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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64716 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64716)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Farewell Sermon, by Joseph Holden Pott
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: A Farewell Sermon
- delivered on Sunday, October 23, A.D. 1842, at the Parish Church of St. Mary Abbotts, Kensington
-
-
-Author: Joseph Holden Pott
-
-
-
-Release Date: March 6, 2021 [eBook #64716]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A FAREWELL SERMON***
-
-
-Transcribed from the 1842 J. G. F. & J. Rivington edition by David Price.
-
-
-
-
-
- A
- FAREWELL SERMON,
-
-
- DELIVERED
-
- ON SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, A.D. 1842,
-
- AT THE PARISH CHURCH OF
-
- ST. MARY ABBOTTS, KENSINGTON.
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- BY THE VEN.
- ARCHDEACON POTT, M.A.
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- PRINTED AT THE REQUEST OF THE PARISHIONERS.
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON:
- PRINTED FOR J. G. F. & J. RIVINGTON,
- ST. PAUL’S CHURCH YARD,
- AND WATERLOO PLACE, PALL MALL.
-
- * * * * *
-
- 1842.
-
- * * * * *
-
- TO
- THE PARISHIONERS
- OF
- THE PARISH OF KENSINGTON,
-
- THE FOLLOWING DISCOURSE,
-
- WITH EVERY FERVENT PRAYER FOR THEIR WELFARE,
-
- IS INSCRIBED,
-
- BY THEIR FAITHFUL
-
- AND AFFECTIONATE SERVANT,
-
- J. H. POTT.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A FAREWELL SERMON, &c.
-
-
- ECCLES. iii. 1.
-
- “To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under
- the heaven.”
-
-WHEN time draws on to a close with us, the last opportunities should be
-carefully regarded and applied to some such purpose as may show what has
-been the chief aim and the main design of past endeavours.
-
-A sad thing it would be, indeed, if the last portion of our time were to
-be reserved for some single effort: for who can accomplish at one step
-that which a daily progress only can effect?
-
-They who enjoyed long lives of old time, indulged, it must be owned, in
-some complaints which showed more of the weakness of our common nature,
-than of that proficiency for which the loan of life, whatever may be the
-term of its duration, is bestowed. The good king Hezekiah poured his
-lamentation, when it should seem he had much cause to be contented with
-what God had wrought for him in his day. He called that “the cutting off
-his days,” which it may be thought he might have met with more
-complacency of mind, from the contemplation of the benefits which God had
-enabled him to procure for Israel: but if there was any token of
-infirmity in this, it was coupled with a pious mind, and the suit was
-therefore heard and granted. If David, too, seems sometimes querulous in
-his pleas for the enlargement of his days, yet he added a good and
-becoming reason for it, that he might show the power of God to that
-generation in which his eventful lot was cast, and make it known to those
-who were to come.
-
-But we may remark in general, that we do not form a right judgment of the
-Providence of God, if at any time we speak with disparagement of the term
-of human life, as too short for the accomplishment of things which form
-its proper end. We should consider, rather, that in all cases the gift
-of life is made capable of some sufficient share of the mercies and
-salvation of the Lord. It becomes so for all who partake a common
-nature, where they put no impediment to the current and communication of
-Divine Grace. Let us weigh this point with care: it has a seasonable
-application at this moment, since it will prevent undue regrets when any
-portion of the loan of life may cease to serve the purposes to which it
-may have been conducive whilst the season for its exercise endured.
-
-If, then, it is the child who is called hence to an early grave, he goes
-with the seal of grace upon him; and what was wanting here, the bud, the
-blossom, and the ripened cluster, will thrive in a happier soil, and
-flourish in a more propitious climate. The thread of life, which, in
-this case, was so soon severed from the parent’s bosom, was fastened to
-the throne of heaven, and death has no power to dissolve it. The
-Conqueror of Satan, who brought life and immortality to light, will not
-exclude those little ones, whom He once called into his presence, from
-the rescued train of countless multitudes who shall hear that glad word
-of introduction, “Behold, I and the children whom God hath given me.”
-The privileges of the Gospel stood pledged to them in this life to render
-their change blessed to themselves, and to leave that consolation, in the
-day of sorrow, for surviving friends.
