, as St. Paul says, have a form of
+godliness, and yet in your life and actions deny the power of it, by
+living without God in the world, and following the lowest maxims of
+the world in everything but what you call the salvation of your
+souls, what wonder if your children grow up despisers of those who
+are good? If they see you preaching one thing, and practising
+another, they will learn to fancy that all godly people do the same.
+If they see your religion a sham, they will learn to fancy all
+religion false also. Oh! woe, woe, most terrible, to those who thus
+harden their own children's hearts, and destroy in them, as too many
+do, all faith in God and man, all hope, all charity! Woe to them!
+for the Lord Himself, who came to lay the axe to the root of the
+tree, said of such, 'If any man cause one of these little ones to
+offend, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about
+his neck, and that he were drowned in the depths of the sea.'
+
+So it is too often now-a-days, and so it will be, until people
+condescend to learn over again that simple old Church Catechism
+which they were taught when they were little, and to teach it to
+their children, not only with their lips but in their lives.
+
+'The Church Catechism!' some here will say to themselves with a
+smile, 'that is but a paltry medicine for so great a disease--a
+pitiful ending, forsooth, to such a severe sermon as this, to
+recommend just the Church Catechism!' Let those laugh who will, my
+friends. If you think you can bring up your children to be
+blessings to you,--if you think you can live so as to be blessings
+to your children, without the Church Catechism, you can but try. I
+think that you will fail. More and more, year by year, I find that
+those who try do fail. More and more, year by year, I find that
+even religious people's education of their children fails, and that
+pious men's sons now-a-days are becoming more and more apt to be
+scandals to their parents and to religion. If any choose to say
+that the reason is, that the pious men's sons were not of the number
+of the elect, though their fathers were, I can only answer, that God
+is no respecter of persons, and that they say that He is; that God
+is not the author of the evil, and that they say that He is. If a
+child of mine turns out ill, I am bound to lay the fault first on
+myself, and certainly never on God,--and so is every man, unless the
+inspired Scripture is wrong where it says, 'Train up a child in the
+way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it.'
+And the fault _is_ in ourselves. Very few people really teach their
+children now-a-days the Church Catechism; very few really believe
+the Church Catechism; very few really believe that God is such an
+one as the Church Catechism declares to us; very few believe in the
+Lord, in whose image and likeness man is made, whose way John the
+Baptist prepared by turning the hearts of the fathers to the
+children. They put, perhaps, religious books into their children's
+hands, and talk to them a great deal about their souls: but they do
+not tell their children what the Church Catechism tells them,
+because they do not believe what the Church Catechism tells them.
+
+What that is; what the Church Catechism does tell us, which the
+favourite religious books now-a-days do not tell us; and what that
+has to do with turning the hearts of the fathers to the children, I
+must tell you hereafter. God grant that my words may sink into all
+hearts, as far as they are right and true; if sooner or later we are
+not all brought to understand the meaning of those two simple words,
+Father and Son, neither Baptism, nor Confirmation, nor Schools, nor
+this Church, nor the very body and blood of Him who died for us, to
+share which you are all called this day, will be of avail for the
+well-being of this parish, or of this country, or any other country
+upon earth. For where the root is corrupt, the fruit will be also;
+and where family life and family ties, which are the root and
+foundation of society, are out of joint, there the Nation and the
+Church will decay also; as it is written, 'If the foundations be
+cast down, what can the righteous do?'
+
+And whensoever, in any family, or nation and church, the root of the
+tree (which is the conduct of parents to children, and of children
+to parents) grows corrupt and rotten, then 'last days,' as St. Paul
+calls them, are indeed come to it, and evil times therewith; for the
+Lord will surely lay the axe to the root of it, and cut it down and
+cast it into the fire: neither will the days of that family, or
+that people, or that Church, be long in the land which the Lord
+their God has given them. So it has been as yet, in all ages and in
+all countries on the face of God's earth, and so it will be until
+the end. Wheresoever the hearts of the fathers are not turned to
+the children, and the hearts of the children to the fathers, there
+will a great and terrible day of the Lord come; and that nation,
+like Judaea of old, like many a fair country in Europe at this
+moment, will be smitten with a curse.
+
+
+
+SERMON II. SALVATION
+
+
+
+John xvii. 3. This is life eternal, that they may know Thee, the
+only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent.
+
+Before I can explain what this text has to do with the Church
+Catechism, I must say to you a little about what it means.
+
+Now if I asked any of you what 'salvation' was, you would probably
+answer, 'Eternal life.'
+
+And you would answer rightly. That is exactly what salvation is,
+and neither more nor less. No more than that; for nothing greater
+than that can belong to any created being. No less than that; for
+God's love and mercy are eternal and without bound.
+
+But what is eternal life?
+
+Some will answer, 'Going to heaven when we die.' But what before
+you die? You do not know? cannot tell?
+
+Let us listen to what God Himself says. Let us listen to what the
+Lord Jesus Christ, the Word of God, says. Let us listen to what He
+who spake as man never spake, says. Surely His words must be the
+clearest, the simplest, the most exact, the deepest, the widest; the
+exactly fit and true words, the complete words, the perfect words,
+which cannot be improved on by adding to them or taking away one jot
+or tittle. What did the Lord Jesus Christ say that eternal life
+was?
+
+'This is eternal life, that they may know Thee the only true God,
+and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent.'
+
+To know God and Jesus Christ; that is eternal life. That is all the
+eternal life which any of us will ever have, my friends. Unless our
+Lord's words are not complete and perfect, and do not tell us the
+truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, about eternal
+life, that is all the eternal life any one will ever have; and we
+must make up our minds to be content therewith.
+
+To which some will answer, almost angrily, 'Of course. The way to
+obtain eternal life is to know God and Jesus Christ; for if we do
+not, we cannot obtain it.'
+
+What words are these, my friends? what rash words are these, which
+men thrust into Scripture out of their own carnal conceits, as if
+they could improve upon the speech of the Son of Man Himself? He
+says, not that to know God is the way to eternal life: but rather
+that eternal life is the way to know God. He does not say, This is
+to know God and Jesus Christ, _in order that_ they may have eternal
+life. Whatever He says, He does not say that. Nay, more, if we are
+to be very exact (and can we be too exact?) with the Lord's words,
+He says, that 'This is eternal life, _in order that_ they may know
+God and Jesus Christ.' Not that we are to know God that we may
+obtain eternal life, but that we must have eternal life in order
+that we may know God; that eternal life is the means, and the
+knowledge of God the end and purpose for which eternal life is given
+us. However this may be, at least He says what the noble collect
+which we repeat every Sunday says, 'That our eternal life stands in
+the knowledge of God,' depends on it, and will fall without it.
+
+'That we may know God.' Not merely that we may know doctrines about
+salvation, and the ways of winning God's favour, and turning away
+His vengeance; not merely to know what God has done ages ago, or may
+do ages hence, for us: but to know God Himself; to know His person,
+His likeness, His character; and what He is, and what He does, now
+and always; to know His righteousness, His goodness, His truth, His
+love, His mercy, His strength, His willingness and mightiness to
+save; in a word, what the Bible calls His glory; and therefore to
+admire and delight in Him utterly. That is what our eternal life
+stands in; that is why God has given to us eternal life in His Son,
+that we may know that. Oh, believe your Saviour simply, like little
+children, and enter into the joy of your Lord. Acquaint yourselves
+with God, and be at peace.
+
+To know God; and also to know Jesus Christ whom He has sent. For
+St. John, when he tells us that God has already given to us eternal
+life, says also, that this life is in His Son. To know the Son of
+God, in whom the Father is well pleased, because He is His perfect
+Son; His exact likeness, the likeness of that glory of His, and the
+express image of that person and character of His, which I described
+to you just now; One whose life was and is and ever will be
+eternally all love, and mercy, and self-sacrifice, and labour, for
+lost and sinful men; all trust and obedience to His Father. To know
+Him and His life, and to come to Him, and receive from Him an
+eternal life, which this world did not give us, and cannot take away
+from us; which neither man, devil, nor angel, nor the death of our
+bodies, the ruin of empires, the destruction of the whole universe,
+and of time, and space, and all things whereof man can conceive or
+dream, can alter in the slightest, because it is a life of goodness,
+and righteousness, and love, which are eternal as the God from whom
+they spring; eternal as Christ, who is the same yesterday, to-day,
+and for ever; and nothing but our own sinful wills can rob us of
+them.
+
+This is eternal life, and therefore this is salvation. A very
+different account of it (though it is the Bible account) from that
+narrow and paltry one which too many have in their minds now-a-days;
+a narrow and paltry notion that it means only being saved from the
+punishment of our sins after we die; and a very unbelieving, and
+godless, and atheistical notion too; which, like all unbelief hurts
+and spoils men's lives.
+
+For too many say to themselves, 'God must save me after I am dead,
+of course, for no one else can: but as long as I am alive I must
+save myself. God must save me from hell; but I must save myself
+from poverty, from trouble, from what the world may say of me or do
+to me, if I offend it.' And so salvation seems to have to do
+altogether with the next life, and not at all with this; and people
+lose entirely the belief that God is our deliverer, our protector,
+our guide, our friend, now, here, in this life; and do not really
+think that they can get on better in this world by knowing God and
+Jesus Christ; and so they set to work to help themselves by cunning,
+by covetousness, by cowardly truckling to the wicked ways of the
+very world which they renounced at baptism, by following after a
+multitude to do evil, and standing by, saying, 'I saw it not,' when
+they see wrong and cruelty done upon the earth; afraid to fight
+God's battles like men of God, because they say it is 'dangerous.'
+And so, in these evil days, thousands who call themselves Christians
+live on, worldly and selfish, _without God in the world_; while they
+talk busily enough of 'preparing to meet God,' in the world to come;
+dreaming, poor souls, of arriving at what they call 'salvation'
+after they die, while they are too often, I fear, deep enough in
+what the Scripture calls 'damnation,' before they die.
+
+'But,' say some, 'is not salvation going to a place called heaven?'
+My friends, let the Bible speak. It tells us that salvation is not
+in a place at all, but in a person, a living, moving, acting person,
+who is none other than the Lord Jesus Christ. Let the Psalmists
+speak, and shame us, who ought to know (being Christians) even
+better than they, that The Lord Himself is Salvation. The whole
+Book of Psalms, what is it but the blessed discovery that salvation
+is not merely in a place, or a state, not even in some 'beatific
+vision' after men die; but in the Lord Himself all day long in this
+world; that salvation is a life in God and with God? 'The Lord is
+my light, and my salvation, of whom then shall I be afraid? The
+Lord is the strength of my life, and my portion for ever.' This is
+their key-note. Shame on us Christians, that we should have
+forgotten it for one so much lower. 'The name of the Lord,' says
+Solomon, 'is a strong tower: the righteous runneth into it, and is
+safe.' Into it: not merely into some pleasant place after he dies,
+but all day long; and is safe: not merely after he dies, but in
+every chance and change of this mortal life. My friends, I am
+ashamed to have to put Christian men in mind of these things.
+Truly, 'Evil communications have corrupted good manners; awake to
+righteousness and sin not, for some have not the knowledge of God.'
+I am ashamed, I say; for there are old hymns in the mouths of every
+one to this day, which testify against their want of faith; which
+say, 'Christ is my life,' 'Christ is my salvation;' and which were
+written, I doubt not, by men who meant literally what they said,
+whatever those who sing them now-a-days may mean by them. Now what
+do those hymns mean by such words, if they mean anything at all?
+Surely what I have been preaching to you, and what seems to some of
+you, I fear, strange and new doctrine. And what else does the
+Church Catechism mean, when it bids every child thank God for having
+brought him into a state of salvation? For mind, throughout the
+whole Church Catechism there is not one word about what people
+commonly call heaven and hell; not one word though 'heaven and hell'
+are now-a-days generally the first things about which children are
+taught. Not one word is the child taught about what will happen to
+him after death, except that his body will rise again, and that
+Christ will be his Judge after he is dead as well as while he is
+alive: but not one word about that salvation after he is dead,
+which is almost the only thing of which one hears in many pulpits.
+And why, but because the Catechism teaches the child to believe that
+Jesus Christ is his salvation now, in this life, and believes that
+to be enough for him to know? For if Christ be eternal, His
+salvation must be eternal also. If Christ's life be in the child,
+eternal life must be in the child; for Christ's life must be
+eternal, even as Christ Himself; and that is enough for the child,
+and for us also.
+
+And with this agrees that great text of Scripture, 'When the wicked
+man turneth away from his wickedness, and doeth that which is lawful
+and right, he shall save his soul alive.' People now-a-days are apt
+to make two mistakes about that one text. First they forget the
+'when,' and read it as if it stood, 'If the wicked man turn away
+from his wickedness in this life, he shall save his soul in the next
+life:' but the Bible says much more than that. It says, that when
+he turns, then and there, that moment he shall save his soul alive.
+And next, they read the text as if it stood, 'he shall save his
+soul.' Here again, my friends, the Bible says a great deal more; it
+says, that he shall save his soul alive. Perhaps that does not seem
+to you any great difference? Alas, alas, my friends, I fear that
+there are too many now, as there have been in all times, who do not
+care for the difference. Provided 'their souls are saved,' by which
+they mean, provided they escape torment after they die, it matters
+nothing to them whether their souls are saved alive, or saved dead;
+they do not even know the difference between a dead soul and a live
+soul; because they know nothing about eternal death and eternal
+life, which are the death and the life of eternal persons such as
+souls are; they say to themselves, if they be Protestants, 'I hope I
+shall have faith enough to be saved;' or if they be Papists, 'I hope
+I shall have good works enough to be saved;' valuing faith and works
+not for themselves; yea, valuing--for I must say it--Almighty God
+Himself, not for Himself and His own glory, but valuing faith and
+works, and the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, only
+because, as they dream, they are so many helps to a life of pleasure
+beyond the grave; not knowing this, that living faith and good works
+do not merely lead to heaven, but are heaven itself, that true, real
+eternal heaven wherein alone men really live; that true, real
+eternal life which was with the Father, and was manifested in Jesus
+Christ, whom St. John saw living upon earth that same Eternal Life,
+and bore witness of Him that His life was the light of men; that
+eternal life whereof it is written, that God hath brought us to life
+together with Christ, and raised us up, and made us sit together in
+heavenly places in Christ Jesus:--not knowing this, that the only
+life which any soul ought to live, is the life of God and of Christ,
+and of the Spirit of God and Christ; a life of righteousness, and
+justice, and truth, and obedience, and mercy, and love; a life which
+God has given to us, that we may know and copy Him, and do His
+works, and live His life, for ever:--not knowing this also that
+eternal death is not merely some torture of fire and worms beyond
+the grave: but that this is eternal death, not to live the eternal
+life which is the only possible life for souls, the life of
+righteousness and love; a death which may come on respectable
+people, and high religious professors, while they are fancying
+themselves sure to be saved, as easily and surely as it may on
+thieves and harlots, wallowing in the mire of sins.
+
+For what is this same eternal death? The opposite surely to eternal
+life. Eternal life is to know God, and therefore to obey Him.
+Eternal life is to know God, whose name is love; and therefore, to
+rejoice to fulfil His law, of which it is written, 'Love is the
+fulfilling of the law;' and therefore to be full of love ourselves,
+as it is written, 'We know that we have passed from death unto life,
+because we love the brethren;' and again, 'Every one that loveth,
+knoweth God, for God is love.' And on the other hand, eternal death
+is not to know God, and therefore not to care for His law of love,
+and therefore to be without love; as it is written on the other
+hand, 'He that loveth not his brother abideth in death.' 'Whosoever
+hateth his brother is a murderer;' and ye know that no murderer hath
+eternal life abiding in him; and again, 'He that loveth not, knoweth
+not God, for God is love.' Eternal death, then, is to love no one;
+to be shut up in the dark prison-house of our own wilful and wayward
+thoughts and passions, full of spite, suspicion, envy, fear; in
+fact, in one word, to be a devil. Oh, my friends, is not that
+damnation indeed, to be a devil here on earth, and for aught we
+know, for ever and ever?
+
+Do you not know what frame of mind I mean? Thank God, none of us, I
+suppose, is ever utterly without some grain of love left for some
+one; none of us, I suppose, is ever utterly shut up in himself; and
+as long as there is love there is life and as long as there is life
+there is hope: but yet there have been moments when one has felt
+with horror how near, and how terrible, and how easy was this same
+eternal death which some fancy only possible after they die.
+
+For, my friends, were you ever, any one of you, for one half hour,
+completely angry, completely _sulky_? displeased and disgusted with
+everybody and everything round you, and yet displeased and disgusted
+with yourself all the while; liking to think everyone wrong, liking
+to make out that they were unjust to you; feeling quite proud at the
+notion that you were an injured person: and yet feeling in your
+heart the very opposite of all these fancies: feeling that you were
+wrong, that you were unjust to them, and feeling utterly ashamed at
+the thought that they were the injured persons, and that you had
+injured them. And perhaps, to make all worse, the person about whom
+all this storm had arisen in your heart, was some dear friend or
+relation whom you loved (strange contradiction, yet most true) at
+the very moment that you were trying to hate. Oh, my friends, if
+one such dark hour has ever come home to you; if you have ever let
+the sun go down upon your wrath, and so given place to the devil,
+then you know something at least of what eternal death is. You know
+how, in such moments, there is a worm in the heart, and a fire in
+the heart, compared with which all bodily torment would be light and
+bearable; a worm in the heart which does not die: and a fire in the
+heart which you cannot quench: but which if they remained there
+would surely destroy you. So intolerable are they, that you feel
+that you will actually and really die, in some strange unspeakable
+way, if you continue in that temper long. Do not there open at such
+times within our hearts black depths of evil, a power of becoming
+wicked, a chance of being swept off into sin if one gives way, which
+one never suspected till then; and yet with all these, the most
+dreadful sense of helplessness, of slavery, of despair?--God grant
+that may not remain, for then comes the mad hope to escape death by
+death, to try by one desperate stroke to rid oneself of that self
+which is for the time one's torment, worm, fire, death, and hell.
+And what is this dark fight within us? What does the Bible call it?
+It is death and life, eternal death and eternal life, salvation and
+damnation, hell and heaven, fighting together within our hapless
+hearts, to see which shall be our masters. It is the battle of the
+evil spirit, who is the Devil, fighting with the good spirit, who is
+God. Nothing less than that, my friends. Yes, in those hateful and
+shameful moments of pride, or spite, or contempt, or self-will, or
+suspicion, or sneering, on which when they are past we look back
+with shame and horror, and wonder how we could have been such
+wretches even for a moment,--at such times, I say, our heart is a
+battle-field, on which no less than the Devil himself, and God
+Himself are fighting for our souls. On one side, Satan trying to
+bring us into that state of eternal death in which he lives himself;
+Satan, the loveless one, the self-willed one, the accuser, the
+slanderer, slandering God to us, slandering man to us, slandering to
+us the friends we love best and trust most utterly; yea, slandering
+our own selves to us, trying to make us believe that we are as bad,
+ought to be as bad, and must always be as bad as we seem for the
+time to be; that we cannot shake off our evil passions, that we
+cannot rise again out of the eternal death of sin into the eternal
+life of righteousness. And on the other side, the Spirit of God and
+of His Christ, the Spirit of eternal life, the Spirit of justice,
+and righteousness, love, joy, peace, duty, self-sacrifice, trying to
+make us know Him and see His beauty, and obey Him, and be at peace;
+trying to raise us again into that eternal life and state of
+salvation which the Lord Jesus Christ has bought for us with His
+most precious blood.
+
+Oh, awful thought! Life and death, the Devil himself, and the Lord
+Jesus Christ Himself, fighting in your heart and in mine, and in the
+heart of every human being round us! And yet most blessed thought,
+hopeful, glorious,--full of the promise of eternal victory! For
+greater is He that is with us, than he that is against us; and He
+who conquered Satan for Himself, can and will conquer him for us
+also. No thing can separate us from the love of Christ; no thing,
+yea no angel, or devil, principality, or power; no thing, but only
+ourselves, only our own proud and wayward will and determination to
+the Devil's voice in our hearts, and not the voice of Christ, the
+Word of Life, who is nigh us, in our hearts, even in our darkest
+moments, loving us still, pitying us, ready, able and willing to
+help all who cast themselves on Him, and raise us, there and then,
+the very moment we cry to Him and renounce the Devil and our own
+foolish will, out of self-will into God's will, out of darkness into
+light, out of hatred into love, out of despair into hope, out of
+doubt into faith, out of tempest into peace, out of the death of sin
+into the life of righteousness, the life of love and charity, which
+abideth for ever. Oh, listen not to the lying, slanderous Devil,
+who tells you that by your own sin you have lost your share in
+Christ, lost baptismal grace, lost Christ's love--Lost His love?
+His, who, were you in the very lowest depths of hell, would pity you
+still? His love, who Himself went down into hell, and preached to
+the spirits in prison, to show that he did care even for them? Not
+so: into Him you have been baptized. His cross is on your
+foreheads, His Father is your Father:--and can a father desert his
+child, even though he sinned seventy and seven times, if seventy and
+seven times he turn and repent? Can man weary God? Can the
+creature conquer and destroy the love of his Creator? Can Christ
+deny Himself? Not so; whosoever thou art, however sorely tempted,
+however deeply fallen, however disgusted and terrified at thyself,
+turn only to that blessed face which wept over Jerusalem, to that
+great heart which bled for thee upon the cross, and thou shalt find
+him unchanged, the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever, the Lord of
+life and love, able and willing to save to the uttermost all who
+come to God through Him, and the accusing Devil shall turn and flee,
+and thou shalt know that thy Redeemer liveth still, and in thy flesh
+thou shalt see the salvation of God, and cry, 'Rejoice not against
+me, Satan, mine enemy; for when I fall I shall arise.'
+
+
+
+SERMON III. A GOOD CONSCIENCE
+
+
+
+1 Peter iii. 21. The like figure whereunto baptism doth now save us
+(not the putting away the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a
+good conscience toward God,) by the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
+
+These words are very wide words; too wide to please most people.
+They preach a very free grace; too free to please most people. Such
+free and full grace, indeed, that some who talk most about free
+grace, and insist most on man's being saved only by free grace, are
+the very men who shrink from these words most, and would be more
+comfortable in their minds, I suspect, if they were not in the Bible
+at all, because the grace they preach is too free. But so it always
+has been, and so it is, and so, I suppose, it always will be. Man
+preaches his notions of God's forgiveness, his notions of what he
+thinks God ought to do; but when God proclaims His own forgiveness,
+and tells men what He has actually done, and bids His apostle
+declare boldly that baptism doth now save us, then man is frightened
+at the vastness of God's generosity, and thinks God's grace too
+free, His forgiveness too complete; and considers this text and many
+another in the Bible as 'dangerous' forsooth, if it is 'preached
+unreservedly,' and not to be quoted without some words of man's
+invention tacked to it, to water it down, and narrow it, and take
+all the strength and life out of it; and if he be asked whether he
+believes the words of Scripture,--for instance, whether St. Paul
+spoke truth when he told the heathen Athenians that they and all men
+were the offspring of God;--or when he told the Romans that as by
+the offence of one, judgment came on all men to condemnation, even
+so by the righteousness of One, the free gift came upon all men to
+justification of life;--or when he told the Corinthians, that as in
+Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive;--or whether
+St. Peter spoke truth when he said, that 'baptism doth also now save
+us,'--then they answer, that the words are true 'in a sense;' that
+is, not in their plain sense; true, if they were only true; true,
+and yet somehow at the same time not true; and not to be preached
+'unreservedly:' as if man could be more cautious and correct in his
+language than the Spirit of God, who inspired the Apostles; as if
+man could be more careful of God's honour than God is of His own; as
+if man could hate sin and guard against sin more carefully than God
+Himself.
+
+Just in the same way do people stumble at certain invaluable words
+in the Church Catechism, which teach children to thank God for
+having brought them into that state of salvation. Even very good
+people, and people who really wish to believe and honour the Church
+Catechism, and the Sacrament of Baptism, find these words too strong
+to please them, and say, that of course a child's being in a state
+of salvation cannot mean that he is saved, but that he may be saved
+after he dies.
+
+My friends, I never could find that we have a right to take
+liberties with the Bible and the Prayer Book which we dare not take
+with any other book, and to put meanings into the words of them
+which, in the case of any other book, would be contrary to plain
+grammar and the English tongue, if not to common sense and honesty.
+
+If you say of a man, 'he is in a state of happiness,' you mean, do
+you not, that he is happy now, not that he may perhaps be happy some
+day? If you came to me and told me that you were in a state of
+hunger, you would think it a very strange answer to receive if I
+say, 'Very well then, if you become hungry, come to me, and I will
+feed you?' You all know that a man's being in a state of poverty,
+or of misery, means that he is poor or miserable now, here, at this
+very time; that if a man is in a state of sickness, he is sick; if
+he is in a state of health, he is healthy. Then what can a man's
+being in a state of salvation mean, by all rules of English, but
+that he is saved? If I were to say to any one of the good people
+who do not think so, 'My friend, you are in a state of damnation,'
+he would answer me quickly enough, 'I am not, for I am not damned.'
+He would agree that a man's being in a state of damnation means that
+the man is damned; why will he not agree that a man's being in a
+state of salvation means that he is saved? Because, my friends,
+God's grace is too full for fallen man's notions; and therefore
+there is an evil fashion abroad in the world, that where a text
+speaks of wrath, and misery and punishment, you are to interpret it
+exactly, and to the very letter: but where it speaks of love, and
+mercy, and forgiveness, you are to do no such thing, but narrow it,
+and fence it, and explain it away, for fear you should make sinners
+too comfortable,--a plan which seems wise enough, but which, like
+other plans of man's wisdom, has not succeeded too well, to judge by
+the number of sinners who are already too comfortable though they
+hear the Bible misused, and God's grace narrowed in this way every
+Sunday of their lives.
+
+But, my friends, we call ourselves Englishmen and churchmen; let us
+be honest Englishmen and plain churchmen, and take our Catechism as
+it stands. For rightly or wrongly, truly or falsely, it does teach
+every christened child to thank God, not merely that it has some
+chance of being saved, when it dies, but that it is saved already,
+now, here on earth.
+
+Whether that is true or false is another question. I believe it to
+be true. I believe the text to be true; I believe that why people
+shrink from it is, that they have got into their minds a wrong,
+unscriptural, superstitious notion of what being saved, and saving
+one's soul alive, and salvation mean. And I beg all of you who read
+your Bibles to search the Scriptures from beginning to end, and try
+to find out what these words mean, and whether the Catechism has not
+kept close, after all, to the words of Scripture. It will be better
+for you, my friends; it will be worth your while, to know exactly
+what being saved means; for to judge by the signs of the times,
+there are, very probably, days coming in which it will be as needful
+for you and for your children to save your souls alive lest you die,
+as ever it was for the Jews in Isaiah's or Jeremiah's time, or for
+the Romans in St. Paul's time; and that in that day you will find
+the Catechism wider, and deeper, and sounder than you have ever
+suspected it to be, and see, I trust, that in these very words it
+preaches to you, and me, and our children after us, the one true
+Gospel and good news, which will stand, and grow, and shine brighter
+and brighter for ever, when all the paltry, narrow, counterfeit
+gospels which man invents in its place have been burnt up by the
+unquenchable fire with which the merciful Lord purges the chaff from
+His floor.
+
+I told you this morning what I believe that salvation was,--to know
+God, and Jesus Christ, whom He has sent. To know God's likeness,
+God's character, what God has shown of His own character, what He
+has done for us. To know His boundless love, and mercy, and knowing
+that, to trust in Him utterly, and submit to Him utterly, and obey
+Him utterly, sure that He loves us, that His will to us is goodwill,
+that His commandments must be life. To know God, and therefore to
+love Him and to serve Him, that is salvation.
+
+Now what hinders a little child, from the very moment that it can
+think or speak, from entering into that salvation? Not the child's
+own heart. There is evil in the child--true. Is there none in you
+and me? There is a corrupt nature in the child--true. Is there not
+in you and me? Woe to us if we have not found it out: woe to us if
+we dare to think that we are in ourselves--or out of ourselves
+either--one whit better than our own children. What should hinder
+any child whom you or I ever saw from knowing God, and His Name, the
+Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit?
+
+Has he not an earthly father, through whom he may know _The_ Father?
+Is he not an earthly son; and through that may he not know _The_
+Son? Has he not a conscience, a spirit in him which knows good from
+evil? holiness from wickedness--far more clearly and tenderly than
+the souls of most grown people do? and can he not, therefore,
+understand you when you speak of a Holy Spirit, a Spirit which puts
+good desires into his heart, and can enable him to bring those good
+desires into practice?
+
+I know one hindrance at least; and that is his parents' sins; when
+the parents' harshness or neglect tempts the child to fancy that God
+The Father is such a Father to him as his parents are, and that to
+be a child of God is to look up to his heavenly Father with dread
+and suspicion as to a hard taskmaster whose anger has to be turned
+away, and not with that perfect love, and trust, and respect, and
+self-sacrifice, with which the Lord Jesus Christ fulfilled His
+Father's will and proclaimed His Father's glory: or when the
+parents' unholiness and lip-religion teach the child to fancy that
+the Holy Spirit means only certain religious fancies and feelings,
+or the learning by heart of certain words and doctrines, or, worst
+of all, a spirit of bondage unto fear; instead of knowing Him to be,
+as He is, the Spirit of righteousness, and love, and joy, and peace,
+long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, meekness, temperance: or
+when, again, parents by their own teaching, do despite to the Spirit
+of Grace in their own child, and destroy their child's good
+conscience toward God, by telling the child that it does not really
+love God, when it loves Him, perhaps, far better than they do; by
+telling the child that its sins have parted it from God, when its
+sins are light, yea, are as nothing in the balance compared to the
+sins they themselves commit every day, while they claim for
+themselves clearer light and knowledge than the child, and thereby
+condemn themselves rather than the child; when they darken and
+defile the pure and beautiful trust and admiration for its Heavenly
+Father, which God's Spirit puts into the child's heart, by telling
+it that it is doomed to I know-not-what horrible misery and torture
+when it dies; but that it can escape from that wretched end by
+thinking certain thoughts, and feeling certain feelings; and so
+(after stirring up in the child all manner of dreadful doubts of
+God's love and justice, and perhaps driving it away from religion
+altogether by making it believe that it has committed sins which it
+has not committed, and deserves horrible tortures which it has not
+deserved), do perhaps at last awaken in it a new love for God, but
+one which is not like that first love, that childlike love; one
+which, I fear, is hardly a love for God at all, but principally a
+selfish joy and delight at having escaped from coming torments.
+This is the reason, my friends; and this hindrance, at least, I
+know. I will not copy those parents, my friends, and tell them, as
+they tell their children, that they are bringing on themselves
+endless torture; but I must tell them, for the Lord Christ has told
+them, that they are bringing on themselves something--I know not
+what--of which it is written, that it were better for them that a
+millstone were hanged about their necks, and that they were drowned
+in the depth of the sea. Oh, my friends, if I speak sternly, almost
+bitterly, when I speak of parents' sins, it is because I speak for
+those who cannot speak for themselves. I plead for Christ's little
+ones: I plead for the souls and consciences of those little
+children of whom Christ said, 'Suffer the little children to come
+unto me;' not that they might become His, but because they were His
+already; not that they might win His love, but because He loved them
+from all eternity: not that they might enter into the kingdom of
+heaven, but, because they were in the kingdom of heaven already;
+because the kingdom of heaven was made up of such as them, and the
+angels who ministered unto them always beheld the face of our Father
+who is in heaven. Yes; I plead for those children, of whom the Lord
+said, 'Except ye be converted,' that is, utterly turned and changed,
+'and become as little children, ye shall in no wise enter into the
+kingdom of heaven.' Deep and blessed words, which are the root-rule
+of all true righteousness; which so few really believe at heart, any
+more than the Pharisees, and Sadducees, and Herodians of old did.
+Up and down, all over England, I hear men of all denominations
+saying, not, 'Except we grown people be converted and become as
+little children;' but, 'except the little children be converted, and
+become like us, grown people.' God grant that the little children
+may not become like too many grown people! God grant it, I say.
+God grant that our children may not become like us! God grant that
+they may keep through youth and manhood, and through the grave, and
+through all worlds to come, the tender and childlike heart, which we
+too often have hardened in ourselves by bigotry and superstition,
+and dead faith, and lip-worship! And I can have good hope that God
+will grant it. I can have hope that God will teach our children and
+our children's children truly to know Him whose name is Love and
+Righteousness, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, as long as
+I see His providence preserving for us this old Church Catechism, to
+teach our children what we forget to teach them, or what we have not
+faith enough to teach them.
+
+Yes, I can have hope for England; and hope for those mighty nations
+across the seas, whose earthly mother God has ordained that she
+should be, as long as the Catechism is taught to her children.
+
+For see. This Catechism does not begin with telling children that
+they are sinners: they will find that out soon enough for
+themselves, poor little things, from their own wayward and self-
+willed hearts. Nor by telling them that man is fallen and corrupt:
+they will find out that also soon enough, from the way in which they
+see people go on around them. It does not even begin by telling
+them that they ought to be good, or what goodness and righteousness
+is; because it takes for granted that they know that already; it
+takes for granted that The Light who lights every man who comes into
+the world is in them; even the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, stirring
+up in their hearts, as He does in the heart of every child, the
+knowledge of good and the love of good. But it begins at once by
+teaching the child the name of God. It goes at once to the root of
+the matter; to the fountain of goodness itself; even to God, the
+Father of lights. It is so careful of God's honour, so careful that
+the child should learn from the first to look up to God with love
+and trust, that it dare not tell the child that God can destroy and
+punish, before it has told him that God is a Father and a Maker; the
+Father of spirits, who has made him and all the world. It dare not
+tell him that mankind is fallen, before it has told him that all the
+world is redeemed. It dare not talk to him of unholiness, before it
+has taught him that the Holy Spirit of God is with him, to make him
+holy. It tells him of a world, a flesh, and a devil: but he has
+renounced them. He has neither part nor lot in them; and he is not
+to think of them yet. He is to think of that in which he has part
+and lot, of which he is an inheritor. He is to know where he is and
+ought to be, before he knows where he is not and ought not to be:
+he is to think of the name of God, by which he can trample world,
+flesh, and devil under foot, if they dare hereafter meddle with his
+soul. In its God-inspired tenderness and prudence, it dare not
+darken the heart of one little child, or tempt him to hard thoughts
+of God, or to cry, 'Why hast thou made me thus?' lest it put a
+stumbling-block in the way of Christ's little ones, and dishonour
+the name and glory of God. It tells him of the love, before it
+tells him of the wrath; of the order, before it tells him of the
+disorder; of the right, before the wrong; of the health, before the
+disease; of the freedom, before the bondage; of the truth, before
+the lies; of the light, before the darkness; in one word, it tells
+him first of the eternal and good God, who was, and is, and shall be
+to all eternity, before and above the evil devil. It tells him of
+the name of God; and tells him that God is with him, and he with
+God, and bids him believe that, and be saved, from his birth-hour,
+to endless ages. It does not tell him to pray that he may become
+God's child; but to pray, because he is God's child already. It
+does not tell him to love God, in order that he may make God love
+him; but to love God because God loves him already, and has loved
+him from all eternity. It does not tell him to obey Jesus Christ,
+in order that Christ may save him; but to obey Christ because Christ
+has saved him, and bought him with his own blood. It does not tell
+him to do good works, in order that God's Spirit may be pleased with
+him, and come to him, and make him one of the elect; neither does it
+tell him, that some day or other, if he is converted, and feels
+certain religious experiences, he will have a right to consider
+himself one of God's elect: but it tells him to look man and devil
+in the face, he, the poor little ignorant village child, and say
+boldly in the name of God, 'I am one of God's elect. The Holy
+Spirit of God is sanctifying me, and making me holy. God has saved
+me; and I heartily thank my Heavenly Father, who has called me to
+this state of salvation.' It tells him to believe that he is safe--
+safe in the ark of Christ's Church, as Noah was safe in the ark at
+the deluge; and that the one way to keep himself within that ark is
+to obey Him to whom it belongs, who judges it and will guide it for
+ever, Jesus Christ, the likeness of God; and that as long as he does
+that, neither world, flesh, nor devil, can harm him; even as Noah
+was safe in the ark, and nothing could drown him but his own wilful
+casting himself out of the ark, and trying to free the flood of
+waters by his own strength and cunning.
+
+It tells him, I say, that he is safe, and saved, even as David, and
+Isaiah, and all holy men who ever lived have been, as long as he
+trusts in God, and clings to God, and obeys God; and that only when
+he forsakes God, and follows his own selfishness and pride, can
+anything or being in earth or hell harm him.
+
+And do not fancy, my friends, that this is a mere unimportant
+question of words and doctrines, because a baptized and educated
+child may be lost after all, and fall from his state of salvation
+into a state of damnation. Still more, do not fancy that if a child
+is taught that he is already a child of God, regenerated in baptism,
+and elect by God's Spirit, that therefore he will neglect either
+vital faith or good works--heaven forbid!
+
+Is it likely to make a child careless, and inclined to neglect vital
+truth, to tell him that God is his Father and loves him utterly, and
+has given His only begotten Son to die for him? Is it not the very
+way, the only way, to stir up in him faith, and real hearty trust
+and affection towards God? How can you teach him to trust God, but
+by telling him that God has shown himself boundlessly and perfectly
+worthy to be trusted by every soul of man; or to love God, but by
+showing him that God loves him already? Is it likely to make a
+child careless of good works, to tell him that God has elected and
+chosen him, and all his brothers and schoolfellows, to be conformed
+into the likeness of Jesus Christ, and that every good, and
+honourable, and gentle thought or feeling which ever crosses his
+little heart, does not come from himself, is not part of his own
+nature or character, but is nothing less than the inspiration of the
+Holy Spirit, nothing less than the voice of Almighty God Himself,
+speaking to the child's heart, that he may answer with Samuel--
+'Speak, Lord, for thy servant heareth?' Is it likely to make a
+child careless about losing eternal life, to tell him that God has
+already given to him eternal life, and that that life is in His Son
+Jesus Christ, to whom the child belongs, body, soul, and spirit?
+
+Judge for yourselves, my friends. Think what awe, what reverence,
+purity, dread of sin, would grow up in a child who was really taught
+all this, and yet what faith and love to God, what freedom, and
+joyfulness, and good courage about his own duty and calling in life.
+
+And then look at the fruits which in general follow a religious
+education, as it is miscalled; and take warning. For if you really
+train up your children in the way in which they should go, be sure
+that when they are old they will not depart from it--a promise which
+is not fulfilled to most religious education which we see around us
+now-a-days; from which sad fact, if Scripture be inspired and
+infallible, we can only judge that such is not the way in which the
+children should go; and that because it is a wrong way, therefore
+God will not, and man cannot, keep them in it.
+
+
+
+SERMON IV. NAMES
+
+
+
+Matthew i. 21. And thou shall call his name Jesus.
+
+Did it ever seem to you a curious thing that the Catechism begins by
+asking the child its name? 'What is your name?' 'Who gave you this
+name?' I think that if you were not all of you accustomed to the
+Church Catechism from your childhood, that would seem a strange way
+of beginning to teach a child about religion.
+
+But the more I consider, the more sure I am that it is the right way
+to begin teaching a child what the Catechism wishes to teach.
+
+Do not fancy that it begins by asking the child's name just because
+it must begin somehow, and then go on to religion afterwards. Do
+not fancy that it merely supposes that the clergyman does not know
+the child's name, and must ask it; for this Catechism is intended to
+be taught by parents to their children, and masters to their
+apprentices and servants; by people, therefore, who know the child's
+name perfectly well already, and yet they are to begin by asking the
+child his name.
+
+Now, why is this? What has a child's name to do with his Faith and
+duty as a Christian?
+
+You may answer, Because his Christian name is given him when he is
+baptized.
+
+But _why_ is his Christian name given him when he is baptized? Why
+then rather than at any other time?
+
+Because it is the old custom of the Church. No doubt it is: and a
+most wise and blessed custom it is; and one which shows us how much
+more about God and man the churchmen in old times knew, than most of
+our religious teachers now-a-days. But how did that old custom
+arise? What put into the minds of church people, for the last
+sixteen hundred years at least, that being baptized and being named
+had anything to do with each other? Men had names of their own long
+before the Lord Jesus came, long before His Baptism was heard of on
+earth;--the heathens of old had their names--the heathens have names
+still;--why, then, did church people feel it right to mix a new
+thing like baptism with a world-old thing like giving a name?
+
+My friends, I feel and say honestly, that there is more in this
+matter than I understand; and what little I do understand, I could
+not explain fully in one sermon, or in many either. But let this be
+enough for to-day. God grant that I may be able to make you
+understand me.
+
+Any one's having a name--a name of his own, a Christian name, as we
+rightly call it--signifies that he is a person; that is, that he has
+a character of his own, and a responsibility, and a calling and duty
+of his own, given him by God; in one word, that he has an immortal
+soul in him, for which he, and he alone, must answer, and receive
+the rewards of the deeds which it does in the body, whether they be
+good or evil. But names are not given at random, without cause or
+meaning. When Adam named all the beasts, we read that whatsoever he
+called any beast, that _was_ the name of it. The names which he
+gave _described_ each beast, were taken from something in its
+appearance, or its ways and habits, and so each was its right name,
+the name which expressed its nature. And so now, when learned men
+discover animals or plants in foreign countries, they do not give
+them names at random, but take care to invent names for them which
+may describe their natures, and make people understand what they are
+like, as Adam did for the beasts of old. And much more, in old
+times, had the names of men each of them a meaning. If it was
+reasonable to give names full of meaning to each kind of dumb
+animal, which are mere things, and not persons at all, how much more
+to each man separately, for each man is a person of himself; each
+man has a character different from all others, a calling different
+from all others, and therefore he ought to have his own name
+separate from all others: and therefore in old times it was the
+custom to give each child a separate name, which had a meaning in
+it, was, as it were, a description of the child, or of something
+particular about the child.
+
+Now, we may see this, above all, in The adorable Name of Jesus.
+That name, above all others, ought to show us what a name means; for
+it is the name of the Son of Man, the one perfect and sinless man,
+the pattern of all men; and therefore it must be a perfect name, and
+a pattern for all names; and it was given to the Lord not by man,
+but by God; not after He was born, but before He was conceived in
+the womb of the blessed Virgin. And therefore, it must show and
+mean not merely some outward accident about Him, something which He
+seemed to be, or looked like, in men's eyes: no, the Name of Jesus
+must mean what the Lord was in the sight of His Father in Heaven;
+what He was in the eternal purpose of God the Father; what He was,
+really and absolutely, in Himself; it must mean and declare the very
+substance of His being. And so, indeed, it does; for The adorable
+Name of Jesus means nothing else but God the Saviour--God who saves.
+This is His name, and was, and ever will be. This Name He fulfilled
+on earth, and proved it to be His character, His exact description,
+His very Name, in short, which made Him different from all other
+beings in heaven or earth, create or uncreate; and therefore, He
+bears His name to all eternity, for a mark of what He has been, and
+is, and will be for ever--God the Saviour; and this is the perfect
+name, the pattern of all other names of men.
+
+Now though the Christian names which we give our children here in
+England, have no especial meaning to them, and have nothing to do
+with what we expect or wish the children to be when they grow up,
+yet the names of people in most other countries in the world have.
+The Jewish names which we find in the Bible have almost all of them
+a meaning. So Simeon, I believe, means 'Obedient'; Jehoshaphat
+means, 'The Lord will judge'; Daniel, 'God is my judge'; Isaiah
+means, 'The Salvation of the Lord'; Isaac means, 'She laughs,' as a
+memorial of Sarah's laughing, when she heard that she was to have a
+child; Ishmael means, 'The Lord hears,' in remembrance of God's
+hearing Hagar's cry in the wilderness, when Ishmael was dying of
+thirst.
+
+Especially those names of which we read that God commanded them to
+be given, have meanings, and to tell the persons who bore those
+names what God expected of them, or would do for them. So Abraham
+means, 'The father of many nations.' So the children of both Isaiah
+and Hosea had names given them by God, each of them meaning
+something which God was going to do to the nation of the Jews. And
+so John means, 'Given by the Lord,' which name was given to John the
+Baptist by the Angel, before his strange birth, in his mother's old
+age.
+
+But we must remember that the heathens also gave names to their
+children, though they did not know that their children owed any duty
+to God, or belonged to God, and therefore we cannot call their names
+Christian names. Yes, the heathens did give their children names;
+some of them give their children names still. And there is to me
+something most sad and painful in those heathen names, and yet most
+full of meaning. A solemn lesson to us, to show us what the fall
+means; what man becomes, when he gives way to his fallen nature, and
+is parted from Christ, the Head of man.
+
+First, these heathens had a dim remembrance that man was made in the
+likeness of God, and lived by Faith in God, and therefore that men's
+names were to express that, as indeed many of their old names do.
+But, alas! the likeness of God in fallen man is like a tree without
+roots, or rather a tree without soil to grow in. God's likeness in
+man can only flourish as long as he is joined to Christ, the perfect
+likeness of God, the true life and the true light of men, the
+foundation which is already laid, and the soil in which man was
+meant to grow and flourish for ever, and as long as he is fed by the
+Spirit of God, the Lord and Giver of Life, who proceeds--never
+forget that, or you will lose the understanding both of who God is
+and what man is--proceeds not only from God the Father, but also
+from God the Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. And therefore, in the
+heathen, God's likeness withered and decayed, as a tree withers and
+decays when torn up from the soil. And first, they began to call
+themselves after the names of false gods, which they had invented
+out of their own carnal fancies. Then they called themselves after
+the names of their dumb animal's. So, Pharaoh means, 'The Sun-God';
+the Ammonites mean, 'The people who worshipped the ram as a god';
+Potiphar means, 'A fat bull,' which the Egyptians used to worship;
+and I could tell you of hundreds of heathen names more, like these,
+which are ridiculous enough to make one smile, if we did not keep in
+mind what tokens they are of sin and ignorance, and the likeness not
+of God, but of the beasts which perish.