-
-If the call hence comes in somewhat of maturer years, though still in the
-days of youth, the young man will have lived long enough to have learned
-the rudiments of saving knowledge, and to have practised the first
-lessons of Christian faith and Christian duty; and thus the best end for
-which the loan of life was given, will have found that happy earnest of
-its future fulness.
-
-If, again, the thread of life shall have been continued to later periods
-of its course, no doubt the opportunities for all those advantages to
-which life can minister, will render it at all times a blessing and a
-boon. Nor will you wonder, in comparing the longer with the shorter term
-of life, that the suit of supplicating parents in our Lord’s days,
-whether for the child or for the youth, was so often granted by a
-restoration to a more protracted term of life. You will not wonder that
-our Blessed Lord should so mark the value of the life which now is, and
-its connexion, by a right improvement of it, with the life of glory. We
-are bound, indeed, to bless God for all the dispensations of his hand,
-for they all serve for good; but we must not reverse the language, not of
-natural feeling only, but of more just conceptions of the purposes for
-which life is given, or be led to think that death is the boon, and that
-a return to this life could be no blessing. When did our Lord make that
-answer to the mourner’s suit? or when did He reprove the tears and
-sorrows of survivors with that cold reply? So little ground is there,
-among the singularities of dress and manners in which some have placed so
-much of their religion, for refusing to put on the mourning weed for the
-departed. There is but a single instance in the Sacred Volume of a
-prohibition so enjoined; and then it was designedly portentous, denoting
-the last extremity to which offences had grown up in Israel, and the
-punishments which were to follow.
-
-If now the term of life runs on, and the seasons are prolonged, old age
-comes forward, and not without its burdens and privations. Will you
-plead here with old Barzillai, to whom David gave a gracious invitation,
-to mark the sense he entertained of the value of past services, proposing
-that he should return with him when he was restored from exile, and
-brought back in peace and honour to Jerusalem? The old man’s answer was
-not entirely the most proper and becoming: “and Barzillai said unto the
-king, Can thy servant taste what I eat, or what I drink? can I hear any
-more the voice of singing-men or singing-women? Wherefore, then, should
-thy servant be yet a burden unto my lord the king?” But Barzillai, if
-this was ill spoken, showed a prudent spirit in what followed, for he
-puts in a prompt plea for his son: “Behold,” said he, “thy servant
-Chimham; let him go with my lord the king, and do with him what shall
-seem good unto thee.” Now David might, no doubt, have replied, “I want
-you for the council-board, where your sage experience may yield me better
-service than this youth can furnish.” But David had a due regard to the
-privileges of descent, and to the preference to be shown to the children
-of deserving parents who may spend their lives in the service of their
-country, and frequently can find no reward in this life, but in the
-persons of surviving children. It is the plain stamp of barbarism which
-rests upon those governments which do not recognize this principle, and
-where the hand of power makes one only testament for the frail possessor
-after all his services. David formed a different judgment; he accepted
-Barzillai’s tender of his son; he followed the same course which he had
-pursued with poor Mephibosheth, the son of the princely, noble-minded
-Jonathan, who preferred the known will of God, and his love to David, to
-the crown of one who had incurred the forfeiture of what he had so
-ill-sustained. David placed Mephibosheth at his own board, although he
-could neither serve him in the field, nor attend him in his exile. The
-first order made upon the king’s return, after receiving Mephibosheth’s
-excuse, was to confirm to him the grant which had before been made in his
-behalf.
-
-Thus have we traced the several stages of the life of man, and in each of
-them we have found that life might be a blessing, and the ground of every
-blessing; and that God, ever gracious, ever merciful, might crown with
-some word of benediction the closing days of each such term or period of
-the life of man, just as He did the six glorious days of the creation.
-The morning and the evening (for so we reckon time) were followed by a
-solemn benediction, but with a special blessing for the Sabbath-day, the
-crown of all that stupendous work, the day sanctified by the Creator’s
-rest; the day claimed for Himself, with a marked reserve, such as the
-true Proprietor of all that He had made, and of all the bounties which
-distinguished man’s first abode in Paradise, was pleased to attach to one
-tree in the garden, by which the first pair might be reminded of the
-homage due to God, and might fulfil it by a strict regard to his
-commandment.