+
+Then comes another set of names, showing a lower fall still, when
+heathens have quite forgotten that man was originally made in God's
+likeness, and are not only content to live after the likeness of the
+beasts which perish, but pride themselves on being like beasts, and
+therefore name their children after dumb animals,--the girls after
+the gentler and fairer animals, and the boys after ravenous and
+cruel beasts of prey. That has been the custom among many heathen
+nations; perhaps among almost all of them, at some time or other.
+It is the custom now among the Red Indians in North America, where
+you will find one man in a tribe called 'The Bull,' another 'The
+Panther,' and another 'The Serpent,' and so on; showing that they
+would like to be, if they could, as strong as the bull, as cruel as
+the panther, as venomous as the serpent. What wonder that those Red
+Indians, who have so put on the likeness of the beasts, are now
+dying off the face of the earth like the beasts whom they admire and
+imitate?
+
+And this was the way with our own heathen forefathers before the
+blessed Gospel was preached to them. It is frightful, in reading
+old histories, to find how many Englishmen, our own forefathers,
+were named after fierce wild beasts, and tried, alas! to be like
+their names--children of wrath, whose feet were swift to shed blood,
+under whose lips was the poison of adders, and destruction and
+bloodshed following in their paths, not knowing the way of peace.
+The wolf was the common wild beast of England then; and there are, I
+should say, twenty common old English names ending in wolf, besides
+as many more ending in bear, and eagle, and raven. Fearful sign!
+that men of our own flesh and blood should have gloried in being
+like the wolf, the cruellest, the greediest, the most mean of savage
+beasts! How shall we thank God enough, who sent to them the
+knowledge of His Son Jesus Christ, and called them to be new men in
+Christ Jesus, and called them to holy baptism, to receive new names,
+and begin new lives in the righteous likeness of God Himself?--that
+as by nature they had been the children of wrath, so in baptism they
+might become the children of grace; that as from their forefathers
+they had inherited a corrupt nature, original sin, and the likeness
+of the foul and ravenous beasts which perish, they might have power
+from the Spirit of God to become the sons of God, conformed into the
+likeness of Jesus Christ, in peace, and love, and righteousness, and
+all holiness.
+
+And yet, in names there is a lower depth still among fallen and
+heathen men; when they lose utterly the last dim notion that God
+intends men to be persons, even as God the Father is a person, and
+God the Son a person, and God the Holy Spirit is a person, and so
+lose the custom of giving their children personal names at all;
+either giving them, after they grow up, mere nicknames, taken from
+some peculiarity of their bodies, or something which they have done,
+or some place where they happen to live; or else, like many tribes
+of heathen negroes, just name them after the day of the week on
+which they were born, as some way of knowing them apart; or, last
+and most shocking of all, give them no names at all, and have no
+names themselves, knowing each other apart as the dumb animals do,
+only by sight. I can conceive no deeper fall into utter brutishness
+than that; and yet some few of the most savage tribes, both in
+Africa and in the Indian islands, are said--God help them!--to live
+in that way, and to have no names;--blotted, indeed, out of the book
+of life!
+
+But is this the right state for men? No; it is the wrong state. It
+is a disease into which men are fallen; a disease out of which
+Christ came to raise men; and out of which He does raise us in Holy
+Baptism. Baptism puts the child into its right state--into the
+right state for a human being, a human soul, a human person. And
+baptism declares what that right state is--a member of Christ, a
+child of God, and an inheritor of the kingdom of heaven. A member
+of Christ, and therefore a person, because Christ is a person. A
+child of God, and therefore a person, because a child's duty is to
+love and trust and obey his father--and only a person can do that,
+not an animal or a thing. An inheritor of the kingdom of heaven,
+and therefore bound to cherish all heavenly thoughts and feelings,
+all righteousness, love, and obedience, which only spirits and
+persons, not animals or things, can feel.
+
+Now can you not see why baptism is the proper time for giving the
+child a name? Because then Christ claims the child for His own;--
+because having a name shows that the child is a person who has a
+soul, a will, a conscience, a duty; a person who must answer himself
+for himself alone for what he does in the body, whether it be good
+or evil. And that will, and soul, and conscience were given the
+child by Christ, by whom all things are made, who is the Light which
+lights every man who comes into the world.
+
+Thus in holy baptism God adopts the child for His own in Jesus
+Christ. He declares that the child is regenerate, and has a new
+life, a life from above, a seed of eternal personal life which he
+himself has not by nature. And that seed of eternal life is none
+other but the Holy Spirit of God, the Spirit of the Father and of
+the Son, the Lord and Giver of Life, who does verily and indeed
+regenerate the child in holy baptism, and dwells with his soul, his
+person, his very self, that He may educate the child's character,
+and raise his affections, and subdue his will, and raise him up
+daily from the death of sin to the life of righteousness.
+
+Therefore, when in the Catechism you solemnly ask the child its
+name, you ask it no light question. You speak as a spirit, a
+person, to its spirit, to its very self, which God wills should
+never perish, but live for ever. You single the child out from all
+its schoolfellows, from all the millions of human beings who have
+ever lived, or ever will live; and you make the child, by answering
+to his name, confess that he is a person, an immortal soul, who must
+stand alone before the judgment seat of God; a person who has a duty
+and a calling upon God's earth, which he must fulfil or pay the
+forfeit. And then you ask the child who gave him his name, and make
+him declare that his name was given him in baptism, wherein he was
+made a member of Christ and a child of God. You make the child
+confess that he is a person in Jesus Christ, that Christ has
+redeemed him, his very self, and taken him to Himself, and made him
+not merely God's creature, or God's slave, but God's child. You
+make the child confess that his duty as a person is not towards
+himself, to do what _he_ likes, and follow his own carnal lusts; but
+toward God and toward his neighbours, who are in God's kingdom of
+heaven as well as he. And then you go on in the rest of the
+Catechism to teach him how he himself, the person to whom you are
+speaking, may live for ever and ever as a person, by faith in other
+Persons beside himself, even in God the Father, Son, and Holy
+Spirit, as you teach him in the Creed; by doing his duty to other
+persons beside himself, even to God and man, as you teach him in the
+Ten Commandments; and by diligent prayer to another Person beside
+himself, even to God his heavenly Father, to feed and strengthen him
+day by day with that eternal life which was given to him in baptism.
+Thus the whole Catechism turns upon the very first question in it--
+'What is thy name?' It explains to the child what is really meant,
+in the sight of God, and of the Lord Jesus Christ, and of the whole
+Church in earth and heaven, by the child's having a name of his own,
+and being a person, and having that name given to him in holy
+baptism.
+
+And if this is true of our children, my friends, it is equally true
+of us. You and I are persons, and persons in Christ; each stands
+alone day and night before the judgment-seat of Christ. Each must
+answer for himself. None can deliver his brother, nor make
+agreement unto God for him. Each of us has his calling from his
+heavenly Father; his duty to do which none can do instead of him.
+Each has his own sins, his own temptations, his own sorrows, which
+he must bring single-handed and alone to God his Father, as it is
+written, 'The heart knoweth its own bitterness, and a stranger
+intermeddleth not with its joy.' There is a world, a flesh, and a
+devil, near to us, ready to drag us down, and destroy our personal
+and spiritual life, which God has given us in Christ; a flesh which
+tempts us to follow our own appetites and passions, blindly and
+lawlessly, like the beasts which perish; a world which tempts us to
+become mere things, without free-wills of our own, or consciences of
+our own, without personal faith and personal holiness; the puppets
+of the circumstances and the customs which happen to be round us;
+blown about like the dead leaf, and swept helplessly down the stream
+of time. And there is a devil, too, near us, tempting us to the
+deepest lie of all,--to set up ourselves apart from God, and to try,
+as the devil tries, to be persons in our own strength, each doing
+what he chooses, each being his own law, and his own master; that
+is, his own lawlessness, and his own tyrant: and if we listen to
+that devil, that spirit of lawlessness and self-will, we shall
+become his slaves, persons in him, doing his work, and finding
+torment and misery and slavery in it. Awful thought, that so many
+enemies should be against us; yea, that we ourselves should be our
+own enemies! But here baptism gives us hope, baptism gives us
+courage; we are in Christ; God is our Father, and He can and will
+give us power to have victory, and to triumph against the world, the
+flesh, and the devil. His Spirit is given to us in baptism--that
+Spirit of God who is not merely a force or an influence, but a
+person, a living, loving, holy Person. He is with us, to give our
+persons, our souls, eternal life from His life, eternal holiness
+from His holiness; that so, not merely some part of us, but we our
+very selves and souls--we the very same persons who were christened,
+and had a name given us in holy baptism, and have been answering to
+that name all our life, and were reminded, whenever we heard that
+name, that we had a duty of our own, a history of our own, hopes,
+fears, joys, sorrows of our own, which none could share with us,--
+that we, I say, our own persons, our very selves, may be raised up
+again at the last day, free, pure, strong, filled with the life of
+God, which is eternal life.
+
+And then, what blessed words are these from the Lord Jesus, which we
+read in the book of Revelation? 'And I will give to him that
+overcometh, a new name.' A new name for him that overcometh world,
+flesh, and devil; that shall be our portion in the world to come. A
+new name, perfect like the name of the Lord Jesus, which shall
+express and mean all that we are to do hereafter, and all that we
+have done well on earth. A name which shall declare to us our
+calling and work in God's Church triumphant, throughout all ages and
+worlds to come: and yet a name which no man knoweth saving he who
+receiveth it. Yes, if we may dare to guess at the meaning of those
+deep words, perhaps in that new name shall be recorded for each man
+all that went on, in the secret depths of the man's own heart,
+between himself and his God, unknown and unnoticed even by the wife
+of his bosom. The cup of cold water given in Christ's name; the
+little private acts of love, and kindness, and self-sacrifice, of
+which none but God knew; the secret prayers, the secret acts of
+contrition, the secret hungerings and thirstings after
+righteousness, the secret struggles and agonies of heart, which he
+could not, dare not, ought not to tell to any human being. All
+these, he shall find, will go to make up his character in the life
+to come, to determine what work he is to do for God in the world to
+come; as it is written, 'Be thou faithful over a few things, and I
+will make thee ruler over many things.' All these, perhaps, shall
+be expressed and declared in that new name, the full meaning of
+which none will know but the man himself, because none but he knows
+the secret experiences and struggles which went toward the making of
+it; none but he and God; for God will know all, He who is the Lord
+and Saviour of our souls, our persons, our very selves, and can
+preserve them utterly to the fulness of eternal life, because He
+knows them thoroughly and utterly; because He judges not according
+to appearance, but judges righteous judgment; because He sees us not
+merely as we seem to others to be, not even as we seem at times to
+ourselves to be;--but searches the heart, and can be touched with
+the feeling of its infirmities, seeing that He himself has been
+tempted even as we are, yet without sin; because, blessed thought!
+He can pierce through the very marrow of our being, and discern the
+thoughts and intents of our hearts, and see what we long to be, and
+what we ought to be; so that we can safely and hopefully commend our
+spirits to His hand, day by day and hour by hour, and can trust Him
+to cleanse us from our secret faults, and to renew and strengthen
+our very selves day by day with that eternal life which He gives to
+all who cast themselves utterly upon Him.
+
+
+
+SERMON V. SPONSORSHIP
+
+
+
+1 Cor. xii. 26, 27. Whether one member suffer, all the members
+suffer with it; or whether one member be honoured, all the members
+rejoice with it. Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in
+particular.
+
+I have to tell you that there will be a confirmation held at . . .
+on the . . . All persons of fit age who have not yet been confirmed
+ought to be ready, and I hope and trust that most of them will be
+ready, on that day to profess publicly their faith and loyalty to
+the Lord who died for them. I hope and trust that they will, as
+soon as possible, tell me that they intend to do so, and come to me
+to talk over the matter, and to learn what I can teach them about
+it. They will find in me, I hope, nothing but kindness and fellow-
+feeling.
+
+But I have not only to tell young persons of the Confirmation: I
+have to tell all godfathers and godmothers of it also. Have any of
+you here ever stood godfather or godmother to any young person in
+this parish who is not yet confirmed? If you have, now is the time
+for you to fulfil your parts as sponsors. You must help me, and
+help the children's parents, in bringing your godchildren to
+confirmation. It really is your duty. It will be better for you if
+you fulfil it. Better for you, not merely by preventing a
+punishment, but by bringing a blessing. Let me try to show you what
+I mean.
+
+Now godparents must have some duty, some responsibility or other;--
+that is plain. If you or I promise and vow things in another
+person's name, we must be bound more or less to see that that other
+person fulfils the promise which we made for him: and so the
+baptism service warns the sponsors as soon as the child is
+christened, 'Forasmuch as this child has promised,' &c.; and then we
+have a plain explanation of what a godfather and godmother's duties
+are. 'And that your godchild may know these things the better,'
+&c.: and finally, 'you shall take care that this child be brought
+to the bishop to be confirmed.'
+
+That is the duty of godfathers and godmothers. Those who stand for
+any child do it on that understanding, and take upon themselves
+knowingly that duty.
+
+Now, I will not threaten you, my friends; I will not pretend to tell
+you how God will punish those godfathers and godmothers who do not
+do their duty; because I do not know how he will punish them. He
+has not told us in the Bible; and who am I, to deal out God's
+thunders as if they belonged to me, and judge people of whose real
+merits and dements in God's sight I have no fair means of judging?
+I always dread and dislike threatening any sinner out of this
+pulpit, except those who plainly break the plain laws which are
+written in those Ten Commandments, and hypocrites: because I stand
+in awe of our Lord's own words--'Woe unto you Scribes and Pharisees,
+hypocrites, for ye bind heavy burdens, and grievous to be borne, and
+lay them on men's shoulders, while you yourselves touch them not
+with one of your fingers.' There is too much of that now-a-days, my
+friends, and I have no mind to add my share to it. And sure I am,
+that any godfathers and godmothers who do their duty, only because
+they are afraid that God will punish them if they do not, will not
+do their duty at all. But sure I am also, and thankful to God, that
+we cannot neglect any duty whatsoever without being punished in some
+way or other for our neglect of it. That is not a curse, but a
+blessing: it is a blessing to us to be punished. The only real
+curse of God in this life is to be left unpunished for our sins. It
+is a blessing for us that our sins find us out. For if our sins did
+not find _us_ out, we should very often, I fear, not find our sins
+out. And, therefore, when I tell godfathers and godmothers, not
+that God will perhaps punish them for their neglect, but that He
+does punish them for it already, I am telling them good news, if
+they will only open their hearts to that good news.
+
+For God does punish people for neglecting their godchildren. Those
+who have eyes to see may see it round us now, in this very parish,
+and in every parish in England, in the selfishness, distrust,
+divisions, and quarrels which prevail. I do not mean that this
+parish is worse than others, or England worse than other countries.
+That is no concern of ours: our own parish, and our own evils, are
+quite concern enough for us.
+
+Are people happy together? Do they pull well together? Look at the
+old-standing quarrels, misunderstandings, grudges, prejudices,
+suspicions, which part one man from another, one family from
+another; every man for his own house, and very few for the kingdom
+of God;--no, not even for the general welfare of the parish! Do not
+men try to better themselves at the expense of the parish--to the
+injury of the parish? Do not men, when they try to raise their own
+family, seem to think that the simplest way to do it is to pull down
+their neighbour's family; to draw away their custom; oust them from
+their places, or hurt their characters in order to rise upon their
+fall? so that though they are brothers, members of the same church,
+nation and parish, the greater part of them are, in practice, at war
+with each other--trying to live at each other's expense. Now, is
+this profitable? So far from it, that if you will watch the
+history, either of the whole world, or of this country, or of this
+one parish, you will find that by far the greater part of the misery
+in it has sprung from this very selfishness and separateness--from
+the perpetual struggle between man and man, and between family and
+family: so that there have been men, and those learned, and
+thoughtful, and well-meaning men enough, who have said that the only
+cure for the world's quarrelling and selfishness was to take all
+children away from their parents, and bring them up in large public
+schools; ay, and even to try plans which are sinful, foul, and
+wicked, all in order to prevent parents knowing which were their own
+children, that they might care for all the children in the parish as
+much as if they were their own.
+
+A foolish plan, my friends, and for this one reason, that it is
+driving out one evil by a still greater one. It destroys the root
+to get the fruit; by destroying family life, and love, and
+obedience, to get at the communion of saints, or rather at some
+ghost of it. The real communion of saints is founded on the Fifth
+Commandment--'Thou shalt honour thy father and thy mother;' and
+grows out of it, not by destroying it, but by fulfilling it, as the
+tree grows out of the root, without taking away from the life of the
+root, but rather by nourishing and increasing it. Now, the ancient
+institution of godfathers and godmothers would, it seems to me, if
+it were carried out honestly and really, do for us what we certainly
+have not done for ourselves as yet, and bind us all together as one
+family. It would do all the good which those fanciful philosophers
+of whom I first spoke, have dreamt, without any of the evil; and it
+would do it because it goes simply on the belief that the foundation
+is already laid, and that that foundation is Christ. It says,
+because this child is not merely the child of his father and mother,
+but the child of God, the universal Father, therefore other people
+besides his parents have an interest in him: all who are children
+of God as well as he have an interest in him; for they are all his
+brothers, and have a brother's interest in his welfare. Because
+this child is not merely a member of the family whose surname he
+bears, but a member of Christ, a member of God's great adopted
+family, in the hearts of every one of whom His only begotten Son,
+Jesus Christ, is working; therefore this child ought to be an object
+of awe, and of interest, and love, and care to every other member of
+Christ's Church. Moreover, the child is an inheritor of a heavenly
+kingdom--a kingdom of grace--a kingdom of God,--which is love and
+justice, and peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit--all personal,
+spiritual, heavenly, God-given graces;--and he cannot have them
+without being a blessing to all around him; and he cannot be without
+them, without being a curse to all around him. If, in after life,
+when he comes to be confirmed, he claims his inheritance in this
+heavenly kingdom, he will be full of love, justice, peace, joy in
+the Holy Spirit. If he refuses to claim his inheritance, and
+despises his heavenly birthright, and lives as if he were a mere
+earthly creature, only to please himself, and help himself, he will
+not be full of those graces. And what then? That he will be full
+of their opposites, of course. If he has not love, he will be
+unloving, selfish, hard, cold--to _you_ and yours. If he has not
+justice he will be unjust--to you and yours. If he is not at peace
+he will be at war, quarrelling, grudging, envying, backbiting--you
+and yours. If he has not joy in the Holy Spirit, he will have joy
+in an unholy spirit, for he must have joy in some spirit; he must
+take pleasure in some sort of way of thinking and feeling, and some
+sort of life--in short, in some sort of spirit; and whatsoever is
+not holy is unholy, whatsoever is not good is bad, whatsoever is not
+of God's Holy Spirit is of the Devil;--and therefore, if the child
+as he grows up has not joy in the Holy Spirit, and does not enjoy
+doing right and pleasing God, and being like the Lord Jesus Christ,
+then he will enjoy doing wrong, and pleasing himself, and being
+unlike the Lord Jesus Christ; and so he will set a bad example, and
+be a temptation to all young people of his own age, ready to lead
+them into sin, and draw them away to those sinful and unholy
+pleasures in which he takes delight,--whether it be to rioting and
+drinking, or to uncleanness and unchastity, or to sneering and
+laughing at godliness, and at good people. And that, as you know by
+experience, may be the worse for you and the worse for your
+children. Is that the sort of young person with whom you would wish
+to see your children keeping company? Is that the sort of young
+person next door to whom you would wish to live? Is not such a
+person a curse, just because he is a person, a spiritual being with
+an evil spirit in him, which can harm you, and tempt you, and act on
+you for evil; just as if he had been a righteous person, with the
+holy and good Spirit in him, he would have helped you, and taught
+you, and worked on you for good? But so it is: we are members one
+of another, and if one member goes wrong, and gets diseased, and
+suffers, all the other members are sure to suffer more or less with
+it, sooner or later: you feel it so in your bodies--be sure it is
+so in God's church. But if one member is sound and healthy, all the
+other members must and will be the better for its health, and
+rejoice with it, and be able to do their own work the more freely,
+and strongly, and heartily.
+
+Just think for yourselves; consider, you who are grown up, and have
+had experience of life, the harm you have known one bad man do, the
+sorrow he will cause, even to people who never saw him; and the good
+which you have seen one good man, not merely do with his own hands,
+but put into other people's hearts by his example. Is not both the
+good and the harm which is done on earth like the ripple of a stone
+dropt into water, which spreads and spreads for a vast distance
+round, however small the stone may be? Indeed, bold as it may seem
+to say it, I believe that, if we could behold all hearts as the Lord
+Jesus does, we should find that there never was a good man but that
+the whole of Christendom, perhaps all mankind, was sooner or later,
+more or less, the better for him; and that there never was a bad man
+but that all Christendom, perhaps all mankind, was the worse for
+him. So fully and really true it is in everyday practice, that we
+are members one of another.
+
+Now this is the principle on which the Church acts. For the little
+unconscious infant is treated as what it is, a most solemn and
+important person, who has other relations beside its father and
+mother, as a person who is the brother of all the people round it,
+and of all the Church of God, and who, too, may hereafter do to them
+boundless good or harm, and they to it.
+
+Therefore we must have some persons to bear witness of that, to
+remind the child himself, and the whole Church, that he is not
+merely a soul by itself to be saved, but that he is a brother, a
+member of a family; that he is bound to that family henceforth, for
+good and for evil. And this the godfathers and godmothers do: they
+represent and stand in the place of the whole Church. In one sense,
+every Christian who meets that child through life, or hears of it,
+ought to behave, as far as he can, as its godfather; ought to help
+and improve it if he can. But what is everybody's business, says
+the proverb, is nobody's business; and therefore these godfathers
+and godmothers are called out from the rest, as examples to the
+rest, to watch over the child, and to help and advise its father and
+mother in guiding and training it: but not by interfering with a
+parent's rights, God forbid! or by drawing away the child's
+affections from its own flesh and blood; for if a child be not
+taught first to honour its father and mother, there is little use in
+teaching it anything else whatsoever; and a godfather's first duty
+is to see that his godchild obeys its earthly parents for the Lord's
+sake, for that is right, and God's will, whatever else is not.
+
+Now just conceive--I am sure that you easily may--what a blessing to
+this parish, or this part of the country, it would be, were the
+duties of godfathers really carried out and practised. Every child,
+beside his father and mother, would have some two or three elder
+friends at least, whom he had known from his childhood, whom he
+could trust, to whom he could go in trouble as to his own flesh and
+blood. The orphan would have, if not relations, still godparents,
+to comfort and protect him. No one could go abroad without meeting,
+if not a godparent, yet the godparent or godchild of a friend or a
+relation; someone, in short, who had an interest in him, and he in
+them. All would be bound together in threefold cords of interest
+and affection. How many spites, family quarrels, mistakes, and
+ignorances about each other would be done away, if people would but
+thus simply enter into that communion of saints to which, by right,
+they belong, and bear each other's burdens, and so fulfil the law of
+Christ.--Unless you think that men are such ill-conditioned
+creatures that the less they mix with each other the better. I do
+not. I believe that the more we mix with each other, and the better
+we know each other, the more we shall feel for each other: that the
+more we help people, the more we shall find that they are worth
+helping; that the more, in a word, we try to live, not after the
+likeness of the beasts, selfish and apart, but after the order and
+constitution of God's Church, to which we belong, and which is, that
+we are all fellow-members of one body, then the more we shall find
+that God's order is the right, good, blessed order, by obeying which
+we enter into comfort of which we never dream as long as we lead
+selfish, separate, worldly lives; as it is written, 'Eye hath not
+seen, nor ear heard, nor hath it entered into the heart of man to
+conceive, the things which God has prepared for those who love Him.'
+
+This may seem a fanciful dream, too fair to be possible; but what
+prevents it from being possible, save and except our own selfishness
+and laziness?
+
+And as for what fruit will spring from it, I have seen, by
+experience, the blessing of godfathership and godmothership, where
+it is really carried out; how it will knit together, in sacred bonds
+of friendship, not merely the children, but the grown persons of
+different families, and give them a fellow-feeling, a mutual
+interest, which will prevent a hundred quarrels and coldnesses among
+frail human creatures. And to those who are childless themselves,
+what a blessing to have their love and self-sacrifice called out, by
+being bound in holy bonds, if not to children of their own, at least
+to children of God!--to have young people to care for, to teach, to
+guide, and so to win for themselves in the Church of God a name
+better than that of sons and daughters. And have no fear that by
+bringing your kindness to bear especially upon your godchildren you
+will narrow your love, and care less for children in general. Not
+so, my friends; you will find that your love to your godchildren,
+like love to your own children, will make all children lovable in
+your eyes: you will learn how worthy of your love children are,
+what capacities of good there are in them, how truly of such are the
+kingdom of heaven; and their simplicity will often teach you more
+than you can teach them. Their God-given instincts of right and
+wrong, truth and falsehood, which come from the indwelling Word of
+God, Jesus the Lord, will often enough shame us, will teach us more
+and more the depth of that great saying, 'Out of the mouths of babes
+and sucklings, Thou, O God, hast perfected Thy praise.'
+
+Now try, I entreat you, all godfathers and godmothers, to carry out
+these hints of mine, and so fulfil your duty to your godchildren,
+sure that you will find it a blessing to yourselves as well as to
+them.
+
+After all it is your duty. But do not let the slandering Devil
+slander to you that blessed word, Duty, and make you afraid of it,
+and shrink from it, as if it meant something burdensome, and
+troublesome, and thankless, which you suppose you must do for fear
+of punishment, while you have a right to see how little of it you
+can do, and try to be let off as cheaply as possible. Beware of
+that evil spirit, my friends, for he is very near you, and me, and
+every man, whenever we think of our duty. Very near us he is, that
+evil Jesuit spirit, that spirit of bondage unto fear, which is
+continually setting us on to find out with how _little_ service God
+will be contented, how human slaves may make the cheapest bargain
+with some stern taskmaster above, of whom they dream. And from that
+temptation there is no escape, save into the blessed name of God
+Himself--our Father.
+
+Our Father!--whenever you think of your duty to God or man, think
+but of those two words. Remember that all duty is duty to a Father;
+your Father; and such a Father! Who gave His only begotten Son to
+die for you, who showed what He was in that Son--full of goodness,
+perfectly loving, perfectly merciful, perfectly just; and then you
+will not be inclined to ask how _little_ obedience, how _little_
+love, how _little_ service, He will allow you to pay to Him; but how
+much He will help you to pay to Him. Then you will feel that His
+service is perfect freedom, because it is service to a Father who
+loves you, and will help you to do His will. Then you will feel
+that His commandments are not grievous, because they are a Father's
+commandments, because you are bound to do them, not by dread and
+superstition, but by gratitude, honour, affection, respect, trust.
+Then you will not be thinking of what punishment will come if you
+disobey--no, nor of what reward will come if you obey--but you will
+be thinking of the commandment itself, and how to carry it out most
+perfectly, and let the consequences take care of themselves, because
+you know that your _Father_ takes care of them; that He loves you,
+and therefore what He commands must be good for you, utterly the
+best thing for you; that He only gives you a commandment because it
+is good for you; that you are made in God's image, and therefore
+God's will must be for you the path of life, the only rule by which
+you can prosper now and for ever.
+
+Do try, now, all you who are godfathers and godmothers, and for once
+look on your duty in this light. Be sure that in trying to do your
+duty you will bring a blessing on yourselves, because your duty is
+to a Father in heaven. Be sure that, in trying to better your
+godchildren, you will better yourselves; in trying to teach them,
+you will teach yourselves; in trying to bring them to confirmation,
+you will indeed confirm, root, and strengthen yourselves the more
+deeply in all that is good; because your godchildren are indeed
+God's children, and whatsoever you do for them you do for His only
+begotten Son Jesus Christ, as He Himself says, 'Inasmuch as ye did
+it unto one of the least of these little ones, ye did it unto Me.'
+Do not be afraid of trying; you will have a hundred reasons for not
+trying rise in your mind, the Devil will find you a hundred lying
+excuses: 'It will be so difficult; and you do not like to interfere
+with other people's children; and you have never cared about your
+godchildren yet, and it will seem so odd to begin now; and the
+children may not listen to you; and besides, you do not know enough
+to teach them; you are not good scholar enough, good liver enough,
+you can't preach where you don't practice.' Oh, how ready the Devil
+is to help a man to excuses for not doing his duty; how careful he
+is to keep out of a man's mind the one thought which would sweep all
+those excuses to the wind--the thought that this same duty, which he
+is trying to make look so ugly, is duty to a loving Father. Do not
+listen to his lies; look up to your good Father in heaven; and try.
+It is God's will that these children should be confirmed; it is His
+will that you should help to bring them to confirmation; and if it
+is His will, He will help you to do that will of His. It may seem
+difficult: but try, and the difficulty will vanish, for God will
+make it easy for you. You may be afraid of interfering: believe
+that God's Spirit is working in the hearts of your godchildren, and
+of their parents also; and trust to God's Spirit to make them kindly
+and thankful to you about the matter, and glad to see that you take
+an interest in their children. You may seem not to know enough: O,
+my friends, you know enough, every one of you, if you have courage
+to confess how much you know. Ask God for courage to speak out, and
+He will give it you. And even if you are no scholar, be sure that,
+as the old proverb says, 'Teaching is the best way of learning.'
+Any parent, or godfather, or godmother, who will try to teach their
+children God's truth and their duty, will find that in so doing they
+will teach themselves even more than they teach the children. I say
+it because I know it from my own experience. And for the rest,
+again I say, is not God your Father? Therefore, if any man be in
+want of wisdom, or courage, or any other heavenly gift, let him ask
+of God, who giveth liberally and upbraideth not, and he shall
+receive it. For after all, when you ask God to teach you, and
+strengthen you to do your duty, you do but ask Him for a part of
+that very inheritance which He has already given you; a part of your
+inheritance in that kingdom of heaven which is a kingdom of
+spiritual gifts and graces, into which you were baptized as well as
+your godchildren.
+
+Try then, each of you, what you can do to bring your own godchildren
+to confirmation, and what you can do to make them fit for
+confirmation; for you are members one of another, and if you will
+act as such, you will find strength to do your duty, and a blessing
+in your day from that heavenly Father from whom every fatherhood in
+heaven and earth, and yours among the rest, is named.
+
+
+
+SERMON VI. JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH
+
+
+
+Ephesians ii. 5. By grace ye are saved.
+
+We all hold that we are justified by faith, that is, by believing;
+and that unless we are justified we cannot be saved. And of all men
+who ever believed this, perhaps those who gave us the Church
+Catechism believed it most strongly. Nay, some of them suffered for
+it; endured persecution, banishment, and a cruel death, because they
+would persist in holding, contrary to the Romanists, that men were
+justified by faith only, and not by the works of the law; and that
+this was one of the root-doctrines of Christianity, which if a man
+did not believe, he would believe nothing else rightly. Does it not
+seem, then, something strange that they should never in this
+Catechism of theirs mention one word about justifying or
+justification? They do not ask the child, 'How is a man justified?'
+that he may answer, 'By faith alone;' they do not even teach him to
+say, 'I am justified already. I am in a state of justification;'
+but not saying one word about that, they teach him to say much more--
+they teach him to say that he is in a state of salvation, and to
+thank God boldly because he is so; and then go on at once to ask him
+the articles of his belief. And even more strange still, they teach
+him to answer that question, not by repeating any doctrines, but by
+repeating the simple old Apostles' Creed. They do not teach him to
+say, as some would now-a-days, 'I believe in original sin, I believe
+in redemption through Christ's death, I believe in justification by
+faith, I believe in sanctification by the Holy Spirit,'--true as
+these doctrines are; still less do they bid the child say, 'I
+believe in predestination, and election, and effectual calling, and
+irresistible grace, and vicarious satisfaction, and forensic
+justification, and vital faith, and the three assurances.'
+
+Whether these things be true or false, it seemed to the ancient
+worthies who gave us our Catechism that children had no business
+with them. They had their own opinions on these matters, and spoke
+their opinions moderately and wisely, and the sum of their opinions
+we have in the Thirty-nine Articles, which are not meant for
+children, not even for grown persons, excepting scholars and
+clergymen. Of course every grown person is at liberty to study
+them; but no one in the Church of England is required to agree to
+them, and to swear that they are true, except scholars at our old
+Universities, and clergymen, who are bound to have studied such
+questions. But for the rest of Englishmen all the necessary
+articles of belief (so the old divines considered) were contained in
+the simple old Apostles' Creed.
+
+And why? Because, it seems to me, they were what Englishmen ought
+to be--what too many Englishmen are too apt to boast of being in
+these days, while they are not so, or anything like it--and that is,
+honest men and practical men. They had taught the children to say
+that they were members of Christ, children of God, and inheritors of
+the kingdom of heaven; and they had taught the children, when they
+said that, to mean what they said; for they had no notion that 'I
+am,' meant 'I may possibly be;' or that 'I was made,' meant 'There
+is a chance of my being made some time or other.' They would not
+have dared to teach children to say things which were most probably
+not true. So believing really what they taught, they believed also
+that the children were justified. For if a child is not justified
+in being a member of Christ, a child of God, and an inheritor of the
+kingdom of heaven, what is he justified in being? Is not that
+exactly the just, right, and proper state for him, and for every
+man?--the very state in which all men were meant originally to be,
+in which all men ought to have been? So they looked on these
+children as being in the just, right, and proper way, on which God
+looks with satisfaction and pleasure, and in which alone a man can
+do just, right, and proper things, by the Spirit of Christ, which He
+gives daily and hourly to those who belong to Him and trust in Him
+and in His Father.
+
+But they knew that the children could only keep in this just, and
+right, and proper state by trusting in God, and looking up to Him
+daily in faith, and love, and obedience. They knew that if the
+children, whether for one hour or for their whole lives, lost trust
+in God, and began trusting in themselves, they would that very
+moment, then and there, become not justified at all, because they
+would be doing a thing which no man is justified in doing, and fall
+into a state into which no man is justified in remaining for one
+hour--that is, into an unjustifiable state of self-will, and
+lawlessness, and forgetfulness of who and of what they were, and of
+what God was to them; in one word, into a sinful state, which is not
+a righteous, or just, or good, or proper state for any man, but an
+utterly unrighteous, unjust, wrong, improper, mistaken, diseased
+state, which is certain to breed unrighteous, unjust, improper
+actions in a man, as a limb is certain to corrupt if it be cut off
+from the body, as a little child is certain to come to harm if it
+runs away from its parents, and does just what it likes, and eats
+whatsoever pleases its fancy. So these old divines, being practical
+men, said to themselves, 'These children are justified and right in
+being what they are, therefore our business is to keep them what
+they are, and we can only do that as long as they have faith in God
+and in His Christ.'
+
+Now, if they had been mere men of books, they would have said to
+themselves, 'Then we must teach the children very exactly what faith
+is, that they may know how to tell true faith from false, and may be
+able to judge every day and hour whether they have the right sort of
+faith which will justify them, or some wrong sort which will not.'
+And many wise and good men in those times did say so, and tormented
+their own minds, and the minds of weak brethren, with long arguments
+and dry doctrines about faith, till, in their eagerness to make out
+what sort of thing faith ought to be, they seemed quite to forget
+that it must be faith in God, and so seemed to forget too who God
+was, and what He was like. Therefore, they ended by making people
+believe (as too many, I fear, do now-a-days) not that they were
+justified freely by the grace of God, shown forth in the life, and
+death, and resurrection of his Son Jesus Christ; no: but that they
+were justified by believing in justification by faith, and that
+their salvation depended not on being faithful to God and trusting
+in Him, but in standing up fiercely for the doctrine of
+justification by faith. And so they destroyed the doctrine of free
+grace, while they thought they were fighting for it; for they taught
+men not to look to God for salvation, so much as to their own faith,
+their own frames, and feelings, and experiences; and these, as
+common sense will show you, are just as much something in a man, as
+acts of his own, and part of him, as his good works would be; and so
+by making people fancy that it was having the right sort of feelings
+which justified them, they fell back into the very same mistake as
+the Papists against whom they were so bitter, namely, that it is
+something in a man's self which justifies him, and not simply
+Christ's merits and God's free grace.
+
+But our old Reformers were of a different mind; and everlasting
+thanks be to Almighty God that they were so. For by being so they
+have made the Church of England (as I always have said, and always
+will say) almost the only Church in Europe, Protestant or other,
+which thoroughly and fully stands up for free grace, and
+justification by faith alone. For these old Reformers were
+practical men, and took the practical way. They knew, perhaps, the
+old proverb, 'A man need not be a builder to live in a house.' At
+least they acted on it, and instead of trying to make the children
+understand what faith was made up of, they tried to make them live
+in faith itself. Instead of saying, 'How shall we make the children
+have faith in God by telling them what faith is?' they said, 'How
+shall we make them have faith in God by telling them what God is?'
+And therefore, instead of puzzling and fretting the children's minds
+with any of the controversies which were then going on between
+Papists and Protestants, or afterwards between Calvinists and
+Arminians, they taught the children simply about God; who He was,
+and what He had done for them and all mankind; that so they might
+learn to love Him, and look up to Him in faith, and trust utterly to
+Him, and so remain justified and right, saved and safe for ever.
+
+By doing which, my friends, they showed that they knew more about
+faith and about God than if they had written books on books of
+doctrinal arguments (though they wrote those too, and wrote them
+nobly and well); they showed that they had true faith in God, such
+trust in Him, and in the beauty and goodness, justice and love,
+which He had shown, that they only needed to tell the children of
+it, and they would trust Him too, and at once have faith in so good
+a God. They showed that they had such trust in the excellencies,
+and reasonableness, and fitness of His Gospel, that they were sure
+that it would come home at once to the children's hearts. They
+showed that they had such trust in the power of His grace, in His
+love for the children, in the working of His Spirit in the children,
+that He would bring His Gospel home to their hearts, and stir them
+up by the spirit of adoption to feel that they were indeed the
+children of God, to whom they might freely cry, 'My Father!'
+
+And I say that they were not deceived. I say that experience has
+shown that they were right; that the Church Catechism, where it is
+really and honestly taught, gives the children an honest, frank,
+sober, English temper of mind which no other training which I have
+seen gives. I have seen, alas! Church schools fail, ere now, in
+training good children; but as far as I have seen, they have failed
+either because the Catechism was neglected for the sake of cramming
+the children's brains with scholarship, or because the Catechism was
+not honestly taught: because the words were taught by rote, but the
+explanations which were given of it were no explanations at all, but
+another doctrine, which our forefathers knew not: either Dissenting
+or Popish; either a religion of fancies, and feelings, and
+experiences, or one of superstitious notions and superstitious
+ceremonies which have been borrowed from the Church of Rome, and
+which, I trust in God, will be soon returned to their proper owner,
+if the free, truthful, God-trusting English spirit is to remain in
+our children. I know that there are good men among Dissenters, my
+friends; good men among Romanists. I have met with them, and I
+thank God for them; and what may not be good for English children
+may be good for foreign ones. I judge not; to his own master each
+man stands or falls. But I warn you frankly, from experience (not
+of my own merely--Heaven forbid!--but from the experience of
+centuries past), that if you expect to make the average of English
+children good children on any other ground than the Church Catechism
+takes, you will fail. Of course there will be some chosen ones here
+and there, whose hearts God will touch; but you will find that the
+greater part of the children will not be made better at all; you
+will find that the cleverer, and more tender-hearted will be made
+conceited, Pharisaical, self-deceiving (for children are as ready to
+deceive themselves, and play the hypocrite to their own consciences,
+as grown people are); they will catch up cant words and phrases, or
+little outward forms of reverence, and make a religion for
+themselves out of them to drug their own consciences withal; while,
+when they go out into the world, and meet temptation, they will have
+no real safeguard against it, because whatsoever they have been
+taught, they have not been taught that God is really and practically
+their Father, and they His children.
+
+I have seen many examples of this kind. Perhaps those who have eyes
+to see may have seen one or two in this very parish. Be that as it
+may, I tell you, my friends, that your children shall be taught the
+Church Catechism, with the plain, honest meaning of the words as
+they stand. No less: but as God shall give me grace, no more. If
+it be not enough for them to know that God, He who made heaven and
+earth, is their Father; that His Son Jesus Christ redeemed them and
+all mankind by being born of the Virgin Mary, suffering under
+Pontius Pilate, being crucified, dead, and buried, descending into
+hell, rising again the third day from the dead, ascending into
+Heaven, and sitting on the right hand of God the Father Almighty, in
+the intent of coming from thence to judge the living and the dead;
+to believe in the Holy Spirit, in the holy universal Church in which
+He keeps us, in the fellowship of all Saints in which He knits us
+together; in the forgiveness of our sins which He proclaims to us,
+in the resurrection of our body which He will quicken at the last
+day, in the life everlasting which is His life,--if, I say, this be
+not enough for them to believe, and on the strength thereof to trust
+God utterly, and so be justified and saved from this evil world, and
+from the doom and punishment thereof, then they must go elsewhere;
+for I have nothing more to offer them, and trust in God that I never
+shall have.
+
+
+
+SERMON VII. DUTY AND SUPERSTITION
+
+
+
+Micah vi. 6-8. Wherewith shall I come before the Lord and bow
+myself before the most High God? Shall I come before him with burnt
+offerings? . . . Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams? .
+. . Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression; the fruit of my
+body for the sin of my soul?
+
+He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord
+require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk
+humbly with thy God?
+
+There are many now-a-days who complain of that part of the Church
+Catechism which speaks of our duty to God and to our neighbour; and
+many more, I fear, who shrink from complaining of the Church
+Catechism, because it is part of the Prayer-book, yet wish in their
+secret hearts that it had said something different about Duty.
+
+Some wonder why it does not say more about what are called
+'religious duties,' and 'acts of worship,' 'mortification,'
+'penitence,' and 'good works.' Others wonder no less why it says
+nothing about what are called 'Christian frames and feelings,' and
+'inward experiences.'
+
+For there is a notion abroad in the world, as there is in all evil
+times, that a man's chief duty is to save his own soul after he is
+dead; that his business in this world is merely to see how he can
+get out of it again, without suffering endless torture after his
+body dies. This is called superstition: anxiety about what will
+happen to us after we die.
+
+Now if you look at the greater number of religious books, whether
+Popish or Protestant, you will find that in practice the main thing,
+almost the one thing, which they are meant to do, is to show the
+reader how he may escape Hell-torments, and reach Heaven's pleasures
+after he dies: not how he may do his Duty to God and his neighbour.
+They speak of that latter, of course: they could not be Christian
+books at all, thank God, without doing so; but they seem to me to
+tell men to do their Duty, not simply because it is right, and a
+blessing in itself, and worth doing for its own sake, but because a
+man may gain something by it after he dies. Therefore, to help
+their readers to gain as much as possible after they die, they are
+not content with the plain Duty laid down in the Bible and in the
+Catechism, but require of men new duties over and above; which may
+be all very good if they help men to do their real Duty, but are
+simply worth nothing if they do not.
+
+Let me explain myself. I said just now that superstition means
+anxiety about what will happen to us after we die. But people
+commonly understand by superstition, religious ceremonies, like the
+Popish ones, which God has not commanded. And that is not a wrong
+meaning either; for people take to these ceremonies from over-
+anxiety about the next life. The one springs out of the other; the
+outward conduct out of the inward fear; and both spring alike out of
+a false notion of God, which the Devil (whose great aim is to hinder
+us from knowing our Father in Heaven) puts into men's minds. Man
+feels that he is sinful and unrighteous; the light of Christ in his
+heart shows him that, and it shows him at the same time that God is
+sinless and righteous. 'Then,' he says, 'God must hate sin;' and
+there he says true. Then steps in the slanderer, Satan, and
+whispers, 'But you are sinful; therefore God hates you, and wills
+you harm, and torture, and ruin.' And the poor man believes that
+lying voice, and will believe it to the end, whether he be Christian
+or heathen, until he believes the Bible and the Sacraments, which
+tell him, 'God does not hate you: He hates your sins, and loves
+you; He wills not your misery but your happiness; and therefore
+God's will, yea, God's earnest endeavour, is to raise you out of
+those sins of yours, which make you miserable now, and which, if you
+go on in them, must bring of themselves everlasting misery to you.'
+Of themselves; not by any arbitrary decree of God (whereof the Bible
+says not one single word from beginning to end), that He will
+inflict on you so much pain for so much sin: but by the very nature
+of sin; for to sin is to be parted from God, in whose presence alone
+is life, and therefore sin is, to be in death. Sin is, to be at war
+with God, who is love and peace; and therefore to be in
+lovelessness, hatred, war, and misery. Sin is, to act contrary to
+the constitution which God gave man, when He said, 'Let us make man
+in our image, after our likeness;' and therefore sin is a disease in
+human nature, and like all other diseases, must, unless it is
+checked, go on everlastingly and perpetually breeding weakness, pain
+and torment. And out of that God is so desirous to raise you, that
+He spared not His only begotten Son, but freely gave Him for you, if
+by any means He might raise you out of that death of sin to the life
+of righteousness--to a righteous life; to a life of Duty--to a
+dutiful life, like His Son Jesus Christ's life; for that must go on,
+if you go on in it, producing in you everlastingly and perpetually
+all health and strength, usefulness and happiness in this world and
+all worlds to come.
+
+But men will not hear that voice. The fact is, that simply to do
+right is too difficult for them, and too humbling also. They are
+too proud to like being righteous only with Christ's righteousness,
+and too slothful also; and so they go about like the old Pharisees,
+to establish a righteousness of their own; one which will pamper
+their self-conceit by seeming very strange, and farfetched, and
+difficult, so as to enable them to thank God every day that they are
+not as other men are; and yet one which shall really not be as
+difficult as the plain homely work of being good sons, good fathers,
+good husbands, good masters, good servants, good subjects, good
+rulers. And so they go about to establish a righteousness of their
+own (which can be no righteousness at all, for God's righteousness
+is the only righteousness, and Christ's righteousness is the only
+pattern of it), and teach men that God does not merely require of
+men to do justly, and love mercy, and walk humbly with their God,
+but requires of them something more. But by this they deny the
+righteousness of God; for they make out that he has not behaved
+righteously and justly to men, nor showed them what is good, but has
+left them to find it out or invent it for themselves. For is it not
+establishing a righteousness of one's own, to tell people that God
+only requires these Ten Commandments of Christians in general, but
+that if any one chooses to go further, and do certain things which
+are not contained in the Ten Commandments, 'counsels of perfection,'
+as they are called, and 'good works' (as if there were no other good
+works in the world), and so do more than it is one's duty to do, and
+lead a sort of life which is called (I know not why) 'saintly' and
+'angelic,' then one will obtain a 'peculiar crown,' and a higher
+place in Heaven than poor commonplace Christian people, who only do
+justly, and love mercy, and walk humbly with their God?
+
+And is it not, on the other hand, establishing a righteousness of
+one's own, to say that God requires of us belief in certain
+doctrines about election, and 'forensic justification,' and
+'sensible conversion,' and certain 'frames and feelings and
+experiences;' and that without all these a man has no right to
+expect anything but endless torture; and all the while to say little
+or nothing about God's requiring of men the Ten Commandments? For
+my part, I am equally shocked and astonished at the doctrine which I
+have heard round us here--openly from some few, and in practice from
+more than a few--that because the Ten Commandments are part of the
+Law, they are done away with, because we are not now under the Law
+but under Grace. What do they mean? Is it not written, that not
+one jot or tittle of the Law shall fail; and that Christ came, not
+to destroy the Law, but to fulfil it? What do they mean? That it
+was harm to break the Ten Commandments before Christ came, but no
+harm to break them now? Do they mean that Jews were forbid to
+murder, steal, and commit adultery, but that Christians are not
+forbidden? One thing I am afraid they do mean, for I see them act
+up to it steadily enough. That Jews were forbidden to covet, but
+that Christians are not; that Jews might not commit fornication, but
+Christians may; that Jews might not lie, but Christians may; that
+Jews might not use false weights and measures, or adulterate goods
+for sale, but that Christians may. My friends, if I am asked the
+reason of the hypocrisy which seems the besetting sin of England, in
+this day;--if I am asked why rich men, even high religious
+professors, dare speak untruths at public meetings, bribe at
+elections, and go into parliament each man with a lie in his right
+hand, to serve neither God nor his country, but his political party
+and his religious sect, by conduct which he would be ashamed to
+employ in private life;--if I am asked why the middle classes (and
+the high religious professors among them, just as much as any) are
+given over to cheating, coveting, puffing their own goods by
+shameless and unmanly boasting, undermining each other by the
+dirtiest means, while the sons of religious professors, both among
+the higher and the middle classes, seem just as liable as any other
+young men to fall into unmanly profligacy;--if I am asked why the
+poor profess God's gospel and practise the Devil's works; and why,
+in this very parish now, there are women who, while they are
+drunkards, swearers, and adulteresses, will run anywhere to hear a
+sermon, and like nothing better, saving sin, than high-flown
+religious books;--if I am asked, I say, why the old English honesty
+which used to be our glory and our strength, has decayed so much of
+late years, and a hideous and shameful hypocrisy has taken the place
+of it, I can only answer by pointing to the good old Church
+Catechism, and what it says about our duty to God and to our
+neighbour, and declaring boldly, 'It is because you have forgotten
+that. Because you have despised that. Because you have fancied
+that it was beneath you to keep God's plain human commandments. You
+have been wanting to "save your souls," while you did not care
+whether your souls were saved alive, or whether they were dead, and
+rotten, and damned within you; you have dreamed that you could be
+what you called "spiritual," while you were the slaves of sin; you
+have dreamed that you could become what you call "saints," while you
+were not yet even decent men and women.'
+
+And so all this superstition has had the same effect as the false
+preaching in Ezekiel's time had. It has strengthened the hands of
+the wicked, that he should not turn from his wicked way, by
+promising him life; and it has made the heart of the righteous sad,
+whom God has not made sad. Plain, respectable, God-fearing men and
+women, who have wished simply to do their duty where God has put
+them, have been told that they are still unconverted, still carnal--
+that they have no share in Christ--that God's Spirit is not with
+them--that they are in the way to endless torture: till they have
+been ready one minute to say, 'Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow
+we die'--'Surely I have cleansed my hands in vain, and washed my
+heart in innocency;' and the next minute to say, with Job, angrily,
+'Though I die, thou shalt not take my righteousness from me! You
+preachers may call me what names you will; but I know that I love
+what is right, and wish to do my duty;' and so they have been made
+perplexed and unhappy, one day fancying themselves worse than they
+really were, and the next fancying themselves better than they
+really were; and by both tempers of mind tempted to disbelieve God's
+Gospel, and throw away the thought of vital religion in disgust.
+
+And now people are raising the cry that Popery is about to overrun
+England. It may be so, my friends. If it is so, I cannot wonder at
+it; if it is so, Englishmen have no one to blame but themselves.
+And whether Popery conquers us or not, some other base superstition
+surely will conquer us if we go on upon our present course, and set
+up any new-fangled, self-invented righteousness of our own, instead
+of the plain Ten Commandments of God. For I tell you plainly they
+are God's everlasting law, the very law of liberty, wherewith Christ
+has made us free; and only by fulfilling them, as Christ did, can we
+be free--free from sin, the world, the flesh, and the Devil. For to
+break them is to sin: and whosoever commits sin is the slave of
+sin; and whosoever despises these commandments will never enjoy that
+freedom, but be entangled again in the yoke of bondage, and become a
+slave, if not to open and profligate sins, still surely to an evil
+and tormenting conscience, to superstitious anxieties as to whether
+he shall be saved or damned, which make him at last ask,
+'Wherewithal shall I come before the Lord? Will the Lord be pleased
+with this, that and the other fantastical action, or great sacrifice
+of mine?' or at last, perhaps, the old question, 'Shall I give my
+firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of
+my soul? Shall I cheat my own family, leave my property away from
+my children, desert them to shut myself up in a convent, or to
+attempt some great religious enterprise?'--Things which have
+happened a thousand times already, and worse, far worse, than them;
+things which will happen again, and worse, far worse than them, as
+soon as a hypocritical generation is seized with that dread and
+terror of God which is sure to arise in the hearts of men who try to
+invent a righteousness of their own, and who forget what God's
+righteousness is like, and who therefore forget what God is like,
+and who therefore forget what God's name is, and who therefore
+forget that Jesus Christ is God's likeness, and that the name of God
+is 'Love.'
+
+Now, I say that the Church Catechism, from beginning to end, is the
+cure for this poison, and in no part more than where it tells us our
+duty to God and our neighbour; and that it does carry out the
+meaning of the text as no other writing does, which I know of, save
+the Bible only.
+
+For what says the text?
+
+'He hath showed thee, O man, what is good.'
+
+Who has showed thee? Who but this very God, from whom thou art
+shrinking; to whom thou art looking up in terror, as at a hard
+taskmaster, reaping where He has not sown, who willeth the death of
+a sinner, and his endless and unspeakable torment? The very God
+whom thou dreadest has stooped to save and teach thee. He hath sent
+His only begotten Son to thee, to show thee, in the person of a man,
+Jesus Christ, what a perfect man is, and what He requires of thee to
+be. This Lord Jesus is with thee, to teach thee to live by faith in
+thy heavenly Father, even as He lived, and to be justified thereby,
+even as He was justified by being declared to be God's well-beloved
+Son, and by being raised from the dead. He will show thee what is
+good; He has shown thee what is good, when He showed thee His own
+blessed self, His story and character written in the four Gospels.
+This is thy God, and this is thy Lord and Master; not a silent God,
+not a careless God, but a revealer of secrets, a teacher, a guide, a
+'most merciful God, who showeth to man the thing which he knew not;'
+that same Word of God who talked with Adam in the garden, and
+brought his wife to him; who called Abraham, and gave him a child;
+who sent Moses to make a nation of the Jews; who is the King of all
+the nations upon earth, and has appointed them their times and the
+bounds of their habitation, if haply they may feel after Him and
+find Him; who meanwhile is not far from any one of them, seeing that
+in Him they live, and move, and have their being, and are His
+offspring; who has not left Himself without witness, that they may
+know that He is one who loves, not one who hates, one who gives, not
+one who takes, one who has pity, not one who destroys, in that He
+gives them rain and fruitful seasons, filling their hearts with food
+and gladness. This is thy God, O man! from whose face thou desirest
+to flee away.
+
+Next, 'He hath showed thee, O _man_.' Not merely, 'He hath showed
+thee, O deep philosopher, or brilliant genius;'--not merely, 'He
+hath showed thee, O eminent saint, or believer who hast been through
+many deep experiences:' but, 'He hath showed thee, O _man_.'
+Whosoever thou art, if thou be a man, subsisting like Jesus Christ
+the Son of Man, of a reasonable soul and human flesh; thou labourer
+at the plough, tradesman in thy shop, soldier in the battle-field,
+poor woman working in thy cottage, God hath showed thee, and thee,
+and thee, what is good, as surely and fully as He has shown it to
+scholars and divines, to kings and rulers, and the wise and prudent
+of the earth.
+
+And He hath showed _thee_; not you. Not merely to the whole of you
+together; not merely to some of you so that one will have to tell
+the other, and the greater part know only at second-hand and by
+hearsay: but He hath showed to thee, to each of you; to each man,
+woman, and child, in this Church, alone, privately, in the depths of
+thy own heart, He hath showed what is good. He hath sent into thine
+heart a ray of The Light who lighteth every man who comes into the
+world. He has given to thy soul an eye by which to see that Light,
+a conscience which can receive what is good, and shrink from what is
+evil; a spiritual sense, whereby thou canst discern good and evil.
+That conscience, that soul's eye of thine, God has regenerated, as
+He declares to thee in baptism, and He will day by day make it
+clearer and tenderer by the quickening power of His Holy Spirit; and
+that Spirit will renew Himself in thee day by day, if thou askest
+Him, and will quicken and soften thy soul more and more to love what
+is good, and strengthen it more and more to hate and fly from what
+is evil.
+
+Next, 'He hath showed thee, O man, what is GOOD.' Not merely what
+will turn away God's punishments, and buy God's rewards; not merely
+what will be good for thee after thou diest: but what is good, good
+in itself, good for thee now, and good for thee for ever; good for
+thee in health and sickness, joy and sorrow, life and death; good
+for thee through all worlds, present and to come; yea, what would be
+good for thee in hell, if thou couldst be in hell and yet be good.
+Not what is good enough for thy neighbours and not good enough for
+thee, good enough for sinners and not good enough for saints, good
+enough for stupid persons and not good enough for clever ones; but
+what is good in itself and of itself. The one very eternal and
+absolute Good which was with God, and in God, and from God, before
+all worlds, and will be for ever, without changing or growing less
+or greater, eternally The Same Good. The Good which would be just
+as good, and just, and right, and lovely, and glorious, if there
+were no world, no men, no angels, no heaven, no hell, and God were
+alone in his own abyss. That very good which is the exact pattern
+of His Son Jesus Christ, in whose likeness man was made at the
+beginning, God hath showed thee, O man; and hath told thee that it
+is neither more nor less than thy Duty, thy Duty as a man; that thy
+duty is thy good, the good out of which, if thou doest it, all good
+things such as thou canst not now conceive to thyself, must
+necessarily spring up for thee for ever; but which if thou
+neglectest, thou wilt be in danger of getting no good things
+whatsoever, and of having all evil things, mishap, shame, and misery
+such as thou canst not now conceive of, spring up for thee
+necessarily for ever.
+
+This seems to me the plain meaning of the text, interpreted by the
+plain teaching of the rest of Scripture. Now see how the Catechism
+agrees with this.
+
+It takes for granted that God has showed the child what is good:
+that God's Spirit is sanctifying and making good, not only all the
+elect people of God, but him, that one particular child; and it
+makes the child say so. Therefore, when it asks him, 'What is thy
+duty to God and to thy neighbour?' it asks him, 'My child, thou
+sayest that God's Spirit is with thee, sanctifying thee and showing
+thee what is good, tell me, therefore, what good the Holy Spirit has
+showed thee?--tell me what He has showed thee to be good, and
+therefore thy duty?'
+
+But some may answer, 'How can you say that the Holy Spirit teaches
+the children their Duty, when it is their schoolmaster, or their
+father, who teaches them the Ten Commandments and the Catechism?'
+
+My friends, we may teach our children the Ten Commandments, or
+anything else we like, but we cannot teach them that that is their
+_duty_. They must first know what Duty means at all, before they
+can learn that any particular things are parts of their Duty. And,
+believe me, neither you nor I, nor all the men in the world put
+together, no, nor angel, nor archangel, nor any created being, nor
+the whole universe, can teach one child, no, nor our own selves, the
+meaning of that plain word DUTY, nor the meaning of those two plain
+words, I OUGHT. No; that simple thought, that thought which every
+one of us, even the most stupid, even the most sinful has more or
+less, comes straight to him from God the Father of Lights, by the
+inspiration of the Holy Spirit of God, the Spirit of Duty, Faith,
+and Obedience.
+
+For mind--when you teach a child, 'If you do this wrong thing--
+stealing, for instance--God will punish you: but if you are honest,
+God will reward you,' you are not teaching the child that it is his
+Duty to be honest, and his Duty not to steal. You are teaching him
+what is quite right and true; namely, that it is profitable for him
+to be honest, and hurtful to him to steal: but you are not teaching
+him as high a spiritual lesson as any soldier knows when he rushes
+upon certain death, knowing that he shall gain nothing, and may lose
+everything thereby, but simply because it is his Duty. You are only
+enticing your child to do right, and frightening him from doing
+wrong; quite necessary and good to be done: but if he is to be
+spiritually honest, honest at heart, honest from a sense of honour,
+and not of fear; in one word, if he is to be really honest at all,
+or even to try to be really honest, something must be done to that
+child's heart which nothing but the Spirit of God can do; he must be
+taught that it is his DUTY to be honest; that honesty is RIGHT, the
+perfectly right, and proper, and beautiful thing for him and for all
+beings, yea, for God Himself; he must be taught to love honesty, and
+whatsoever else is right, for its own sake, and therefore to feel it
+his Duty.
+
+And I say that God does that by your children. I say that we cannot
+watch our children without seeing that, though there is in them, as
+in us, a corrupt and wilful flesh, which tempts them downward to
+selfish and self-willed pleasures: yet there is in them generally,
+more than in us their parents, a Spirit which makes them love and
+admire what is right, and take pleasure in it, and feel that it is
+good to be good, and right to do right; which makes them delight in
+reading and hearing of loving, and right, and noble actions; which
+makes them shocked, they hardly know why, at bad words, and bad
+conduct, and bad people. And woe to those who deaden that
+tenderness of conscience in their own children, by their bad
+examples, or by false doctrines which tell the children that they
+are still unregenerate, children of the Devil, not yet Christians;
+and who so put a stumbling-block in the way of Christ's little ones,
+and do despite to the Spirit of Grace by which they are sealed to
+the day of redemption. I see parents thinking that their children
+are to learn the deceitfulness of the human heart from themselves,
+and the working of God's Spirit from their parents; but I often
+think that the teachers ought to be converted indeed, that is,
+turned right round and become the learners instead of the teachers,
+and learn the workings of God's Spirit from their children, and the
+deceitfulness of the human heart from themselves; if at least the
+Lord Jesus's words have any real force or meaning at all, when He
+said, not, 'Except the little children be converted, and become as
+you,' but, 'Except ye be converted, and become as one of these
+little children, ye' (and not they) 'shall in no wise enter into the
+kingdom of heaven.'
+
+Believe me, my friends, that your children's angels do indeed behold
+the face of their Father which is in heaven; that there is a direct
+communication between Him and them; and that the sign and proof of
+it is, the way in which they understand at once what you tell them
+of their duty, and take to it, as it were, only too readily and
+hopefully, and confidently, as if it were a thing natural and easy
+to them. Alas! it is neither natural nor easy, and they will find
+out that too soon by sad experience: but still, the Divine Light is
+there, the sense of duty is in their minds, and the law of God is
+written in their hearts by the Holy Spirit of God, who is
+sanctifying them, not merely by teaching them to hope for heaven, or
+to dread hell, but by showing them what is good.
+
+And herein, I say, the simple and noble old Church Catechism, by
+faith in God's Spirit, does indeed perfect praise out of the mouths
+of babes. Without one word about rewards or punishments, heaven or
+hell, it begins to talk to the child, like a true English Catechism
+as it is, about that glorious old English key word, DUTY. It calls
+on the child to confess its own duty, and teaches it that its duty
+is something most human, simple, everyday, commonplace, if you will
+call it so. I rejoice that it is commonplace; I rejoice that in
+what it says about our duty to God, and to our neighbour, it says
+not one word about those counsels of perfection, or those frames and
+feelings, which depend, believe me, principally on the state of
+people's bodily health, on the constitution of their nerves, and the
+temper of their brain: but that it requires nothing except what a
+little child can do as well as a grown person, a labouring man as
+well as a divine, a plain farmer as well as the most refined,
+devout, imaginative lady. May God bless them all; may God help them
+all to do their Duty in that station of life to which it has pleased
+God to call them; but may God grant to them never to forget that
+there is but one Duty for all, and that all of them can do that Duty
+equally well, whatever their constitution, or scholarship, or
+station of life may be, provided they will but remember that God has
+called them to that station, and not try to invent some new and
+finer one for themselves; provided they remember that they are to do
+in that station neither more nor less than every one else is to do
+in theirs, namely, to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly
+with their God.
+
+In a word, to be perfect, even as their Father in heaven is perfect.
+To do justly, because God is just, faithful, and true, rewarding
+every man according to his works, and no partial accepter of
+persons; so that in every nation he that feareth God and worketh
+righteousness is accepted by Him.
+
+To love mercy, because God loves mercy; to be merciful, because our
+Father in heaven is merciful; because He willeth not the death of a
+sinner, but rather that he should turn from his wickedness and live;
+because God came to seek and to save that which is lost, and is good
+to the unthankful and the evil; and because God so loved sinful man,
+that when man hated God, God's answer to man's hate, God's vengeance
+upon man's rebellion, was, to send His only-begotten Son, that
+whosoever believed in Him should not perish, but have everlasting
+life.
+
+And to walk humbly with your God, because--and what shall I say now?
+Does God walk humbly? Can there be humility in God? Can God obey?
+And yet it must be so. If, as is most certain from Holy Scripture,
+man, as far as he is what man ought to be, is the image and glory of
+God; if man's justice ought to be a copy of God's justice, and man's
+mercy a copy of God's mercy, and all which is good in man a copy of
+something good in God: if, as is most certain, all good on earth is
+God's likeness, and only good because it is God's likeness, and is
+given by God's Spirit,--then our walking humbly with God, if it be
+good, must be a copy of something in God. But of what?
+
+That, my friends, is a question which can never be answered but by
+those who believe in the mystery of the ever-blessed Trinity, The
+Father, The Son, and The Holy Ghost. It is too solemn and great a
+matter to be spoken of hastily at the end of a sermon. I will tell
+you what little I seem to see of it next Sunday, with awe and
+trembling, as one who enters upon holy ground. But this I will tell
+you, to bear in mind meanwhile, that if you wish to know or to do
+what is right, you must firmly believe and bear in mind this,--that
+God's justice is exactly like what would be just in you and me,
+without any difference whatsoever: that God's mercy is exactly like
+what would be merciful in you and me; and that, as I hope to show
+you next Sunday, God's humility, wonderful as it may seem, is
+exactly like what would be humble in you and me. For I warn you,
+that if you do not believe this, you will be tempted to forget God's
+righteousness, and to invent a righteousness of your own, which is
+no righteousness at all, but unrighteousness. For there can be but
+one righteousness--mind what I say--only one righteousness, as there
+can be only one truth, and only one reason. Forget that, and you
+will be tempted to invent for yourselves a false justice, which is
+dishonest and partial; a false mercy, which is cruel; a false
+humility, which is vain and self-conceited; and you will be tempted
+also, as men of all religions and denominations have been, to impute
+to God actions, and thoughts, and tempers, which are (as your own
+consciences, if you would listen to God's Word in them, would tell
+you) unjust, cruel, and proud; and then you will be tempted to say
+that things are justifiable in God, which you would not excuse in
+any other being, by saying: 'Of course it must be right in Him,
+because He is God, and can do what He will.' As if the Judge of all
+the earth would not do Right; as if He could be anything, or could
+do anything, but the Eternal _Good_ which is His very being and
+essence, and which He has shown forth in His Son Jesus Christ our
+Lord, who went about doing good because God was with Him. We all
+know what the good which He did was like. Let us believe that God
+the Father's goodness is the same as Jesus Christ's goodness. Let
+us believe really what we say when we confess that Jesus was the
+brightness of His Father's Glory, and the express image of His
+Person.
+
+
+
+SERMON VIII. SONSHIP
+
+
+
+John v. 19, 20, 30. Then answered Jesus, Verily, verily, I say unto
+you, The Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He seeth the Father
+do: for what things soever He doeth, these also doeth the Son
+likewise. For the Father loveth the Son, and sheweth Him all things
+that Himself doeth.
+
+I can of mine own self do nothing: as I hear, I judge: and my
+judgment is just; because I seek not mine own will, but the will of
+my Father which is in Heaven.
+
+This, my friends, is why man should walk humbly and obediently with
+his God; because humility and obedience are the likeness of the Son
+of God, who, though He is equal to His Father, yet to do His
+Father's will humbled Himself, and took on Him the form of a slave,
+and though He is a Son, yet learned obedience by the things which He
+suffered; sacrificing Himself utterly and perfectly to do the
+commands of His Father and our Father, of His God and our God; and
+sacrificing Himself to His Father not as a man merely, but as a son;
+not because He was in the likeness of sinful flesh, but because He
+was The Everlasting Son of His Father; not once only on the cross,
+but from all eternity to all eternity, the Lamb slain before the
+foundation of the world. This is a great mystery; we may understand
+somewhat more of it by thinking over the meaning of those great
+words, Father and Son.
+
+Now, first, a son must be of the same nature as his father,--that is
+certain. Each kind of animal brings forth after its kind: the lion
+begets lions, the sheep, sheep; the son of a man must be a man, of
+one substance with his earthly father; and by the same law, the Son
+of God must be God. Take away that notion: say that the only-
+begotten Son of God is not very God of very God, of one substance
+with His Father, and the word son means nothing. If a son be not of
+the same substance as his father, he is not a son at all. And more,
+a perfect son must be as great and as good as his father, exactly
+like his father in everything. That is the very meaning of father
+and son; that like should beget like. Among fallen and imperfect
+men, some sons are worse and weaker than their fathers: but we all
+feel that that is an evil, a thing to be sorry for, a sad
+consequence of our fallen state. Our reasons and hearts tell us
+that a son ought to be equal to his father, and that it is in some
+way an affliction, almost a shame, to a father, if his children are
+weaker or worse than he is. But we cannot fancy such a thing in
+God; the only-begotten perfect Son of the Almighty and perfect
+Father must be at least equal to His Father, as great as His Father,
+as good as His Father; the brightness of His Father's glory, and the
+express image of His Father's person.
+
+But there is another thing about father and son which we must look
+at, and that is this: a good son loves and obeys his father, and
+the better son he is, the more he loves and obeys his father; and
+therefore a perfect son will perfectly love and perfectly obey his
+father.
+
+Now, here is the great difference between animals and men. Among
+the higher animals, the mothers always, and the fathers sometimes,
+feed, and help, and protect their young: but we seldom or never
+find that young animals help and protect their parents; certainly,
+they never obey their fathers when they are full grown, but are as
+ready to tear their fathers in pieces as their fathers are to tear
+them: so that the love and obedience of full-grown sons to their
+fathers is so utterly human a thing, so utterly different from
+anything we find in the brutes, that we must believe it to be part
+of man's immortal soul, part of God's likeness in man.
+
+And in the text our Lord declares that it is so; He declares that
+His obedience to His Father, and His Father's love to Him, is the
+perfect likeness of what goes on between a good son and a good
+father among men; only that it is _perfect_, because it is between a
+perfect Father and a perfect Son.
+
+Father and Son! Let philosophers and divines discover what they may
+about God, they will never discover anything so deep as the wonder
+which lies in those two words, Father and Son. So deep, and yet so
+simple! So simple, that the wayfaring man, though poor, shall not
+err therein. 'Who is God? What is God like? Where shall we find
+Him, or His likeness?'--so has mankind been crying in all ages, and
+getting no answer, or making answers for themselves in all sorts of
+superstitions, idolatries, false philosophies. And then the Gospel
+comes, and answers to every man, to every poor and unlearned
+labourer: Will you know the name of God? It is a Father, a Son,
+and a Holy Spirit of love, joy, peace; a Spirit of perfect
+satisfaction of the Father in the Son, and perfect satisfaction of
+the Son with the Father, which proceeds from both the Father and the
+Son. It needs no scholarship to understand that Name; every one may
+understand it who is a good father; every one may understand it who
+is a good son, who looks up to and obeys his father with that filial
+spirit of love, and obedience, and satisfaction with his father's
+will, which is the likeness of the Holy Spirit of God, and can only
+flourish in any man by the help of the Holy Spirit which proceeds
+from the Father and the Son.
+
+Father and Son! what more beautiful words are there in the world?
+What more beautiful sight is there in the world than a son who
+really loves his father, really trusts his father, really does his
+duty to his father, really looks up to and obeys his father's will
+in all things? who is ready to sacrifice his own credit, his own
+pleasure, his own success in life, for the sake of his father's
+comfort and honour? How much more fair and noble must be the love
+and trust which is between God the Father and God the Son!
+
+I wish that some of those who now write so many excellent books for
+young people, would write one made up entirely of stories of good
+sons who have obeyed, and worked for, and suffered for their
+parents. Sure I am that such a book, wisely and well written, would
+teach young people much of the meaning of the blessed name of God,
+much of their duty to God. And yet, after all, my friends, is not
+such a book written already? Have we not the four Gospels, which
+tell us of Jesus Christ, the perfect Son, who came to do the will of
+a perfect Father? Read that; read your Bibles. Read the history of
+the Lord Jesus Christ, keeping in mind always that it is the history
+of the Son of God, and of His obedience to His Father. And when in
+St. John's most wonderful Gospel you meet with deep texts, like the
+one which I have chosen, read them too as carefully, if possible
+more carefully, than the rest; for they are meant for all parents
+and for all children upon earth. Read how The Father loves The Son,
+and gives all things into His hand, and commits all judgment to The
+Son, and gives Him power to have life in Himself, even as The Father
+has life in Himself, and shows Him all things that Himself doeth,
+that all men may honour The Son even as they honour The Father.
+Read how The Son came only to show forth His Father's glory; to be
+the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person: to
+establish His Father's kingdom; to declare the goodness of His
+Father's Name, which is _The_ Father. How He does nothing of
+Himself, but only what He sees His Father do; how He seeks not His
+own will, but the will of the Father who sent Him; how He sacrificed
+all, yea even His most precious body and soul upon the cross, to
+finish the work which His Father gave Him to do. How, being in the
+form of God, and thinking it no robbery to be equal with God, He
+could boldly say, 'As the Father knoweth me, even so know I the
+Father. I and my Father are one:' and still, in the fulness of His
+filial love and obedience, declared that He had no will, no wish, no
+work, no glory, but His Father's; and in the hour of His agony cried
+out, 'Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me:
+nevertheless, not my will but thine be done.'
+
+My friends, you will be able to understand more and more of the
+meaning of these words just in proportion as you are good sons and
+good fathers; and therefore, just in proportion as you are led and
+taught by the Holy Spirit of God, without whose help no man can be
+either a good father or a good son. A bad son; a disobedient, self-
+willed, self-conceited son, who is seeking his own credit and not
+his father's, his own pleasure and not his parent's comfort; a son
+who is impatient of being kept in order and advised, who despises
+his parent's counsel, and will have none of his reproof,--to him
+these words of our Lord, the deepest, noblest words which were ever
+spoken on earth, will have no more meaning than if they were written
+in a foreign language; he will not know what our Lord means; he will
+not be able to see why our Lord came and suffered; he will not see
+any beauty in our Lord's character, any righteousness in His
+sacrificing Himself for His Father; and because he has forgotten his
+duty to his earthly father, he will never learn his duty to God.
+
+For what is the duty of the Lord Jesus Christ is our duty, if we are
+the sons of God in Him. He is The Son of God by an eternal never-
+ceasing generation; we are the sons of God by adoption. The way in
+which we are to look up to God, The Holy Spirit must teach us; what
+is our duty to God The Holy Spirit must teach us. And who is The
+Holy Spirit? He is The Spirit who proceeds from The Son as well as
+from The Father. He is The Spirit of Jesus Christ, The Spirit of
+the Son of God, the Spirit who descended on the Lord Jesus when He
+was baptized, the Spirit which God gave to Him without measure. He
+is the Spirit of The Son of God; and we are sons of God by adoption,
+says Saint Paul; and because we are sons, he says, God has sent
+forth into our hearts the Spirit of His Son, by whom we look up to
+God as our Father; and this Spirit of God's Son, by whom we cry to
+God, Abba, Father, St. Paul calls, in another place, the Spirit of
+adoption; and declares openly that He is the very Spirit of God.
+
+Therefore, in whatsoever way the Spirit of God is to teach you to
+look up to God, He will teach you to look up to Him as a Father; the
+Father of Spirits, and therefore your Father; for you are a spirit.
+Whatsoever duty to God the Holy Spirit teaches you, He teaches you
+first, and before all things, that it is filial duty, the duty of a
+son to a father, because you are the son of God, and God is your
+Father.
+
+Therefore, whatsoever man or book tells you that your duty to God is
+anything but the duty of a son to his father does not speak by the
+Spirit of God. Whatsoever thoughts or feelings in your own hearts
+tell you that your duty to God is anything but the duty of a son to
+his father, and tempt you to distrust God's forgiveness, and shrink
+from Him, and look up to Him as a taskmaster, and an austere and
+revengeful Lord, are not the Spirit of God; no, nor your own spirit,
+'the spirit of a man,' which is in you; for that was originally made
+in the likeness of God's Spirit, and by it rebellious sons arise and
+go back to their earthly fathers, and trust in them when they have
+nothing else left to trust, and say to themselves, 'Though all the
+world has cast me off, my parents will not. Though all the world
+despise and hate me, my parents love me still; though I have
+rebelled against them, deserted them, insulted them, I am still my
+father's child. I will go home to my own people, to the house where
+I was born, to the parents who nursed me on their knee, I will go to
+my father.'
+
+Fathers and mothers! if your son or daughter came home to you thus,
+though they had insulted you, disgraced you, and spent their
+substance in riotous living, would you shut your doors upon them?
+Would not all be forgiven and forgotten at once? Would not you call
+your neighbours to rejoice with you, and say, 'It is good to be
+merry and glad, for this our son was dead and is alive again, he was
+lost and is found?' And would not that penitent child be more
+precious to you, though you cannot tell why, than any other of your
+children? Would you not feel a peculiar interest in him henceforth?
+And do you not know that so to forgive would be no weak indulgence,
+but the part of a good father; a good, and noble, and human thing to
+do? Ay, a human thing, and therefore a divine thing, part of God's
+likeness in man. For is it not the likeness of God Himself? Has
+not God Himself, in the Parable of the Prodigal Son, declared that
+He does so forgive His penitent children, at once and utterly, and
+that 'There is more joy among the angels of God over one sinner that
+repenteth, than over ninety and nine just persons who need no
+repentance?' So says the Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son
+of God. Let who dare dispute His words, or try to water them down,
+and explain them away.
+
+And why should it not be so? Do you fancy God less of a father than
+you are? Is He not _The_ Father, the perfect Father, 'from whom
+every fatherhood in heaven and earth is named?' Oh, believe that He
+is indeed a Father; believe that all the love and care which you can
+show to your children is as much poorer than the love and care God
+shows to you, as your obedience to your earthly parents is poorer
+and weaker than the love and obedience of Jesus Christ to His
+Father. God is as much better a Father than you are, as Jesus
+Christ is a better Son than you are. There is a sum of proportions;
+a rule-of-three sum; work it out for yourselves, and then distrust
+God's love if you dare.
+
+And believe, that whatsoever makes you distrust God's love is
+neither the Spirit of God who is the spirit of sonship, nor the
+spirit of man: but the spirit of the Devil, who loves to slander
+God to men, that they may shrink from Him, and be afraid to arise
+and go to their Father, to be received again as sons of God; that
+so, being kept from true penitence, they may be kept from true
+holiness, and from their duty to God, which is the duty of sons of
+God to their Father in heaven.
+
+Believe no such notions, my friends; howsoever humble and reverent
+they may seem, they are but insults to God; for under pretence of
+honouring Him, they dishonour Him; for He is love, and he who
+feareth, that is, who looks up to God with terror and distrust, is
+not made perfect in love. So says St. John, in the very chapter
+wherein he tells us that God is love, and has manifested His love to
+us by sending His Son to be the Saviour of the world; and that the
+very reason for our loving God is, that He loves us already; and
+that therefore He who loveth not knoweth not God, for God is love.
+
+Yes, my friends, God is your Father; and God is love; and your duty
+to God is a duty of love and obedience to a Father who so loved you
+and all mankind that He spared not His only begotten Son, but freely
+gave Him for you. 'Our Father which art in heaven,' is to be the
+key-note of all your duty, as it is to be the key-note of all your
+prayers: and therefore the Catechism is right in teaching the child
+that God is his Father, and Jesus Christ the perfect Son of God his
+pattern, and the Holy Spirit of the Father and of the Son his
+teacher and inspirer, before it says one word to the child about
+duty to God, or sin against God. How indeed can it tell him what
+sin is, until it has told him against whom sin is committed, and
+that if he sins against God he sins against a Father, and breaks his
+duty to his Father? And how can it tell him that till it has told
+him that God is his Father? How can it tell him what sin is till it
+has told him what righteousness is? How can it tell him what
+breaking his duty is till it has told him what the duty itself is?
+But the child knows already that God is his Father; and therefore,
+when the Catechism asks him, 'What is his duty to God?' it is as
+much as to say, 'My child, thou hast confessed already that thou
+hast a good Father in heaven, and thou knowest as well as I (perhaps
+better) what a father means. Tell me, then, how dost thou think
+thou oughtest to behave to such a Father?' And the whole answer
+which is put into the child's mouth, is the description of duty to a
+father; of things which there would be no reason for his doing to
+anyone who was not his father; nay, which he could not do honestly
+to anyone else, but only hypocritically, for the sake of flattering,
+and which differs utterly from any notion of duty to God which the
+heathen have ever had just in this, that it is a description of how
+a son should behave to a father. Read it for yourselves, my
+friends, and judge for yourselves; and may God give you all grace to
+act up to it--not in order that you, by 'acts of faith,' or 'acts of
+love,' or 'acts of devotion,' may persuade God to love you; but
+because He loves you already, with a love boundless as Himself;
+because in Him you live, and move, and have your being, and are the
+offspring of God; because His mercy is over all His works, and
+because He loved the world, and sent His Son, not to condemn the
+world, but that the world through Him might be saved; because He is
+The Giver, The Father of lights, from whom comes every good and
+perfect gift; because all which makes this earth habitable--all
+justice, order, wisdom, goodness, mercy, humbleness, self-sacrifice--
+all which is fair, or honourable, or useful, in men or angels, in
+kings on their thrones or in labourers at the plough, in divines in
+their studies or soldiers in the field of battle--all in the whole
+universe, which is not useless, and hurtful, and base, and damnable,
+and doomed (blessed thought that it is so!) to be burned up in
+unquenchable fire--all, I say, comes forth from the Father of the
+spirits of all flesh, the Lord of Hosts, who is wonderful in counsel
+and excellent in working; who spared not His only begotten Son, but
+freely gave Him for us, and will with Him freely give us all things.
+
+
+
+SERMON IX. THE LORD'S PRAYER
+
+
+
+Matt. vi. 9, 10. After this manner pray ye: Our Father which art
+in heaven.
+
+I have shown you what a simple account of our duty to God and to our
+neighbour the Catechism gives us. I now beg you to remark, that
+simple and everyday as this same duty is, the Catechism warns us
+that we cannot do it without God's special grace, and I beg you to
+remark further, that the Catechism does not say that we cannot do
+these things well without God's special grace, but that we cannot do
+them at all. It does not say that we cannot do all these things of
+ourselves, but that we can do none of them. But I want you to
+remark one thing more, which is very noteworthy: that in this case,
+for the first time throughout the Catechism, the teacher tells the
+child something. All along the teacher has, as I have often shown
+you, been making the child tell him what is right, calling out in
+the child's heart thoughts and knowledge which were there already.
+Now he in his turn tells the child something which he takes for
+granted is not in the child's heart, of which, if it is, has been
+put into it by his teachers, and of which he must be continually
+reminded, lest he should forget it; namely, that he cannot do these
+of himself; that, as St. Paul says, 'in him,' that is, in his flesh,
+'dwells no good thing;' that he is not able to think or to do
+anything as of himself, but his sufficiency is of God, who works in
+him to will and to do of His good pleasure, who has also given him
+His Holy Spirit.
+
+The Catechism, in short, takes for granted that the child knows his
+duty; but it takes for granted also that he does not know how to do
+that duty. It takes for granted, that in every child there is as
+St. Paul says, 'a law in his members warring against the law of his
+mind, and bringing him into captivity to the law of sin' (literally,
+of short coming, or missing the mark) 'which is in his members.'
+Now man's natural inclination is to suppose that good thoughts are
+part of himself, and therefore that a good will to put them in
+practice is in his own power. I blame no one for making that
+mistake: but I warn them, in the name of the Bible and of the
+Catechism, that it is a mistake, and one which every man, woman, and
+child will surely discover to be a mistake, if they try to act on
+it. Good thoughts are not our own; they are Jesus Christ's; they
+come from Him, The Life and The Light of men; they are His voice
+speaking to our hearts, informing us of His laws, showing us what is
+good. And good desires are not our own: they come from the Holy
+Spirit of God, who strives with men, and labours to lift their
+hearts up from selfishness to love; from what is low and foul, to
+what is noble and pure; from what is sinful and contrary to God's
+will, to what is right and according to God's will.
+
+This is the lesson which you and I and every man have to learn:
+that in ourselves dwells no good thing; but that there is One near
+us mightier than we, from whom all good things do come; and that He
+loves us, and will not only teach us what is good, but give us the
+power to do the good we know. But if we forget that, if we take any
+credit whatsoever to ourselves for the good which comes into our
+minds, then we shall be surely taught our mistake by sore
+afflictions and by shameful falls; by God's leaving us to ourselves,
+to try our own strength, and to find it weakness; to try our own
+wisdom, and find it folly; to try our own fancied love of God, and
+find that after all our conceit of ourselves, we love ourselves
+better, when it comes to a trial, than we love what is right; until,
+in short, we are driven with St. Paul to feel that, howsoever much
+our hearts may delight in the Law of God, there is a corrupt nature
+in us which fights against our delight in God's law, and will surely
+conquer it, and make us slaves to our own fancies, slaves to our
+passions, slaves to ourselves, ay, slaves to the very lowest and
+meanest part of ourselves: unless we can find a deliverer; unless
+we can find some one stronger than us, who can put an end to this
+hateful, shameful war within us between good wishes and bad deeds.
+
+And then, if we will but cry with St. Paul, 'Oh, wretched man that I
+am, _who_ shall deliver me from the body of this death?' we shall
+surely, sooner or later, hear a voice within our hearts, a voice
+full of love, of comfort, of fellow-feeling for us,--'_I_ will
+deliver thee, my child; _I_, even I thy Father in heaven; I will
+teach thee, and inform thee in the way wherein thou shouldest go;
+and I will guide thee with mine eye.' And then with St. Paul we
+shall be able to answer our own question, and say, 'Who will deliver
+me? I thank God, that God Himself will deliver me, through Jesus
+Christ our Lord.'
+
+This, then, is the reason why we need to pray: because we need to
+be delivered from ourselves. This is the reason why we may pray,
+because God is willing to deliver us from ourselves, if we be
+willing.
+
+But every human being round us needs to be delivered from
+themselves, just as much as we do. Without that deliverance we
+cannot do our duty, neither can they. And just in proportion as men
+are delivered from themselves, will mankind do its duty, and the
+world go right.
+
+Now their duty is the same as ours; and therefore the prayer which
+is right and good for us is equally right and good for them. And
+what is more, we cannot pray rightly for ourselves unless we pray
+for them in the very same breath; for the Catechism tells us that
+there is one duty for all of us, to love and obey and serve our
+heavenly Father, and to love our neighbour as ourselves, because
+they are our brothers, children of one common Father, members of the
+same God's family as we are, and their interest and ours are bound
+up together. Yes, to love all mankind as ourselves; for though too
+many of them, alas! are not yet in God's family, and strangers to
+His covenant, yet God's will is that they too should come to the
+knowledge of the truth; and therefore for them we can pray hopefully
+and trustfully, 'Lord have mercy on all men, on Jews, Turks,
+Infidels, and heretics; and bring them home, blessed Lord, to Thy
+flock, that they may be saved and made one fold under one Shepherd,
+through Jesus Christ our Lord, in whom Thou hast declared Thy good
+will to all the children of men.'
+
+This is the right prayer. That all men may do their duty where God
+has put them. That those who, like the heathen, do not know their
+duty, may be taught it; that we who do know it, may have strength to
+do it.
+
+And therefore it is that the Catechism teaches us the need of
+prayer, immediately after making us confess our duty; and therefore
+it is that it begins by teaching the Lord's Prayer, because that
+prayer is the one, of all prayers which ever have been offered upon
+earth, which perfectly expresses the duty of man, and man's relation
+to Almighty God.
+
+It is throughout a prayer for strength. It confesses throughout
+what we want strength for, to what use we are to put God's grace if
+He bestows it on us. Our delight in the Lord's Prayer will depend
+on what we consider our duty here on earth to be.
+
+If we look upon this earth principally as a place where we are to
+pray for all the good things which we can get, our first prayer will
+be, of course, 'Give us this day our daily bread.'
+
+If we look at this earth principally as a place where we have a
+chance of being saved from punishment and torment after we die, then
+our first prayer will be, 'Forgive us our sins.' And, in fact, that
+is all that too many of our prayers now-a-days seem to consist of,--
+'Oh, my Maker, give me. my daily bread. Oh, my Judge, forgive me my
+sins.' Right prayers enough, but spoilt by being taken out of their
+place; spoilt by being prayed before all other prayers; spoilt, too,
+by being prayed for ourselves alone, and not for other people also.
+
+But if we believe, as the Bible and the Catechism tell us, that we
+and all Christian people are God's children, members of God's
+family, set on earth in God's kingdom to do His work by doing our
+duty, each in that station of life to which God has called us, in
+the hope of a just reward hereafter according to our works, then our
+great desire will be for strength to do our duty, and the Lord's
+Prayer will seem to us the most perfect way of asking for that
+strength; and if we believe that we are God's children and He our
+Father, we shall feel sure that we must get strength from Him, and
+sure that we must ask for that strength; and sure that He will give
+it us if we do ask.
+
+But if His will is to give it us, why ask Him at all? Why pray at
+all, if God already knows our necessities, and is able and willing
+to supply them?
+
+My friends, the longer I live, the more certain I am that the only
+reason for praying at all is because God is our Father; the more
+certain I am that we shall never have any heart to pray unless we
+believe that God is our Father. If we forget that, we may utter to
+Him selfish cries for bread; or when we look at His great power, we
+may become terrified, and utter selfish cries to Him not to harm us,
+without any real shame or sorrow for sin: but few of us will have
+any heart to persevere in those cries. People will say to
+themselves, 'If God is evil, He will not care to have mercy on me:
+and if He is good, there is no use wearying Him by asking Him what
+He has already intended to give me: why should I pray at all?'
+
+The only answer is, 'Pray, because God is your Father, and you His
+child.' The only answer; but the most complete answer. I will
+engage to say, that if anyone here is ever troubled with doubts
+about prayer, those two simple words, 'Our Father,' if he can once
+really believe them in their full richness and depth, will make the
+doubts vanish in a moment, and prayer seem the most natural and
+reasonable of all acts. It is because we are God's children, not
+merely His creatures, that He will have us pray. Because He is
+educating us to know Him; to know Him not merely to be an Almighty
+Power, but a living, loving Person; not merely an irresistible Fate,
+but a Father who delights in the love of His children, who wishes to
+shape them into His own likeness, and make them fellow-workers with
+Him; therefore it is that He will have us pray. Doubtless he
+_could_ have given us everything without our asking; for He _does_
+already give us almost everything without our asking. But He wishes
+to educate us as His children; to make us trust in Him; to make us
+love Him; to make us work for Him of our own free wills, in the
+great battle which He is carrying on against evil; and that He can
+only do by teaching us to pray to Him. I say it reverently, but
+firmly. As far as we can see, God cannot educate us to know Him,
+The living, willing, loving Father, unless He teaches us to open our
+hearts to Him, and to ask Him freely for what we want, just
+_because_ He knows what we want already.
+
+If I have not made this plain enough to any of you, my friends, let
+me go back to the simple, practical explanation of it which God
+Himself has given us in those two words--father and child.
+
+Should you like to have a child who never spoke to you, never asked
+you for anything? Of course not. And why? 'Because,' you would
+say, 'one might as well have a dumb animal in one's family instead
+of a child, if it is never to talk and ask questions and advice.'
+Most true and reasonable, my friends. And as you would say
+concerning your children, so says God of His. You feel that unless
+you teach your children to ask you for all they want, even though
+you know their necessities before they ask, and their ignorance in
+asking, you will never call out their love and trust towards you.
+You know that if you want really to have your child to please and
+obey you, not as a mere tame animal, but as a willing, reasonable,
+loving child, you must make him know that you are training him; and
+you must teach him to come to you of his own accord to be trained,
+to be taught his duty, and set right where he is wrong: and even so
+does God with you. If you will only consider the way in which any
+child must be educated by its human parents, then you will at once
+see why prayer to our Heavenly Father is a necessary part of our
+education in the kingdom of heaven.
+
+Now the Lord's Prayer, just this sort of prayer, is man's cry to his
+Heavenly Father to train him, to educate him, to take charge of him,
+daily and hourly, body and soul and spirit. It is a prayer for
+grace, for special grace; that is, for help, daily and hourly, in
+each particular duty and circumstance; for help from God specially
+suited to enable us to do our duty. And the whole of the prayer is
+of this kind, and not, as some think, the latter part only.