-
-The Sabbath-day! With what joy must its regular returns have been hailed
-in the first scenes of an unblemished world; and how good and gracious
-was the Author of that first hallowed institution, so that in the day of
-forfeiture, not only was the first pledge of salvation given, but the
-welcome respite from increasing labours by returning Sabbaths was
-continued. It had no limitation or exception in its first appointment,
-nor should we presume to put such; much less was there any intimation
-given in that hour that the appointment of this day, with its solemn
-benediction, was but an anticipated notice of the Jewish Sabbath,
-together with what was indeed peculiar to it, when, after long
-intermissions or neglects, it was revived. Can we think that when “for
-every thing there is a season,” there was to be none more especially
-provided, in all times, for religious observation? and that, too, when
-the Sovereign Lord had set his seal to such provision, without one word
-which could affect its perpetuity? Accordingly we find a set time for
-religious exercises mentioned in that new scene of discipline and trial
-to which man was removed; for, indeed, he was not cast out as an alien
-and an enemy, a wanderer and a wretch.
-
-In this hour of closure for my pastoral care among you, it may not be
-unseasonable to advert to things which have found their turns in hours of
-teaching and persuasion. Let me then entreat you to remember those first
-acts of grace, the early grounds of good hope, which made life itself,
-with all its seasons, a blessing, and, if rightly husbanded, the
-seed-plot of all blessings to the sons of men. Nothing but a new
-apostasy could destroy that hope, when the term of life was continued
-where it might have been cut short, in which case the human race would
-have been extinguished, and that triumph would have been given to the
-common foe to God and man. Nothing but a new apostasy from God would
-render man, in his state of promised rescue and encouragement and in the
-new term of his probation, an enemy to God. Before that horrible
-desertion from his worship, the Most High made his visit to the
-patriarchal altar, and gave that memorable declaration of his will, “If
-thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted?” The ground was laid in
-purpose and effect for that acceptance; and surely the assurance thus
-added was not for one family.
-
-Thus there is a Sabbath still set apart for a welcome day of rest, and
-for religious exercises; a day, the joy of which I have so often shared
-with you in these happy seasons of religious worship and communion.
-Remember the well-timed distinctions which He who was Lord also of the
-Sabbath-day, as the partner of his Father’s glory, prescribed for the
-right observance of the day, divesting it of its legal strictness and
-peculiarities, and still more protecting it, by an open vindication of
-its essential objects, from Jewish scruples and from Jewish
-superstitions.
-
-O look well to the duties of the Christian Sabbath! We want no
-traditionary warrant for its transfer to the glad day of the Redeemer’s
-resurrection. The Scriptures furnish plain and indubitable vestiges of
-that change. Look well to its salutary obligations, bound upon us by the
-twofold cogency of precept and example.
-
-Remember who it was, who, after the scene of his ministerial labours,
-kept his last Sabbath in the grave, and crowned with perpetual glory the
-day of his triumphant resurrection. Well might that day become not only
-the day of rest from labour, but a day of gladness and release from
-worldly cares and occupation, and, above all, the happy emblem of a rest
-from every evil work, a respite from a bondage worse than that of servile
-Egypt, a rest too from the galling yoke and ruling power of sin, which is
-the privilege of faith.
-
-Among such topics as may now claim a seasonable repetition, I may again
-remind you how much it behoves us, in consulting the written word, the
-rule of faith and duty, to avoid all partial views, by which restriction
-one truth would exclude another; or, what is worse, a wrong conclusion
-may be joined with what is only true in some respects, and both the truth
-and the fallacious inference may thus gain currency together. The
-neglect of this rule has brought more strifes and divisions into the
-Christian world than almost any thing that can be named. Take an
-instance if you think fit; there is more joy when that which is lost is
-found again, than for that which was never lost. This is true in that
-respect; but will you strain the matter farther, and say that the
-recovered sheep is of more worth than the whole flock to which it is
-restored? Will you say that the piece of silver which was missing, and
-when found creates much joy on that account, outweighs all that the
-purse, from whence it dropped, contained? Will you say, that the
-pardoned son, who returns to the right path by a true repentance, and
-fills his father’s heart with well placed and unwonted joy, is in all
-respects to be preferred to the son who never left the right path from an
-early day? The forgiving father’s answer will convict that
-misconception:—“Son, thou art ever with me, and all that I have is
-thine.” If the elder brother may be thought to have lost his preference,
-it could only be because of his envious temper and his ill-timed
-remonstrance. In avoiding partial views and misapplications of what is
-true, the more numerous and more general and plainer testimonies, and
-those which admit but of one construction, will be the guiding light for
-reconcilement and consistency—not for preference, for that would still be
-but a partial view.