+
+It is too often said that the three first sentences are not prayers
+for man, but rather praises to God. My friends, they cannot be one
+without being the other. You cannot, I believe, praise God aright
+without praying for men; you cannot pray for men aright without
+praising God; at least, you cannot use the Lord's Prayer without
+doing both at once, without at once declaring the glory of God and
+praying for the welfare of all mankind.
+
+'Hallowed be Thy name.' Is not that a prayer for men as well as
+praise to God? Yes, my friends, when you say, 'Our Father, hallowed
+be Thy name,' you pray that all men may come at last to look up to
+God as their Father, to love, serve, and obey God as His children;
+and for what higher blessing can you pray? Ay, and you pray, too,
+that men may learn at last the deep meaning of that word--father;
+that they may see how Godlike and noble a trust God lays on them
+when He gives them children to educate and make Christian men; you
+pray that the hearts of all fathers may be turned to the children,
+and the hearts of all children to the fathers; you pray for the
+welfare, and the holiness, and the peace of every home on earth; you
+pray for the welfare of generations yet unborn, when you pray, 'Our
+Father, hallowed be Thy name.'
+
+'Thy kingdom come.' Is not that too, if we will look at it
+steadfastly, prayer for our neighbours, prayer for all mankind, and
+still prayer for ourselves; prayer for grace, prayer for the life
+and health of our own souls?
+
+'Thy kingdom come.'--That kingdom of the Father which Jesus Christ
+proved by His works on earth to be a kingdom of justice and
+righteousness, of love and fellow-feeling. When we pray, 'Thy
+kingdom come,' it is as if we said, 'Son of God, root out of this
+sinful earth all self-will and lawlessness, all injustice and
+cruelty; root out all carelessness, ignorance, and hardness of
+heart; root out all hatred, envy, slander; root them out of all
+men's hearts; out of my heart, for I have the seeds of them in me.
+Make me, and all men round me, day by day, more sure that Thou art
+indeed our King; that Thou hast indeed taught us the laws of Thy
+Father's kingdom; and that, only in keeping them and loving them is
+there health, and righteousness, and safety for any soul of man, for
+any nation under the sun.' 'Thy will be done;'--no, not merely 'Thy
+will be done;' but done 'on earth as it is in heaven;' done, not
+merely as the trees and the animals, the wind and clouds, do Thy
+will, by blindly following their natures, but done as angels and
+blessed spirits do it, of their own will. They obey Thee as living,
+willing, loving persons; as Thy sons: teach us to obey Thee in like
+manner; lovingly, because we love Thy will; willingly, because our
+wills are turned to Thy will; and therefore, oh Heavenly Father,
+take charge of these wayward wills and minds of ours, of these
+selfish, self-willed, ignorant, hasty hearts of ours, and cleanse
+them and renew them by Thy Spirit, and change them into Thy likeness
+day by day. Make us all clean hearts, oh God, and renew within us a
+right spirit, the copy of Thine own Holy Spirit. Cast us not away
+from Thy presence, for from Thee alone comes our soul's life; take
+not from us Thy Holy Spirit, who is The Lord and Giver of Life;
+whose will is Thy will; who alone can strengthen and change us to do
+Thy will on earth, as saints and angels do in heaven, and to be
+fellow-workers with each other, fellow-workers with Thee, O God,
+even as those blessed spirits are who minister day and night to all
+Thy creatures.
+
+'Give us this day our daily bread.' People sometimes divide the
+Lord's Prayer into two parts--the ascriptions and the petitions--and
+consider that after we have sufficiently glorified and praised God
+in the first three sentences of the prayer, then we are at liberty
+to begin asking something for ourselves, and to say 'Give us day by
+day our daily bread.' I cannot think so, my friends. I have been
+showing you that 'Hallowed be Thy name, Thy kingdom come, Thy will
+be done,' if we do but recollect that they are spoken to our Father,
+are just as much prayers for all mankind, as they are hymns of
+honour to God; and so I say of these latter: 'Give us--Forgive us--
+Lead us not--Deliver us'--that if we will but remember that they,
+too, are spoken to our Father, we shall find that they are just as
+much hymns of honour to God as prayers for mankind.
+
+Yes, my friends, when we say, 'Give us this day our daily bread,' we
+do indeed honour God and the name of God. We declare that He is
+Love, that He is The Giver, The absolutely and boundlessly _generous
+and magnanimous_ Being. And what higher glory and honour or praise
+can we ascribe, even to God Himself, than to say that of Him? Next,
+we pray not for ourselves only, but for our neighbours; for England,
+for Christendom, for the heathen who know not God, and for
+generations yet unborn. We pray that God would so guide, and teach,
+and preserve the children of men, as to enable them to fulfil in
+every country and every age the work which He gave them to do, when
+He said, 'Be fruitful, and multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue
+it.' We know that our Father has commanded us to labour. We know
+that our Father has so well ordered this glorious earth, that
+whosoever labours may reap the just fruit of his labour; therefore
+we pray that God would prosper our righteous plans for earning our
+own living. We pray to Him not only so to order the earth that it
+may bring forth its fruits in due season, but that men may be in a
+fit state to enjoy those fruits, that God may not be forced for
+their good to withhold from them blessings which they might abuse to
+their ruin. But we pray, also, 'Give _us_:' not me only, but _us_;
+and therefore we pray that He would prosper our neighbour's plans as
+well as ours. So we confess that we believe God to be no respecter
+of persons; we confess that we believe He will not take bread out of
+others' mouths to give it to us; we declare that God's curse is on
+all selfishness and oppression of man by man; we renounce our own
+selfishness, the lust which our fallen nature has to rise upon
+others' fall, and say, 'Father, we are all children at Thy common
+table. Thou alone canst prosper the richest and the wisest; Thou
+alone canst prosper the poorest and the weakest; Thou wilt do equal
+justice to all some day, and we confess that Thou art just in so
+doing; we only ask Thee to do it now, and to give us and all mankind
+that which is good for them.'
+
+Thus we pray not for this generation only, but for generations yet
+unborn; not for this nation of England only, but for heathens and
+savages beyond the seas. When we say, 'Give us our daily bread,' we
+pray for every child here and on earth, that he may receive such an
+education as may enable him to get his daily bread. We pray for
+learned men in their studies, that they may discover arts and
+sciences which shall enrich and comfort nations yet unborn. We pray
+for merchants on the seas, that they may discover new markets for
+trade, new lands to colonize and fill with Christian men, and extend
+the blessings of industry and civilization to the savage who lives
+as the beasts which perish and dwindles down off the face of the
+earth by famine, disease, and war, the victim of his own idleness,
+ignorance, and improvidence.
+
+And all the while we are praying for the widow and the orphan, that
+God would send them friends in time of need; for the houseless
+wanderer, for the shipwrecked sailor, for sick persons, for feeble
+infants, that God would send help to them who cannot help
+themselves, and soften our hearts and the hearts of all around us,
+that we may never turn our faces away from any poor man, lest the
+face of the Lord be turned away from us.
+
+So far we have been praying to our Heavenly Father, first as a
+Father, then as a King, then as an Inspirer, then as a Giver; and
+next we pray to Him as a _For_giver--'Forgive us our trespasses.'
+We have been confessing in these four petitions what God's goodwill
+to man is; what God wishes man to be, how man ought to live and
+believe. And then comes the recollection of sin. We must confess
+what God's law is before we can confess that we have broken it; and
+now we do confess that we have broken it. We know that God is our
+Father. How often have we forgotten that He is a father; how often
+have we forgotten to be good fathers ourselves.
+
+We are in God's kingdom. How often have we behaved as if we were
+our own kings, and had no masters over us but our own fancies,
+tempers, appetites! We are to do His will on earth as it is done in
+heaven. How have we been doing our own will!--pleasing ourselves,
+breaking loose from His laws, trying to do right of our own wills
+and in our own strength, instead of asking His Spirit to strengthen,
+and cleanse, and renew our wills, and so have ended by doing not the
+right which we knew to be right, but the wrong which we knew to be
+wrong. God is a giver. How often have we looked on ourselves as
+takers, and fancied that we must as it were steal the good things of
+this world from God, lest He should forget to give us what was
+fitting! How often have we forgotten that God gives to all men, as
+well as to us; and while we were praying, give _me_ my daily bread,
+kept others out of their daily bread!
+
+Oh, my friends, we cannot blame ourselves too much for all these
+sins; we cannot think them too heinous. We cannot confess them too
+openly; we cannot cry too humbly and earnestly for forgiveness. But
+we never shall feel the full sinfulness of sin; we never shall
+thoroughly humble ourselves in confession and repentance, unless we
+remember that all our sins have been sins against a Father, and a
+forgiving Father, and that it is His especial glory, the very beauty
+and excellence in Him, which ought to have kept us from disobeying
+Him, that He does forgive those who disobey Him.
+
+And, lastly, in like manner, when you say, 'Lead us not into
+temptation, but deliver,' &c., you are not only entreating God to
+lead you, but you are honouring and praising Him, you are setting
+forth His glory, and declaring that He is a God who does _lead_, and
+a God who does not leave His poor creatures to wander their own
+foolish way, but guides men, in spite of all their sins, full of
+condescension and pity, care and tender love. You do not only ask
+God to deliver you from evil, but you declare that He is righteous,
+and hates evil; that He is love, and desires to deliver you from
+evil; One who spared not His only-begotten Son, but gave Him freely
+for us, to deliver us from evil; and raised Him up, and delivered
+all power into His hand, that He might fight His Father's battle
+against all which is hurtful to man and hateful to God, till death
+itself shall be destroyed, and all enemies put under the feet of the
+Saviour God.
+
+
+
+SERMON X. THE DOXOLOGY
+
+
+
+Psalm viii. 1 and sqq. O Lord our Governor, how excellent is Thy
+name in all the earth, Thou that hast set Thy glory above the
+heavens!
+
+Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast Thou ordained strength,
+because of Thine enemies, that Thou mightest still the enemy and the
+avenger.
+
+This is the text which I have chosen to-day, because I think it will
+help us to understand the end of the Lord's Prayer, which tells us
+to say to our Father in Heaven, 'Father, Thine is the kingdom;
+Father, Thine is the power; Father, Thine is the glory.'
+
+The man who wrote this psalm had been looking up at the sky,
+spangled with countless stars, with the moon, as if she were the
+queen of them all, walking in her brightness. He had been looking
+round, too, on this wonderful earth, with its countless beasts, and
+birds, and insects, trees, herbs, and flowers, each growing, and
+thriving, and breeding after their kind, according to the law which
+God had given to each of them, without any help of man. And then he
+had thought of men, how small, weak, ignorant, foolish, sinful they
+were, and said to himself, 'Why should God care for men more than
+for these beasts, and birds, and insects round? Not because he is
+the largest and strongest thing in the world; for I will consider
+Thy heavens, even the work of Thy hands, the moon and the stars,
+which Thou hast ordained, how much greater, more beautiful they are
+than poor human beings. May not glorious beings, angels, be
+dwelling in them, compared to whom man is no better than a beast?'
+
+And yet he says to himself, 'I know that God, though He has put man
+lower than the angels, has crowned him with glory and honour. I
+know that, whatever glorious creatures may live in the sun, and
+moon, and stars, God has given man the dominion and power here, on
+_this_ world. I know that even to babes and sucklings God has given
+a strength, because of His enemies--that He may silence the enemy
+and the avenger; and I know that by so doing, God has set His glory
+_above_ the heavens, and has shown forth His glory more in these
+little children, to whom He gives strength and wisdom, than He has
+in sun, and moon, and stars.'
+
+Now how is that? The Catechism, I think, will tell us. The
+Doxology, at the end of the Lord's Prayer, will tell us, if we
+consider it.
+
+If you will listen to me, I will try and show you what I mean.
+
+Suppose I took one of your children, and showed him that large
+bright star, which you may see now every evening, shining in the
+south-west, and said to him, 'My child, that star, which looks to
+you only a bright speck, is in reality a world--a world fourteen
+hundred times as big as our world. We have but one moon to light
+our earth; that little speck has four moons, each of them larger
+than ours, which light it by night. That little speck of a star
+seems to you to be standing still; in reality, it is travelling
+through the sky at the rate of 25,000 miles an hour.' What do you
+think the child's feeling would be? If he were a dull child, he
+might only be astonished; but if he were a sensible and thoughtful
+child, do you not think that a feeling of awe, almost of fear, would
+come over him, when he thought how small and weak and helpless he
+was, in comparison of those mighty and glorious stars above his
+head?
+
+And next, if I turned the child round, and bade him look at that
+comet or fiery star, which has appeared lately low down in the
+north-west, and said, 'My child, that comet, which seems to you to
+hang just above the next parish, is really eighty millions of miles
+off from us. That bright spot at the lower part of it is a fiery
+world as large as the moon,--that tail of fiery light which you see
+streaming up from it, and which looks a few feet long, is a stream
+of fiery vapour, stretching, most likely, hundreds of thousands of
+miles through the boundless space. It seems to you to be sinking
+behind the trees, so slowly that you cannot see it move. It is
+really rushing towards us now, with its vast train of light, at the
+rate of some eighty thousand miles an hour.' And suppose then, if,
+to make the child more astonished than ever, I went on--'Yes, my
+child, every single tiny star which is twinkling over your head is a
+sun, a sun as large, or larger than our own sun, perhaps with worlds
+moving round it, as our world moves round our sun, but so many
+millions of miles far off, that the strongest spy-glass cannot make
+these stars look any larger, or show us the worlds which we believe
+are moving round them.'
+
+Do you not think that just in proportion to the child's quickness
+and understanding, he would be awed, almost terrified?
+
+And lastly, suppose that to puzzle and astonish him still more, I
+took a chance drop of water out of any standing pool, and showed him
+through a magnifying-glass, in that single drop of water, dozens,
+perhaps hundreds, of living creatures so small that it is impossible
+to see them with the naked eye, each of them of some beautiful and
+wonderful shape, unlike anything which you ever saw or dreamed of,
+but each of them alive, each of them moving, feeding, breeding,
+after its kind, each fulfilling the nature which God has given to
+them, and told him, 'All the whole world, the air which you breathe,
+the leaves on the trees, the soil under your feet, ay, even often
+the food which you eat, and your own flesh and blood, are as full of
+wonderful things as that drop of water is. You fancy that all the
+life in the world is made up of the men and women in it, and the few
+beasts, and birds, and insects, which you see about you in the
+fields. But these living things which you do see are not a
+millionth part of the whole number of God's creatures; and not one
+smallest plant or tiniest insect dies, but what it passes into a new
+life, and becomes food for other creatures, even smaller than,
+though just as wonderful as itself. Every day fresh living
+creatures are being discovered, filling earth, and sea, and air,
+till men's brains are weary with counting them, and dizzy with
+watching their unspeakable beauty, and strangeness, and fitness for
+the work which God has given each of them to do.'
+
+And then suppose I said to the child, 'God cares for each of these
+tiny living creatures. How do you know that He does not care for
+them as much as He does for you? God made them for His own
+pleasure, that He might rejoice in the work of His own hands. How
+do you know that He does not rejoice in them as much as in you?
+Those mighty worlds and suns above your head, which you call stars,
+how do you know that they are not as much more glorious and precious
+in God's sight than you are, as they are larger and more beautiful
+than you are? And mind! all these things, from the tiniest insects
+in the water-drop, to the most vast star or comet in the sky, all
+obey God. They have not fallen, as you have; they have not sinned,
+as you have; they have not broken the law, by which God intended
+them to live, as you have. The Bible tells you so; and the
+discoveries of learned men prove that the Bible is right, when it
+declares that they all continue to this day according to His
+ordinance; for all things serve Him; that sun, and moon, and stars,
+and light are praising Him; that fire and hail, snow and vapour,
+wind and storm, mountains and all hills, fruitful trees and all
+cedars, beasts and all cattle, worms and feathered fowl, are showing
+forth His glory day and night; because He has made them sure for
+ever and ever, each according to its kind, and given them a law
+which shall not be broken; for all His works praise Him, and show
+the glory of His kingdom, and the mightiness of His power, that His
+power, His glory, and the mightiness of His kingdom might be known
+unto the children of men.
+
+And you!--They keep God's ordinance, and you have broken it; they
+fulfil God's word, you fulfil your own fancies. They have a law
+which shall not be broken, you break God's law daily. Are not they
+better than you? Is not, not merely sun and stars, but even the
+meanest gnat which hums in the air, better than man, more worthy of
+God's love than man? For man has sinned, and they have not.'
+
+Do you not think that I should sadden, and terrify the child, and
+make him ready to cry out, 'Whither shall I flee from the wrath of
+this great Almighty God; who has made this wondrous heaven and
+earth, and all of it obeys Him, except me--I a rebel against Him who
+made and rules all this?'
+
+My friends, I only say, suppose that I spoke thus to your children.
+For God forbid that I should speak thus to any human being, without
+having first taught him the Lord's Prayer, without first having
+taught him to say, 'I believe in Jesus Christ, Very God of Very God,
+who was born of the Virgin Mary, and took man's nature on Him;'
+without having taught him to say, 'Our Father which art in heaven,
+Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever and
+ever, Amen.' So it is, and so let it be: for so it is well, and so
+I am safe, sinner and rebel though I be.
+
+I would not say it, unless I had taught him this; for then I should
+be speaking the Devil's words, and doing the Devil's work: for
+these are the thoughts of which he always takes advantage, whenever
+he finds them in men's hearts; because he is the enemy who hates
+men, and the avenger who punishes them for their bad thoughts, by
+leading them on into dark and fearful deeds; because he is the
+Devil, the Slanderer, as his name means, and slanders God to men,
+and tries always to make them believe that God does not care for
+men, and grudges them blessings; in order that he may make men dread
+God, and shrink from Him into their own pride, or their own carnal
+lusts and fancies.
+
+These are the thoughts of which the Devil took advantage in the
+heathen in old times, and tempted them to forget God--God, who had
+not left Himself without a witness, in that He gave them rain and
+fruitful seasons, filling their hearts with food and gladness--God,
+whose unseen glory, even His eternal power and Godhead, may be
+clearly seen from the creation of the world, being understood from
+the things which are made--God, in whom, as St. Paul told the
+heathen, they lived and moved, and had their being, and were the
+offspring of God. This--that man is the offspring of God, and has a
+Father in heaven--is the great truth which the Devil has been trying
+to hide from men in every age, and by a hundred different devices.
+By making them forget this, he tempted them to worship the creature
+instead of the Creator; to pray to sun and moon and stars, to send
+them fair weather, good crops, prosperous fortune: to look up to
+the heaven above them, and down to the earth beneath their feet, in
+slavish dread and anxiety: and pray to the sun, not to blast them
+to the seas, not to sweep them away; to the rivers and springs, not
+to let them perish from drought; to earthquakes, not to swallow them
+up; ay, even to try to appease those dark fierce powers, with whom
+they thought the great awful world was filled, by cruel sacrifices
+of human beings; so that they offered their sons and their daughters
+to devils, and burned their own children in the fire to Moloch, the
+cruel angry Fire King, whom they fancied was lord of the earthquakes
+and the burning mountains. So did the Canaanites of old, and so did
+the Jews after them; whensoever they had forgotten that God was
+their Father, who had bought them, and that the kingdom, and the
+power, and the glory, throughout heaven and earth, were His, then at
+once they began to be afraid of heaven and earth, and worshipped
+Baalim, and Astaroth, and the Host of Heaven, which were the sun and
+moon and stars, and Moloch the Fire King, and Thammuz the Lord of
+the Spring-time, and with forms of worship which showed plainly
+enough, either by their cruelty or their filthy profligacy, who was
+the author of them, and that man, when he forgets that heaven and
+earth belong to his Father, is in danger of becoming a slave to his
+own lowest lusts and passions.
+
+And do not fancy, my friends, that because you and I are not likely
+to worship sun and moon and stars as the old heathen did, that
+therefore we cannot commit the same sin as they did.
+
+My friends, I believe that we are in more danger of committing it in
+England just now than ever we were; that learned men especially are
+in danger of so doing, because they know so far more of the wonders
+and the vastness of God's creation than the heathens of old knew.
+
+But you are not learned, you will say: you are plain people, who
+know nothing about these wonderful discoveries which men make by
+telescopes and magnifying-glasses, but use your own eyes in a plain
+way to get your daily bread, and you feel no such temptations. You
+believe, of course, that the kingdom and power and glory of all we
+see is God's.
+
+Yes; but do you believe too that He whom people are too apt to call
+God, just because they have no other name to call Him, is your
+Father? That it is your Father's will which governs the weather,
+which makes the earth bear fruit and gladden the heart of man with
+good and fruitful seasons?
+
+Alas, my friends, if we will open our eyes, see things in their true
+light, and call things by their true name, we shall see many a man
+in England now honouring the creature more than the Creator;
+trusting in the seasons and the soil more than he does in God, and
+so sinning in just the same way as the heathen of old.
+
+When people say to themselves, 'I must get land, I must get money,
+by any means; honestly if I can, if not, dishonestly; for have it I
+must;' what are they doing then but denying that the kingdom, the
+power, and the glory of this earth belong to the Righteous God, and
+that He, and not the lying Devil, gives them to whomsoever He will?
+
+When people say to themselves (as who does not at moments?) 'To be
+rich is to be safe; a man's life does consist in the abundance of
+what he possesses;' what are they doing but saying that man does
+_not_ live by every word which proceeds out of the mouth of God, but
+by what he can get for himself and keep for himself? When they are
+fretful and anxious about their crops, when they even repine and
+complain of Providence, as I have known men do because they do not
+prosper as they wish, what are they doing but saying in their
+hearts, 'The weather and the seasons are the lords and masters of my
+good fortune, or bad fortune. I depend on them, and not on God, for
+comfort and for wealth, and my Heavenly Father does _not_ know what
+I have need of?' When parents send their girls out to field-work,
+without any care about whom they talk with, to have their minds
+corrupted by hearing filthiness and seeing immodest behaviour, what
+are they doing but offering their daughters in sacrifice, not even
+to Moloch, but to Mammon; saying to themselves, 'My daughter's
+modesty, my daughter's virtue, is not of as much value as the paltry
+money which I can earn by leaving her alone to learn wickedness,
+instead of keeping watch over her, if she does work, that she may be
+none the worse for her day's labour.'
+
+I might go on and give you a thousand instances more, but they all
+come alike to this; that whensoever you fancy that you cannot earn
+your daily bread without doing wrong yourself, or leaving your
+children to learn wrong, then you do not believe that the kingdom,
+the power, and the glory of this earth on which you work is your
+Heavenly Father's. For if you did, you would be certain that gains,
+large or small, got by breaking the least of His commandments, could
+never prosper you, but must bring a curse and a punishment with
+them; and you would be sure also, that because God is your Father,
+and this earth and all herein is His, that He would feed you with
+food sufficient for you, if you do but seek first His kingdom--that
+is, try to learn His laws; and seek first His righteousness--that
+is, strive and pray day by day to become righteous even as He is
+righteous.
+
+Yes, my friends, this is one meaning, though only one, of St. John's
+words, 'This is the victory which overcometh the world, even our
+faith.' We all see the world full of pleasant things, for which we
+long; of necessary things, too, without which we should starve and
+die. And then the temptation comes to us to snatch at these things
+for ourselves by any means in our power, right or wrong; like the
+dumb animals who break out of their owners' field into the next, if
+they do but see better pasturage there, or fight and quarrel between
+themselves for food, each trying to get the most for himself and rob
+his neighbour. So live the beasts, and so you and I, and every
+human being shall be tempted to live, if we follow our natures, if
+we forget that we are God's children, in God's kingdom, under the
+laws of a Heavenly Father, who has shown forth His own love and
+justice, His own kingdom, and power, and glory, in the person of the
+Lord Jesus Christ. But if we remember that, if we remember daily
+that the kingdom, and power, and glory is our Father's, then we
+shall neither fear storms and blights, bad crops, or anything else
+which is of the earth earthly. We shall fear nothing of that kind,
+which can only kill the body, but only fear the evil Devil, lest, by
+making us distrust and disobey our Heavenly Father, he should, after
+he has killed, destroy both body and soul in hell. And as long as
+we fear him, as long as we renounce him, as long as we trust utterly
+in our Heavenly Father's love and justice, and in the love and
+justice of His dear Son, the Man Christ Jesus, to whom all power is
+given in heaven and earth--then out of the youngest child among us
+will God's praise be perfected; for the youngest child among us, by
+faith in God his Father, may look upon all heaven and earth, and
+say, 'Great, and wonderful, and awful as this earth and skies may
+be, I am more precious in the sight of God than sun, and moon, and
+stars; for they are things: but I am a person, a spirit, an
+immortal soul, made in the likeness of God, redeemed into the
+likeness of God, sanctified into the likeness of God. This great
+earth was here thousands and thousands of years before I was born,
+and it will be here perhaps millions and millions of years after I
+am dead; but it cannot harm _me_; it cannot kill _me_. When earth,
+and sun, and stars are past away, I shall live for ever; for I am
+the immortal child of an Immortal Father, the child of the
+everlasting God. These things He only made: but me He begot unto
+everlasting life, in Jesus Christ my Lord. I seem to depend on this
+earth for food, for clothing, for comfort, for life itself: and yet
+I do not do so in reality; for man doth not live by bread alone, but
+by _every_ word which proceeds out of the mouth of God my Father.
+In Him I have eternal life: a life which this earth did not give,
+and cannot take away; a life which, by the mercy of my Father in
+heaven, I trust and hope to be living when sun and earth, stars and
+comets, are returned again to their dust, and blotted from the face
+of heaven. For the kingdom, the glory, and the power of this world,
+and all other worlds, past, present, and to come, belong to Him who
+spared not His only-begotten Son, but freely gave Him for us, and
+will with Him freely give us all things.'
+
+And thus, my friends, may God's praise be perfected out of the mouth
+of any Christian child, when He declares that God put man a little
+lower than the angels only to crown him with the glory and worship
+of having the only-begotten Son of God take man's nature upon Him,
+and walk this earth as a man, and live, and die, and rise again as a
+man, that so He might raise fallen man again to the glory and honour
+which God appointed for men from the beginning, when He said, Let us
+make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have
+dominion over the fish of the sea and the fowl of the air, and the
+beast of the earth; and be fruitful and multiply, and replenish the
+earth and subdue it.
+
+
+
+SERMON XI. AHAB AND NABOTH
+
+
+
+1 Kings xxi. 2, 3. And Ahab spake unto Naboth, saying, Give me thy
+vineyard, that I may have it for a garden of herbs, because it is
+near unto my house: and I will give thee for it a better vineyard
+than it; or, if it seem good to thee, I will give thee the worth of
+it in money. And Naboth said unto Ahab, The Lord forbid it me, that
+I should give the inheritance of my fathers unto thee.
+
+You heard to-day read for the first lesson, the story of Naboth and
+King Ahab. Most of you know it well. Naboth's vineyard has passed
+into a proverb for something which we covet.
+
+It is good that it should be so. We cannot know our Bible too well;
+we cannot have Bible words and Bible thoughts too much worked into
+our ways of talking and thinking about everyday matters. As far as
+I can see, the best days of England, the best days of every
+Christian country of which I ever read, have been days when men were
+not ashamed of their Bibles; when they were ready to live by their
+Bibles; to ask advice of their Bibles about buying and selling,
+about making war and peace, about all the business of life; and were
+not ashamed to quote texts of Scripture in the parliament, and in
+the market, and in the battle-field, as God's law, God's rule, God's
+word about the matter in hand, which was, therefore, sure to be the
+right word and the right rule. People are grown ashamed of doing so
+now-a-days; but that does not alter the matter one jot. We may deny
+God, but He cannot deny Himself. His laws are everlasting, and He
+is ruling and judging us by them now, all day long, just as much as
+He ruled and judged those Jews by them of old. The God of Abraham
+is our God; the God of Moses is our God; the God of Ahab and Naboth
+is our God; neither He nor His government are altered in the least
+since their time, and they never will alter for ever, and ever, and
+ever; and if we do not choose to believe that now in this life, we
+shall be made to believe it by some very ugly and painful schooling
+in the life to come.
+
+What laws of God, now, can we learn from this story?
+
+First, we may learn what a sacred thing _property_ is. That a man's
+possessions (if they be justly come by) belong to him, in the sight
+of God as well as in the sight of man, and that God will uphold and
+avenge the man's right.
+
+Naboth, you see, stands simply on his right to his own property.
+'The Lord forbid it me, that I should give the inheritance of my
+fathers unto thee.' I do not think that he meant that God had
+actually forbidden him: it seems to have been only some sort of
+oath which he used. He may certainly have had reasons for thinking
+it wrong to part with his lands; hurtful, perhaps, to his family
+after him. Yet, as Ahab had promised him a better vineyard for it,
+or its worth in money, I cannot help thinking that Naboth's reason
+was the one which shows on the face of his words. It was the
+inheritance of his fathers, this vineyard. They had all worked in
+it, generation after generation; perhaps, according to the Jewish
+custom, they were buried somewhere in it; at least, it had been
+theirs and now was his; he had worked in it, and played in it--
+perhaps since he was a child--and he loved it; it was part and
+parcel of his father's house to him, a sacred spot.
+
+And so it should be. It is a holy feeling which makes a man cling
+to the bit of land which he has inherited from his parents, even to
+the cottage, though it be only a hired one, where he has lived for
+many a year, and where he has planted and tilled, perhaps with some
+that he loved, who are now dead and gone, or grown up and gone out
+into the world, till the little old cottage-garden is full of
+remembrances to him of past joys and past sorrows. The feeling
+which makes a man cling to his home and to his own land is a good
+feeling, and breeds good in the man. It makes him respect himself;
+it keeps him from being reckless and unsettled. It is a feeling
+which should not be broken through. It is seldom pleasant to see
+land change hands; it is seldom pleasant to see people turned out of
+their cottages. It must often be so, but let it be as seldom as
+possible. One likes to see a family take root in a place, and grow
+and thrive there, one generation after another; and you will find,
+my friends, that families do take root and thrive in a place just in
+proportion as they fear God and do righteousness. The Psalms tell
+you, again and again, that the way to abide in the land, and prosper
+in it, is to trust in the Lord and be doing good; and that the
+wicked are soon rooted out, and their names perish out of the land.
+One sees that come true daily.
+
+But to return to Naboth. He loved his own land, and therefore he
+had a right to keep it. We may say it was but a fancy of his, if he
+could have a better vineyard, or the worth of it in money.
+Remember, at least, that God respected that fancy of his, and
+justified it, and avenged it. When (after Naboth's death) Elijah
+accused Ahab, in God's name, he put two counts into the indictment;
+for Ahab had committed two sins. 'Hast thou killed, and also taken
+possession?' Killing was one sin; taking possession was another.
+
+And so Ahab learnt two weighty and bitter lessons. He learnt that
+God's Law stands for ever, though man's law be broken or be
+forgotten by disuse. For you must understand, that these Jews were
+a free people, even as we are. They were not like the nations round
+about them, or as the Russians are now--slaves to their king, and
+holding their property only at his will. The law of Moses had made
+them a free people, who held their property each man from God, by
+God's Law, which had said, 'Thou shalt not steal. Thou shalt not
+covet. Cursed is he who removes his neighbour's landmark.' And
+their kings were bound to govern by Moses' law, just as our kings
+and rulers are bound to govern by the old constitutions of England,
+and to do equal justice by rich and poor. But the wicked kings of
+Israel were trying to break through that law, and make themselves
+tyrants and despots, such as the Czar of Russia is now. First,
+Jeroboam began by trying to wean his people from Moses' law, by
+preventing their going up to worship at Jerusalem, and making them
+worship instead the golden calves at Dan and at Bethel. For he knew
+that if he could make idolaters of them, he should soon make slaves
+of them; and he succeeded; and the kingdom of Israel grew more
+miserable year by year; and now Ahab, his wicked successor, was
+breaking down the laws of property and wrongfully taking away his
+subjects' lands. Perhaps he said in his heart, 'I am king; there is
+no law stronger than I. I have a right to do what I like.' If he
+did so, he found that he was mistaken. He found that though he
+forgot Moses' law, God had not; that the law stood there still,
+because it was founded on eternal justice, which proceeds for ever
+out of the mouth of God; and by the Law, which he had chosen to
+forget, he was judged; by the Law of God, which deals equal justice
+to rich and poor, which is, like God Himself, no acceptor of
+persons; but says, 'Thou shalt not covet,' to the king upon his
+throne as sternly as to the beggar on the dunghill.
+
+And that Law stands still, my friends, doubt it not. Thanks to the
+wisdom and justice of our forefathers who built the laws of England
+on those old Ten Commandments, which hang for a sign thereof in
+every church to this day. Thanks to them, I say, and to God, the
+root of the law of England is, equal justice between man and man, be
+he high or low; and it is a thing to bless God for every day of our
+lives, that here the poor man's little is as safe as the rich man's
+wealth: but there is many a sin of oppression, many a sin of
+covetousness, my friends, which no law of man can touch. Make laws
+as artfully as you will, bad men can always slip through them, and
+escape the spirit of them, while they obey the letter: and I
+suppose it will be so to the world's end; and that, let the laws be
+as perfect as they may, if any man wishes to cheat or oppress his
+neighbour, he will surely be able to work his wicked will in some
+way or other. Well then, my friends, if man's law is weak, God's is
+not;--if man's law has flaws and gaps in it, through which
+covetousness can creep, God's has none;--even if (which God forbid)
+man's law died out, and sinners were left to sin without fear of
+punishment, still God's Law stands sure, and the eye of the living
+God slumbers not, and the hand of the living God never grows weary,
+and out of the everlasting heaven His voice is saying, day and
+night, for ever, 'I endure for ever. I sit on the throne judging
+right; a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of My kingdom. I
+judge the world in justice, and minister true judgment unto the
+people. I also will be a refuge for the oppressed, even a refuge in
+due time of trouble.'
+
+O hear those words, my friends! hear and obey, if you love life, and
+wish to see good days; and never, never say a thing is right, simply
+because the law cannot punish you for it. Never say in your hearts
+when you are tempted to be hard, cruel, covetous, over-reaching,
+'What harm? I break no law by it.' There is a law, whether you see
+it or not; you break a law, whether you confess it or not; a law
+which is as a wall of iron clothed with thunder, though man's law be
+but a flimsy net of thread; and that law, and not any Acts of
+Parliament, shall judge you in the day when the secrets of all
+hearts shall be disclosed, and every man shall receive the due
+reward of the deeds done in the body, not according as they were
+allowed or not by the Statute Book, but according as they were good
+or evil.
+
+Another lesson we may learn from this story: that if we give way to
+our passions, we give way to the Devil also. Ahab gave way to his
+passion; he knew that he was wrong; for when Naboth refused to sell
+him the vineyard, he did not dare openly to rob him of it; he went
+to his house heavy of heart, and fretted, like a spoilt child,
+because he could not get what he wanted. It was but a little thing,
+and he might have been content to go without it. He was king of all
+Israel, and what was one small vineyard more or less to him? But
+prosperity had spoilt him; he must needs have every toy on which he
+set his heart, and he was weak enough to fret that he could not get
+more, when he had too much already. But he knew that he could not
+get it; that, king as he was, Naboth's property was his own, and
+that God's everlasting Law stood between him and the thing he
+coveted. Well for him if he had been contented with fretting. But,
+my friends--and be you rich or poor, take heed to my words--whenever
+any man gives way to selfishness, and self-seeking, to a proud,
+covetous, envious, peevish temper, the Devil is sure to glide up and
+whisper in his ear thoughts which will make him worse--worse, ay,
+than he ever dreamt of being. First comes the flesh, and then the
+Devil; and if the flesh opens the door of the heart, the Devil steps
+in quickly enough. First comes the flesh: fleshly, carnal pride at
+being thwarted; fleshly, carnal longing for a thing, which longs all
+the more for it because one cannot have it; fleshly, carnal
+peevishness and ill-temper, at not having just the pleasant thing
+one happens to like. That is a state of mind which is a bird-call
+for all the devils; and when they see a man in that temper, they
+flock to him, I believe, as crows do to carrion. It is astonishing,
+humbling, awful, my friends, what horrible thoughts will cross one's
+mind if once one gives way to that selfish, proud, angry, longing
+temper; thoughts of which we are ashamed the next moment;
+temptations to sin at which we shudder, they seem so unlike
+ourselves, not parts of ourselves at all. When the dark fit is
+past, one can hardly believe that such wicked thoughts ever crossed
+one's mind. I don't think that they are part of ourselves; I
+believe them to be the whispers of the Devil himself; and when they
+pass away, I believe that it is the Lord Jesus Christ who drives
+them away. But if any man gives way to them, determines to keep his
+sullenness, and so gives place to the Devil; then those thoughts do
+not pass; they take hold of a man, possess him, as the Bible calls
+it, and make him in his madness do things which--alas! who has not
+done things in his day, of which he has repented all his life
+after?--things for which he would gladly cut off his right hand for
+the sake of being able to say, 'I never did that?' But the thing is
+done--done to all eternity: he has given place to the Devil, and
+the Devil has made him do in five minutes work which he could not
+undo in five thousand years; and all that is left is, when he comes
+to himself, to cast himself on God's boundless mercy, and Christ's
+boundless atonement, and cry, 'My sins are like scarlet, Thou alone
+canst make them whiter than snow: my sin is ever before me; only
+let it not be ever before Thee, O God! Punish me, if thou seest
+fit; but oh forgive, for there is mercy with Thee, and infinite
+redemption!' And, thanks be to God's great love, he will not cry in
+vain. Yet, oh, my friends, do not give place to the Devil, unless
+you wish, forgiven or not, to repent of it to the latest day you
+live.
+
+And this was Ahab's fate. He knew, I say, that he was wrong; he
+knew that Naboth's property was his own, and dare not openly rob him
+of it; and he went to his house, heavy of heart, and refused to eat;
+and while he was in such a temper as that, the Devil lost no time in
+sending an evil spirit to him. It was a woman whom he sent,
+Jezebel, Ahab's own wife: but she was, as far as we can see, a
+woman of a devilish spirit, cruel, proud, profligate, and unjust, as
+well as a worshipper of the filthy idols of the Canaanites. Ahab's
+first sin was in having married this wicked heathen woman: now his
+sin punished itself; she tempted him through his pride and self-
+conceit; she taunted him into sin: 'Dost thou now govern the
+kingdom of Israel? I will give thee the vineyard of Naboth.' You
+all remember how she did so; by falsely accusing Naboth of
+blasphemy. Ahab seems to have taken no part in Naboth's murder.
+Perhaps he was afraid; but he was a weak man, and Jezebel was a
+strong and fierce spirit, and ruled him, and led him in this matter,
+as she did in making him worship idols with her; and he was content
+to be led. He was content to let others do the wickedness he had
+not courage to carry out himself. He forgot that, as is well said,
+'He who does a thing by another, does it by himself;' that if you
+let others sin for you, you sin for yourself. Would to God, my
+friends, that we would all remember this! How often people wink at
+wrong-doing in those with whom they have dealings, in those whom
+they employ, in their servants, in their children, because it is
+convenient to them. They shut their eyes, and their hearts too, and
+say to themselves, 'At all events, it is his doing and not mine; and
+it is his concern; I am not answerable for other people's sins. I
+would not do such a thing myself, certainly; but as it is done, I
+may as well make the best of it. If I gain by it, I need not be so
+very sharp in looking into the matter.' And so you see men who
+really wish to be honest and kindly themselves, making no scruple of
+profiting by other people's dishonesty and cruelty. Now the law
+punishes the receiver of stolen goods almost as severely as the
+thief himself: but there are many receivers of stolen goods, my
+friends, whom the law cannot touch. The world, at times, seems to
+me to be full of them; for every one, my friends, who hushes up a
+cruel or a dishonest matter, because he himself is a gainer by it,
+he is no better than the receiver of stolen goods, and he will find
+in the day of the Lord, that the sin will lie at his door, as
+Jezebel's sin lay at Ahab's. There was no need for Ahab to say,
+'Jezebel did it, and not I.' The prophet did not even give him time
+to excuse himself: 'Thus saith the Lord, Hast thou killed, and also
+taken possession?' By taking possession of Naboth's vineyard, and
+so profiting by his murder, he made himself partaker in that murder,
+and had to hear the terrible sentence, 'In the place where dogs
+licked the blood of Naboth, dogs shall lick thy blood, even thine.'
+
+Oh, my friends, whatsoever you do, keep clean hands and a pure
+heart. If you touch pitch, it will surely stick to you. Let no
+gain tempt you to be partaker of others men's sins; never fancy
+that, because men cannot lay the blame on the right person, God
+cannot. God will surely lay the burden on the man who helped to
+make the burden; God will surely require part payment from the man
+who profited by the bargain; so keep yourselves clear of other men's
+sins, that you may be clear also of their condemnation.
+
+So Ahab had committed a horrible and great sin, and had received
+sentence for it, and now, as I said before, there was nothing to be
+done but to repent; and he did so, after his fashion.
+
+Ahab, it seems, was not an utterly bad man; he was a weak man, fond
+of his own pleasure, a slave to his own passions, and easily led,
+sometimes to good, but generally to evil. And God did not execute
+full vengeance on him: his repentance was a poor one enough; but
+such as it was, the good and merciful God gave him credit for it as
+far as it went, and promised him that the worst part of his
+sentence, the ruin of his family, should not come in his time. But
+still the sentence against him stood, and was fulfilled. Not long
+after, as we read in the second lesson, he was killed in battle, and
+that not bravely and with honour (for if he had been, that would
+have been but a slight punishment, my friends), but shamefully by a
+chance shot, after he had disguised himself, in the cowardice of his
+guilty conscience, and tried to throw all the danger on his ally,
+good King Jehoshaphat of Judah; 'and they washed his chariot in the
+pool of Samaria, and the dogs licked up his blood, according to the
+word of the Lord, which he spake by Elijah the prophet.'
+
+So ends one of the most clear and terrible stories in the whole
+Bible, of God's impartial justice. May God give us all grace to lay
+it to heart! We are all tempted, as Ahab was; rich or poor, our
+temptation is alike to give place to the Devil, and let him lead us
+into dark and deep sin, by giving way to our own fancies, longings,
+pride, and temper. We are all tempted, as Ahab was, to over-reach
+our neighbours in some way; I do not mean always in cheating them,
+but in being unfair to them, in caring more for ourselves than for
+them; thinking of ourselves first, and of them last; trying to make
+ourselves comfortable, or to feed our own pride, at their expense.
+Oh, my friends, whenever we are tempted to be selfish and grasping,
+be sure that we are opening a door to the very Devil of hell
+himself, though he may look so smooth, and gentle, and respectable,
+that perhaps we shall not know him when he comes to us, and shall
+take his counsels for the counsel of an angel of light. But be sure
+that if it is selfishness which has opened the door of our heart,
+not God, but the Devil, will come in, let him disguise himself as
+cunningly as he will; and our only hope is to flee to Him in whom
+there was no selfishness, the Lord Jesus Christ, who came not to do
+His own will, but His Father's; not to glorify Himself, but His
+Father; not to save His own life, but to sacrifice it freely, for
+us, His selfish, weak, greedy, wandering sheep. Pray to Him to give
+you His Spirit, that glorious spirit of love, and duty, and self-
+sacrifice, by which all the good deeds on earth are done; which
+teaches a man not to care about himself, but about others; to help
+others, to feel for others, to rejoice in their happiness, to grieve
+over their sorrows, to give to them, rather than take from them--in
+one word, The Holy Spirit of God, which may He pour out on you, and
+me, and all mankind, that we may live justly and lovingly, as
+children of one just and loving Father in heaven.
+
+
+
+SERMON XII. THE LIGHT OF GOD
+
+
+
+[Preached for the Chelsea National Schools.]
+
+Ephesians v. 13. All things which are reproved are made manifest by
+the light: for whatsoever is made manifest is light.
+
+This is a noble text, a royal text; one of those texts which forbid
+us to clip and cramp Scripture to suit any narrow notions of our
+own; which open before us boundless vistas of God's love, of human
+knowledge, of the future of mankind. There are many such texts,
+many more than we fancy; but this is one which is especially
+valuable at the present time; one especially fit for a sermon on
+education; for it is, as it were, the scriptural charter of the
+advocate of education. It enables him boldly to say, 'There is
+nothing I will refuse to teach; there is nothing which man shall
+forbid me to teach; there is nothing which God has made in heaven or
+earth about which I will not tell the truth boldly to the young.'
+
+For light comes from God. God is light, and in Him is no darkness
+at all. And therefore He wishes to give light to His children. He
+willeth not that the least of them should be kept in darkness about
+any matter. Darkness is of the Devil; and he who keeps any human
+soul in darkness, let his pretences be as reverent and as religious
+as they may, is doing the Devil's work. Nothing, then, which God
+has made will we conceal from the young.
+
+True, there are errors of which we will not speak to the young; but
+they are not made by God: they are the works of darkness. Our duty
+is to teach the young what God has made, what He has done, what He
+has ordained; to make them freely partakers of whatsoever light God
+has given us. Then, by means of that light, they will be able to
+reprove the works of darkness.
+
+For whatsoever is made manifest is light. Our version says;
+'Whatsoever makes manifest is light.' That is true, a noble truth;
+but I should not be honest, if I did not confess that that is not
+what St. Paul says here. He says, 'That which _is_ made manifest is
+light.' On this the best commentators and scholars agree. Our old
+translators have made a mistake, though in grammar only, and have
+substituted one great truth for another equally great.
+
+'Whatsoever is made manifest is light.' We should have expected
+this, if we are really Christians. If we have faith in God; if we
+believe that God is worthy of our faith--a God whom we can trust; in
+whom is neither caprice, deceit, nor darkness, but pure and perfect
+light;--if we believe that we are His children, and that He wishes
+us to be, like Himself, full of light, knowing what we are and what
+the world is, because we know who God is;--if we believe that He
+sent His Son into the world to reveal Him, to unveil Him, to draw
+aside the veil which dark superstition and ignorance had spread
+between man and God, and to show us the glory of God;--if we believe
+this, then we shall be ready to expect that whatsoever is made
+manifest would be light; for if God be light, all that He has made
+must be light also. Like must beget like, and therefore light must
+beget light, good beget good, love beget love; and therefore we
+ought to expect that as true and sound knowledge increases, our
+views of God will be more full of light.
+
+Yes, my friends; under the influence of true science God will be no
+longer looked upon, as He was in those superstitions which we well
+call dark, as a proud, angry, capricious being, as a stern
+taskmaster, as one far removed from the sympathy of men: but as one
+of whom we may cheerfully say, Thy name be hallowed, for Thy name is
+Father; Thy kingdom come, for it is a Father's kingdom; Thy will be
+done, for it is a Father's will; and in doing Thy will alone men
+claim their true dignity of being the sons of God.
+
+Our views of our fellow-men will be more cheerful also; more full of
+sympathy, comprehension, charity, hope; in one word, more full of
+light. If it be true (and it is true) that God loves all, then we
+should expect to find in all something worthy of our love. If it be
+true that God willeth that none should perish, we should expect to
+find in each man something which ought not to perish. If it be true
+that God stooped from heaven, yea stoops from heaven eternally, to
+seek and to save that which is lost, then we should have good hope
+that our efforts to seek to save that which is lost will not be in
+vain. We shall have hope in every good work we undertake, for we
+shall know that in it we are fellow-workers with God.
+
+Our notions of the world--of God's whole universe, will become full
+of light likewise. Do we believe that this earth was made by Jesus
+Christ?--by Him who was full of grace and truth? Do we believe our
+Bibles, when they tell us, that He hath given all created things a
+law which cannot be broken; that they continue as at the beginning,
+for all things serve Him? Do we believe this? Then we must look on
+this earth, yea on the whole universe of God, as, like its Master,
+full of grace and truth; not as old monks and hermits fancied it, a
+dark, deceiving, evil earth, filled with snares and temptations; a
+world from which a man ought to hide himself in the wilderness, and
+find his own safety in ignorance. Not thus, but as the old Hebrews
+thought of it, as a glorious and a divine universe, in which the
+Spirit of God, the Lord and Giver of life, creates eternal melody,
+bringing for ever life out of death, light out of darkness, letting
+his breath go forth that new generations may be made, and herein
+renew the face of the earth.
+
+And experience teaches us that this has been the case; that for near
+one thousand eight hundred years there has been a steady progress in
+the mind of the Christian race, and that this progress has been in
+the direction of light.
+
+Has it not been so in our notions of God? What has the history of
+theology been for near one thousand eight hundred years? Has it not
+been a gradual justification of God, a gradual vindication of His
+character from those dark and horrid notions of the Deity which were
+borrowed from the Pagans, and from the Jewish Rabbis? a gradual
+return to the perfect good news of a good God, which was preached by
+St. John and by St. Paul?--In one word, a gradual manifestation of
+God; and a gradual discovery that when God is manifested, behold,
+God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all?
+
+That progress, alas! is not yet perfect. We still see through a
+glass darkly, and we are still too apt to impute to God Himself the
+darkness of those very hearts of ours in which He is so dimly
+mirrored. And there are men still, even in Protestant England, who
+love darkness rather than light, and teach men that God is dark, and
+in Him are only scattered spots of light, and those visible only to
+a favoured few; men who, whether from ignorance, or covetousness, or
+lust of power, preach such a deity as the old Pharisees worshipped,
+when they crucified the Lord of Glory, and offer to deliver men,
+forsooth, out of the hands of this dreadful phantom of their own
+dark imaginations.
+
+Let them be. Let the dead bury their dead, and let us follow
+Christ. Believe indeed that He is the likeness of God's glory, and
+the express image of God's person, and you will be safe from the
+dark dreams with which they ensnare diseased and superstitious
+consciences. Let them be. Light is stronger than darkness; Love
+stronger than cruelty. Perfect God stronger than fallen man; and
+the day shall come when all shall be light in the Lord; when all
+mankind shall know God, from the least unto the greatest, and
+lifting up free foreheads to Him who made them, and redeemed them by
+His Son, shall in spirit and in truth, worship The Father.
+
+Does not experience again show us that in the case of our fellow-
+men, whatsoever is made manifest, is light?
+
+How easy it was, a thousand years ago--a hundred years ago even, to
+have dark thoughts about our fellow-men, simply because we did not
+know them! Easy it was, while the nations were kept apart by war,
+even by mere difficulty of travelling, for Christians to curse Jews,
+Turks, Infidels, and Heretics, and believe that God willed their
+eternal perdition, even though the glorious collect for Good Friday
+gave their inhumanity the lie. Easy to persecute those to whose
+opinions we could not, or would not, take the trouble to give a fair
+hearing. Easy to condemn the negro to perpetual slavery, when we
+knew nothing of him but his black face; or to hang by hundreds the
+ragged street-boys, while we disdained to inquire into the
+circumstances which had degraded them; or to treat madmen as wild
+beasts, instead of taming them by wise and gentle sympathy.
+
+But with a closer knowledge of our fellow-creatures has come
+toleration, pity, sympathy. And as that sympathy has been freely
+obeyed, it has justified itself more and more. The more we have
+tried to help our fellow-men, the more easy we have found it to help
+them. The more we have trusted them, the more trustworthy we have
+found them. The more we have treated them as human beings, the more
+humanity we have found in them. And thus man, in proportion as he
+becomes manifest to man, is seen, in spite of all defects and sins,
+to be hallowed with a light from God who made him.
+
+And if it has been thus, in the case of God and of humanity, has it
+not been equally so in the case of the physical world? Where are
+now all those unnatural superstitions--the monkish contempt for
+marriage and social life, the ghosts and devils; the astrology, the
+magic, and other dreams of which I will not speak here, which made
+this world, in the eyes of our forefathers, a doleful and dreadful
+puzzle; and which made man the sport of arbitrary powers, of cruel
+beings, who could torment and destroy us, but over whom we could
+have no righteous power in return? Where are all those dark dreams
+gone which maddened our forefathers into witch-hunting panics, and
+which on the Continent created a priestly science of witch-finding
+and witch-destroying, the literature whereof (and it is a large one)
+presents perhaps the most hideous instance known of human cruelty,
+cowardice, and cunning? Where, I ask, are those dreams now? So
+utterly vanished, that very few people in this church know what a
+great part they played in the thoughts of our forefathers; how
+ghosts, devils, witches, magic, and astrology, filled the minds, not
+only of the ignorant, but of the most learned, for centuries.
+
+And now, behold, nature being made manifest, is light. Science has
+taught men to admire where they used to dread; to rule where they
+used to obey; to employ for harmless uses what they were once afraid
+to touch; and, where they once saw only fiends, to see the orderly
+and beneficent laws of the all-good and almighty God. Everywhere,
+as the work of nature is unfolded to our eyes, we see beauty, order,
+mutual use, the offspring of perfect Love as well as perfect Wisdom.
+Everywhere we are finding means to employ the secret forces of
+nature for our own benefit, or to ward off physical evils which
+seemed to our forefathers as inevitable, supernatural; and even the
+pestilence, instead of being, as was once fancied, the capricious
+and miraculous infliction of some demon--the pestilence itself is
+found to be an orderly result of the same laws by which the sun
+shines and the herb grows; a product of nature; and therefore
+subject to man, to be prevented and extirpated by him, if he will.
+
+Yes, my friends, let us teach these things to our children, to all
+children. Let us tell them to go to the Light, and see their
+Heavenly Father's works manifested, and know that they are, as He
+is, _Light_. I say, let us teach our children freely and boldly to
+know these things, and grow up in the light of them. Let us leave
+those to sneer at the triumphs of modern science, who trade upon the
+ignorance and the cowardice of mankind, and who say, 'Provided you
+make a child religious, what matter if he does fancy the sun goes
+round the earth? Why occupy his head, perhaps disturb his simple
+faith, by giving him a smattering of secular science?'
+
+Specious enough is that argument: but shortsighted more than
+enough. It is of a piece with the wisdom which shrinks from telling
+children that God is love, lest they should not be sufficiently
+afraid of Him; which forbids their young hearts to expand freely
+towards their fellow-creatures: which puts into their mouths the
+watchwords of sects and parties, and thinks to keep them purer
+Christians by making them Pharisees from the cradle.
+
+My friends, we may try to train up children as Pharisees: but we
+shall discover, after twenty years of mistaken labour, that we have
+only made them Sadducees. The path to infidelity in manhood is
+superstition in youth. You may tell the child never to mind whether
+the sun moves round the earth or not: but the day will come when he
+will mind in spite of you; and if he then finds that you have
+deceived him, that you have even left him in wilful ignorance, all
+your moral influence over him is gone, and all your religious
+lessons probably gone also. So true is it, that lies are by their
+very nature self-destructive. For all truth is of God; and no lie
+is of the truth, and therefore no lie can possibly help God or God's
+work in any human soul. For as the child ceases to respect his
+teachers he ceases to respect what they believe. His innate
+instinct of truth and honour, his innate longing to believe, to look
+up to some one better than himself, have been shocked and shaken
+once and for all; and it may require long years, and sad years, to
+bring him back to the faith of his childhood. Again I say it, we
+must not fear to tell the children the whole truth; in these days
+above all others which the world has yet seen. You cannot prevent
+their finding out the truth: then for our own sake, let us, their
+authorized teachers, be the first to tell it them. Let them in
+after life connect the thought of their clergyman, their
+schoolmaster, their church, with their first lessons in the free and
+right use of their God-given faculties, with their first glimpses
+into the boundless mysteries of art and science. Let them learn
+from us to regard all their powers as their Heavenly Father's gift;
+all art, all science, all discoveries, as their Heavenly Father's
+revelation to men. Let them learn from us not to shrink from the
+light, not to peep at it by stealth, but to claim it as their
+birthright; to welcome it, to live and grow in it to the full
+stature of men--rational, free, Christian English men. This, I
+believe, must be the method of a truly Protestant education.
+
+I said Protestant--I say it again. What is the watchword of
+Protestantism? It is this. That no lie is of the truth. There are
+those who complain of us English that we attach too high a value to
+TRUTH. They say that falsehood is an evil: but not so great a one
+as we fancy. We accept the imputation. We answer boldly that there
+can be no greater evil than falsehood, no greater blessing than
+truth; and that by God's help we will teach the same to our
+children, and to our children's children. Free inquiry, religious
+as well as civil liberty--this is the spirit of Protestantism. This
+our fathers have bequeathed to us; this we will bequeath to our
+children;--to know that all truth is of God, that no lie is of the
+truth. Our enemies may call us heretics, unbelievers, rebellious,
+political squabblers. They may say in scorn, You Protestants know
+not whither you are going; you have broken yourselves off from the
+old Catholic tree, and now, in the wild exercise of your own private
+judgment, you are losing all that standard of doctrine, all unity of
+belief. Our answer will be--It is not so: but even if it were so--
+even if we did not know whither we were going--we should go forward
+still. For though we know not, God knows. We have committed
+ourselves to God, the living God; and He has led us; and we believe
+that He will lead us. He has taught us; and we believe that He will
+teach us still. He has prospered us, and we believe that He will
+prosper us still: and therefore we will train up our children after
+us to go on the path which has brought us hither, freely to use
+their minds, boldly to prove all things, and hold fast that which is
+good; manfully to go forward, following Truth whithersoever she may
+lead them; trusting in God, the Father of Lights, asking Him for
+wisdom, who giveth to all liberally, and upbraideth not; and it
+shall be given them.
+
+I have been asked to preach this day for the National Schools of
+this parish. I do so willingly, because I believe that in them this
+course of education is pursued, that conjoined with a sound teaching
+in the principles of our Protestant church, and a wholesome and
+kindly moral training, there is free and full secular instruction as
+far as the ages of the children will allow. Were it not the case, I
+could not plead for these schools; above all at this time, when the
+battle between ancient superstition and modern enlightenment in this
+land seems fast coming to a crisis and a death struggle. I could
+not ask you to help any school on earth in which I had not fair
+proof that the teachers taught, on physical and human as well as on
+moral subjects, the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
+truth, so help them God.
+
+
+
+SERMON XIII. PROVIDENCE
+
+
+
+Matthew vi. 31, 32, 33. Be not anxious, saying, What shall we eat?
+or, what shall we drink, or wherewithal shall we be clothed? (for
+after all these things do the heathen seek:) for your Heavenly
+Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things. But seek ye
+first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things
+shall be added unto you.
+
+We must first consider carefully what this text really means; what
+'taking no thought for the morrow' really is. Now, it cannot mean
+that we are to be altogether careless and imprudent; for all
+Scripture, and especially Solomon's Proverbs, give us the very
+opposite advice, and one part of God's Word cannot contradict the
+other. The whole of Solomon's Proverbs is made up of lessons in
+prudence and foresight; and surely our Lord did not come to do away
+with Solomon's Proverbs, but to fulfil them. And more, Solomon
+declares again and again, that prudence and foresight are the gifts
+of God; and God's gifts are surely meant to be used. Isaiah, too,
+tells us that the common work of the farm, tilling the ground,
+sowing, and reaping, were taught to men by God; and says of the
+ploughman, that 'His God doth instruct him to discretion and doth
+teach him.' Neither can God mean us to sit idle with folded hands
+waiting to be fed by miracles. Would He have given to man reason,
+and skill, and the power of bettering his mortal condition by ten
+thousand instructions if He had not meant him to use those gifts?
+We find that, at the beginning, Adam is put into the garden, not to
+sit idle in it, nor to feed merely on the fruits which fall from the
+trees, as the dumb animals do, but to dress it, and to keep it; to
+use his own reason to improve his own condition, and the land on
+which God had placed him. Was not the very first command given to
+man to replenish the earth and subdue it? And do we not find in the
+very end of Scripture the Apostles working with their own hands for
+their daily bread?
+
+But what use of many words? It is absurd to believe anything else;
+absurd to believe that man was meant to live like the butterfly,
+flitting without care from flower to flower, and, like the
+butterfly, die helpless at the first shower or the first winter's
+frost. Whatever the text means, it cannot mean that.
+
+And it does not mean that. I suppose, that three hundred years ago
+(when the Bible was translated out of the Greek tongue, in which the
+Apostles wrote, into English), 'taking thought' meant something
+different from what it does now: but the plain meaning of the text,
+if it be put into such English as we talk now, is, 'Do not _fret_
+about the morrow. Be not anxious about the morrow.' There is no
+doubt at all, as any scholar can tell you, that that is the plain
+meaning of the word in our modern English, and that our Lord is not
+telling us to be imprudent or idle, but not to be anxious and
+fretful about the morrow.
+
+And more, I think if we look carefully at these words, we shall find
+that they tell us the very reason why we are to work, and to look
+forward, and to believe that God will bless our labour.
+
+And what is this reason? It is this, that we have a _Father_ in
+heaven; not a mere Maker, not a mere Master, but a _Father_. All
+turns on that one Gospel of all Gospels, _your Father in heaven_.
+For our Lord seems to me to say, 'Be not anxious for your life, what
+ye shall eat, or drink, or wear. Is not the life more than meat?
+Has not your Heavenly Father given you a higher life than the mere
+life which must be kept up by food, which He has given to the
+animals? He has made you reasonable souls; He has given to you
+wisdom from His own wisdom, and a share of the Light which lights
+every man who comes into the world, the Light of Christ His Son; He
+has created you in His own likeness, that like Him you may make
+things, be makers and inventors, each in his place and calling, each
+according to his talents and powers, even as your Heavenly Father,
+the Maker and Creator of all things. And if He has given you all
+these wonderful powers of mind and soul, surely He has given you the
+less blessing, the mere power to earn your own food? If He has made
+you so much wiser than the beasts, surely He has made you as wise as
+the beasts.' 'And is not the body more than raiment?' Has He not
+given you bodies which can speak, write, build, work, plant, in a
+thousand cunning and wonderful ways; bodies which can do a thousand
+nobler things than merely keep themselves warm, as the beasts do?
+Then be sure, if He has given you the greater power, He has given
+you the less also. And as for fine clothes and rich ornaments, 'Is
+not the body more than raiment?' Is not your body a far more
+beautiful and nobler thing than all the gay clothes with which you
+can bedizen it? If your bodies be fair, strong, healthy, useful, it
+matters little what clothes you put upon them. Why will you not
+have faith in your Heavenly Father? Why will you not have faith in
+the great honour which He put on you when He said at first, 'Let us
+make man in our image, after our likeness, and let him have dominion
+over all things on the earth'? Be sure, that God would not have
+made man, and given him all these powers, and sent him upon this
+earth, unless this earth had been a right good and fit place for
+him. Be sure that if you obey the laws of this earth where God has
+put you, you will never need to be anxious or fret; but you will
+prosper right well, you and your children after you. For 'Consider
+the fowls of the air, they neither sow, nor reap, and gather into
+barns, and yet your Heavenly Father feeds them; and are ye not much
+better than they?' Surely you are, for you _can_ sow, and reap, and
+gather into barns. And if God makes the earth work so well that it
+feeds the fowls who cannot help themselves, how much more will the
+earth feed you who _can_ help yourselves, because God has given you
+understanding and prudence? But as for anxiety, fretting, repining,
+complaining to God, 'Why hast Thou made me thus?' what use in that?
+'Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit to his stature?'
+Will all the fretting and anxiety in the world make you one foot or
+one inch taller than you are? Will it make you stronger, wiser,
+more able to help yourself? You are what you are: you can do what
+God has given you power to do. Trust Him that He has made you
+strong enough and wise enough to earn your daily bread, and to
+prosper right well, if you will, upon this earth which He has made.
+And why be anxious about clothing? 'Consider the lilies of the
+field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin; and yet
+Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.' But
+man _can_ toil, man _can_ spin; your Heavenly Father has given to
+man the power of providing clothes for himself, and not for himself
+only, but for others; so that while the man who tills the soil feeds
+the man who spins and weaves, the man who spins and weaves shall
+clothe the man who tills the soil; and the town shall work for the
+country, while the country feeds the town; and every man, if he does
+but labour where God has put him, shall produce comforts for human
+beings whom he never saw, who live perhaps in foreign lands across
+the sea. For the Heavenly Father has knit together the great family
+of man in one blessed bond of mutual need and mutual usefulness all
+over the world; so that no member of it can do without the other,
+and each member of it--each individual man--let him work at what
+thing he will, can make many times more of that thing than he needs
+for himself, and so help others while he earns his own living; and
+so wealth and comfort ought to increase year by year among the whole
+family of men, ay, and would increase, if it were not for sin. Yes,
+my friends, if it were not for that same _sin_--if it were not that
+men do not seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness,
+there would be no end, no bound to the wealth, the comfort, the
+happiness of the children of men. Even as it is, in spite of all
+man's sin, the world does prosper marvellously, miraculously; in
+spite of all the waste, destruction, idleness, ignorance, injustice,
+and folly which goes on in the world, mankind increases and
+replenishes the earth, and improves in comfort and in happiness; in
+spite of all, God is stronger than the Devil, life stronger than
+death, wisdom stronger than folly, order stronger than disorder,
+fruitfulness stronger than destruction; and they will be so, more
+and more, till the last great day, when Christ shall have put all
+enemies under His feet, and death is swallowed up in victory, and
+all mankind is one fold under one Shepherd, Jesus Christ, the
+righteous King of all.
+
+But some may ask, What does our Lord mean when He says, 'That if we
+sought first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, all these
+things should be added to us?'
+
+I cannot tell you altogether, my friends; for eye hath not seen, nor
+ear heard, nor hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive
+what God has prepared for those who love Him. But this I can tell
+you, that these things are taken _from_ men, instead of being added
+to them, by their not seeking first God's kingdom and His
+righteousness. I can tell you, as the Prophet does, that it is the
+sins of man which withhold good things from him; because though, as
+the Prophet says in the same place, God sends the good things, and
+the former and latter rain in their season, and reserves to men
+still the appointed weeks of harvest, yet men will not fear that
+same Lord their God; and therefore those good things are wasted, and
+mankind remains too often miserable in spite of God's goodness, and
+starving in the midst of God's plenty.
+
+If you wish to know what I mean, look but once at this present war.
+I do not complain of the war. I honour the war. I thank God from
+the bottom of my heart for this great and glorious victory, and I
+call on you to thank Him, too, for it. I am none of those who think
+war sinful. I cannot do so, for I swore at my baptism to fight
+manfully under Christ's banner against the world, the flesh, and the
+Devil; and if we cannot reach the Devil and his works by any other
+means, we must reach them as we are doing now, by sharp shot and
+cold steel, and we must hold it an honourable thing, and few things
+more honourable on earth, for a man to die fighting against evil
+men, and an evil world-devouring empire, like that of Babylon of
+old, or this of Russia now, that he may save not merely us who sit
+here now, but our children's children, and generations yet unborn,
+from Russian tyranny, and Russian falsehood, and Russian profligacy,
+and Russian superstition. I say, I do not complain of this war; but
+I ask you to look at the mere waste which it brings, the mere waste
+of God's blessings. Consider all the skilful men now employed in
+making cannon, shot, and powder to kill mortal men, who might every
+one of them, in time of peace, have been employed in making things
+which would feed, and clothe, and comfort mortal man. Consider that
+very powder and shot itself, the fruit of so much labour and money,
+made simply to be shot away, once for all, as if a man should spend
+months in making some precious vessel, and then dash it to pieces
+the moment it was made. Consider that Sevastopol alone; the
+millions of money which it must have cost--the stone, the timber,
+the iron, all used there--in making a mere robber's den, which might
+all have been spent in giving employment and sustenance to whole
+provinces of poor starving Russians. Consider those tens of
+thousands of men, labouring day and night for months at those deadly
+earthworks, whose strong arms might have been all tilling God's
+earth, and growing food for the use of man. And then see the waste,
+the want, the misery which that one place, Sevastopol, has caused
+upon God's earth.
+
+And consider, too, the souls of mortal men, who have been wasted
+there--no man knows how many, nor will know till the judgment day.
+Two hundred thousand, at the least, they say, wasted about that
+accursed place, within the last twelve months. Two hundred thousand
+cunning brains, two hundred thousand strong right hands, two hundred
+thousand willing hearts: what good might not each of those men have
+done if he had been labouring peacefully at home, in his right place
+in God's family! What might he not have invented, made, carried
+over land and sea? None dead there but might have been of use in
+his generation; and doubtless many a one who would have done good
+with all his might, who would have been a blessing to those around
+him; and now what is left of him on earth but a few bones beneath
+the sod? Wasted--utterly wasted! Oh, consider how precious is one
+man; consider how much good the weakest and stupidest of us all
+might do, if he set himself with his whole soul to do good; consider
+that the weakest and stupidest of us, even if he has no care for
+good, cannot earn his day's wages without doing some good to the
+bodies of his fellow-men; and then judge of the loss to mankind by
+this one single siege of one single town; and think how many
+stomachs must be the emptier, how many backs the barer, for this one
+war; and then see how man wastes God's gifts, and wastes most of all
+that most precious gift of all, men, living men, with minds, and
+reasons, and immortal souls.
+
+And whence has all this waste come? Simply because these Russian
+rulers have chosen to seek first, not God's kingdom, but their own.
+Instead of behaving like God's ministers and God's stewards, and
+asking, 'How would God our King have us rule His kingdom?' they have
+laboured for their own power, conquering all the nations round them,
+removing their neighbour's landmark, and wasting the wealth of their
+country on armies, and fortresses, and fleets, with which they
+intended to conquer more and more of the earth which did not belong
+to them. Because, instead of seeking God's righteousness, and
+saying to themselves, 'How shall we be righteous, even as our
+Heavenly Father is righteous, and how shall we teach this great
+people to be righteous likewise?' they have sought their own
+pleasure, and lived in profligacy, covetous and cheating almost
+beyond belief; and instead of behaving righteously to the people, or
+teaching them to be righteous, they have crushed down the people,
+stupefied and corrupted them by slavery, and maddened them by
+superstitions which are not the righteousness of God, till they have
+made them easy tools in their unjust wars, and are able to drive
+them, even by force, like sheep to the slaughter, to die miserably
+in a cause in which, even if those unhappy slaves conquered, they
+would only rivet their own chains more tightly, and put more power
+into the hands of the very rulers who are robbing them of their
+earnings, dishonouring their daughters, and driving off their sons
+to die in a foreign land. Ah, my friends, if these men had but
+sought first the kingdom of God and His righteousness; if the great
+wealth, and the wonderful industry and prudence of Russia had been
+but spent in doing justly, and loving mercy, what a rich and
+honourable country of brave and industrious Christian men might
+Russia be; a blessing, and not a curse, to half the earth of God!
+
+Let us pray that she will become so, some day; and we may have hope
+for her, for she is but young, and has time yet for repentance.
+
+But some may say--indeed, we are all ready enough to say--'Then the
+evil of this war is the Russians' fault, and not ours; and so in
+every other case. In every other evil and misery they are rather
+other people's fault than ours. If we do our duty well enough, and
+if other people would but do theirs, all would be well.'
+
+We are all apt to say this in our hearts. But our Lord does not say
+so. His promise is to all mankind: but His promise is to each of
+us also. When He says, Seek ye first God's kingdom and
+righteousness, He speaks to you and to me, to every soul now here.
+Believe it, my friends. The more that I see of life, the more I see
+how much of our sorrow is our own fault; how much of our happiness
+is in our own hands; and the more I see how little use there is in
+finding fault with this government, or that, the more I see how much
+use there is in every man's finding fault with himself, and taking
+his share of the blame.
+
+I do not doubt that if the whole people of England, for the last
+forty years, had sought first God's kingdom and God's righteousness,
+and said to themselves in every matter, not merely 'What is
+profitable for us to do?' but 'What is _right_ for us to do?' we
+should have been spared the expenses and the sorrows of this war:
+but as for blaming our government, my friends,--what they are we
+are; we choose them, Englishmen like ourselves, and they truly
+_represent us_. Not one complaint can we make against them, which
+we may not as justly make against ourselves; and if we had been in
+their places, we should have done what they did; for the seeds of
+the same sins are in us; and we yield, each in his own household and
+his own business, to the same temptations as they, to the sins which
+so easily beset Englishmen at this present time. I say, frankly, I
+see not one charge brought against them in the newspapers which
+might not quite as justly be brought against me, and, for aught I
+know, against every one of us here; and while we are not faithful
+over a few things, what right have we to complain of them for not
+having been faithful over many things? Believe, rather (I believe
+it), that if we had been in their place, we should have done far
+worse than they; and ask yourselves, 'Do _I_ seek first God's
+kingdom and God's righteousness; for if I do not, what right have I
+to lay the blame of my bad success on other men's not seeking them?'
+To each of us, as much as to our government, or to the Russian
+empire, is Christ's command; and each of us must take the
+consequences, if we break it. Let us look at ourselves, and mend
+ourselves, and try whether God's promise will not hold true for us,
+each in his station, let the world round us go as it will. Be sure
+that God is just, and that every man bears his own burden: that the
+righteous should be as the wicked, that be far from Thee, O God!
+Shall not the judge of all the earth do right? Be sure that those
+who trust in Him shall never be confounded, though the earth be
+moved, and the mountains carried into the midst of the sea, as it is
+written, 'Trust in the Lord, and be doing good; dwell in the land,
+and work where God has placed thee, and verily thou shalt be fed.'
+
+But have we done so, my friends? have we sought first God's kingdom
+and His righteousness? have we not rather forgotten the meaning of
+the text, and what God's kingdom is, and what His righteousness is?
+Do not most people fancy that God's kingdom only means some pleasant
+place to which people are to go after they die? and that seeking
+God's righteousness only means having Christ's righteousness imputed
+to us (as they call it), without our being righteous and good
+ourselves? Do not most of us fancy that this very text means, 'Do
+you take care of your souls, and God will take care of your bodies;
+do you see after the salvation of your souls, and God will see after
+the salvation of your bodies'? a meaning which, in the first place,
+is not true, for God will do no such thing; and all the religion in
+the world will not prevent a man's having to work for his daily
+bread, or pay his debts for him without money; and a meaning which,
+in the second place, people themselves do not believe; for religious
+professors in general now are just as keen about money as
+irreligious ones, and even more so; so that covetousness and
+cunning, ambition and greediness to rise in life, seem now-a-days to
+go hand in hand with a high religious profession; and those who
+fancy themselves the children of light have become just as wise in
+their generation as the children of this world whom they despise.
+
+No, my friends, that is not the meaning of the text; and when I ask
+you, Have you obeyed the text? I do not ask you that question; but
+one which I believe is something far more spiritual and more deep,
+something at least which is far more heart-searching, and likely to
+prick a man's conscience, perhaps to make him angry with me who ask.
+
+Do you seek first God's kingdom, or your own profit, your own
+pleasure, your own reputation? Do you believe that you are in God's
+kingdom, that He is your King, and has called you to the station in
+which you are to do good and useful work for Him upon this earth of
+His? Whatever be your calling, whether you be servant, labourer,
+farmer, tradesman, gentleman, maid, wife, or widow, father, son, or
+husband, do you ask yourself every day, 'Now what are the laws of
+God's kingdom about this station of mine? what is my duty here? how
+can I obey God, and His laws here, and do what He requires of me,
+and so be a good servant, a good labourer, a good tradesman, a good
+master, a good parish officer, a good wife, a good parent, pleasing
+to God, useful to my neighbours and to my countrymen?' Or do you
+say to yourselves, 'How can I get the greatest quantity of money and
+pleasure out of my station, with the least trouble to myself?' My
+dearest friends, ask yourselves, each of you, in which of these two
+ways do you look at your own station in life?
+
+And do you seek first God's righteousness? There can be no mistake
+as to what God's righteousness is; for God's righteousness must be
+Christ's righteousness, seeing that He is the express image of His
+Father. Now do you ask yourselves, 'How am I to be righteous in my
+station, as Christ was in His? how can I do my Heavenly Father's
+will, as Christ did? how can I behave like Christ in my station? how
+would the Lord Jesus Christ have behaved, if He had been in my
+place, when He was on earth?' My friends, that is the question, the
+searching question, the question which must convince us all of sin,
+and show us so many faults of our own to complain of, that we shall
+find no time to throw stones at our neighbours. How would the Lord
+Jesus Christ have behaved, if He had been in my place when He was
+upon earth?
+
+My dear friends, till we can all of us answer that question somewhat
+better than we can now, we have no need to look as far as Russia, or
+as our forefathers' mistakes, or our rulers' mistakes, to find out
+why this trouble and that trouble come upon us: for we shall find
+the reason in our own selfish, greedy, self-willed hearts.
+
+Oh, my friends, let us each search our own lives, and repent, and
+amend, and resolve to do our duty, as sons of God, in the station to
+which God has called us, by the help of the Spirit of God, which He
+has promised freely to those who ask Him. And now, this day, as we
+thank God for this great victory, let us thank Him, not with our
+lips merely, but with our lives, by living such lives as He loves to
+see, such lives as He meant us to live, lives of loyalty to God, and
+of usefulness to our brethren, and of industry and prudence in our
+calling, and so help forward, each of us, however humble our
+station, the glory of God; because we shall each of us, in the
+cottage and in the field, in the shop and in the mansion, in this
+our little parish, and therefore in the great nation of which it is
+a part, help forward the fulfilment of those blessed words, Our
+Father which art in heaven; Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done on
+earth as it is in heaven; and therefore, also, the fulfilment of the
+words which come after them, and not before them; Give us this day
+our daily bread.
+
+
+
+SERMON XIV. ENGLAND'S STRENGTH
+
+
+
+2 Kings xix. 34. I will defend this city, to save it for mine own
+sake.
+
+The first lesson for this morning's service is of the grandest in
+the whole Old Testament; grander perhaps than all, except the story
+of the passage of the Red Sea, and the giving of the Law on Sinai.
+It follows out the story which you heard in the first lesson for
+last Sunday afternoon, of the invasion of Judea by the Assyrians.
+You heard then how this great Assyrian conqueror, Sennacherib, after
+taking all the fortified towns of Judah, and sweeping the whole
+country with fire and sword, sent three of his generals up to the
+very walls of Jerusalem, commanding King Hezekiah to surrender at
+discretion, and throw himself and his people on Sennacherib's mercy;
+how proudly and boastfully he taunted the Jews with their weakness;
+how, like the Russian emperor now, he called in religion as the
+excuse for his conquests and robberies, saying, as if God's
+blessings were on them, 'Am I now come up without the Lord against
+this place to destroy it? The Lord said to me, Go up against this
+place to destroy it;' while all the time what he really trusted in
+(as his own words showed) was what the Russian emperors trust in,
+their own strength and the number of their armies.
+
+Jerusalem was thus in utter need and danger; the vast army of the
+Assyrians was encamped at Lachish, not more than ten miles off; and
+however strong the walls of Jerusalem might be, and however
+advantageously it might stand on its high hill, with lofty rocks and
+cliffs on three sides of it, yet Hezekiah knew well that no strength
+of his could stand more than a few days against Sennacherib's army.
+For these Assyrians had brought the art of war to a greater
+perfection than any nation of the old world: they lived for war,
+and studied, it seems, only how to conquer. And they have left
+behind them very remarkable proofs of what sort of men they were, of
+which I think it right to tell you all; for they are most
+instructive, not merely because they prove the truth of Isaiah's
+account, but because they explain it, and help us in many ways to
+understand his prophecies. They are a number of sculptures and
+paintings, representing Sennacherib, his army, and his different
+conquests, which were painted by his command, in his palace; and
+having been lately discovered there, among the ruins of Nineveh,
+have been brought to England, and are now in the British Museum,
+while copies of many of them are in the Crystal Palace. There we
+see these terrible Assyrian conquerors defeating their enemies,
+torturing and slaughtering their prisoners, swimming rivers, beating
+down castles, sweeping on from land to land like a devouring fire,
+while over their heads fly fierce spirits who protect and prosper
+their cruelties, and eagles who trail in their claws the entrails of
+the slain. The very expression of their faces is frightful for its
+fierceness; the countenances of a 'bitter and hasty nation,' as the
+Prophet calls them, whose feet were swift to shed blood. And as for
+the art of war, and their power of taking walled towns like
+Jerusalem, you may see them in these pictures battering down and
+undermining forts and castles, with instruments so well made and
+powerful, that all other nations who came after them, for more than
+two thousand years, seem to have been content to copy from them, and
+hardly to have improved on the old Assyrian engines.
+
+Such, and so terrible, they came up against Jerusalem: to attempt
+to fight them would have been useless madness; and Hezekiah had but
+one means of escaping from them, and that was to cast himself and
+his people upon the boundless mercy, and faithfulness, and power of
+God.
+
+And Hezekiah had his answer by Isaiah the prophet: and more than an
+answer. The Lord took the matter into His own hand, and showed
+Sennacherib which was the stronger, his soldiers and horses and
+engines, or the Lord God; and so that terrible Assyrian army came
+utterly to nought, and vanished off the face of the earth.
+
+Now, my friends, has this noble history no lesson in it for us? God
+forbid! It has a lesson which ought to come nearer to our hearts
+than to the hearts of any nation: for though we or our forefathers
+have never been, for nearly three hundred years, in such utter need
+and danger as Jerusalem was, yet be sure that we might have been so,
+again and again, had it not been for the mercy of the same God who
+delivered Jerusalem from the Assyrians. It is now three hundred
+years ago that the Lord delivered this country from as terrible an
+invader as Sennacherib himself; when He three times scattered by
+storms the fleets of the King of Spain, which were coming to lay
+waste this land with fire and sword: and since then no foreign foe
+has set foot on English soil, and we almost alone, of all the
+nations of Europe, have been preserved from those horrors of war,
+even to speak of which is dreadful! Oh, my friends! we know not
+half God's goodness to us!
+
+And if you ask me, why God has so blest and favoured this land, I
+can only answer--and I am not ashamed or afraid to answer--I believe
+it is on account of the Church of England; it is because God has put
+His name here in a peculiar way, as He did among the Jews of old,
+and that He is jealous for His Church, and for the special knowledge
+of His Gospel and His Law, which He has given us in our Prayer-book
+and in our Church Catechism, lighting therein a candle in England
+which I believe will never be put out. It is not merely that we are
+a Protestant country,--great blessing as that is,--it is, I believe,
+that there is something in the Church of England which there is not
+in Protestant countries abroad, unless perhaps Sweden: for every
+one of them (except Sweden and ourselves) has suffered, from time to
+time, invading armies, and the unspeakable horrors of war. In some
+of them the light of the Gospel has been quenched utterly, and in
+others it lingers like a candle flickering down into the socket. By
+horrible persecutions, and murder, and war, and pillage, have those
+nations been tormented from time to time; and who are we, that we
+should escape? Certainly from no righteousness of our own. Some
+may say, It is our great wealth which has made us strong. My
+friends, believe it not. Look at Spain, which was once the richest
+of all nations; and did her riches preserve her? Has she not
+dwindled down into the most miserable and helpless of all nations?
+Has not her very wealth vanished from her, because she sold herself
+to work all unrighteousness with greediness?
+
+Some may say, It is our freedom which makes us strong. My friends,
+believe it not. Freedom is a vast blessing from God, but freedom
+alone will preserve no nation. How many free nations have fallen
+into every sort of misery, ay, into bitter slavery, in spite of all
+their freedom. How many free nations in Europe lie now in bondage,
+gnawing their tongues for pain, and weary with waiting for the
+deliverance which does not come? No, my friends, freedom is of
+little use without something else--and that is loyalty; reverence
+for law and obedience to the powers that be, because men believe
+those powers to be ordained of God; because men believe that Christ
+is their King, and they His ministers and stewards, and that He it
+is who appoints all orders and degrees of men in His Holy Church.
+True freedom can only live with true loyalty and obedience, such as
+our Prayer-book, our Catechism, our Church of England preaches to
+us. It is a Church meant for free men, who stand each face to face
+with their Heavenly Father: but it is a Church meant also for loyal
+men, who look on the law as the ordinance of God, and on their
+rulers as the ministers of God; and if our freedom has had anything
+to do (as no doubt it has) with our prosperity, I believe that we
+owe the greater part of our freedom to the teaching and the general
+tone of mind which our Prayer-book has given to us and to our
+forefathers for now three hundred years.
+
+Not that we have listened to that teaching, or acted up to it: God
+knows, we have been but too like the Jews in Isaiah's time, who had
+the Law of God, and yet did every man what was right in his own
+eyes; we, like them, have been hypocritical; we, like them, have
+neglected the poor, and the widow, and the orphan; we, like them,
+have been too apt to pay tithe of mint and anise, and neglect the
+weightier matters of the law, justice, mercy, and judgment. When we
+read that awful first chapter of Isaiah, we may well tremble; for
+all the charges which he brings against the Jews of his time would
+just as well apply to us; but yet we can trust in the Lord, as
+Isaiah did, and believe that He will be jealous for His land, and
+for His name's sake, and not suffer the nations to say of us, 'Where
+is now their God?' We can trust Him, that if He turn His hand on
+us, as He did on the Jews of old, and bring us into danger and
+trouble, yet it will be in love and mercy, that He may purge away
+our dross, and take away all our alloy, and restore our rulers as at
+the first, and our counsellors as at the beginning, that we may be
+called, 'The city of righteousness, the faithful city.' True, we
+must not fancy that we have any righteousness of our own, that we
+merit God's favour above other people; our consciences ought to tell
+us that cannot be; our Bibles tell us that is an empty boast. Did
+we not hear this morning, 'Bring forth fruits meet for repentance:
+and think not to say within yourselves, We have Abraham to our
+father; for God is able of these stones to raise up children to
+Abraham.' But we may comfort ourselves with the thought that there
+is One standing among us (though we see Him not) who will, ay, and
+does, 'baptize us with the Holy Ghost and with fire, whose fan is in
+His hand, and He will thoroughly purge His floor, and gather the
+wheat into His garner,' for the use of our children after us, and
+the generations yet unborn, while the chaff, all among us which is
+empty, and light, and rotten, and useless, He will burn up (thanks
+be to His holy name) with fire unquenchable, which neither the
+falsehood and folly of man, nor the malice of the Devil, can put
+out, but which will purge this land of all its sins.
+
+This is our hope, and this is the cause of our thankfulness. For
+who but we should be thankful this day that we are Englishmen,
+members of Christ's Church of England, inhabitants of, perhaps, the
+only country in Europe which is not now perplexed with fear of
+change, while men's hearts fail them for dread, and looking for
+those things which are coming on the earth? a country which has
+never seen, as all the countries round have seen, a foreign army
+trampling down their crops, burning their farms, cutting down their
+trees, plundering their towns, destroying in a day the labour of
+years, while women are dishonoured, men tortured to make them give
+up their money, the able-bodied driven from their homes, ruined and
+wanderers, and the sick and aged left to perish of famine and
+neglect. My friends, all these things were going on but last year
+upon the Danube. They are going on now in Asia: even with all the
+mercy and moderation of our soldiers and sailors, we have not been
+able to avoid inflicting some of these very miseries upon our own
+enemies; and yet here we are, going about our business in peace and
+safety in a land in which we and our forefathers have found, now for
+many a year, that just laws make a quiet and prosperous people; that
+the effect of righteousness is peace, and the fruit of
+righteousness, quietness and assurance for ever;--a land in which
+the good are not terrified, the industrious hampered, and the greedy
+and lawless made eager and restless by expectation of change in
+government; but every man can boldly and hopefully work in his
+calling, and 'whatsoever his hand finds to do, do it with all his
+might,' in fair hope that the money which he earns in his manhood he
+will be able to enjoy quietly in his old age, and hand it down
+safely to his children, and his children's children;--a land which
+for hundreds of years has not felt the unspeakable horrors of war; a
+land which even now is safely and peacefully gathering in its
+harvest, while so many countries lie wasted with fire and sword.
+Oh, my friends, who made us to differ from others, or what have we
+that we did not receive? Not to ourselves do we owe our blessings;
+hardly even to our wise forefathers: but to God Himself, and the
+Spirit of God which was with them, and is with us still, in spite of
+all our shortcomings. We owe it to our wise Constitution, to our
+wise Church, the principle of which is that God is Judge and Christ
+is King, in peace as well as in war, in times of quiet as well as in
+times of change; I say, to our wise Constitution and to our wise
+Church, which teach us that all power is of God; that all men who
+have power, great or small, are His stewards; that all orders and
+degrees of men in His Holy Church, from the queen on the throne to
+the labourer in the harvest-field, are called by God to their
+ministry and vocation, and are responsible to God for their conduct
+therein. How then shall we show forth our thankfulness, not only in
+our lips, but in our lives? How, but by believing that very
+principle, that very truth which He has taught us, and by which
+England stands, that we are God's people, and God's servants? He
+has indeed showed us what is good, and our fathers before us; and
+what does the Lord require of us in return, but to do the good which
+He has showed us, to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly
+with our God?
+
+Oh, my friends, come frankly and joyfully to the Lord's Table this
+day. Confess your sins and shortcomings to Him, and entreat Him to
+enable you to live more worthily of your many blessings. Offer to
+Him the sacrifice of your praise and thankfulness, imperfect though
+it is, and join with angels and archangels in blessing Him for what
+He is, and what He has been to you: and then receive your share of
+_His_ most perfect sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, the bread
+and the wine which tell you that you are members of His Church; that
+His body gives you whatsoever life and strength your souls have;
+that His blood washes out all your sins and shortcomings; that His
+Spirit shall be renewed in you day by day, to teach you to do the
+good work which He has prepared already for you, and to walk in the
+old paths which have led our forefathers, and will lead us too, I
+trust, safe through the chances and changes of this mortal life, and
+the fall of mighty kingdoms, towards that perfect City of God which
+is eternal in the heavens.
+
+
+
+SERMON XV. THE LIFE OF GOD
+
+
+
+Ephesians iv. 17, 18. That ye walk not as other Gentiles walk, in
+the vanity of their mind, being alienated from the life of God
+through the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of
+their heart.
+
+You heard these words read in the Epistle for to-day. I cannot
+expect that you all understood them. It is no shame to you that you
+did not. Some of them are long and hard Latin words. Some of them,
+though they are plain English enough, are hard to understand because
+they have to do with deep matters, which can only be understood by
+the help of God's Spirit. And even with the help of God's Spirit we
+cannot any of us expect to understand _all_ which they mean: we
+cannot expect to be as wise as St. Paul; for we must be as good as
+St. Paul before we can be as wise about goodness as he was. I do
+not pretend to understand all the text myself: no, not half, nor a
+tenth part of what it very likely means. But I do seem to myself to
+understand a little about it, by the help and blessing of God; and
+what little of it I do understand, I will try to make you understand
+also.
+
+For the words in the text belong to you as much as to me, or to St.
+Paul himself. What is true for one man, is true for every man.
+What is right for one man, is right for every man. What God
+promises for one man, He promises to every man. Man or woman, black
+or white, rich or poor, scholar or unlearned, there is no respect of
+persons with Him. 'In Christ Jesus,' says St. Paul, 'there is
+neither male nor female, slave nor freeman, Jew who fancies that
+God's promises belong to him alone, or Gentile who knows nothing
+about them, clever learned Greek, or stupid ignorant Barbarian.'
+
+It is enough for God that we are all men and women bearing the
+flesh, and blood, and human nature which His Son Jesus Christ wore
+on earth. If we are baptized, we belong to Him: if we are not
+baptized, we ought to be; for we belong to Him just as much. Every
+man may be baptized; every man may be regenerate; God calls all to
+His grace and adoption and holy baptism, which is the sign and seal
+of His adoption; and therefore, what is right for the regenerate
+baptized man, is right for the unregenerate unbaptized man; for the
+Christian and for the heathen there is but one way, one duty, one
+life for both, and that is the life of God, of which St. Paul speaks
+in the text.
+
+Now of this life of God I will speak hereafter; but I mention it
+now, because it is the thing to which I wish to bring your thoughts
+before the end of the sermon.