-
-I may here add a necessary caution (oftentimes suggested, for it
-frequently proves needful), to give heed to the native idioms or forms of
-speech, which were in use, and rightly understood, by those to whom the
-word of treaty and persuasion was first addressed. The use of learned
-pains will thus appear, as well as of every method of right reasoning in
-the study of the sacred Scriptures, the rule of faith and duty for which
-we have to bless God daily.
-
-I may now touch upon the best and only safe ground of trust which we have
-to take in any season of review, when past portions of our lives are
-recalled to our consideration. We may look, now, to the hope of pardon,
-and allowance for things done amiss, or things left undone; and blessed
-be God that ground has been laid, or who could stand in judgment in the
-last account? Certainly not the boastful and punctilious Pharisee;
-certainly not those who have keener eyes for the faults of others than
-for their own defects. Excellent are the words of our Lord’s apostle,
-and now most seasonable in their application; thus he marks it for a
-ruling principle of charity, that it “thinketh no evil,” and is not,
-therefore, apt to censure or condemn.
-
-It is but in some respects, that we can speak well of those whom we are
-least inclined to censure, and most ready to regard with favour;—and with
-that remark I shall fairly take leave of what concerns myself in this day
-of valediction.
-
-But I am well aware that the season of departure from accustomed scenes
-of duty is a proper season for advice, and to this last tribute of
-sincere affection and regard, I will now address myself.
-
-We stand much for authority, for rights of station, and the sacred
-warrant of the pastoral commission—and we do well, for without them there
-would be no order in the world, no joint progress in a common path; no
-peace, no security. When every man in Israel did what was right in his
-own eyes, and nothing by direction or consent, it was a day of trouble
-and disaster, of ruin and confusion. They who will own no guide in the
-way they have to tread, had need be well acquainted with the road.
-
-It would be well if such men, who despise all guides, would be content to
-go alone—but was it ever so seen in all the world? Are not such the men
-who strive most eagerly to press others into their train from all
-quarters where they can obtrude themselves and spread their pestilent
-opinions, and lay their destructive snares?
-
-But the rules of pastoral advice derive their obligation from the
-simplest forms of truth; were it otherwise, how would they meet the
-varied calls for choice and resolution which come forward in the course
-of human life? If the truth itself has no special period for the height
-and measure of its growth in human breasts, yet it has for its perpetual
-standard God’s own eternal attributes. In those perfections of the
-Deity, the sure test of truth is established. Our Lord’s apostle takes
-this ground; “He that cometh to God, must believe that he is;”—and
-observe what follows, “and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently
-seek him;”—in which two particulars, the existence of God, and the
-never-failing characters of truth, wisdom, equity, and goodness in such
-expressions of his favour, the sure foundations of his moral government
-are laid, as well as the sum of every moral and religious obligation.
-This appears in all the articles of faith, and in all the acts of duteous
-service; it appears in all that God hath done for us in the great work of
-our redemption more especially, and in all that he requires of us in
-order to a future recompense.
-
-Let no vicissitude in things by which men are tried, but with a sure
-refuge under all events for the dutiful, tempt you for a moment to forget
-that the “ways of God are equal:” it was his own challenge to backsliding
-Israel, and the last result will not fail to confirm it. Let no light
-conceit at any time induce you to suppose that the great truths, upon
-which the hope of our salvation is built, may be regarded as things
-indifferent, for which another season may be found; or that such things,
-with all their convincing proofs and trains of evidence, are placed
-beyond our reach. Can we think that our Lord’s word is not verified,
-that, “Wisdom should be justified of her children?” And with respect
-more particularly to disingenuous pleas of difficulty, do we find the
-rules of faith and duty things so hard to be ascertained? Have we no
-sufficient traces of them in the light of conscience; in the bright
-tokens and communications of God’s own grace and solemn declarations, in
-the powers of right discrimination, without which there could be no
-reasonable choice of any thing that best deserves our compliance? Have
-we not (blessed be God!) the sacred, never-erring Word, which has been
-written for our learning, and for our sure direction in all things
-needful to salvation?