+
+But first, let us see what St. Paul means, when he talks about the
+Gentiles in his day. For that also has to do with us. I said that
+every man, Christian or heathen, has the same duty, and is bound to
+do the same right; every man, Christian or heathen, if he sins,
+breaks his duty in the same way, and does the same wrong. There is
+but one righteousness, the life of God; there is but one sin, and
+that is being alienated from the life of God. One man may commit
+different sorts of sins from another; one may lie, another may
+steal: one may be proud, another may be covetous: but all these
+different sins come from the same root of sin; they are all flowers
+of the same plant. And St. Paul tells us what that one root of sin,
+what that same Devil's plant, is, which produces all sin in
+Christian or Heathen, in Churchman or Dissenter, in man or woman--
+the one disease, from which has come all the sin which ever was done
+by man, woman, or child since the world was made.
+
+Now, what is this one disease, to which every man, you and I, are
+all liable? Why it is that we are every one of us worse than we
+ought to be, worse than we know how to be, and, strangest of all,
+worse than we wish and like to be.
+
+Just as far as we are like the heathen of old, we shall be worse
+than we know how to be. For we are all ready enough to turn
+heathens again, at any moment, my friends; and the best Christian in
+this church knows best that what I say is true; that he is beset by
+the very same temptations which ruined the old heathens, and that if
+he gave way to them a moment they would ruin him likewise. For what
+does St. Paul say was the matter with the old heathens?
+
+First he says, 'Their understanding was darkened.' But what part of
+it? What was it that they had got dark about and could not
+understand? For in some matters they were as clever as we, and
+cleverer. What part of their understanding was it which was
+darkened? St. Paul tells us in the first chapter of the Epistle to
+the Romans. It was their hearts--their reason, as we should say.
+It was about God, and the life of God, that they were dark. They
+had not been always dark about God, but they were _darkened_; they
+grew more and more dark about Him, generation after generation; they
+gave themselves up more and more to their corrupt and fallen nature,
+and so the children grew worse than their fathers, and their
+children again worse than them, till they had lost all notion of
+what God was like. For from the very first all heathens have had
+some notion of what God is like, and have had a notion also, which
+none but God could have given them, that men ought to be like God.
+God taught, or if I may so speak, tried to teach, the heathen, from
+the very first. If God had not taught them, they would not have
+been to blame for knowing nothing of God. For as Job says, 'Can man
+by searching find out God?' Surely not; God must teach us about
+Himself. Never forget that man cannot find God; God must show
+Himself to man of His own free grace and will. God must reveal and
+unveil Himself to us, or we shall never even fancy that there is a
+God. And God did so to the heathen. Even before the Flood, God's
+Spirit strove with man; and after the Flood we read how the Lord,
+Jesus Christ the Son of God, revealed Himself in many different ways
+to heathens. To Pharaoh, king of Egypt, in Abraham's times; and
+again to Abimelech, king of Gerar; and again to Pharaoh and his
+servants, in Joseph's time; and to Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon,
+and to Cyrus, king of Persia; and no doubt to thousands more.
+Indeed, no man, heathen or Christian, ever thought a single true
+thought, or felt a single right feeling, about God or man, or man's
+duty to God and his neighbour, unless God revealed it to him
+(whether or not He also revealed _Himself_ to the man and showed him
+_who_ it was who was putting the right thought into his mind): for
+every right thought and feeling about God, and goodness, and duty,
+are the very voice of God Himself, the word of God whereof St. John
+speaks, and Moses and the prophets speak, speaking to the heart of
+sinful man, to enlighten and to teach him. And therefore, St. Paul
+says, the sinful heathen were without excuse, because, he says,
+'that which may be known of God is manifest, that is plain, among
+them, for God hath showed it to them. For the invisible things of
+Him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being
+understood by the things which are made, even His eternal power and
+Godhead; so that they are without excuse.' 'But these heathens,' he
+says, 'did not like to retain God in their knowledge; and when they
+knew God, did not glorify Him as God, and changed the glory of the
+Incorruptible God into the likeness of corruptible man, and beasts
+and creeping things.' And so they were alienated from the life of
+God; that is, they became strangers to God's life; they forgot what
+God's life and character was like: or if they even did awake a
+moment, and recollect dimly what God was like, they hated that
+thought. They hated to think that God was what He was, and shut
+their eyes, and stopped their ears as fast as possible.
+
+And what happened to them in the meantime? What was the fruit of
+their wilfully forgetting what God's life was? St. Paul tells us
+that they fell into the most horrible sins--sins too dreadful and
+shameful to be spoken of; and that their common life, even when they
+did not run into such fearful evils, was profligate, fierce, and
+miserable. And yet St. Paul tells us all the while they knew the
+judgment of God, that those who do such things are worthy of death.
+
+Now we know that St. Paul speaks truth, from the writings of
+heathens; for God raised up from time to time, even among the
+heathen Greeks and Romans, witnesses for Himself, to testify of Him
+and of His life, and to testify against the sins of the world, such
+men as Socrates and Plato among the Greeks, whose writings St. Paul
+knew thoroughly, and whom, I have no doubt, he had in his mind when
+he wrote his first chapter of Romans, and told the heathen that they
+were without excuse. And among the Romans, also, He raised up, in
+the same way, witnesses for Himself, such as Juvenal and Persius,
+and others, whom scholars know well. And to these men, heathens
+though they were, God certainly did teach a great deal about
+Himself, and gave them courage to rebuke the sins of kings and rich
+men, even at the danger of their lives; and to some of them he gave
+courage even to suffer martyrdom for the message which God had given
+them, and which their neighbours hated to hear. And this was the
+message which God sent by them to the heathen: that God was good
+and righteous, and that therefore His everlasting wrath must be
+awaiting sinners. They rebuked their heathen neighbours for those
+very same horrible crimes which St. Paul mentions; and then they
+said, as St. Paul does, 'How you make your own sins worse by
+blasphemies against God! You sin yourselves, and then, to excuse
+yourselves, you invent fables and lies about God, and pretend that
+God is as wicked as you are, in order to drug your own consciences,
+by making God the pattern of your own wickedness.'
+
+These men saw that man ought to be like God; and they saw that God
+was righteous and good; and they saw, therefore, that
+unrighteousness and sin must end in ruin and everlasting misery. So
+much God had taught them, but not much more; but to St. Paul he had
+taught more. Those wise and righteous heathen could show their
+sinful neighbours that sin was death, and that God was righteous.
+But they could not tell them how to rise out of the death of sin,
+into God's life of righteousness. They could preach the terrors of
+the Law, but they did not know the good news of the Gospel, and
+therefore they did not succeed; they did not convert their
+neighbours to God. Then came St. Paul and preached to the very same
+people, and he did convert them to God; for he had good news for
+them, of things which prophets and kings had desired to see, and had
+not seen them, and to hear, and had not heard them.
+
+For God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spoke to the
+fathers by the prophets, at last spoke to all men by a Son, His
+only-begotten Son, the exact likeness of His Father, the brightness
+of His glory, and the express image of His person. He sent Him to
+be a man: very man of the substance of His mother, the Blessed
+Virgin Mary, at the same time that He was Very God, of the substance
+of His Father, begotten before all worlds.
+
+And so God, and the life of God, was manifested in the flesh and
+reasonable soul of a man; and from that time there is no doubt what
+the life of God is; for the life of God is the life of Jesus Christ.
+There is no doubt now what God is like, for God is like Jesus
+Christ. No one can now say, 'I cannot see God, how then can you
+expect me to be like God?' for He who has seen Jesus Christ, as His
+character stands in the Gospels, has seen God the Father. No one
+can say now, 'How can a man be like God, and live a life like God's
+life?' for if any one of you say that, I can answer him: 'A man can
+be like God; you can be like God; for there was once a man on earth,
+Jesus, the son of the Blessed Virgin, who was perfectly like God.'
+And if you answer, 'But He was like God, because He was God,' I can
+say, 'And that is the very reason why you can be like God also.' If
+Jesus Christ had been only a man, you could no more become like Him
+than you can become clever because another man is clever, or strong
+because another man is strong: but because He was God The Son of
+God, He can give you, to make you like God, the same Holy Spirit
+which made Him like God; for that Holy Spirit proceeds from Him, the
+Son, as well as from the Father, and the Father has committed all
+power to the Son; and therefore that same Man Christ Jesus has power
+to change your heart, and renew it, and shape it to be like Him, and
+like His Father, by the power of His Spirit, that you may be like
+God as He was like God, and live the life of God which He lived; so
+that the Lord Jesus Christ, because He was a man like God, showed
+that all men can become like God; and because He was God, Very God
+of Very God, He is able to make all who come to Him men like
+Himself, men like God, and raise them up body and soul to the
+everlasting life of God, that He may be the firstborn among many
+brethren.
+
+Now what is this everlasting life of God, which the Lord Jesus
+Christ lived perfectly, and which He can and will make every one of
+us live, in proportion as we give up our hearts and wills to Him,
+and ask Him to take charge of us, and shape us, and teach us? When
+we read that blessed story of Him who was born in a stable, and laid
+in a manger, who went about doing good, because God was with Him,
+who condescended of His own freewill to be mocked, and scourged, and
+spit upon, and crucified, that He might take away the sins of the
+whole world, who prayed for His murderers, and blest those who
+cursed Him--what sort of life does this life of God, which He lived,
+seem to us? Is it not a life of love, joy, peace, long-suffering,
+gentleness, goodness, patience, meekness? Surely it is; then that
+is the likeness of God. God is love. And the Lord Jesus' life was
+a life of love--utter, perfect, untiring love. He did His Father's
+will perfectly, because He loved men perfectly, and to the death.
+He died for those who hated Him, and so He showed forth to man the
+name and glory of God; for God is love. The name of the Father, and
+of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost is love; for love is justice and
+righteousness, as it is written, 'Love worketh no ill to his
+neighbour: therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.' And God
+is perfect love, because He is perfect righteousness; and perfect
+righteousness, because He is perfect love; for His love and His
+justice are not two different things, two different parts of God, as
+some say, who fancy that God's justice had to be satisfied in one
+way, and His love in another, and talk of God as if His justice
+fought against His love, and desired the death of a sinner, and then
+His love fought against His justice, and desired to save a sinner.
+No wonder that those who hold such doctrines go further still, and
+talk as if God the Father desired to destroy mankind, and would have
+done it if God the Son had not interposed, and suffered Himself
+instead; till they can fancy that they are Christians, and know God,
+while they use the hideous words of a certain hymn, which speaks of
+
+
+'The streaming drops of Jesu's blood
+Which calmed the Father's frowning face.'
+
+
+May God deliver and preserve us and our children from all such
+blasphemous fables, which, like the fables of the old heathen,
+change the glory of the Incorruptible God into the likeness of a
+corruptible man, which deny the true faith, that God has neither
+parts nor passions, by talking of His love and His justice as two
+different things; which confound His persons by saying that the Son
+alone does what the Father and the Holy Spirit do also, while they
+divide His substance by making the will of the Son different from
+the will of the Father, and deny that such as the Father is, such is
+the Son, and such is the Holy Ghost, all three one perfect Love, and
+one perfect Justice, because they are all three one God, and God is
+love, and love is righteousness.
+
+Believe me, my friends, this is no mere question of words, which
+only has to do with scholars in their libraries; it is a question,
+the question of life and death for you, and me, and every living
+soul in this church,--Do we know what the life of God is? are we
+living it? or are we alienated from it, careless about it, disliking
+it?
+
+For, as I said at the beginning of my sermon, we are all ready
+enough to turn heathens again; and if we grow to forget or dislike
+the life of God, we shall be heathen at heart. We may talk about
+Him with our lips, we may quarrel and curse each other about
+religious differences; but let us make as great a profession as we
+may, if we do not love the life of God we shall be heathen at heart,
+and we shall, sooner or later, fall into sin. The heathens fell
+into sin just in proportion as their hearts were turned away from
+the life of God, and so shall we. And how shall we know whether our
+hearts are turned away, or whether they are right with God? Thus:
+What are the fruits of God's Spirit? what sort of life does the
+Spirit of God make man live? For the Spirit of God is God, and
+therefore the life of God is the life which God's Spirit makes men
+live; and what is that? a life of love and righteousness.
+
+The old heathens did not like such a life, therefore they did not
+like to retain God in their knowledge. They knew that man ought to
+be like God: and St. Paul says, they ought to have known what God
+was like; that He was Love; for St. Paul told them He left not
+Himself without witness, in that He sent them rain and fruitful
+seasons, filling their hearts with food and gladness. That was, in
+St. Paul's eyes, God's plainest witness of Himself--the sign that
+God was Love, making His sun shine on the just and on the unjust,
+and good to the unthankful and the evil--in one word, perfect,
+because He is perfect Love. But they preferred to be selfish,
+covetous, envious, revengeful, delighting to indulge themselves in
+filthy pleasures, to oppress and defraud each other. Do you?
+
+For you can, I can, every baptized man can take his choice between
+the selfish life of the heathens and the loving life of God: we may
+either keep to the old pattern of man, which is corrupt according to
+the deceitful lusts; or we may put on the new pattern of man, which
+is after God's likeness, and founded upon righteousness and truthful
+holiness.
+
+Every baptized man may choose. For he is not only bound to live the
+life of God: every man, as the old heathen philosophers knew, is
+bound to live it: but more. The baptized man _can_ live it: that
+is the good news of his baptism. _You can_ live the life of God,
+for you know what the life of God is--it is the life of Jesus
+Christ. _You can_ live the life of God, for the Spirit of God is
+with you, to cleanse your soul and life, day by day, till they are
+like the soul and life of Christ.
+
+Then you will be, as the apostle says, 'a partaker of a divine
+nature.' Then--and it is an awful thing to say--a thing past hope,
+past belief, but I must say it--for it is in the Bible, it is the
+word of the Blessed Lord Himself, and of His beloved apostle, St.
+John: 'If a man love Me, he will keep my commandments, and my
+Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our abode
+with him.' 'And this is His commandment,' says St. John, 'That we
+should love one another.' 'God is Love, and he who dwelleth in Love
+dwelleth in God, and God in him.'
+
+God is Love. As I told you just now, the heathens of old might have
+known that, if they had chosen to open their eyes and see. But they
+would not see. They were dark, cruel, and unloving, and therefore
+they fancied that God was dark, cruel, and unloving also. They did
+not love Love, and therefore they did not love God, for God is Love.
+And therefore they did not love loving: they did not enjoy loving;
+and so they lost the Spirit of God, which is the Spirit of Love.
+And therefore they did not love each other, but lived in hatred and
+suspicion, and selfishness, and darkness. They were but heathen.
+But if even they ought to have known that God was Love, how much
+more we? For we know of a deed of God's love, such as those poor
+heathen never dreamed of. God so loved the world, that He gave His
+only-begotten Son to die for it. Then God showed what His eternal
+life was--a life of love: then God showed what our eternal life is--
+to know Him who is Love, and Jesus Christ, whom He sent to show
+forth His love: then God showed that it is the duty and in the
+power of every man to live the life of God, the life of Love; for He
+sent forth into the world His Spirit, the Spirit of Love, to fill
+with love the heart of every man and woman who sees that Love is the
+image of God, and longs to be loving, and therefore longs to be like
+God; as it is written, 'Blessed are those who hunger and thirst
+after righteousness, for they shall be filled:' for righteousness is
+keeping Christ's commandment, and Christ's commandment is, that we
+love one another. And to those who long to do that, God's Spirit
+will come to fill them with love; and where the Spirit of God is,
+there is also the Father, and there is also the Son; for God's
+substance cannot be divided, as the Athanasian creed tells us (and
+blessed and cheering words they are); and he who hath the Holy
+Spirit of Love with him hath both the Father and the Son; as it is
+written: 'If a man love Me, my Father will love him, and we will
+come unto him, and make our abode with him.'
+
+And then, if we have God abiding with us, and filling us with His
+Eternal Life, what more do we need for life, or death, or eternity,
+or eternities of eternities? For we shall live in and with and by
+God, who can never die or change, an everlasting life of love,
+whereof St. Paul says, that though prophecies shall fail, and
+tongues shall cease, and knowledge shall vanish away, because all
+that we know now is but in part, and all that we see now is through
+a glass darkly, yet Love shall never fail, but abide for ever and
+ever.
+
+
+
+SERMON XVI. GOD'S OFFSPRING
+
+
+
+Galatians iv. 7. Wherefore thou art no more a servant, but a son;
+and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ.
+
+I say, writes St. Paul, in the epistle which you heard read just
+now, 'that the heir, as long as he is a child, differs nothing from
+a servant, though he be lord of all; but is under tutors and
+governors, until the time appointed by his father. Even so,' he
+says, we, 'when we were children, were in bondage under the elements
+of the world: but when the fulness of time was come, God sent forth
+His Son made of a woman, made under a law, to redeem them that were
+under a law, that we might receive the adoption of sons.'
+
+When we were children. He is not speaking of the Jews only; for
+these Galatians to whom he was writing were not Jews at all, any
+more than we are. He was speaking to men simply as men. He was
+speaking to the Galatians as we have a right to speak to all men.
+
+Nor does he mean merely when we were children in age. The Greek
+word which he uses, means infants, people not come to years of
+discretion. Indeed, the word which he uses means very often a
+simpleton, an ignorant or foolish person; one who does not know who
+and what he is, what is his duty, or how to do it.
+
+Now this, he says, was the state of men before Christ came; this is
+the state of all men by nature still; the state of all poor
+heathens, whether in England or in foreign countries.
+
+They are children--that is, ignorant and unable to take care of
+themselves; because they do not know what they are. St. Paul tells
+us what they are. That they are all God's offspring, though they
+know it not. He likens them to young children, who, though they are
+their father's heirs, have no more liberty than slaves have; but are
+kept under tutors and masters, till they have arrived at years of
+discretion, and are fit to take their places as their father's
+_sons_, and to go out into the world, and have the management of
+their own affairs, and a share in their father's property, which
+they may use for themselves, instead of being merely fed and clothed
+by, and kept in subjection to him, whether they will or not. This
+is what he means by receiving the adoption of sons. He does not
+mean that we are not God's children till we find out that we are
+God's children. That is what some people say; but that is the very
+exact contrary to what St. Paul used to say. He told the heathen
+Athenians that they were God's children. He put them in mind that
+one of their own heathen poets had told them so, and had said, 'We
+are also God's offspring.' And so in this chapter he says, You were
+God's children all along, though you did not know it. You were
+God's heirs all along, although you differed nothing from slaves;
+for as long as you were in your heathen ignorance and foolishness,
+God had to treat you as His slaves, not as His children; and so you
+were in bondage under the elements of the world, till the fulness of
+time was come.
+
+And, then, God sent His Son, born of a woman, born under a law, to
+redeem those who were under a law--that is, all mankind. The Jews
+were keeping, or pretending to keep, Moses' law, and trying to
+please God by that. The heathens were keeping all manner of old
+superstitious laws and customs about religion which their
+forefathers had handed down to them. But heathens, and indeed Jews
+too, at that time, all agreed in one thing. These laws and customs
+of theirs about religion all went upon the notion of their being
+God's slaves, and not his children. They thought that God did not
+love them; that they must buy His favours. They thought religion
+meant a plan for making God love them.
+
+Then appeared the love of God in Jesus Christ. As at this very
+Christmas time, the Son of God, Jesus Christ the Lord, in whose
+likeness man was made at the beginning, was born into the world, to
+redeem us and all mankind. He told them of their Heavenly Father;
+He preached to them the good news of the kingdom of God; that God
+had not forgotten them, did not hate them, would freely forgive them
+all that was past; and why? Because He was their Father, and loved
+them, and loved them so that He spared not His only begotten Son,
+but freely gave Him for them. And now God looks at us human beings,
+not as we are in ourselves, sinful and corrupt, but he looks at us
+in the light of Jesus Christ, who has taken our nature upon Him, and
+redeemed it, and raised it up again, so that God can look on it now
+without disgust, and henceforth no one need be ashamed of being a
+man; for to be a man is to be in the likeness of God. Man was
+created in the image and likeness of God, and who is the image and
+likeness of God but Jesus Christ? Therefore man was created at
+first in Jesus Christ, and now, as St. Paul says, he is created anew
+in Jesus Christ; and now to be a man is to partake of the same flesh
+and blood which the Lord Jesus Christ wore for us, when He was made
+very man of the substance of his mother, and that without spot of
+sin, to show that man need not be sinful, that man was meant by God
+to be holy and pure from sin, and that by the Holy Spirit of Jesus
+Christ we, every one of us, can become pure from sin. This is the
+blessedness of Christmas-day. That one man, at least, has been born
+into the world spotless and free from sin, that He might be the
+firstborn of many brethren. This is the good news of Christmas-day.
+That now, in Christ's light, and for Christ's sake, our Father looks
+on us as His sons, and not His slaves.
+
+Therefore is every child who comes into the world baptized freely
+into the name of God. Baptism is a sign and warrant that God loves
+that child; that God looks on it as His child, not for itself or its
+own sake, but because it belongs to Jesus Christ, who, by becoming a
+man, redeemed all mankind, and made them His property and His
+brothers. Therefore every child, when it is brought to be baptized,
+promises, by its godfathers and godmothers, repentance and faith,
+when it comes to years of understanding. It is not God's slave, as
+the beasts are. It is God's child. But God does not wish it to
+remain merely His child, under tutors and governors, forced to do
+what is right outwardly, and whether it likes or not. God wishes
+each of us to become His son, His grown-up and reasonable son. To
+know who we are;--to work in His kingdom for Him;--to guide and
+manage our own wills, and hearts, and lives in obedience to Him;--to
+claim and take our share as men of God of the inheritance which He
+has given us. And that we can only do by faith in Jesus Christ. We
+must trust in Him, our Lord, our King, our Saviour, our Pattern. We
+must confess that we are nothing in ourselves, that we owe all to
+Him. We must follow in his footsteps, giving up our wills to God's
+will, doing not our own works, but the good works which God has
+prepared for us to walk in; and then we shall be truly confirmed;
+not mere children of God, under tutors, governors, schoolmasters and
+lawgivers, but free, reasonable, willing, hearty Christians, perfect
+men of God, the sons of God without rebuke.
+
+Oh, my friends, will you claim your share in the Spirit of God, whom
+the Lord bought for us with His precious blood, that Spirit who was
+given you at your baptism, which may be daily renewed in you, if you
+pray for it; who will strengthen and lift you up to lead lives
+worthy of your high calling? Or will you, like Esau of old, despise
+your birthright, and neglect to pray that God's Spirit may be
+renewed in you, and so lose more and more day by day the thought
+that God is your Father, and the love of holy and godlike things?
+Alas! take care that, like Esau, you hereafter find no room for
+repentance, though you seek it carefully with tears! It is a
+fearful thing to despise the mercies of the living God; and when you
+are called to be His sons, to fall back under the terrors of His
+law, in slavish fears and a guilty conscience, and remorse which
+cannot repent.
+
+And do not give way to false humility, says St. Paul. Do not say,
+'This is too high an honour for us to claim.' Do not say, 'It seems
+too conceited and assuming for us miserable sinners to call
+ourselves sons of God. We shall please God better, and show
+ourselves more reverent to Him, by calling ourselves His slaves, and
+crouching and trembling before Him, as if we expected Him to strike
+us dead, and making all sorts of painful and tiresome religious
+observances, and vain repetitions of prayers, to win His favour;' or
+by saying, 'We dare not call ourselves God's children yet; we are
+not spiritual enough; but when we have gone through all the
+necessary changes of heart, and frames, and feeling, and have been
+convinced of sin, and converted, and received the earnest, God's
+Spirit, by which we cry, Abba, Father! _then_ we shall have a right
+to call ourselves God's children.'
+
+Not so, says St. Paul, all through this very Epistle to the
+Galatians. That is not being reverent to God. It is insulting Him.
+For it is despising the honour which He has given you, and trying to
+get another honour of your own invention, by observances, and
+frames, and feelings of your own. Do not say, 'When we have
+received the earnest of God's Spirit, by which we can cry, Abba,
+Father! _then_ we shall become God's children;' for it is just
+because you _are_ God's children already--just because you have been
+God's children all along, that God has taught you to call Him
+Father. The Lord Jesus Christ told men that God was their Father.
+Not merely to the Apostles, but to poor, ignorant, sinful wretches,
+publicans and harlots, He spoke of their Father in heaven, who,
+because He is a perfect Father, sends His sun to shine on the evil
+and the good, and His rain to fall on the just and on the unjust.
+The Lord Jesus Christ taught men--all men, not merely saints and
+Apostles, but all men, when they prayed--to begin, 'Our Father.' He
+told them that that was the manner in which they were to pray, and
+therefore no other way of praying can we expect God to hear. No
+slavish, terrified, superstitious coaxing and flattering will help
+you with God. He has told you to call Him your Father; and if you
+speak to Him in any other way, you insult Him, and trample under
+foot the riches of His grace.
+
+This is the good news which the Bible preaches. This is the witness
+of God's Spirit, proclaiming that we are the sons of God; and, says
+St. Paul in another place, 'our spirit witnesses' to that glorious
+news as well. We feel, we know--why, we cannot tell, but we feel
+and know that we are the sons of God. When we are most calm, most
+humble, most free from ill-temper and self-conceit, most busy about
+our rightful work, then the feeling comes over us--I have a Father
+in heaven. And that feeling gives us a strength, a peace, a sure
+trust and hope, which no other thought can give. Yes, we are ready
+to say, I may be miserable and unfortunate, but the Great God of
+heaven and earth is my Father; and what can happen to me? I may be
+borne down with the remembrance of my great sins; I may find it
+almost too hard to fight against all my bad habits; but the Great
+God who made heaven and earth is my Father, and I am His son. He
+will forgive me for the past; He will help me to conquer for the
+future. If I do but remember that I am God's son, and claim my
+Father's promises, neither the world, nor the devil, nor my own
+sinful flesh, can ever prevail against me.
+
+This thought, and the peace which it brings, St. Paul tells us is
+none of our own; we did not put it into our own hearts; from God it
+comes, that blessed thought, that He is our Father. We could never
+have found it out for ourselves. It is the Spirit of the Son of
+God, the Spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ, which gives us courage to
+say, 'Our Father which art in heaven,' which makes us feel that
+those words are true, and must be true, and are worth all other
+words in the world put together--that God is our Father, and we his
+sons. Oh, my friends, believe earnestly this blessed news! the news
+of Christmas-day, that you are not God's slaves, but his sons, heirs
+of God, and joint-heirs with Christ;--joint-heirs with Christ! In
+what? Who can tell? But what an inheritance of glory and bliss
+that must be, which the Lord Jesus Christ Himself is to inherit with
+us--an inheritance such as eye hath not seen, and incorruptible,
+undefiled, and that fadeth not away, preserved in heaven for us; an
+inheritance of all that is wise, loving, noble, holy, peaceful--all
+that can make us happy, all that can make us like God Himself. Oh,
+what can we expect, if we neglect so great salvation? What can we
+expect, if when the Great God of heaven and earth tells us that we
+are His children, we turn away and fall down, become like the
+brutes, and the savages, or worse, like the evil spirits who rebel
+against God, instead of growing up to become the sons of God,
+perfect even as our Father in heaven is perfect? May He keep us all
+from that great sin! May He awaken each and every one of you to
+know the glory and honour which Jesus Christ brought for you when He
+was born at Bethlehem--the glory and honour which was proclaimed to
+belong to you when you were christened at that font! May He awaken
+you to know that you are the sons of God, and to look up to Him with
+loving, trustful, obedient souls, saying from your hearts, morning
+and night 'Our Father which art in heaven,' and feeling that those
+words give you daily strength to conquer your sins, and feel
+assurance of hope that your Heavenly Father will help and prosper
+you, His family, every time you struggle to obey His commandments,
+and follow the example of His perfect and spotless Son, Jesus Christ
+the Lord!
+
+
+
+SERMON XVII. DEATH IN LIFE
+
+
+
+Romans viii. 12, 13. Brethren, we are debtors, not to the flesh, to
+live after the flesh. For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die:
+but if ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye
+shall live.
+
+Does it seem strange to you that St. Paul should warn you, that you
+are not debtors to your own flesh? It is not strange, when you come
+to understand him; certainly not unnecessary: for as in his time,
+so now, most people do live as if they were debtors to their own
+flesh, as if their great duty, their one duty in life, was to please
+their own bodies, and brains, and tempers, and fancies, and
+feelings. Poor people have not much time to indulge their brains;
+and no time at all, happily for them, to indulge their fancies and
+feelings, as rich people do when they grow idle, and dainty, and
+luxurious. But still, too many of them live as if they were debtors
+to their own flesh; as if their own bodies and their own tempers
+were the masters of them, and ought to be their masters. Young men,
+for instance, how often they do things in secret of which it is a
+shame even to speak, just because it is pleasant. Young women, how
+often do they sell themselves and their own modesty, just for the
+pleasure of being flattered and courted, and of getting a few fine
+clothes. How often do men, just for the pleasure of drink, besot
+their souls and bodies, madden their tempers, neglect their
+families, make themselves every Saturday night, and often half the
+week, too, lower than the beasts which perish. And then, when a
+clergyman complains of them, they think him unreasonable; and by so
+thinking, show that he is right, and St. Paul right: for if I say
+to you, My dear young people (and I do say it), if you give way to
+filthy living and filthy talking, and to drunkenness, and to vanity
+about fine clothes, you will surely die--do you not say in your
+hearts, 'How unreasonable: how hard on us! If we can enjoy
+ourselves a little, why should we not? It is our right, and do it
+we will; and if it is wrong, it ought not to be wrong.' Why, what
+is that but saying, that you ought to do just what your body likes:
+that you are debtors to your flesh; and that your flesh, and not
+God's law, is your master. So again, when people grow older,
+perhaps they are more prudent about bad living, and more careful of
+their money: but still they live after the flesh. One man sets his
+heart on making money, and cares for nothing but that; breaks God's
+law for that, as if that was the thing to which he was a debtor,
+bound by some law which he could not avoid to scrape and scrape
+money together for ever. Another (and how often we see that) is a
+slave to his own pride and temper, which are just as much bred in
+his flesh: if he has been injured by any one, if he has taken a
+dislike against any one, he cannot forget and forgive: the man may
+be upright and kindly on many other points; prudent, too, and sober,
+and thoroughly master of himself on most matters; and yet you will
+find that when he gets on that one point, he is not master of
+himself; for his flesh is master of him: he may be a strong-minded,
+shrewd man upon most matters but just that one point: some old
+quarrel, or grudge, or suspicion, is, as we say, his weak point:
+and if you touch on that, the man's eye will kindle, and his face
+redden, and his lip tremble, and he will show that he is not master
+of himself: but that he is over-mastered by his fleshly passion, by
+the suspiciousness, or revengefulness, or touchiness, which every
+dumb animal has as well as he, which is not part of his man's
+nature, not part of God's image in him, but which is like the beasts
+which perish.
+
+Now, my friends, suppose I said to you, 'If you give way to such
+tempers; if you give way to pride, suspicion, sullen spite, settled
+dislike of any human being, you will surely die;' should you not,
+some of you, be inclined to think me very unreasonable, and to say
+in your hearts, 'Have I not a right to be angry? Have I not a right
+to give a man as good as he brings?' so confessing that I am right,
+after all, and that some of you think that you are debtors to your
+flesh, and its tempers, and do not see that you are meant to be
+masters, and not slaves, of your tempers and feelings.
+
+Again. Among poor women, as well as among rich ones, as they grow
+older, how much gossiping, tale-bearing, slandering, there is, and
+that too among people who call themselves religious. Yes, I say
+slandering; I put that in too; for I am certain that where the first
+two grow, the third is not far off. If gossiping is the root, tale-
+bearing and harsh judgment is the stem, and plain lying and
+slandering, and bearing false witness against one's neighbour, is
+the fruit.
+
+Now I say, because St. Paul says it, 'that those who do such things
+shall surely die.' And do not some of you think me unreasonable in
+that, and say in your heart, 'What! are we to be tongue-tied? Shall
+we not speak our minds?' Be it so, my good women, only remember
+this: that as long as you say that, you confess that you are not
+masters of your tongues, but your tongues are masters of you, and
+that you freely confess you owe service to your tongue, and not to
+God. Do not therefore complain of me for saying the very same
+thing, namely, that you think you are debtors to your flesh--to the
+tongues in your mouths, and must needs do what those same little
+unruly members choose, of which St James has said, 'The tongue is a
+fire, a world of iniquity, and it sets on fire the whole course of
+nature, and is set on fire of hell.' And again: 'If any person
+among you seem to be religious, and bridles not his tongue, but
+deceives himself, that person's religion is vain.'
+
+Again:--and, my good women, you must not think me hard on you, for
+you know in your hearts that I am not hard on you; but I must speak
+a word on a sin which I am afraid is growing in this parish, and in
+too many parishes in England; and that is deceiving kind and
+charitable persons, in order to get more help from them. God knows
+the temptation must be sore to poor people at times. And yet you
+will surely find in the long run, that 'honesty is the best policy.'
+Deceit is always a losing game. A lie is sure to be found out; as
+the Lord Jesus Himself says, 'There is nothing hid which shall not
+be made manifest;' and what we do in secret, is sure, unless we
+repent and amend it, to be proclaimed on the housetop: and many a
+poor soul, in her haste and greediness to get much, ends by getting
+nothing at all. And if it were not so;--if you were able to deceive
+any human being out of the riches of the world: yet know, that a
+man's life does _not_ consist in the abundance of the things which
+he possesses. And know that if you will not believe that,--if you
+will fancy that your business is to get all you can for your mortal
+bodies, by fair means or foul,--if you will fancy that you are thus
+debtors to your own flesh, you will surely die: but if you, through
+the Spirit, do mortify the deeds of the body, you shall live.
+
+And by this time some of you are asking, 'Live? Die? What does all
+this mean? When we die we shall die, good or bad; and in the
+meantime we shall live till we die. And you do not mean to tell us
+that we shall shorten our lives by our own tempers, or our tale-
+bearing, though we might, perhaps, by drunkenness?'
+
+My friends, if such a question rises in your mind, be sure that it,
+too, is a hint that you think yourself a debtor to the flesh--to
+live according to the flesh. For tell me, tell yourselves fairly,
+is your flesh, your body, the part of yourself which you can see and
+handle, _You_?--You know that it is not. When a neighbour's body
+dies, you say, perhaps, '_He_ is dead,' but you say it carelessly;
+and when one whom you know well, and love, dies,--when a parent, a
+wife, a child, dies, you feel very differently about them, even if
+you do not speak differently. You feel and know that he, the person
+whom you loved and understood, and felt with, and felt for, here on
+earth, is not dead at all; you feel (and in proportion as the friend
+you have lost was loving, and good, and full of feeling for you, you
+feel it all the more strongly) that your friend, or your child, or
+the wife of your bosom, is alive still--where you know not, but you
+feel they are alive; that they are very near you;--that they are
+thinking of you, watching you, caring for you,--perhaps grieving
+over you when you go wrong--perhaps rejoicing over you when you go
+right,--perhaps helping you, though you cannot see them, in some
+wonderful way. You know that only their mortal flesh is dead. That
+their mortal flesh was all you put into the grave; but that _they_
+themselves, their souls and spirits, which were their very and real
+selves, are alive for evermore; and you trust and hope to meet them
+when you die;--ay, to meet them body and soul too, at the last day,
+the very same persons whom you knew here on earth, though the flesh
+which they wore here in this life has crumbled into dust years and
+ages before.
+
+Is not this true? Is not this a blessed life-giving thought--I had
+almost said the most blessed and life-giving thought man can have--
+that those whom we have loved and lost are not dead, but only gone
+before; that they live still to God and with God; that only their
+flesh has perished, and they themselves are alive for evermore?
+
+Now believe me, my friends, as surely as a man's flesh can die and
+be buried, while he himself, his soul, lives for ever, just so a
+man's self, his soul, can die, while his flesh lives on upon earth.
+You do not think so, but the Bible thinks so. The Bible talks of
+men being _dead_ in trespasses and sins, while their flesh and body
+is alive and walking this earth. It talks, too, of a worse state,
+of men twice dead; of men, who, after God has brought their souls to
+life, let those souls of theirs die down again within them, and rot
+away, as far as we can see, hopelessly and for ever. And what is it
+which kills a man's soul within him on this side the grave, and
+makes him dead while he has a name to live? _Sin_, evil-doing, the
+disease of the soul, the death of the soul, yea, the death of the
+man himself. And what is sin but living according to the flesh, and
+not according to the spirit? What is sin but living as the dumb
+animals do, as if we were debtors to our own flesh, to fulfil its
+lusts, and to please our own appetites, fancies, and tempers,
+instead of remembering that we are debtors to God, who made us, and
+blesses us all day long;--debtors to our Lord Jesus Christ, who
+bought us with His own blood, that we might please Him and obey
+Him;--debtors to God's Holy Spirit, who puts into our minds good
+desires;--debtors to our baptism vows, in which we were consecrated
+to God, that He, and not this flesh of ours, might be our Master for
+ever?
+
+This is sin; to give way to those selfish and evil tempers, against
+which I warned you in the beginning of my sermon, and which, if any
+man indulges in them, will surely and steadily, bit by bit, kill
+that man's soul within him, and leave the man dead in trespasses and
+sins, while his body walks this earth.
+
+My friends, do not fancy these are merely farfetched words out of a
+book, made to sound difficult and terrible in order to frighten you.
+God forbid! When Scripture says this, it speaks a plain and simple
+truth, and one which I know to be a truth from experience. I speak
+that which I know, and testify that which I have seen. I have seen
+(and what sadder or more fearful sight?) dead men and dying walk
+this earth in flesh and blood; men busy enough, shrewd enough upon
+some points, priding themselves, perhaps, upon their cleverness and
+knowledge of the world, of whom all one could say was, The man is
+dead; the man is lost, unless God brings him to life again by His
+quickening Spirit: for goodness is dead in him; the powers of his
+soul are dead in him; the hope of being a better man is dead in him;
+all that God wishes to see him be and do, is dead; God's likeness
+and glory in him is dead: he thinks himself wise, and he is a fool
+in God's sight; for he sees not God's law, which is the only wisdom:
+he thinks himself strong, but he is utterly weak and helpless; for
+he is the slave of his own tempers, the slave of his own foul lust,
+the slave of his own pride and vanity, the slave of his own
+covetousness. Oh, my friends, people are apt to be afraid of what
+they call seeing a ghost--that is, a spirit without a body: they
+fancy that it would be a very shocking thing to meet one; but as for
+me, I know a far more dreadful sight; and that is, a careless and a
+hardened sinner--a body without a spirit. Which is uglier and
+ghastlier--a spirit without a body, or a body without a spirit? And
+yet such one meets, I dare not think how often.
+
+What sadder sight, if you recollect that men need not be thus; that
+God hates seeing them thus; that they become thus, and die down in
+sin, in spite of God, with all heaven above, and God the Lord
+thereof, crying to them, Why wilt thou die? What sadder sight? How
+many have I seen, living, to all intents and purposes, as if they
+had no souls; as if there were no God, no Law of God, no Right, no
+Wrong; caring for nothing, perhaps, but drink and bad women; or
+caring for nothing but scraping together a little more money than
+their neighbours; or caring for nothing but dress, and vanity, and
+gossiping, and tale-bearing; and yet, when one came to know them,
+one saw that _that_ was not what God intended them to be; that He
+had given them hearts which they had hardened, good feelings which
+they had crushed, sound brains which they had left idle, till one
+was ready to weep over them, as over something beautiful and noble
+ruined and lost; and looked on them as one would on a grand tree
+struck by lightning, decayed and dead, useless, and only fit to be
+burned, with just enough of its proper shape to show what a tree it
+ought to have been. And so it is with men and women: hardly a day
+passes but one sees some one of whom one says, with a sigh, 'What a
+worthy, loveable, useful person, that might have been! what a
+blessing to himself and all around him! and now, by following his
+fallen nature, and indulging it, he is neither worthy, nor loveable,
+nor useful; neither a blessing to himself nor to any human being:
+he might have been good for so much, and now he is good for nothing;
+for the spirit, the immortal soul which God gave him, is dead within
+him.'
+
+My friends, I would not say this, unless I could say more. I would
+not say sad words, if I could not follow them up by joyful and
+hopeful ones. It is written, 'If ye live after the flesh, ye shall
+die;' but it is written also, 'If ye, through the Spirit, do mortify
+the deeds of the body, ye shall live.' It is promised--promised, my
+friends, 'Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and
+Christ shall give thee light.'
+
+Through the Spirit, through God's Spirit, every soul here can live,
+now and for ever. Through God's Spirit, Christ not only can, but
+will, give you light. And that Spirit is near you, with you. Your
+baptism is the blessed sign, the everlasting pledge, that God's
+Spirit is with you. Oh, believe that, and take heart. I will not
+say, you do not know how much good there is in you; for in us dwells
+no good thing, and every good thought and feeling comes only from
+the Spirit of God: but I will say boldly to every one of you, you
+do not know how much good there may be in you, if you will listen to
+those good thoughts of God's Spirit; you do not know how wise, how
+right, how strong, how happy, how useful, you may become; you do not
+know what a blessing each of you may become to yourselves, and to
+all around you. Only make up your mind to live by God's law; only
+make up your mind, in all things, small and great, to go God's way,
+and not your own. Only make up your mind to listen, not to your own
+flesh, temper, and brain, which say this and that is pleasant, but
+to listen to God's Spirit, which says this is right, and that is
+wrong: this is your duty, do it. Search out your own besetting
+sins; and if you cannot find them out for yourself, ask God to show
+you them; ask Him to give you truth in the inward parts, and make
+you to understand wisdom in the secret places of your heart. Pray
+God's Spirit to quicken your soul, and bring it to life, that it may
+see and love what is good, and see and hate what is wrong; and
+instead of being most hard on your neighbour's sin, to which you are
+not tempted, be most hard on your own sin, on the sin to which you
+are most tempted, whatsoever that may be. You have your besetting
+sin, doubt it not; every one has. I know that I have. I know that
+I have inclinations, tempers, longings, to which if I gave way, my
+soul would rot and die within me, and make me a curse to myself, and
+you, and every one I came near; and all I can do is to pray God's
+Spirit to help me to fight those besetting sins of mine, and crush
+them, and stamp them down, whenever they rise and try to master me,
+and make me live after the flesh. It is a hard fight; and may God
+forgive me, for I fight it ill enough: but it is my only hope for
+my soul's life, my only hope of remaining a man worth being called a
+man, or doing my duty at all by myself and you, and all mankind.
+And it is your only hope, too. Pray for God's Spirit, God's
+strength, God's life, to give your souls life, day by day, that you
+may fight against your sins, whatsoever they are, lest they kill
+your souls, long before disease and old age kill your bodies. Make
+up your minds to it. Make up your minds to mortify the deeds of the
+body; to say to your own bodies, tempers, longings, fancies, 'I will
+not go your way: you shall go God's way. I am not your debtor; I
+owe you nothing; I am God's debtor, and owe Him everything, and I
+will pay Him honestly with the service of my body, soul, and spirit.
+I will do my duty, and you, my flesh, must and shall do it also,
+whether it is pleasant at first, or not:' and be sure it will be
+pleasant at last, if not at first. Keep God always before your
+eyes. Ask yourself in every action, 'What is right, what is my
+duty, what would God have me do?' And so far from finding it
+unpleasant, you will find that you are saving yourself a thousand
+troubles, and sorrows, and petty anxieties which now torment you;
+you will find that in God's presence is life, the only life worth
+having, and that at His right hand are pleasures for evermore. Oh,
+be sure, my friends, that in real happiness you will not lose, but
+gain without end. If to have a clear conscience, and a quiet mind;
+if to be free from anxiety and discontent, free from fear and shame;
+if to be loved, respected, looked up to, by all whose good word is
+worth having, and to know that God approves of you, that all day
+long God is with you, and you with God, that His loving and mighty
+arms are under you, that He has promised to keep you in all your
+ways, to prosper all you do, and reward you for ever,--if this be
+not happiness, my friends, what is?
+
+
+
+SERMON XVIII. SHAME
+
+
+
+Romans x. 11. For the Scripture saith, Whosoever believeth on Him
+shall not be ashamed.
+
+My friends, what this text really means is one thing; what we may
+choose to think it means is another thing--perhaps a very different
+thing. I will try and show you what I believe it really means.
+
+'Whosoever believeth on Him shall not be ashamed.' It seems as if
+St. Paul thought, that not being ashamed had to do with salvation,
+and being saved; ay, that they were almost the same thing: for he
+says just before, if thou doest so and so, thou shalt be saved; for
+with the heart man believeth unto righteousness, and with the mouth
+confession is made unto salvation; _for_ the Scripture saith,
+'Whosoever believeth on Him shall not be ashamed;' as if being
+ashamed was the very thing from which we were to be saved. And
+certainly that wise and great man, whoever he was (some say he was
+St. Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, in Italy), who wrote the Te Deum,
+thought the same; for how does he end the Te Deum? 'O Lord, in Thee
+have I trusted: let me never be confounded,' that is, brought to
+shame. You see, after he has spoken of God, and the everlasting
+glory of God, of Cherubim and Seraphim, that is, all the powers of
+the earth and the powers of the heavens, of Apostles, Prophets,
+Martyrs, the Holy Church, all praising God, and crying 'Holy, holy,
+holy. Lord God of Hosts, Heaven and Earth are full of the majesty
+of Thy glory;' after he has spoken of the mystery of the Trinity,
+Father and Son and Holy Ghost, of Christ's redemption and
+incarnation, and ascension and glory; of His judging the world; of
+His government, and His lifting up His people for ever; after he has
+prayed God to keep them this day without sin, and to let His mercy
+lighten upon them; after all this, at the end of this glorious hymn,
+all that he has to say is, 'O Lord, in Thee have I trusted: let me
+never be confounded.'--All he has to say: but that is a great deal:
+he does not say that merely because he wants to say something more,
+and has nothing else to say. Not so. In all great hymns and
+writings like this, the end is almost sure to be the strongest part
+of all, to have the very pith and marrow of the whole matter in it,
+as I believe this end of the Te Deum has; and I believe that whoever
+wrote it thought that being confounded, and brought to shame, was
+just the most horrible and wretched thing which could happen to him,
+or any man, and the thing above all others from which he was most
+bound to pray God to save him and every human being.
+
+Now, how is this? First, let us look at what coming to shame is;
+and next, how believing in Christ will save us from it.
+
+Now, every man and woman of us here, who has one spark of good
+feeling in them, will surely agree, that coming to shame is
+dreadful; and that there is no pain or torment on earth like the
+pain of being ashamed of oneself: nothing so painful. And I will
+prove it to you. You call a man a brave man, if he is afraid of
+nothing: but there is one thing the very bravest man is afraid of,
+and that is of disgrace, of coming to shame. Ay, my friends, so
+terrible is the torment of shame, that you may see brave men,--men
+who would face death in battle, men who would have a limb cut off
+without a groan, you may see such, in spite of all their courage,
+gnash their teeth, and writhe in agony, and weep bitter tears,
+simply because they are ashamed of themselves, so terrible and
+unbearable is the torment of shame. It may drive a man to do good
+or evil: it may drive him to do good; as when, rather than come to
+shame, and be disgraced, soldiers will face death in battle
+willingly and cheerfully, and do deeds of daring beyond belief: or
+it may drive him to do evil; rather than come to shame, men have
+killed themselves, choosing, unhappy and mistaken men, rather to
+face the torment of hell than the torment of disgrace. They are
+mistaken enough, God knows. But shame, like all powerful things,
+will work for harm as well as for good; and just as a wholesome and
+godly shame may be the beginning of a man's repentance and
+righteousness, so may an unwholesome and ungodly shame be the cause
+of his despair and ruin. But judge for yourselves; think over your
+past lives. Were you ever once--were it but for five minutes--
+utterly ashamed of yourself? If you were, did you ever feel any
+torment like _that_? In all other misery and torment one feels
+hope; one says, 'Still life is worth having, and when the sorrow
+wears away I shall be cheerful and enjoy myself again:' but when one
+has come to shame, when one is not only disgraced in the eyes of
+other people, but disgraced (which is a thousand times worse) in
+one's own eyes; when one feels that people have real reason to
+despise one, then one feels for the time as if life was _not_ worth
+having; as if one did not care whether one died or not, or what
+became of one: and yet as if dying would do one no good, change of
+place would do one no good, time's running on would do one no good;
+as if what was done could not be undone, and the shame would be with
+one still, and torment one still, wherever one was, and if one was
+to live a million years: ay, that it would be everlasting: one
+feels, in a word, that real shame and deserved disgrace is verily
+and indeed an everlasting torment. And it is this, and the feeling
+of this, which explains why poor wretches will kill themselves, as
+Judas Iscariot did, and rush into hell itself, under the horror and
+pain of shame and disgrace. They feel a hell within them so hot,
+that they actually fancy that they can be no worse off beyond the
+grave than they are on this side of it. They are mistaken: but
+that is the reason; the misery of disgrace is so intolerable, that
+they are willing, like that wretched Judas, to try any mad and
+desperate chance to escape it.
+
+So much for shame's being a dreadful and horrible thing. But again,
+it is a spiritual thing: it grows and works not in our fleshly
+bodies, but in our spirits, our consciences, our immortal souls.
+You may see this by thinking of people who are not afraid of shame.
+You do not respect them, or think them the better for that. Not at
+all. If a man is not afraid of shame; if a man, when he is found
+out, and exposed, and comes to shame, does not care for it, but
+'brazens out his own shame,' as we say, we do not call him brave; we
+call him what he is, a base impudent person, lost to all good
+feeling. Why, what harder name can we call any man or woman, than
+to say that they are 'shameless,' dead to shame? We know that it is
+the very sign of their being dead in sin, the very sign of God's
+Spirit having left them; that till they are made to feel shame there
+is no hope of their mending or repenting, or of any good being put
+into them, or coming out of them. So that this feeling of shame is
+a spiritual feeling, which has to do with a man's immortal soul,
+with his conscience, and the voice of God in his heart.
+
+Now, consider this: that there will surely come to you and me, and
+every living soul, a day of judgment; a day in which we shall be
+judged. Think honestly of those two words. First, a day, not a
+mere time, much less a night. Now, in a day there is light, by
+which men can see, and a sun in heaven which shows all things
+clearly. In that day, that brightest and clearest of all days, we
+shall see what we really have been, and what we really have done;
+and for aught we know, every one round us, every one with whom we
+have ever had to do, will see it also. The secrets of all our
+hearts will be disclosed; and we shall stand before heaven and earth
+simply for what we are, and neither more nor less. That is a
+fearful thought! Shall we come to shame in that day? And it will
+be a day of judgment: in it we shall be judged. I do not mean
+merely condemned, for we may be acquitted: or punished, for we may
+be rewarded; those things come after being judged. First, let us
+think of what being judged is. A judge's business is to decide on
+what we have done, or whether we have broken the law or not; to hear
+witnesses for us and against us, to sum up the evidence, and set
+forth the evidence for us and the evidence against us. And our
+judge will be the Son of Man, the Lord Jesus Christ, who is sharper
+than a two-edged sword, piercing through the very joints and marrow,
+and discerning the secret intents of the heart; neither is anything
+hid from Him, for all things are naked and open in the sight of Him
+with whom we have to do. With whom we _have_ to do, mind: not
+merely with whom we _shall_ have to do; for He sees all _now_, He
+knows all now. Ever since we were born, there has not been a
+thought in our heart but He has known it altogether. And He is
+utterly just--no respecter of persons; like His own wisdom, without
+partiality and without hypocrisy. O Lord! who shall stand in that
+day? O Lord! if thou be extreme to mark what is done amiss, who
+shall abide it? O Lord! in thee have I trusted: let me never be
+confounded!
+
+For this is being confounded; this is shame itself. This is the
+intolerable, horrible, hellish shame and torment, wherein is weeping
+and gnashing of teeth; this is the everlasting shame and contempt to
+which, as Daniel prophesied, too many should awake in that day--to
+be found guilty in that day before God and Christ, before our
+neighbours and our relations, and worst of all, before ourselves.
+Worst of all, I say, before ourselves. It would be dreadful enough
+to have all the bad things we ever did or thought told openly
+against us to all our neighbours and friends, and to see them turn
+away from us;--dreadful to find out at last (what we forget all day
+long) that God knows them already; but more dreadful to know them
+all ourselves, and see our sins in all their shamefulness, in the
+light of God, as God Himself sees them;--more dreadful still to see
+the loving God and the loving Christ turn away from us;--but most
+dreadful of all to turn away from ourselves; to be utterly
+discontented with ourselves; ashamed of ourselves; to see that all
+our misery is our own fault, that we have been our own enemies; to
+despise ourselves, and hate ourselves for ever; to try for ever to
+get rid of ourselves, and escape from ourselves as from some ugly
+and foul place in which we were ashamed to be seen for a moment:
+and yet not to be able to get rid of ourselves. Yes, that will be
+the true misery of a lost soul, to be ashamed of itself, and hate
+itself. Who shall deliver a man from the body of that death?
+
+I thank God, through Jesus Christ our Lord. I thank God, that at
+least now, here, in this life, we can be delivered. There is but
+one hope for us all; one way for us all, not to come to utter shame.
+And this is in the Lord Jesus Christ, who has said, 'Though your
+sins be red as scarlet they shall be white as wool; and their sins
+and their iniquities will I remember no more.' One hope, to cast
+ourselves utterly on His boundless love and mercy, and cry to Him,
+'Blot these sins of mine out of Thy book, by Thy most precious
+blood, which is a full atonement for the sins of the whole world;
+and blot them out of my heart by Thy Holy Spirit, that I may hate
+them and renounce them, and flee from them, and give them up, and be
+Thy servant, and do Thy work, and have Thy righteousness, and do
+righteous things like Thee.' And then, my friends, how or why we
+cannot understand; but it is God's own promise, who cannot lie, that
+He will really and actually forgive these sins of ours, and blot
+them out as if we had never done them, and give us clean hearts and
+right spirits, to live new lives, right lives, lives like His own
+life; so that our past sinful lives shall be behind us like a dream,
+and we shall find them forgotten and forgiven in the day of
+judgment;--wonderful mercy! but listen to it--it is God's own
+promise--'If the wicked man turneth away from all his sins that he
+hath committed, and keep all my statutes, and do that which is
+lawful and right, he shall surely live, he shall not die. All his
+transgressions that he hath committed, they shall not be mentioned
+to him: in his righteousness that he hath done he shall live.'
+
+They shall not be mentioned to him. My friends, if, as I have been
+showing, the great misery, the great horror of all, is having our
+sins mentioned to us in That Day, and being made utterly ashamed by
+them, what greater mercy can we want than this--not to have them
+mentioned to us, and not to come to shame; not to be plagued for
+ever with the hideous ghosts of our past bad thoughts, bad words,
+bad deeds, coming all day long to stare us in the face, and cry to
+us while the accusing Devil holds them up to us, as if in a looking-
+glass--'Look at your own picture. This is what you are. This fool,
+this idler, this mean, covetous, hard-hearted man, who cared only
+for himself;--this stupid man, who never cared to know his duty or
+do his duty;--this proud, passionate, revengeful man, who returned
+evil for evil, took his brothers by the throat, and exacted from
+them the uttermost farthing;--this ridiculous, foolish, useless,
+disagreeable, unlovely, unlovable person, who went through the world
+neither knowing what he ought to do, nor whither he was going, but
+was utterly blind and in a dream; this person is you yourself. Look
+at your own likeness, and be confounded, and utterly ashamed for
+ever!' What greater misery than that? What greater blessing than
+to escape that? What greater blessing than to be able to answer the
+accusing Devil, 'Not so, liar! This is not my likeness. This ugly,
+ridiculous, hateful person is not I. I was such a one once, but I
+am not now. I am another man now; and God knows that I am, though
+you may try to shame me by telling me that I am the same man. I was
+wrong, but I am right now; I was as a sheep going astray, but now I
+am returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of my soul, to whom I
+belonged all the while; and now I am right, in the right road; for
+with the heart I have believed God unto righteousness, and He has
+given me a clean heart, and a right spirit, and has purged me, and
+will purge me, till I am clean, and washed me till I am whiter than
+snow; I do not deny one of my old sins; I did them, I know that; I
+confess them to thee now, oh accusing Devil; but I confessed them to
+God, ay, and to man too, long ago, and by confessing them to Him I
+was saved from them; for with the mouth confession is made unto
+salvation. And what is more; I have not only confessed my own sins,
+but I have confessed Christ's righteousness; and I confess it now.
+I confess, I say, that Christ is perfectly righteous and good, the
+Perfect Pattern of what I ought to be; and because He is perfectly
+good, He does not wish to see me remain bad and sinful, that He may
+taunt me and torment me with my sins, as thou the accusing Devil
+dost: but He wishes to make me and every man good like Himself,
+blest like Himself; and He can do it, and will do it, if we will but
+give up our hearts to Him; and I have given up my heart to Him. All
+I ask of Him is to be made good and kept good, set right and kept
+right; and I can trust in Him utterly to do that; for He is faithful
+and just to forgive me my sins, and cleanse me from all
+unrighteousness. Therefore, accuse me not, Devil! for thou hast no
+share in me: I belong to Christ, and not to thee. And set not my
+old sins before my face; for God has set them behind His back,
+because I have renounced them, and sworn an oath against them, and
+Christ has nailed them to His cross, and now they are none of mine
+and none of thine, but are cast long ago into the everlasting fire
+of God, and burnt up and done with for ever; and I am a new man, and
+God's man; and He has justified me, and will justify me, and make me
+just and right; and neither thou, nor any man, has a right to impute
+to me my past sins, for God does not impute them to me; and neither
+thou, nor any man, has a right to condemn me, for God has justified
+me. And if it please God to humble me more (for I know I want
+humbling every day), and to show me more how much I owe to Him--if
+it please Him, I say, to bring to light any of my past sins, I shall
+take it patiently as a wholesome chastening of my Heavenly Father's;
+and I trust to all God's people, and to angels, and the spirits of
+just men made perfect, that they will look on my past sins as God
+looks on them, mercifully and lovingly, as things past and dead,
+forgiven and blotted out of God's book, by the precious blood of
+Christ, and look on me as I am in Christ, not having any
+righteousness of my own, but Christ's righteousness, which comes by
+the inspiration of His own Holy Spirit.'
+
+Thus, my friends, we may answer the Devil, when he stands up to
+accuse us, and confound us in the Day of Judgment. Thus we may
+answer him now, when, in melancholy moments, he sets our sins before
+our face, and begins taunting us, and crying, 'See what a wretch you
+are, what a hypocrite, too. What would all the world think of you,
+if they knew as much against you as I do? What would the world
+think of you, if they saw into that dirty heart of yours?' For we
+can answer him--'Whatever the world would think, I know what God
+Himself thinks: He thinks of me as of a son who, after wasting his
+substance, and feeding on husks with the swine, has come home to his
+Father's house, and cried, Father, I have sinned against heaven, and
+before Thee, and am no more worthy to be called Thy son; and I know
+that that same good Heavenly Father, instead of shaming me,
+reproaching me, shutting His doors against me, has seen me afar off,
+and taken me home again without one harsh word, and called to all
+the angels in heaven, saying, "It is meet that we rejoice and be
+glad, for this My son was dead and is alive again, he was lost and
+is found." And while Almighty God, who made heaven and earth, is
+saying that of me, it matters little what the lying Devil may say.'
+
+Only, only, if you be wandering from your Father's house, come home;
+if you be wrong, entreat to be made right. If you are in your
+Father's house, stay there; if you are right, pray and struggle to
+keep right; if the old account is blotted out, then, for your soul's
+sake, run up no fresh account to stand against you after all in the
+Day of Judgment; if you have the hope in you of not coming to shame,
+you must purify yourselves, even as God is pure; if you believe
+really with your heart, you must believe unto righteousness; that
+is, you must trust God to make you righteous and good: there is no
+use trusting Him to make you anything else, for He will make you
+nothing else; being good Himself, He will only make you good: but
+as for trusting in Him to leave you bad, to leave you quiet in your
+sins, and then to save you after all, that is trusting that God will
+do a most unjust, and what is more, a most cruel thing to you; that
+is trusting God to do the Devil's work; that is a blasphemous false
+trust, which will be utterly confounded in the Day of Judgment, and
+will cover you with double shame. The whole question for each of us
+is, 'Do we believe unto righteousness?' Is righteousness what we
+want? Is to be made good men what we want? If not, no confessing
+with the mouth will be unto salvation, for how can a man be saved in
+his sins? If an animal is diseased can it be saved from dying
+without curing the disease? If a tree be decayed, can it be saved
+from dying without curing the decay? If a man be bad and sinful,
+can he be saved from eternal death without curing his badness and
+sinfulness? How can a man be saved from his sins but by becoming
+sinless? As well ask, Can a man be saved from his sins without
+being saved from his sins? But if you wish really to be saved from
+your sins, and taken out of them, and cured of them, that you may be
+made good men, righteous men, useful men, just men, loving men,
+Godlike men;--then trust in God for that, and you will find that
+your trust will be unto righteousness, for you will become righteous
+men; and confess God with your mouth for that, saying, 'I believe in
+God my Father; I believe in Jesus Christ His Son, who died, and
+rose, and ascended on high for me; I believe in God's Holy Spirit,
+which is with me, to make me right;' and your confession will be
+unto salvation, for you will be saved from your sins.
+
+Always say to yourself this one thing, 'Good I will become, whatever
+it cost me; and in God's goodness I trust to make me good, for I am
+sure He wishes to see me good, more than I do myself; and you will
+find that because you have confessed, in that best and most honest
+of ways, that God is good, and have so given Him real glory, and
+real honour, and real praise, He will save you from the sins which
+torment you: and that because you have really trusted in Him, you
+shall never come, either in this world, or the world to come, to
+that worst misery, the being ashamed of yourself.
+
+
+
+SERMON XIX. FORGIVENESS
+
+
+
+Psalm li. 16, 17. Thou desirest not sacrifice; else would I give
+it: thou delightest not in burnt offering.
+
+The sacrifice of God is a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite
+heart, O God, Thou wilt not despise.
+
+You all heard just now the story of Nathan and David, and you must
+have all felt how beautiful, and noble, and just it was; how it
+declares that there is but one everlasting God's law of justice,
+which is above all men, even the greatest; and that what is right
+for the poor man is right for the king upon his throne, for God is
+no respecter of persons.
+
+And you must have admired, too, the frankness, and fulness, and
+humbleness of David's repentance, and liked and loved the man still,
+in spite of his sins, as much almost as you did when you heard of
+him as a shepherd boy slaying the giant, or a wanderer and an outlaw
+among the hills and forests of Judaea.
+
+But did it now seem strange to you that David's repentance, which
+was so complete when it did come, should have come no sooner? Did
+he need Nathan to tell him that he had done wrong? He seduced
+another man's wife, and that man one of his most faithful servants,
+one of the most brave and loyal generals of his army; and then, over
+and above his adultery, he had plotted the man's death, and had had
+him killed and put out of the way in as base, and ungrateful, and
+treacherous a fashion as I ever heard of. His whole conduct in the
+matter had been simply villanous. There is no word too bad for it.
+And do you fancy that he had to wait the greater part of a year
+before the thought came into his head that that was not the fashion
+in which a man ought to behave, much more a king?--that God's
+blessing was not on such doings as those?--and after all not find
+out for himself that he was wrong, but have to be told of it by
+Nathan?
+
+Surely, if he had any common sense, any feeling of right and wrong
+left in him, he must have known that he had done a bad thing; and
+his guilty conscience must have tormented him many a time and oft
+during those months, long before Nathan came to him. Now, that he
+had the feeling of right and wrong left in him, we cannot doubt; for
+when Nathan told him the parable of the rich man who spared all his
+own flocks and herds, and took the poor man's one ewe lamb, his
+heart told him that _that_ was wrong and unjust, and he cried out,
+'The man who has done this thing shall surely die.' And surely that
+feeling of right and wrong could not have been quite asleep in him
+all those months, and have been awakened then for the first time.
+
+But more; if we look at two psalms which he wrote about that time,
+we shall find that his conscience had _not_ been dead in him, but
+had been tormenting him bitterly; and that he had been trying to
+escape from it, and afterwards to repent--only in a wrong way.
+
+If we look at the Thirty-second Psalm, we shall see there he had
+begun, by trying to deceive himself, to excuse himself before God.
+But that had only made him the more miserable. 'When I kept
+silence, my bones waxed old through my daily complaining. For Thy
+hand was heavy on me night and day: my moisture was turned to the
+drought of summer.' Then he had tried sacrifices. He had fancied,
+I suppose, that he could make God pleased with him again by showing
+great devoutness, by offering bullocks and goats without number, as
+sin-offerings and peace-offerings; but that made him no happier. At
+last he found out that God required no sacrifice but a broken heart.
+That was what God wanted--a broken and a contrite heart; for David
+to be utterly ashamed of himself, utterly broken down and silenced,
+so that he had nothing left to plead--neither past good deeds, nor
+present devoutness, nor sacrifices: nothing but, 'O God, I deserve
+all Thou canst lay on me, and more. Have mercy on me--mercy is all
+I ask.'
+
+There was nothing for him, you see, but to make a clean breast of
+it; to face his sin, and all its shame and abomination, and confess
+it all, and throw himself on God's mercy. And when he did that,
+there, then, and at once, as Nathan told him, God put away his sin.
+As David says himself, 'I said, I will confess my sins unto the
+Lord, and so Thou forgavest the wickedness of my sin.'
+
+As it is written, 'If we confess our sins, God is faithful and just
+to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.'
+
+And now, my friends, what lesson may we learn from this? It is easy
+to say, We have not sinned as deeply as David, and therefore his
+story has nothing to do with us. My friends, whether we have sinned
+as deeply as David or not, his story has to do with you, and me, and
+every soul in this church, and every soul in the whole world, or it
+would not be in the Bible. For no prophecy of Scripture is of
+private interpretation; that is, it does not only point at one man
+here and another there: but those who wrote it were moved by the
+Holy Ghost, who lays down the eternal universal laws of holiness, of
+right and good, which are right and good for you, and me, and all
+mankind; and therefore David's story has to do with you and me every
+time we do wrong, and know that we have done wrong.
+
+Now, my friends, when you have done a wrong thing, you know your
+conscience torments you with it; you are uneasy, and discontented
+with yourselves, perhaps cross with those about you; you hardly know
+why: or rather, though you do know why, you do not like to tell
+yourself why.
+
+The bad thing which you have done, or the bad tempers which you have
+given way to, or the person whom you have quarrelled with, hang in
+your mind, and darken all your thoughts: and you try not to
+remember them: but conscience _makes_ you remember them, and will
+not let the dark thought fly away; till you can enjoy nothing,
+because your heart is not clean and clear; there is something in the
+background which makes you sad whenever you try to be happy. Then a
+man tries first to deceive himself. He says to himself, 'No, that
+sin is not what makes me unhappy--not that;' and he tries to find
+out any and every reason for his uncomfortable feelings, except the
+very thing which he knows all the while in the bottom of his heart
+_is_ the real reason. He says, 'Well, perhaps I am unhappy because
+I have done something wrong: what wrong can I have done?' And so
+he sets to work to find out every sin except _the_ sin which is the
+cause of all, because that one he does not like to face: it is too
+real, and ugly, and humbling to his proud spirit; and perhaps he is
+afraid of having to give it up. So I have known a man confess
+himself a sinner, a miserable sinner, freely enough, and then break
+out into a rage with you, if you dare to speak a word of the one sin
+which you know that he has actually committed. 'No, sir,' he will
+say, 'whatever I may be wrong in, I am right _there_. I have
+committed sins too many, I know: but you cannot charge me with
+that, at least;'--and all the more because he knows that everybody
+round _is_ charging him with it, and that the thing is as notorious
+as the sun in heaven. But that makes him, in his pride, all the
+more determined not to confess himself in the wrong on that one
+point; and he will go and confess to God, and perhaps to man, all
+manner of secret sins, nay, even invent sins for himself out of
+things which are no sins, and confess himself humbly in the wrong
+where perhaps he is all right, just to drug his conscience, and be
+able to say, 'I have repented,'--repented, that is, of everything
+but what he and all the world know that he ought to repent of.
+
+But still his conscience is not easy: he has no peace of mind: he
+is like David: 'While I held my peace, my bones waxed old through
+my daily complaining.' God's hand is heavy on him day and night,
+and his moisture is like the drought in summer: his heart feels
+hard and dry; he cannot enjoy himself; he is moody; he lies awake
+and frets at night, and goes listlessly and heavily about his
+business in the morning; his heart is not right with God, and he
+knows it; God and he are not at peace, and he knows it.
+
+Then he tries to repent: but it is a false, useless sort of
+repentance. He says to Himself, as David did, 'Well, then, I will
+make my peace with God: I will please Him. I have done one wrong
+thing. I will do two right ones to make up for it.' If he is a
+rich man, he perhaps tries David's plan of burnt-offerings and
+sacrifices. He says, 'I will give away a great deal in charity; I
+will build a church; I will take a great deal of trouble about
+societies, and speak at religious meetings, and show God how much I
+really do care for Him after all, and what great sacrifices I can
+make for Him.'
+
+Or, if he is a poor man, he will say, 'Well, then, I will try and be
+more religious; I will think more about my soul, and come to church
+as often as I can, and say my prayers regularly, and read good
+books; and perhaps that will make my peace with God. At all events,
+God shall see that I am not as bad as I look; not altogether bad;
+that I do care for Him, and for doing right.'
+
+But, rich or poor, the man finds out by bitter experience how truly
+David said, 'Thou requirest no sacrifice, else would I give it Thee.
+Thou delightest not in burnt-offerings.'
+
+Not that they are not good and excellent; but that they are not good
+coming from him, because his heart is still unrepentant, because,
+instead of confessing his sin and throwing himself on God's mercy,
+he is trying to win God round to overlook his sin. So almsgiving,
+and ordinances, and prayer give the poor man no peace. He rises
+from his knees unrefreshed. He goes out of church with as heavy a
+heart as he went in, and he finds that for all his praying he does
+not become a better man, any more than a happier man. There is
+still that darkness over his soul, like a black cloud spread between
+him and God.
+
+My friends, if any of you find yourselves in this sad case, the only
+remedy which I can give you, the only remedy which I ever found do
+_me_ any good, or give me back my peace of mind, is David's remedy;
+the one which he found out at last, and which he spoke of in these
+blessed Psalms. Confess your sin to God. Bring it all out. Make a
+clean breast of it--whatever it may cost you, make a clean breast of
+it. Only be but _honest_ with God, and all will come right at once.
+Say, not with your lips only, but from the very bottom of your
+heart, say, 'Oh, good God, Heavenly Father, I have _nothing_ to say;
+I am wrong, and yet I do not know how wrong I am; but Thou knowest.
+Thou seest all my sin a thousand times more clearly than I do; and
+if I look black and foul to myself, oh God, how much more black and
+how foul must I look to Thee! I know not. All I know is, that I am
+utterly wrong, and Thou utterly right. I am shapen in sin,
+conceived in iniquity. My heart it is that is wrong. Not merely
+this or that wrong which I have done; but my heart, my temper, which
+will have its own way, which cares for itself, and not for Thee. I
+have nothing to plead; nothing to throw into the other scale. For
+if I have ever done right, it was Thou didst right in me, and not me
+myself, and only my sins are my own doing; so the good in me is all
+Thine, and the bad in me all my own, and in _me_ dwells no good
+thing. And as for excusing myself by saying that I love Thee, I had
+better tell the truth, since Thou knowest it already--I do _not_
+love Thee. Oh God, I love myself, my pitiful, miserable self, well
+enough, and too well: but as for loving Thee--how many of my good
+deeds have been done for love of Thee? I have done right from fear
+of hell, from hope of heaven; or to win Thy blessings: but how
+often have I done right really and purely for Thy sake? I am
+ashamed to think! My only comfort, my only hope, is, that whether I
+love Thee or not, Thou lovest me, and hast sent Thy Son to seek and
+save me. Help me now. Save me now out of my sin, and darkness, and
+self-conceit. Show Thy love to me by setting this wrong heart of
+mine right. Give me a clean heart, oh God, and renew a right spirit
+within me. If I be wrong myself, how can I make myself right? No;
+Thou must do it. Thou must purge me, or I shall never be clean;
+Thou must make me to understand wisdom in the secret depth of my
+heart, or I shall never see my way. Thou must, for I cannot; and
+base and bad as I am, I can believe that Thou wilt condescend to
+help me and teach me, because I know Thy love in Jesus Christ my
+Lord. And _then_ Thou wilt be pleased with my sacrifices and
+oblations, because they come from a right heart--a truly humble,
+honest, penitent heart, which is not trying to deceive God, or
+plaster over its own baseness and weakness, but confesses all, and
+yet trusts in God's boundless love. Then my alms will rise as a
+sweet savour before Thee, oh God; then sacraments will strengthen
+me, ordinances will teach me, good books will speak to my soul, and
+my prayers will be answered by peace of mind, and a clear
+conscience, and the sweet and strengthening sense that I am in my
+Heavenly Father's house, about my Heavenly Father's business, and
+that His smile is over me, and His blessing on me, as long as I
+remain loyal to Him and to His laws.' Feel thus, my friends, and
+speak to God thus, and see if the dark stupefying cloud does not
+pass away from your heart--see if there and then does not come
+sunshine and strength, and the sweet assurance that you are indeed
+forgiven.
+
+But how about this old sin, which caused the man all this trouble?
+He began by trying to forget it. I think, if he be a true penitent,
+he will not wish to forget it any more. He will not torment himself
+about it, for he knows that God has forgiven him. But the more he
+feels God has forgiven him, the less likely he will be to forgive
+himself. The more sure he feels of God's love and mercy, the more
+utterly ashamed of himself he will be. And what is more, it is not
+wise to forget our own sins, when God has not forgotten them. For
+God does not forget our sins, though He forgives them; and a very
+bad thing it would be for us if He did, my friends. For the wages
+of sin is death: and even if God does not slay us for our sins, He
+is certain to punish us for them in some way, lest we should forget
+that sin is sin, and fancy that God's mercy is only careless
+indulgence. So God did to David. He then told him that though he
+was forgiven he would still be punished, 'The Lord has put away thy
+sin; nevertheless, the child that shall be born unto thee shall
+surely die.' Punishment and forgiveness went together. Ay, if we
+will look at it rightly, David's being punished was the very sign
+that God had forgiven him. Oh, believe that, my friends; face it;
+thank God for it. I at least do, when I look back upon my past
+life, and see that for every wrong I have ever done, I have been
+punished: not punished a tenth part as much as I deserve; but still
+punished, more or less, and made to smart for my own folly, and to
+learn, by hard unmistakable experience, that it will not pay me, or
+any man, to break the least of God's laws; and I thank God for it.
+I tell you to thank God also, whensoever you are punished for your
+sins. It is a sign that God cares for you, that God loves you, that
+God is training and educating you, that God is your Father, and He
+is dealing with you as with His sons. For what son is there whom
+His Father does not chastise? It is a bitter lesson, no doubt; but
+we have deserved it: then let us bear it like men. No doubt it is
+bitter: but there is a blessing in it. No chastisement at first
+seems pleasant, says the Apostle, but rather grievous: yet
+afterwards it yields the peaceable fruit of righteousness to those
+who are exercised thereby. Be exercised by it, then. Let God teach
+you in His own way, even if it seem a harsh and painful way. We
+have had earthly fathers, says the Apostle, who corrected us, and we
+gave them reverence. Shall we not much rather be in subjection to
+God, the Father of Spirits, and live? For suffering and punishment
+is the way to Eternal Life--to that true Eternal Life which is
+knowing God and God's love, and becoming like God. As the Apostle
+says, God chastens us only for our profit, that we may be partakers
+of His holiness. And as king Hezekiah says of affliction, 'Lord, by
+_these_ things,' by sorrow and chastisement, 'men live; and in all
+these things is the life of the spirit.'
+
+May God give to you, and me, and all mankind, as often as we do
+wrong, honest and good hearts to confess our sins thoroughly, and
+take our punishment meekly, and trust in God's boundless mercy, in
+order that if we humble ourselves under His rod, and learn His
+lessons faithfully in this life, we may not need a worse punishment
+in the life to come, but be accepted in the last great Day for the
+sake of Jesus Christ, our blessed Lord and Saviour.
+
+
+
+SERMON XX. THE TRUE GENTLEMAN
+
+
+
+1 Cor. xii. 31; xiii. 1. Covet earnestly the best gifts: and yet
+shew I unto you a more excellent way. Though I speak with the
+tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as
+sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.
+
+My friends, let me say a few plain words this morning to young and
+old, rich and poor, upon this text.
+
+Now you all, I suppose, think it a good thing to be gentlemen and
+ladies. All of you, I say. There is not a poor man in this church,
+perhaps, who has not before now said in his heart, 'Ah, if I were
+but a gentleman!' or a poor woman who has not said in her heart,
+'Ah, if I were but a lady!' You see round you in the world
+thousands plotting and labouring all their lives long to make money
+and grow rich, that they may become (as they think) gentlemen, or,
+at least, their sons after them. And those here who are what the
+world calls gentlemen and ladies, know very well that those names
+are names which are very precious to them; and would sooner give up
+house, land, money, all the comforts upon earth, than give up being
+called gentlemen and ladies; and these last know, I trust, what some
+poor people do not know, and what no man knows who fancies that he
+can make a gentleman of himself merely by gaining money, and setting
+up a fine house, and a good table, and horses and carriages, and
+indulging the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eye, and the
+pride of life; for these last ought to know that the right to be
+called gentlemen and ladies is something which this world did not
+give, and cannot take away; so that if they were brought to utter
+poverty and rags, or forced to dig the ground for their own
+livelihood, they would be gentlemen and ladies still, if they ever
+had been really and truly such; and what is more, they would make
+every one who met them feel that they were gentlemen and ladies, in
+spite of all their poverty.
+
+Now, people do not often understand clearly why this is. They feel,
+more or less, that so it is; but they cannot explain it. I could
+tell you why they cannot; but I will not take up your time. But if
+they cannot explain it, there are those who can. St. Paul explains
+it in the Epistle. The Lord Jesus Himself explains it in the
+Gospel. They tell us why money will not make a gentleman. They
+tell us why poverty will not unmake one: but they tell us more.
+They tell us the one only thing which makes a true gentleman. And
+they tell us more still. They tell us how every one of us, down to
+the poorest and most ignorant man and woman in this church, may
+become true gentlemen and ladies, in the sight of God and of all
+reasonable men; and that, not only in this life, but after death,
+for ever, and ever, and ever. And that is by charity, by love.
+
+Now, if you will look two or three chapters back, in the Epistle to
+the Corinthians--at the 11th and 12th chapters--you will see that
+these Corinthians were behaving to each other very much as people
+are apt to do in England now. They all wanted to rise in life, and
+they wanted to rise upon each other's shoulders. Each man and woman
+wanted to set themselves up above their neighbours, and to look down
+upon them. The rich looked down on the poor, and kept apart from
+them at the Lord's Supper; and no doubt the poor envied the rich
+heartily enough in return. And these Corinthians were very
+religious, and some of them, too, very clever. So those who, being
+poor, could not set themselves up above their neighbours on the
+score of wealth, wanted to set themselves up on the score of their
+spiritual gifts. One looked down on his neighbours because he was a
+deeper scholar than they; another, because he had the gift of
+tongues, and understood more languages than they; another could
+prophesy better than any of them, and so, because he was a very
+eloquent preacher, he tried to get power over his neighbours, and
+abuse the talents which God had given him, to pamper his own pride
+and vanity, and love of managing and ordering people, and of being
+run after by silly women (as St. Paul calls them), ever learning and
+never coming to the knowledge of the truth. And of the rest, one
+party sided with one preacher, or one teacher, and another with
+another; and each party looked down on the other, and judged them
+harshly, and said bitter things of them, till, as St. Paul says,
+they were all split up by heresies, that is, by divisions, party
+spirit, envying, and grudging in the very Church of God, and at the
+very Table of The Lord.
+
+Now says St. Paul, 'Covet earnestly the best gifts: and yet show I
+you a more excellent way;' and that is charity; love. As much as to
+say, I do not complain of any of you for trying to be the best that
+you can, for trying to be as wise as you can be, as eloquent as you
+can be, as learned as you can be: I do not complain of you for
+trying to rise; but I _do_ complain of you for trying to rise upon
+each other's shoulders. I do complain of you for each trying to set
+up himself, and trying to make use of his neighbours instead of
+helping them; and, when God gives you gifts to do good to others
+with, trying to do good only to yourselves with them.
+
+For he says, you are all members of one body; and all the talents,
+gifts, understanding, power, money, which God has bestowed on you,
+He has given you only that you may help your neighbours with them.
+Of course there is no harm in longing and praying for great gifts,
+longing and praying to be very wise, or very eloquent; but only that
+you may do all the more good. And, after all, says St. Paul, there
+is something more worth longing for, not merely than money, but more
+worth longing for than the wisdom of a prophet, or the tongue of an
+angel; and that is charity. If you have _that_, you will be able to
+do as much good as God requires of you in your station; and if you
+have not that, you will not do what God requires of you, even though
+you spoke with the tongues of men and of angels. Even though you
+had the gift of prophecy, and understood all mysteries, and all
+knowledge; even though you had all faith, so that you could remove
+mountains; even though you had all good works, and gave all your
+goods to feed the poor, and your body to be burned as a martyr for
+the sake of religion, and had not charity, you would be nothing.
+Nothing, says St. Paul, but sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal--an
+empty vessel, which makes the more noise the less there is in it.
+If you have charity, says St. Paul, you will be able to do your
+share of good where God has put you, though you may be poor, and
+ignorant, and stupid, and weak; but if you have not charity, all the
+wisdom and learning, righteousness and eloquence in the world, will
+only give you greater power of doing harm.
+
+Yes, he says, I show you a more excellent way to be really great; a
+way by which the poorest may be as great as the richest,--the simple
+cottager's wife as great as the most accomplished lady; and that is
+charity, which comes from the Spirit of God. Pray for that--try
+after that; and if you want to know what sort of a spirit it is that
+you are to pray for and try after, I will tell you. Charity is the
+very opposite of the selfish, covetous, ambitious, proud, grudging
+spirit of this world. Charity suffers long, and is kind: charity
+does not envy: charity does not boast, is not puffed up: does not
+behave itself unseemly; that is, is never rude, or overbearing, or
+careless about hurting people's feelings by hard words or looks:
+seeketh not its own; that is, is not always looking on its own
+rights, and thinking about itself, and trying to help itself; is not
+easily provoked: thinketh no evil, that is, is not suspicious,
+ready to make out the worst case against every one; rejoiceth not in
+iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth; that is, is not glad, as too
+many are, to see people do wrong, and to laugh and sneer over their
+failings: but rejoiceth in the truth, tries to find out the truth
+about every one, and judge them honestly, and make fair allowances
+for them: covereth all things; that is, tries to hide a neighbour's
+sins as far as is right, instead of gossiping over them, and
+blazoning them up and down, as too many do: believeth all things;
+that is, gives every one credit for meaning well as long as it can:
+hopeth all things; that is, never gives any one up as past mending:
+endureth all things, keeps its temper, and keeps its tongue; not
+rendering evil for evil, or railing for railing, but, on the
+contrary, blessing; and so overcomes evil with good.
+
+In one word, while the spirit of the world thinks of itself, and
+helps itself, Charity, which is the Spirit of God, thinks of other
+people, and helps other people. And now:--to be always thinking of
+other people's feelings, and always caring for other people's
+comfort, what is that but the mark, and the only mark, of a true
+gentleman, and a true lady? There is none other, my friends, and
+there never will be. But the poorest man or woman can do that; the
+poorest man or woman can be courteous and tender, careful not to
+pain people, ready and willing to help every one to the best of
+their power; and therefore, the poorest man or woman can be a true
+gentleman or a true lady in the sight of God, by the inspiration of
+the Spirit of God, whose name is Charity.
+
+They can be. And thanks be to the grace of God, they often are. I
+can say that I have seen among plain sailors and labouring men as
+perfect gentlemen (of God's sort) as man need see; but then they
+were _always_ pious and God-fearing men; and so the Spirit of God
+had made up to them for any want of scholarship and rank. They were
+gentlemen, because God's Spirit had made them gentle. For recollect
+all, both rich and poor, what that word gentleman means. It is
+simply a man who is gentle; who, let him be as brave or as wise as
+he will, yet, as St. Paul says, 'suffers long and is kind; does not
+boast, does not behave himself unseemly; is not easily provoked,
+thinketh no evil.'
+
+And recollect, too, what that word lady means. Most of you perhaps
+do not know. I will tell you. It means, in the ancient English
+tongue, a person who gives away bread; who deals out loaves to the
+poor. I have often thought that most beautiful, and full of
+meaning, a very message from God to all ladies, to tell them what
+they ought to be; and not to them only, but to the poorest woman in
+the parish; for who is too poor to help her neighbours?
+
+You see there is a difference between a Christian man's duty in this
+and a Christian woman's duty, though they both spring from the same
+spirit. The man, unless he be a clergyman, has not so much time as
+a woman for actually helping his neighbours by acts of charity. He
+must till the ground, sail the seas, attend to his business, fight
+the Queen's enemies; and the way in which the Holy Spirit of Charity
+will show in him will be more in his temper and his language; by
+making him patient, cheerful, respectful, condescending, courteous,
+reasonable, with every one whom he has to do with: but the woman
+has time to show acts of charity which the man has not. She can
+teach in the schools, sit by the sick bed, work with her hands for
+the suffering and the helpless, even though she cannot with her
+head. Above all, she can give those kind looks and kind words which
+comfort the broken heart better than money and bodily comforts can
+do. And she does do it, thank God! I do not merely mean in such
+noble instances of divine charity and self-sacrifice as those ladies
+who have gone out to nurse the wounded soldiers in the East--true
+ladies, indeed, of whom I fear more than one, ere they return, will
+be added to the noble army of martyrs, to receive in return for the
+great love which they have shown on earth, the full enjoyment of
+God's love in heaven:--not these only, but poor women--women who
+could not write their own names--women who had hardly clothes
+wherewith to keep themselves warm--women who were toiling all day
+long to feed and clothe their own children, till one wondered when
+in the twenty-four hours they could find five spare minutes for
+helping their neighbours;--such poor women have I seen, who in the
+midst of their own daily work and daily care, had still a heart open
+to hear every one's troubles; a head always planning little comforts
+and pleasures for others; and hands always busy in doing good.
+Instead of being made hard and selfish by their own troubles, they
+had been taught by them, as the Lord Jesus was, to feel for the
+troubles of all around them, and went about like ministering angels
+in the Spirit of God, which is peace on earth and goodwill towards
+men.
+
+Oh, my friends, such poor women seemed to me most glorious, most
+honourable, most venerable! What was all rank or fashion, beauty or
+accomplishments, when compared with the great honour which the Lord
+Jesus Christ was putting upon those poor women, by transforming them
+thus into His own most blessed likeness, and giving them grace to go
+about, as He the Lord Jesus did, doing good, because God was with
+them!
+
+Then I felt that such women, poor, and worn, and hard-handed as they
+were, were ladies in the sight of that Heavenly Father, who is no
+respecter of persons; and felt how truly a wise ancient has said,--
+'It is virtue, yea, virtue, gentlemen, which maketh gentlemen; which
+maketh the poor rich, the strong weak, the simple wise, the base-
+born noble. This rank neither the whirling wheel of Fortune can
+destroy, nor the deceitful cavillings of worldlings separate;
+neither sickness abate, nor time abolish.' No; for it is written,
+that though prophecies shall fail, tongues cease, knowledge vanish
+away, and all that we now know is but in part, yet charity shall
+never fail those who are full of the Spirit of Love, but abide with
+them for ever and ever, bringing forth fruit through all eternity to
+everlasting life.
+
+But what sort of virtue? Do not mistake that. Not what the world
+calls virtue; not mere legal respectability, which says, I do unto
+others as they do unto me; which is often merely the whitening
+outside the sepulchre, and leaves the heart within unrenewed,
+unrighteous, full of pride and ambition, conceit, cunning, and envy,
+and unbelief in God: not that virtue, but the virtue which the
+Apostle tells us to add to our faith, the virtue from above, which
+is the same as the wisdom from above, which is first pure, then
+peaceable, gentle, easy to be entreated; in one word, the Holy
+Spirit of God, the Spirit of Divine Love and Charity, which seeketh
+not its own, which St. Paul has described to us in this epistle; the
+Holy Spirit of God, with which the Lord Jesus was filled without
+measure, and which He manifested to all the world in His most
+blessed life and death.
+
+Ah, my friends, this is not an easy lesson to learn. Christ's
+disciples and apostles could not learn it all at once. They tried
+to hinder little children from coming to Him. They rebuked the
+blind man who called after Him. How could the great Prophet of
+Nazareth stoop to trouble Himself about such poor insignificant
+people? They could not conceive, either, why the Lord Jesus should
+choose to die shamefully, when He might have lived in honour: it
+seemed unworthy of Him. They were shocked at His words. 'That be
+far from Thee, Lord,' said Peter. Afterwards, when they really
+understood what that word 'Lord,' meant, and what sort of a man a
+true and perfect Lord ought to be, then they saw how fit, and
+proper, and glorious, Christ's self-sacrifice was. When, too, they
+learnt to look on Him, not merely as a great prophet, but as the Son
+of the Living God, then they understood His conduct, and saw that it
+behoved an only-begotten Son of God to suffer all these things
+before He entered into His glory.
+
+But the Scribes and Pharisees never understood it. To the last they
+were puzzled and angered by that very self-sacrifice of His: He
+must be a bad man, they thought, or He would not care so much for
+bad men. 'A friend of publicans and sinners,' they called Him,
+thinking that a shameful blame to Him, while it was really the very
+highest praise. But if they could not see the beauty of His
+conduct, can we? It is very difficult, I do not deny it, my
+friends, for the selfishness and pride of fallen man: it is
+difficult to see that the Cross was the most glorious throne that
+was even set up on earth, and that the crown of thorns was worth all
+the crowns of czars and emperors: difficult, indeed, not to stumble
+at the stumbling-block of the Cross, and to say, 'It cannot surely
+be more blessed to give than to receive:' difficult, not to say in
+our hearts, 'The way to be great is surely to rise above other men,
+not to stoop below them; to make use of them, and not to make
+ourselves slaves to them.' And yet the Lord Jesus Christ did so; He
+took on Himself the form of a slave, and made Himself of no
+reputation: and what was fit and good for Him, must surely be fit
+and good for us. But it is a hard lesson to the pride of fallen
+creatures: very hard. And nothing, I believe, but sorrow will
+teach it us: sorrow is teaching it some of us now. We surely are
+beginning to see, that to suffer patiently for conscience sake, is
+the most beautiful thing on earth or in heaven: we begin to see
+that those poor soldiers, dying by inches of cold and weariness,
+without a murmur, because it was their Duty, were doing a nobler
+work even than they did when they fought at Alma and Inkermann; and
+that those ladies who are drudging in the hospitals, far away from
+home, amid filth and pestilence, are doing, if possible, a nobler
+work still, a nobler work than if they were queens or empresses,
+because they have taken up the Cross and followed Christ; because
+they are not seeking their own good, but the good of others. And if
+we will not learn it from those glorious examples, God will force us
+to learn it, I trust, every one of us, by sorrow and disappointment.
+Ah, my friends, might one not learn it at once, if one would but
+open one's eyes and look at things as they are? Every one is
+longing for something; each has his little plan for himself, of what
+he would like to be, and like to do, and says to himself all day
+long, 'If I could but get _that_ one thing, I should be happy: If I
+could but get that, then I should want no more!' Foolish man, self-
+deceived by his own lusts! Perhaps he cannot get what he wants, and
+therefore he cannot enjoy what he has, and is moody, discontented,
+peevish, a torment to himself, and perhaps a torment to his family.
+Or perhaps he does get what he wants: and is he happy after all?