-
-It is much to be observed, in such general statements, that the Apostles
-of our Lord never failed to add to their reasonings with Jew or Gentile,
-scribe or sophist, such comprehensive testimonies of the grounds of faith
-and the fruits of holiness in those who continue true to their
-engagement, as will leave no room for uncertain tests or bold opinions,
-for endless fluctuations in the mind and conduct, with doubts and
-difficulties of our own creating. It is true, that in the revelations of
-God’s will there are things which no human faculties, or even those of
-the purest of created beings in the realms of light, could penetrate,
-until the Most High so graciously revealed them,—things which relate to
-his own Essence, with his purposes and counsels for the redemption of
-mankind; but is it so hard to understand that when all was forfeited, God
-should send a Saviour from the throne of glory to become the new Head of
-mankind, by taking flesh, and in that nature, which He by his Divine
-prerogative had power to assume, to fulfil all that wherein our common
-sire had failed? Was not this a nobler exercise of Divine wisdom, than
-the creating a new race, and leaving that triumph to the common foe to
-God and man, that one such race was lost? Is it so hard to be
-understood, that to vindicate the credit of God’s Holy Law, there should
-be one sufficient satisfactory atonement, one sacrifice never more to be
-repeated or renewed? or that, by the prevailing intercession of the same
-Divine Redeemer, the gates of Heaven should be set wide to a rescued
-race, whose own exertions should from thenceforth be well employed, in
-spite of all the force and all the artifices of the common adversary?
-The glory of Divine grace is thus exalted, when the first gifts of God
-are again directed to their proper ends. To raise children unto Abraham
-of the stones of the desert, had been, no doubt, an easy task to the
-Almighty; but would it have served so highly to his glory, as the
-preservation and recovery of the first formed race? Is it so hard to
-perceive how signally the conspiring attributes of God, his justice,
-truth, and mercy, were thus illustrated and made to meet together in that
-work of redemption, which was accomplished in Christ Jesus? Does it
-require much scope of argument or pains of study to enable us to see,
-that to redeem mankind was an object no less worthy of Divine
-interposition, than to create them from the first?
-
-Again, could we safely remain strangers (as some would gladly seem to do)
-to the several branches of all moral obligations, when they have been
-confirmed anew, and drawn out into manifest example, and set before us so
-expressly for our imitation, in our Lord’s own life?
-
-St. Paul’s brief enumeration of faith, hope, and charity, forms the sum
-of what in other places he sets forth with a large detail of things
-required of us, all serving to the same end and intent: only, remember
-carefully what that end is,—it is not the same for which Christ wrought
-and suffered, and He only could sustain; yet is it the “reasonable
-service,” or “living sacrifice of the whole man,” which is required, in
-order not only to our own improvement, which could not thrive without it,
-but in order to a promised recompense, which, together with the freedom
-of the Gospel state, were procured for us at so rich a cost. The ransom
-paid, the heritage obtained, by one only righteous Mediator, how widely
-do they differ from the promised recompense for the faithful and sincere!
-and yet how consistent are these things in their whole effect! There is
-one judgment-seat for both, and one form of judicial sentence, though in
-different respects, is applied to both; but how different is the language
-in which the same Apostle speaks of each. There is no need to call in
-the suffrage of a fellow-witness to correct his view, for both he and his
-fellow-witness, when they speak of the same things, use the same
-language, and declare the same consistent judgment.
-
-And what, then, is our Lord’s compendious draft of things required of us
-in the days of our probation? it is “to love the Lord our God with all
-the heart, and with all the soul, and with all the mind, and with all the
-strength; and our neighbour as ourselves.” Will you strain a flight
-beyond this, and regard the care for yourselves as too low a pitch for
-your wishes to excel, or for the native worth of what is good? Do but
-consider that the welfare and the happiness of his reasonable creatures
-formed the first object and design of the Creator, and can never cease to
-be his purpose; consider, too, that any kind of moral goodness which
-should not be good for us, would want just so much of real goodness, and
-of its proper and essential excellency. It was one of the vilest errors
-of the heathen world, and one which prevailed much, as their earliest
-historian tells us, that there was envy towards man among the gods; and
-no wonder, if the rule of Providence could be placed in such hands as
-they feigned for its administration.