+Not he. He is like the greedy Israelites of old, when they longed
+for the quails; and God sent the quails: but while the meat was yet
+in their mouths, they loathed it. So it is with a man's fancy. He
+gets what he fancies; and he plays with it for a day, as a child
+with a new toy, and most probably _spoils_ it, and next day throws
+it away to run after some new pleasure, which will cheat him in just
+the same way as the last did; and so happiness flits away ahead
+before him; and he is like the simple boy in the parable, who was to
+find a crock of gold where the rainbow touched the ground: but as
+he moved on, the rainbow moved on too, and kept always a field off
+from him. You may smile: but just as foolish is every soul of us,
+who fancies that he will become happy by making himself great;
+admired, rich, comfortable, in short, by making himself anything
+whatsoever, or getting anything whatsoever for himself. Just as
+foolish is every poor soul, and just as unhappy, as long as he will
+go on thinking about himself, instead of copying the Lord Jesus
+Christ, and thinking about others; as long as he will keep to the
+pattern of the old selfish Adam, which is corrupt according to the
+deceitful lusts, the longings and fancies which deceive a man into
+expecting to be happy when he will not be happy; instead of putting
+on the new man, which after God's likeness is created in
+righteousness and true holiness: and what is true holiness but that
+very charity of which St. Paul has been preaching to us, the spirit
+of love, and mercy, and gentleness, and condescension, and patience,
+and active benevolence?
+
+Ah, my friends, do not forget what I said just now; that a man could
+not become happy by making himself anything. No. Not by making
+himself anything: but he may by letting God make him something. If
+he will let God make him a new creature in Jesus Christ, then he
+will be more than happy--he will be blessed: then he will be a
+blessing to himself, and a blessing to every one whom he meets:
+then all vain longing, and selfishness, and pride, and ambition, and
+covetousness, and peevishness and disappointment, will vanish out of
+his heart, and he will work manfully and contentedly where God has
+placed him--cheerful and open-hearted, civil and patient, always
+thinking about others, and not about himself; trying to be about his
+Master's business, which is doing good; and always finding too, that
+his Master Christ sets him some good work to do day by day, and
+gives him strength to do it. And how can a man get that blessed and
+noble state of mind? By prayer and practice. You must ask for
+strength from God: but then you must believe that He answers your
+prayer, and gives you that strength; and therefore you must try and
+use it. There is no more use in praying without practising than
+there is in practising without praying. You cannot learn to walk
+without walking: no more can you learn to do good without trying to
+do good.
+
+Ask, then, of God, grace and help to do good: Pray to Him this very
+day to take all selfishness and meanness out of your hearts, and to
+give you instead His Holy Spirit of Love and Charity, which alone
+can make you noble in His sight; and try this day, try every day of
+your lives, to do some good to those around you. Oh make a rule,
+and pray to God to help you to keep it, never, if possible, to lie
+down at night without being able to say, 'I have made one human
+being at least a little wiser, or a little happier, or a little
+better this day.' You will find it easier than you think, and
+pleasanter: easier, because if you wish to do God's work, God will
+surely find you work to do; and pleasanter, because in return for
+the little trouble it may cost you, or the little choking of foolish
+vulgar pride it may cost you, you will have a peace of mind, a quiet
+of temper, a cheerfulness and hopefulness about yourself and all
+around you, such as you never felt before; and over and above that,
+if you look for a reward in the life to come, recollect this--what
+we have to hope for in the life to come is, to enter into the joy of
+our Lord. And how did He fulfil that joy, but by humbling Himself,
+and taking the form of a slave, and coming not to be ministered to
+but to minister, and to give His whole life, even to the death upon
+the cross, a ransom for many? Be sure, that unless you take up His
+cross, you will not share His crown. Be sure, that unless you
+follow in His footsteps, you will never reach the place where He is.
+If you wish to enter into the joy of your Lord, be sure that His joy
+is now, as it was in Judaea of old, over every sinner that
+repenteth, every mourner that is comforted, every hungry mouth that
+is fed, every poor soul, sick or in prison, who is visited.
+
+That is the joy of your Lord--to show mercy; and that must be your
+joy too, if you wish to enter into His joy. Surely that is plain.
+You must rejoice in doing the same work that He rejoices in, and
+then His joy and yours will be the same; then you will enter into
+His joy, and He will enter into yours; then, as St. John says, you
+will dwell in Christ, and Christ in you, because you love the
+brethren; and you will hear through all eternity the blessed words,
+'Inasmuch as ye did it unto one of the least of these little ones,
+ye did it unto Me.'
+
+
+
+SERMON XXI. TOLERATION
+
+
+
+[Preached at Bideford, 1854]
+
+Philippians iii. 15, 16. And if in any thing ye shall be otherwise
+minded, God shall reveal even this to you. Nevertheless, whereto we
+have already attained, let us walk by the same rule, let us mind the
+same thing.
+
+My friends, allow me to speak a few plain and honest words, ere we
+part, on a matter which is near to, and probably important to, many
+of us here. We all know how the Christian Church has in all ages
+been torn in pieces by religious quarrels; we all know too well how
+painfully these religious quarrels have been brought home to our
+very doors and hearts of late.
+
+Now, we all deplore, or profess to deplore, these differences and
+controversies. But we may do that in two ways: we may say, 'I am
+very sorry that all Christians do not think alike,' when all we mean
+is, 'I am very sorry that all Christians do not think just as I do,
+for I am right and infallible, whosoever else is wrong.' The fallen
+heart of man is too apt to say that, my friends, in its pride and
+narrowness, and while it cries out against the Pope of Rome, sets
+itself up as Pope in his stead.
+
+But there is surely another and a better way of deploring these
+differences: and that is, to say to oneself, 'I am sorry, bitterly
+sorry, that Christians cannot differ without quarrelling and hating
+one another over and above.' And then comes the deeper home-
+thought, 'And how much more sorry I am that I myself cannot differ
+from my fellow-Christians without growing angry with them,
+suspecting them, despising them, treating them as if they were not
+my fellow-Christians at all.' Yes, my friends, this is what we have
+to do first when we think of religious controversies, to examine our
+own hearts and deeds and words; to see whether we too have not been
+making bitterness more bitter, and, as the old proverb says,
+'stirring the fire with a sword;' and to repent humbly and utterly
+of every harsh word, hasty judgment, ungenerous suspicion, as sins,
+not only against men, but against God the Father of Lights, who
+worketh in each of His children to will and to do of His good
+pleasure.
+
+But some will say, 'We cannot give up what we believe to be right
+and true.' God forbid that you should try to do so, my friends; for
+if you really believe it, you cannot, even if you try; and by trying
+you will only make yourselves dishonest. But does not that hold as
+good of the man who differs from you? God will not surely lay down
+one law for you, and another for him? 'But we are right, and he is
+wrong.' Be it so. You do not surely mean that you are quite right;
+perfect and infallible? You mean that you are right on the whole,
+and as far as you see. And how can you tell but that he is right on
+the whole, and as far as he sees? You will answer that both cannot
+be right; that yes and no cannot be both true; that a thing cannot
+be black and white also.
+
+My friends, my friends--but where is the religious controversy, the
+two sides whereof are as clearly opposite to each other as yes and
+no, black and white? I know none now; I have hardly found one in
+the records of the Protestant Church since first Luther and our
+Reformers protested against Romish idolatry. On that last matter
+there should be no doubt, as long as the first two commandments
+stand in the Decalogue; but, with that exception, it would be
+difficult to find a dispute in which the truth lay altogether with
+one party. The truth rather lies, in general, not so much halfway
+between the two combatants, as in some third place, which neither of
+them sees; which perhaps God does not intend them to see in this
+life, while He leaves his servants each to work out some one side of
+Christian truth, dividing to every man severally as He will,
+according to the powers of each mind, and the needs of each
+situation.
+
+True we have the infallible rule of Scripture: but are our own
+interpretations of it so sure to be infallible? Inspired, infinite,
+inexhaustible as it is, can we pretend to have fathomed all its
+abysses, to have comprehended all its boundless treasures? The
+pretence is folly. True, again, it contains all things necessary to
+salvation; and those so plainly set forth, that he who runs may
+read, and the wayfaring man, though poor, shall not err therein.
+And yet does it not contain things whereof even St. Paul himself
+said, that he only knew in part, and prophesied in part, and saw as
+through a glass darkly; and are we to suppose that they are among
+the truths necessary to salvation? Now are not the points about
+which there has been, and is still, most dispute, just of this very
+number? Do they belong to the simple fundamental truths of the
+Gospel? No. Are they such plain matters that the wayfaring man,
+though poor, can make up his mind on them for himself? No. Are
+they one of them laid down directly in Scripture, like the Ten
+Commandments, the Lord's Prayer, or the Creeds? No. They are every
+one, as it seems to me, whether they be right or wrong, abstruse
+deductions, delicate theories, built up on single and obscure texts.
+Surely, if they had been necessary for salvation, the Lord would
+have spoken on them in a tone and in words about which there should
+be no more mistake than about the thunders of Sinai, and the tables
+of stone fresh from the finger-mark of God. And He has spoken to
+us, my friends, on other matters, if not on these. His promises are
+clear enough, and short enough, though high as heaven and wide as
+the universe. There is one God, and one Mediator between God and
+man, the man Christ Jesus, the only-begotten Son of God; and
+whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ, is born of God; and if
+any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
+righteous, and He is the propitiation for our sins. And again, 'If
+any man lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth liberally, and
+upbraideth not, and he shall receive it.' 'For if ye, being evil,
+know how to give good gifts to your children, much more shall your
+Heavenly Father give His Holy Spirit to them who ask Him.'
+
+These are God's promises--simple and clear enough: and what are
+God's demands? Are they numerous, intricate, burdensome, a yoke
+which neither we nor our fathers have been able to bear? God forbid
+again!--'He hath showed thee, oh man, what is good. And what doth
+the Lord require of thee, but to do justly and to love mercy, and to
+walk humbly with thy God?' And lest thou shouldest mistake in the
+least the meaning of these words, He hath showed thee all this, and
+more, by a living example fairer than all the sons of men, and
+through lips full of grace, in the blessed life and blessed death of
+His Son Jesus Christ, the brightness of His glory, and the express
+image of His person. To this, at least, we have already attained.
+Let us walk by this rule, let us all mind this same thing, and if in
+anything else we are differently minded, God in His own good time
+will reveal even that to us.
+
+Is not this enough, my friends? Then why should we bite and tear
+each other about that which is over and above this? If any man
+believes this, and acts on it, let us hail him as a brother. After
+all, let our differences be what they will, have we not one Lord,
+one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is above all,
+and through all, and in us all? If this is not bond enough between
+man and man, what bond would we have? Oh, my friends, when we
+consider this our little life, how full of ignorance it is and
+darkness; within us, rebellion, inconstancy, confusion, daily sins
+and shortcomings; and without us, disappointment, fear of
+loneliness, loss of friends, loss of all which makes life worth
+having,--who are we that we should deny proudly one single tie which
+binds us to any other human being? Who are we that we should refuse
+one hand stretched out to grasp our own? Who are we that we should
+say, 'Stand back, for I am holier than thou?' Who are we that we
+should judge another? to his own master let him stand or fall--'yea,
+and he shall stand,' says the Apostle, 'for God is able to make him
+stand.'
+
+Think of those last words, my friends, they are strong and
+startling; but we must not shrink from them. They tell us that God
+may be as near those whom we heap with hard names, as He is near to
+us; that He may intend that they should triumph, not over us, but
+with us over evil. And if God be with them, who dare be against
+them? Shall we be more dainty than God? And therefore I have never
+been able to hear, without a shudder, words which I have heard, and
+from really Christian men too: 'I can wish well to a pious man of a
+different denomination from mine; I can honour and admire the fruits
+of God's Spirit in him; but I cannot co-operate with him.' When I
+hear such language from really good men, I confess I am puzzled. I
+have no doubt that their reasons seem to them very sound; but what
+they are I cannot conceive. I cannot conceive why I should not hold
+out the right hand of fellowship and brotherhood to every man who
+fears God and works righteousness, of whatsoever denomination he may
+be. We believe the Apostles' Creed, surely? Then think of the
+meaning of that one word, The Holy Spirit. To whom are we to
+attribute any man's good deeds, except to the Holy Spirit? We dare
+not say that he does them by an innate and natural virtue of his
+own, for that would be to fall at once into the Pelagian heresy;
+neither dare we attribute his good deeds to an evil spirit, and say,
+'However good they may look, they must be bad, for he belongs to a
+denomination who cannot have God's Spirit.' We dare not; for that
+would be to approach fearfully near to the unpardonable sin itself,
+the sin against the Holy Ghost, the bigotry which says, 'He casteth
+out devils by the Prince of the devils.' Surely if we be
+Christians, and Churchmen, we confess (for the Bible and the Prayer-
+book declare) that every good deed of man comes down from the One
+Fountain of Good, from God, the Father of Lights, by the inspiration
+of His Holy Spirit.
+
+Then think, my friends, think what words we have said. We confess
+that the great, absolute, almighty, eternal God, in whose hand suns
+and stars, ages and generations, hell and heaven, and all which is
+and has been, and ever will be, are but as a grain of sand; who has
+but to take away His breath, and the whole universe would become
+nothing and nowhere; the utterly holy and righteous God, who is of
+purer eyes than to behold iniquity, who charges His angels with
+folly, and the heavens are not clean in His sight--we confess, I
+say, that this great God has condescended to visit that man's soul,
+and cherish it, and teach it, and shape it (be it ever so little)
+into His own likeness: and shall we dare to stand aloof from him
+from whom God does not stand aloof? Shall we refuse to walk with
+one who walks with God? Shall we refuse to work with one who is a
+fellow-worker with God, to love one whom God loves, to take by the
+hand one whose guest God has become? Shall we be more dainty than
+God? more fastidious than God? more righteous than God? more
+separate from sinners than God? Oh, my friends, let us pray that we
+may love God better, and know His likeness more clearly; that we may
+be more ready to recognise, and admire, and welcome every, even the
+smallest trace of that likeness in any human being, remembering that
+it is the likeness of Christ, who was not merely The Teacher of all
+in every nation who fear God and work righteousness, but the Saviour
+who ate and drank with publicans and sinners: and then we shall be
+more careful how we call unclean what God Himself has cleansed with
+His own presence, His own grace, His own quickening and renewing and
+sanctifying Spirit.
+
+Be sure, be sure, my friends, that in proportion as we really love
+the Lord Jesus Christ, we shall love those who love Him, be it in
+never so clumsy or mistaken a fashion; and love those too whom He
+loved enough to die for them, and whom He loves now enough to teach
+and strengthen. We shall say to them, not 'Wherein do we differ?'
+but 'Wherein do we agree?' Not, 'Because I cannot worship with you,
+therefore I will not work with you;' but rather, 'I wish that I
+could worship with you; I will whenever and wherever I can, as far
+as you allow me, as far as the law allows me, as far as your worship
+is not in my eyes an actually sinful thing: but, be that as it may,
+we can at least do together something better even than worshipping,
+and that is, working. We can surely do good together. Together,
+let our denomination or party be what it may, we can feed the
+hungry, clothe the naked, reform the prisoner, humanize the
+degraded, save yearly the lives of thousands by labouring for the
+public health, and educate the minds and morals of the masses,
+though our religious differences (shame on us that it should be so!)
+force us to part when we begin to talk to them about the world to
+come.'
+
+For are we not brothers after all? Has not God made us of one
+blood, English men, with English hearts? Has not Christ redeemed us
+with one and the same sacrifice? Has not the Holy Spirit given us
+one and the same desire of doing good? And shall we not use that
+spirit hand in hand? Look, look at the opportunities of doing good
+which are around you; look at God's field of good works, white
+already to the harvest; and the labourers are few. Shall these few,
+instead of going manfully to work, stand idly quarrelling about the
+shape of their instruments, and their favourite modes of using them?
+God forbid! True, there are errors against which we are bound to
+protest to the uttermost; but how few? The one real enemy we have
+all to fight is sin--evil-doing. If any man or doctrine makes men
+worse--makes men do worse deeds, protest then, if you will, and
+spare not, and shrink not: for sin must be of the Devil, whatever
+else is not. And therefore we are bound to protest against any
+doctrine which parts man from God, and, under whatsoever pretence of
+reverence or purity, draws again the veil between him and his
+Heavenly Father, and denies him free access to the Throne of Grace,
+and the feet of Jesus, that he may carry thither his own sins, his
+own doubts, his own sorrows, and speak (wondrous condescension of
+redeeming grace!) speak with God face to face, and yet live. For
+this we must protest; for this we must die, if needs be; for if we
+lose this, we lose all which our reforming forefathers won for us at
+the stake, ay, we lose our own souls; for we lose righteousness and
+strength, and the power to do the will of God.
+
+For to shut a man out from free access to God and Christ is to make
+him certainly false, dishonest, cowardly, degraded, slavish, and
+sinful; as modern Popery has made, and always will make, those over
+whom it really gains power. This is the root of our hereditary
+protest against Popery; not merely because we do not agree with
+certain of its doctrines, but because we know from experience, that
+as now taught by the Jesuits, with whom it has identified itself,
+its general tendency is to make men bad men, ignorant, dishonest,
+rebellious; unworthy citizens of a free and loyal state.
+
+And there are practices against which congregations have a right to
+protest, not only as Christians, but as free Englishmen.
+Congregations have a right to protest against any minister who
+introduces obsolete ceremonies which empty his church and drive away
+his people. Those ceremonies may be quite harmless in themselves,
+as I really believe most of them are; many of them may be beautiful,
+and, if properly understood, useful, as I think they are; but a
+thing may be good in itself, and yet become bad by being used at a
+wrong time, and in a way which produces harm. And it is shocking,
+to say the least, to see churches emptied and parishes thrown into
+war for the sake of such matters. The lightest word which can be
+used for such conduct is, pedantry; but I fear at times lest the
+Lord in heaven should be using a far more awful word, and when He
+sees weak brethren driven from the fold of the Church by the self-
+will and obstinacy of the very men who profess to desire to bring
+all into the Church, as the only place where salvation is to be
+found,--I fear, I say, when I see such deeds, lest the Lord should
+repeat against them His own awful words: 'If any man scandalize one
+of these little ones who believeth on Me, it were better for him
+that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were
+drowned in the depths of the sea.' What sadder mistake? Those who
+have sworn to seek out Christ's lambs scattered up and down this
+wicked world, shall they be the very ones to frighten those lambs
+out of the fold, instead of alluring them back into it? Shall the
+shepherd play the part, not even of the hireling who flees and
+leaves the sheep to themselves, but of the very wolf who scatters
+the flock? God forbid! The Church, like the Sabbath, was made for
+man, my friends: not man for the Church; and the Son of Man, as He
+is Lord of the Sabbath, is Lord of the Church, and will have mercy
+in its dealings rather than sacrifice. The minister, my friends,
+was made for the people: and not the people for the minister. What
+else does the very name 'minister' mean? Not a lord who has
+dominion, but a servant, a servant to all, who must give up again
+and again his private notions of what he thinks best in itself for
+the sake of what will be best for his flock; who must be, like St.
+Paul, a Jew to the Jews; under the law to those who are still under
+the law; and yet again without law to those who are without law
+(though not without law to God, but under the law to Christ); weak
+with the weak; strong with the strong; that he may gain men of all
+sorts of opinions and characters by agreeing with them as far as he
+honestly can, and showing his sympathy with each as much as he can;
+and so become all things to all men, that he may by all means save
+some. Oh, my friends, who can read honestly that glorious First
+Epistle to the Corinthians and not see how a man may have the most
+intense earnestness, the strongest doctrinal certainty, and yet at
+the same time the greatest freedom, and charity, and liberality
+about minor matters of ceremonies and Church arrangements, and
+practical methods of usefulness; glad even that Christ be preached
+by his enemies, and out of spite to him, because any way Christ is
+preached?
+
+But, my friends, if it is the right of free Englishmen to protest
+against such doings, how shall it be done? Surely in gentleness,
+calmness, reverence, as by men who know that they are standing on
+holy ground, and dealing with sacred things, before the Throne of
+God, and beneath the eye of Jesus Christ. Not surely, as it has
+been too often done, in bitterness, and wrath, and clamour, and
+evil-speaking, with really unjust suspicions, exaggerations,
+slanders, (and those, too, anonymous,) in the columns of the public
+prints. My friends, these are not God's weapons. Not such is
+Ithuriel's magic spear, the very touch of which unmasks falsehood.
+This is to try to cast out Satan by Satan, to make evil worse by
+fighting it with fresh evil. Oh, my friends, if there is one
+counsel which I would press on all here more earnestly than another,
+it is this--never, never, howsoever great may be the temptation, to
+indulge in anonymous attacks on any human being. No man has a right
+to do it who prays daily to his Father in heaven, Lead us not into
+temptation. For it is to lead oneself into temptation, and that too
+sore to resist; into the temptation to say something which one dare
+not say, and ought not to say, were one's name known; the temptation
+to forget not only the charity of Christians, but even the
+courtesies of civilized life; and to shoot, from behind the safe
+hedge of anonymousness, coward and envenomed shafts, of which we
+should be ashamed, did the world know that they were ours; of which
+we shall surely be ashamed in that great day, when the secrets of
+all hearts shall be disclosed. I speak strongly: but only because
+I know by bitter experience the terrible truth of my own words.
+
+And consider, my friends, can any good result come from handling
+sacred matters with such harsh and fierce hands as they have been
+handled of late? For ourselves, such evil tempers only excite,
+irritate, blind us: they prevent our doing justice to the opposite
+side--(I speak of all parties)--they put us into an unwholesome
+state of suspicion, and tempt us to pass harsh judgments upon men as
+righteous, and perhaps far more righteous, than ourselves: they
+stir up our pride to special plead our case, to make the best of our
+own side, and the worst of our opponents': they defile our very
+prayers; till, when we ought to be praying God to bless all mankind,
+we catch ourselves unawares calling on Him to curse our enemies.
+
+For those who are without--for the infidel, the profligate, the
+careless--oh, what a scandal to them! What an excuse for them to
+blaspheme the holy name whereby we are called, and ask, as of old,
+'Is this then the Gospel of Peace? See how these Christians hate
+one another!'
+
+While for the young, oh, my friends, what a scandal, again, to them!
+If you had seen (as I have) pious parents destroying in their own
+childrens' minds all faith, all reverence for holy things, by mixing
+themselves up in religious controversies, and indulging by their own
+firesides in fierce denunciations of men no worse than themselves;--
+if you will watch (as you may) young people taking refuge, some in
+utter frivolity, saying, 'What am I to believe? When religionists
+have settled what religion is, it will be time enough for me to
+think of it: meanwhile, let me eat and drink, for to-morrow I
+die;'--and others, the children of strong Protestant parents, taking
+refuge in the apostate Church of Rome, and saying, 'If Englishmen do
+not know what to believe, Rome does; if I cannot find certainty in
+Protestantism, I can in Popery;'--if you will consider honestly and
+earnestly these sad tragedies, you will look on it as a sacred duty
+to the children whom God has given you, to keep aloof as much as
+possible from all those points on which Christians differ, and make
+your children feel from their earliest years that there are points,
+and those the great, vital root points, on which all more or less
+agree, which many members of the Romish Church have held, and, I
+doubt not, now hold, as firmly as Protestants,--adoption by one
+common Father, justification by the blood of one common Saviour,
+sanctification by one common Holy Spirit.
+
+And believe me, my friends, that just in proportion as you delight
+in, and live by, these great doctrines, all controversies will
+become less and less important in your eyes. The more you value the
+living body of Christianity, the less you will think of its
+temporary garments; the more you feel the power of God's Spirit, the
+less scrupulous will you be about the peculiar form in which He may
+manifest Himself. Personal trust in Christ Jesus, personal love to
+Christ Jesus, personal belief that He and He only, is governing this
+poor diseased and confused world; that He is really fighting against
+all evil in it; that He really rules all nations, and fashions the
+hearts of all of them, and understands all their works, and has
+appointed them their times and the bounds of their habitation, if
+haply they may feel after Him and find Him: personal and living
+belief that the just and loving Lord Christ reigneth, be the peoples
+never so unquiet;--this, this will keep your minds clear, and sober,
+and charitable, and will make you turn with disgust from platform
+squabbles and newspaper controversies, to do the duty which lies
+nearest you; to walk soberly and righteously with your God, and
+train up your children in His faith and fear, not merely to be
+scholars, not merely to be devotees, but to be Christian Englishmen;
+courteous and gentle, and yet manful and self-restraining; fearing
+God and regarding man; growing up healthy under that solemn sense of
+national duty which is the only safeguard of national freedom.
+
+And, meanwhile, you will leave all who differ from you in the hands
+of a God who wills their salvation far more than you can do; who
+accepts, in every nation, those who fear Him and work righteousness;
+who is merciful in this--that He rewards every man according to his
+work; and who, if our brothers be otherwise minded from us, will
+reveal even that to them, if we be right: or, again, to us, if they
+be right. For we may have to learn from them, as well as they from
+us; and both have to learn much from God, in the day when all
+controversies and doubts shall vanish like a cloud; when we shall
+see no longer in part, and through a glass darkly, but face to face;
+while all things shall be bright in the sunshine of God's presence
+and of the countenance of His Son Jesus Christ our Lord.
+
+
+
+SERMON XXII. PUBLIC SPIRIT
+
+
+
+(Preached at Bideford, 1855.)
+
+1 Corinthians xii. 25, 26. That there should be no division in the
+body; but that the members should have the same care, one of
+another. And whether one member suffer, all suffer with it; or
+whether one member be honoured, all rejoice with it.
+
+I have been asked to preach in behalf of the Provident Society of
+this town. I shall begin by asking you to think over with me a
+matter which may seem at first sight to have very little to do with
+you or with a provident society, but which, nevertheless, I believe
+has very much to do with both, and is full of wholesome spiritual
+instruction for us all.
+
+Did it ever happen to any of you, to see a mob of several thousands
+put to instant flight by a mere handful of soldiers? And did you
+ever ask yourself how that apparent miracle could come to pass? The
+first answer which occurred to you, perhaps, was, that the soldiers
+were well armed, and the mob was not: but soon, I am sure, you felt
+that you were doing the soldiers an injustice; that they would have
+behaved just as bravely if every man in that mob had been as well
+armed as they, and have resisted till they were overpowered by mere
+numbers. You felt, I am sure, that there was something in the
+hearts and spirits of those soldiers which there was not in the
+hearts of the mob; that though the mob might be boiling over with
+the greediest passions, the fiercest fury, while the soldiers were
+calm, cheerful, and caring for nothing but doing their duty, yet
+that there was a thought within them which was stronger than all the
+rage and greediness of the thousands whom they faced; that, in
+short, the seeming miracle was a moral and a spiritual miracle.
+
+What, then, is this wonder-working thought which makes the soldier
+strong?
+
+Courage, you answer, and the sense of duty. True; but what has
+called out the sense of duty? What has inspired the courage? There
+was a time, perhaps, when each of those soldiers was no braver or
+more steady than the mob in front of them. Has it never happened to
+you to know some young country lad, both before and after he has
+become a soldier? Look at him in his native village (if you will
+let me draw for you the sketch of a history, which, alas! is the
+history of thousands), perhaps one of the worst and idlest lads in
+it--unwilling to work steadily, haunting the public-house and the
+worst of company; wandering out at night to poach and caring for
+nothing but satisfying his gross animal appetites; afraid to look
+you in the face, hardly able to give an intelligible, certainly not
+a civil answer; his countenance expressing only vacancy, sensuality,
+cunning, suspicion, utter want of self-respect.
+
+It is a sad sight, but how common a sight, even in this favoured
+land!
+
+At last he vanishes; he has been engaged in some drunken affray, or
+in some low intrigue, and has fled for fear of the law, and enlisted
+as a soldier.
+
+A year or two passes, and you meet the same lad again--if indeed he
+is the same. For a strange change has come over him: he walks
+erect, he speaks clearly, he looks you boldly in the face, with eyes
+full of intelligence and self-respect; he is become civil and
+courteous now; he touches his cap to you 'like a soldier;' he can
+afford now to be respectful to others, because he respects himself,
+and expects you to respect him. You talk to him, and find that the
+change is not merely outward, but inward; not owing to mere
+mechanical drill but to something which has been going on in his
+heart; and ten to one, the first thing that he begins to talk to you
+about, with honest pride, is his regiment. His regiment. Yes,
+there is the secret which has worked these wonders; there is the
+talisman which has humanized and civilized and raised from the mire
+the once savage boor. He belongs to a regiment; in one word, he has
+become the member of a body.
+
+The member of a body, in which if one member suffers, all suffer
+with it; if one member be honoured, all rejoice with it. A body,
+which has a life of its own, and a government of its own, a duty of
+its own, a history of its own, an allegiance to a sovereign, all
+which are now his life, his duty, his history, his allegiance; he
+does not now merely serve himself and his own selfish lusts: he
+serves the Queen. His nature is not changed, but the thought that
+he is the member of an honourable body has raised him above his
+nature. If he forgets that, and thinks only of himself, he will
+become selfish sluttish, drunken, cowardly, a bad soldier; as long
+as he remembers it, he is a hero. He can face mobs now, and worse
+than mobs: he can face hunger and thirst, fatigue, danger, death
+itself, because he is the member of a body. For those know little,
+little of human nature and its weakness, who fancy that mere brute
+courage, as of an angry lion, will ever avail, or availed a few
+short weeks ago, to spur our thousands up the steeps of Alma, or
+across the fatal plain of Balaklava, athwart the corpses of their
+comrades, upon the deadly throats of Russian guns. A nobler
+feeling, a more heavenly thought was needed (and when needed, thanks
+to God, it came!) to keep each raw lad, nursed in the lap of peace,
+true to his country and his Queen through the valley of the shadow
+of death. Not mere animal fierceness: but that tattered rag which
+floated above his head, inscribed with the glorious names of Egypt
+or Corunna, Toulouse or Waterloo, that it was which raised him into
+a hero: he had seen those victories; the men who conquered there
+were dead long since: but the regiment still lived, its history
+still lived, its honour lived, and that history, that honour were
+his, as well as those old dead warriors': he had fought side by
+side with them in spirit, though not in the flesh; and now his turn
+was come, and he must do as they did, and for their sakes, and count
+his own life a worthless thing for the sake of the body which he
+belonged to: he, but two years ago the idle, selfish country lad,
+now stumbling cheerful on in the teeth of the iron hail, across
+ground slippery with his comrades' blood, not knowing whether the
+next moment his own blood might not swell the ghastly stream. What
+matter? They might kill him, but they could not kill the regiment:
+it would live on and conquer; ay, and should conquer, if his life
+could help on its victory; and then its honour would be his, its
+reward be his, even when his corpse lay pierced with wounds,
+stiffening beneath a foreign sky.
+
+Here, my friends, is one example of the blessed power of fellow
+feeling, public spirit, the sense of belonging to a body whose
+members have not merely a common interest, but a common duty, a
+common honour.
+
+This Christian country, thank God! gives daily many another example
+of the same: and every place, and every station affords to each one
+of us opportunities,--more, alas, I fear, than we shall ever take
+full advantage of: but I have chosen the case of the soldier, not
+merely because it is perhaps the most striking and affecting, but
+because I wish to see, and trust in God that I shall see, those who
+remain at home in safety emulating the public spirit and self-
+sacrifice which our soldiers are showing abroad; and by sacrifices
+more peaceful and easy, but still well-pleasing unto God, showing
+that they too have been raised above selfishness, by the glorious
+thought that they are members of a body.
+
+For, are we not members of a body, my friends? Are we not members
+of the Body of bodies, members of Christ, children of God,
+inheritors of the Kingdom of Heaven? Members of Christ--we, and the
+poor for whom I plead, as well as we; perhaps, considering their
+many trials and our few trials, more faithfully and loyally by far
+than we are. There are some here, I doubt not, to whom that word,
+that argument, is enough: to whom it is enough to say, Remember
+that the Lord whom you love loves that shivering, starving wretch as
+well as He loves you, to open and exhaust at once their heart, their
+purse, their labour of love. God's blessing be upon all such! But
+it would be hypocrisy in me, my friends, to speak to this, or any
+congregation, as if all were of that temper of mind. It is not one
+in ten, alas! in the present divided state of religious parties, who
+feels the mere name of Christ enough of a bond to make him sacrifice
+himself for his fellow Christians, as a soldier does for his fellow
+soldiers. Not one in ten, alas! feels that he owes the same
+allegiance to Christ as the soldier does to his Queen; that the
+honour of Christianity is his honour, the history of Christianity
+his history, the life of Christianity his life. Would that it were
+so: but it is not so. And I must appeal to feelings in you less
+wide, honourable and righteous though they are: I must appeal to
+your public spirit as townsmen of this place.
+
+I have a right as a clergyman to do so: I have a duty as a
+clergyman to do so. For your being townsmen of this place is not a
+mere material accident depending on your living in one house instead
+of another. It is a spiritual matter; it is a question of eternity.
+Your souls and spirits influence each other; your tastes, opinions,
+tempers, habits, make those of your neighbours better or worse; you
+feel it in yourselves daily. Look at it as a proof that, whether
+you will or not, you are one body, of which all the members must
+more or less suffer and rejoice together; that you have a common
+weal, a common interest; that God has knit you together; that you
+cannot part yourselves even if you will; and that you can be happy
+and prosperous only by acknowledging each other as brothers, and by
+doing to each other as you would they should do unto you.
+
+It may be hard at times to bring this thought home to our minds:
+but it is none the less true because we forget it; and if we do not
+choose to bring it home to our own minds, it will be sooner or later
+brought home to them whether we choose or not.
+
+For bear in mind, that St. Paul does not say, if one member suffers,
+all the rest ought to suffer with it: he says that they do suffer
+with it. He does not say merely, that we ought to feel for our
+fellow townsmen; he says, that God has so tempered the body together
+as to force one member to have the same care of the others as of
+itself; that if we do not care to feel for them, we shall be made to
+feel with them. One limb cannot choose whether or not it will feel
+the disease of another limb. If one limb be in pain, the whole body
+_must_ be uneasy, whether it will or not. And if one class in a
+town, or parish, or county, be degraded, or in want, the whole town,
+or parish, or county, must be the worse for it. St. Paul is not
+preaching up sentimental sympathy: he is telling you of a plain
+fact. He is not saying, 'It is a very fine and saintly thing, and
+will increase your chance of heaven, to help the poor.' He is
+saying, 'If you neglect the poor, you neglect yourself; if you
+degrade the poor, you degrade yourself. His poverty, his
+carelessness, his immorality, his dirt, his ill-health, will punish
+_you_; for you and he are members of the same body, knit together
+inextricably for weal or woe, by the eternal laws according to which
+the Lord Jesus Christ has constituted human society; and if you
+break those laws, they will avenge themselves.'--My friends, do we
+not see them avenge themselves daily? The slave-holder refuses to
+acknowledge that his slave is a member of the same body as himself;
+but he does not go unpunished: the degradation to which he has
+brought his slave degrades him, by throwing open to him. the
+downward path of lust, laziness, ungoverned and tyrannous tempers,
+and the other sins which have in all ages, slowly but surely, worked
+the just ruin of slave-holding states. The sinner is his own
+tempter, and the sinner is his own executioner: he lies in wait for
+his own life (says Solomon) when he lies in wait for his brother's.
+Do you see the same law working in our own free country? If you
+leave the poor careless and filthy, you can obtain no good servants:
+if you leave them profligate, they make your sons profligate also:
+if you leave them tempted by want, your property is unsafe: if you
+leave them uneducated, reckless, improvident, you cannot get your
+work properly done, and have to waste time and money in watching
+your workmen instead of trusting them. Why, what are all poor-rates
+and county-rates, if you will consider, but God's plain proof to us,
+that the poor are members of the same body as ourselves; and that if
+we will not help them of our own free will, we shall find it
+necessary to help them against our will: that if we will not pay a
+little to prevent them becoming pauperized or criminal, we must pay
+a great deal to keep them when they have become so? We may draw a
+lesson--and a most instructive one it is--from the city of
+Liverpool, in which it was lately proved that crime--and especially
+the crime of uneducated boys and girls--had cost, in the last few
+years, the city many times more than it would cost to educate,
+civilize, and depauperize the whole rising generation of that city,
+and had been a tax upon the capital and industry of Liverpool, so
+enormous that they would have submitted to it from no Government on
+earth; and yet they had been blindly inflicting it upon themselves
+for years, simply because they chose to forget that they were their
+brothers' keepers.
+
+Look again at preventible epidemics, like cholera. All the great
+towns of England have discovered, what you I fear are discovering
+also, that the expense of a pestilence, and of the widows and
+orphans which it creates, is far greater than the expense of putting
+a town into such a state of cleanliness as would defy the entrance
+of the disease. So it is throughout the world. Nothing is more
+expensive than penuriousness; nothing more anxious than
+carelessness; and every duty which is bidden to wait, returns with
+seven fresh duties at its back.
+
+Yes, my friends, we are members of a body; and we must realize that
+fact by painful experience, if we refuse to realize it in public
+spirit and brotherly kindness, and the approval of a good
+conscience, and the knowledge that we are living like our Lord and
+Master Jesus Christ, who laboured for all but Himself, cared for all
+but Himself; who counted not His own life dear to Himself that by
+laying it down He might redeem into His own likeness the beings whom
+He had made; and who has placed us on this earth, each in his own
+station, each in his own parish, that we might follow in His
+footsteps, and live by His Spirit, which is the spirit of love and
+fellow-feeling, that new and risen life of His, which is the life of
+duty, honour, and self-sacrifice.
+
+Yes. Let us look rather at this brighter side of the question, my
+friends, than at the darker. I will preach the Gospel to you rather
+than the Law. I will appeal to your higher feelings rather than to
+your lower; to your love rather than your fear; to your honour
+rather than your self-interest. It will be pleasanter for me: it
+will meet with a more cordial response, I doubt not, from you.
+
+Some dislike appeals to honour. I cannot, as long as St. Paul
+himself appeals to it so often, both in the individual and in
+bodies. His whole Epistle to Philemon is an appeal, most delicate
+and graceful, to Philemon's sense of honour--to the thought of what
+he owed Paul, of what Paul wished him to repay, not with money, but
+with generosity.
+
+And his appeal to the Corinthians is a direct appeal to their
+honour: not to fears of any punishment, or wrath of God, but to the
+respect which they owed to themselves as members of a body, the
+Church of Corinth; and to the respect which they owed to that body
+as a whole, and which they had disgraced by allowing an open scandal
+in it.
+
+And his appeal was successful: they took it just as it was meant;
+and he rejoices in the thought that they did so. 'For this, that ye
+sorrowed after a godly sort, what carefulness it wrought in you,
+yea, what clearing of yourselves, what indignation, what fear, what
+vehement desire, what zeal, what revenge! In all things you have
+approved yourselves to be clear in this matter,'
+
+Noble words, and nobly answered. My friends, you, too, are members
+of a body: go, and do likewise in the matter of this Society's
+failing funds.
+
+* * * * *
+
+May I boldly ask you to alter this to-day? This, remember, is no
+common day. It is a day of thankfulness. The thankfulness which
+you professed, and I doubt not many of you felt, on Thursday night,
+has not evaporated, I trust, by Sunday morning. You have not yet
+forgotten--I trust that there is many a one who will never forget--
+what you owe as townsmen of this place, to God who has preserved you
+safe through the dangers and sorrows of the past autumn. You owe
+more than one debt to God. You owe, all England owes, thanks to Him
+for the late bounteous harvest, thanks to Him for the present
+prosperous seed-time: think what our state might have been with
+scarcity, as well as war, upon us, and pay part of your debt this
+day. You owe a thank-offering for the cessation of the cholera; a
+thank-offering for the sparing of your own lives;--pay it now. You
+owe a thank-offering for the glorious victories of our armies:--pay
+it now. You belong, too, to an honourable body, which has a noble
+history, and sets you many a noble example; show yourselves worthy
+of that body, that history, those examples, now.
+
+And what fitter place than this very church to awaken within you the
+thought of duty and of public spirit?--this church which stands as
+God's own sign that you are the townsmen, the representatives, ay,
+some of you the very descendants, of many a noble spirit of old
+time?--this church, in which God's blessing has been invoked on
+deeds of patriotism and enterprise, of which the whole world now
+bears the fruit?--these walls, in which Elizabeth's heroes, your
+ancestors, have prayed before sailing against the Spanish Armada,--
+these walls, which saw the baptism of the first red Indian convert,
+and the gathering in, as it were, of the firstfruits of the
+heathen,--these walls, in which the early settlers of Virginia have
+invoked God's blessing on those tiny ventures which were destined to
+become the seeds of a mighty nation, and the starting-point of the
+United States,--these walls, which still bear the monument of your
+heroic townsman Strange, who expended for his plague-stricken
+brethren, talents, time, wealth, and at last life itself. For, to
+return, and to apply, I hope, to your consciences, the example of
+the soldier with which I began this Sermon:--shall it be only on the
+battle-field that the power of fellow-feeling is shown forth? Shall
+public spirit be only strong when it has to destroy, and not when it
+has to save and comfort? God forbid! Surely you here have a common
+corporate life, common history, common allegiance, common interest,
+which should inspire you to do your duty, whatsoever it may be, for
+the good of your native place, and to show that you feel an
+honourable self-respect in the thought that you belong to an ancient
+and once famous town, which though it may be outstripped awhile in
+the race of commerce, need never be outstripped, if you will be
+worthy sons of your worthy ancestors, in that race to which St. Paul
+exhorts us; the race of justice and benevolence, the noble rivalry
+of noble deeds.
+
+Oh, look, I beseech you, upon this church as its old worshippers,
+the forefathers of many of you who sit here this day, were wont to
+look on it. Remember that this church is the sign that you are one
+town, one parish, one body; that century after century, this church
+has stood to witness to your fathers, and your fathers' fathers,
+that all who kneel within these walls are brothers, rich or poor;
+that all are children of one Father, redeemed by one Saviour, taught
+by one Spirit. This, this is the blessed truth of which the parish
+church is token, as nought else can be--that you are one body,
+members one of another, and that God's blessing is on your union and
+fellow-feeling; that God smiles on your bearing each other's
+burdens, and so fulfilling the law of Christ. Look on this church,
+and do to others as this church witnesses that God has done for you.
+
+And now, some of you may perhaps have been disappointed, some a
+little scornful, at my having used so many words about so small a
+matter, and talked of battles, legends, heroes of old time, all
+merely to induct you to help this Society with a paltry extra thirty
+pounds. Be it so. I shall be glad if you think so. If the matter
+be so small, it is the more easily done; if the sum be paltry, it is
+the more easily found. If my reasons are very huge and loud-
+sounding, and the result at which I aim very light, the result ought
+to follow all the more certainly; for believe me, my friends, the
+reasons are good ones, Scriptural ones, practical ones, and ought to
+produce the result. I give you the strongest arguments for showing
+your Christian, English public spirit; and then I ask you to show it
+in a very small matter. But be sure that to do what I ask of you to
+do to-day is just as much your duty, small as it may seem, as it
+would be, were you soldiers, to venture your lives in the cause of
+your native land. Duty, be it in a small matter or a great, is duty
+still; the command of Heaven, the eldest voice of God. And, believe
+me, my friends, that it is only they who are faithful in a few
+things who will be faithful over many things; only they who do their
+duty in everyday and trivial matters who will fulfil them on great
+occasions. We all honour and admire the heroes of Alma and
+Balaklava; we all trust in God that we should have done our duty
+also in their place. The best test of that, my friends, is, can we
+do our duty in our own place? Here the duty is undeniable, plain,
+easy. Here is a Society instituted for one purpose, which has, in
+order to exist, to appropriate the funds destined for quite a
+different purpose. Both purposes are excellent; but they are
+different. The Offertory money is meant for the sick, the widow,
+and the orphan; for those who _cannot_ help themselves. The
+Provident Society is meant to encourage those who _can_ help
+themselves to do so. Every farthing, therefore, taken from the
+Offertory money is taken from the widow and the orphan. I ask you
+whether this is right and just? I appeal, not merely to your
+prudence and good sense, in asking you to promote prudence and good
+sense among the poor by the Provident Society; I appeal to your
+honour and compassion, on behalf of the sick, the widow, and orphan,
+that they may have the full enjoyment of the funds intended for
+them. Again, I say, this may seem a small matter to you, and I may
+seem to be using too many words about it. Small? Nothing is small
+which affects not merely the temporal happiness, but the eternal
+welfare, of an immortal soul. My friends, my friends, if any one of
+you had to support yourself and your children on four, seven, or
+even (mighty sum!) ten shillings a week, it would not seem a small
+matter to you then. A few shillings more or less would be to you
+_then_ a treasure won or lost; a matter to you of whether you should
+keep a house over your children's heads, whether you should keep
+shoes upon their feet, and clothes upon their backs; whether you
+should see them, as they grew up, tempted by want into theft or
+profligacy; whether you should rise in the morning free enough from
+the sickening load of anxiety, and the care which eats out the core
+of life, and makes men deaf and blind (as it does many a one) to all
+pleasant sights, and sounds, and thoughts, till the very sunlight
+seems blotted out of heaven by that black cloud of care--care--care--
+which rises with you in the morning, and dogs you at your work all
+day (even if you are happy enough to have work), and sits on your
+pillow all night long, ready to whisper in your ear each time you
+wake; '_Be_ anxious and troubled about many things! What wilt thou
+eat, and what wilt thou drink, and wherewithal wilt thou be clothed?
+For thou hast _no_ Heavenly Father, none above who knowest that thou
+needest these things before thou askest Him.' Oh, my friends, if
+you had felt but for a single day, that terrible temptation, the
+temptation of poverty, and debt, and care, which leads so many a one
+to sell their souls for a few paltry pence, to them of as much value
+as pounds would be to you;--if, I say, you had once felt that
+temptation in all its weight, you would not merely sacrifice, as I
+ask you now to do, some superfluity, which you will never miss; you
+would, I do believe, if you had human hearts within you, be ready to
+sacrifice even the comforts of life to prevent him whose heart may
+be breaking slowly, not a hundred yards from your own door, (and
+more hearts break in this world than you fancy, my friends,) from
+passing through that same dark shadow of want, and care, and
+temptation where the Devil stands calling to the poor man all day
+long, 'Fall down, and worship me; and I will relieve those wants of
+thine which man neglects!'
+
+I have no more to say. I leave the rest to your own good feeling,
+as townsmen of this ancient and honourable place,--remembering
+always who it was who said, 'Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of
+the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto Me.'
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SERMONS FOR THE TIMES***
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