-
-Again, as the truth itself is always true, and virtue, which is its
-image, is no less uniform and constant, most groundless and injurious
-must be those restrictions which would shut out any one real virtue or
-its exercise from the Christian pattern; for in so doing we should
-detract just so much from its integrity. You may reverse the proposition
-if you think fit, and say, with truth, that every virtue puts on the
-Christian character, not from any date of their adoption, but as they are
-cherished and enhanced by new motives and inducements, and strengthened
-by the bond of unity and concord in the Christian household.
-
-Can I forget at this moment, befriended as I have been in the past scene
-of my labours, that among the virtues which some would leave to the
-heathen, together with the patriot spirit and the courage to maintain it,
-Friendship has been made to share the sentence of exclusion? At this
-rate the noble-minded Jonathan could not be added to the list of
-worthies, to recount which St. Paul found the day too short. But the
-glowing pen of David has inscribed the name of his generous and
-ever-constant friend with the sons of faith, in characters which no time
-shall efface. And what then? Had our blessed Lord no family of friends
-which brought him even weeping to the grave of Lazarus? Was it for
-nothing that it was then said, “Behold how he loved him?” Had our Lord
-no disciple who was laid in his bosom at the paschal feast; to whom also
-He gave his last charge concerning her who should be blessed among women?
-Most gladly, therefore, shall I pay the debt of friendly obligation on my
-removal from among you, and cherish that good property of mind which has
-so many moral motives for exciting its first growth, and brings forth so
-many moral fruits in its maturity which may be stored in everlasting
-garners.
-
-But as strange as that distinction is which would cast out real virtues
-from the Christian code, I may now warn you from an opposite extreme.
-Thus have words of _counsel_ been exalted above the word of the
-_commandment_. Let us weigh this also for a moment; it has been, and
-continues still to be, the nurse of many fond conceits.
-
-If you strive to put more into a vessel which is already well
-replenished, will you not displace some of its contents? And if this be
-done where the hand of the Lord hath filled the vessel, that we may drink
-and thirst no more, but live for ever, the loss (not to name the
-sacrilege) will outweigh the gain a thousand-fold. The boastful young
-man, who would not accept the word of the commandment at our Lord’s lips
-as a full reply to his inquiry, but said, “All this have I kept from my
-youth up; what lack I yet?” did not receive, in answer to this
-pretension, a word of counsel. Our Lord showed him plainly what the true
-breadth of the commandment was. Thus he required no more of him than
-that which became the bounden duty of many in the days of trouble which
-succeeded. Many were made to feel the force of that never-changing
-precept, which demands the sacrifice of all things sublunary, where the
-bond of Truth cannot otherwise be kept. There was no sacrifice, then,
-proposed to this aspiring youth, nothing counselled, beyond the verge of
-the commandment; and the test to which he was put was but the fruit of
-his overweening zeal.
-
-When some of the early Christians were not contented to wait the coming
-of the fore-named obligation, but sought martyrdom of their own accord,
-although our Lord enjoined them when persecuted in one city to flee into
-another, the Church interposed, and set a mark of public censure upon
-such rash exposures of the lives of faithful men. Will you say, then,
-that St. Paul put forward words of counsel for which he acknowledged
-that, in advising what was best for those days of peril, he had no
-commandment? He did so; but as he had received no commandment, so did he
-impose none. He left his converts free to follow his advice according to
-their own discretion: he laid no bond upon them, no vow, no snare, no
-scruple; for, indeed, he was the steady foe to things unbidden.
-
-And what, then, are the general and never changing precepts which no
-flight of zeal can surpass? We have already taken one such comprehensive
-rule from our Lord’s lips; but to enlarge a little on a theme so
-seasonable at all times, we may remark, that the word of precept requires
-us to weigh and esteem things according to their real worth; to seek the
-kingdom of God first, and his righteousness; to prize that pearl of price
-above all other things; to take readily, as St. Paul showed in his
-example, what God giveth, with a thankful and becoming use of the welcome
-gift, but with a just sense that what may be bitter and distasteful, if
-such be the cup, will serve for good to those who love God; we are thus
-enjoined to be content with such things as we have, to keep under and to
-combat every evil inclination, for there lies the place and proper
-exercise of self-denial; it will prove unfit and injurious when pressed
-beyond its uses. It was the aim of the apostle to set free to all things
-lawful and becoming, but not to be brought under the power of any; which
-shows at once the misery and inconvenience of an iron chain, whether
-forged by others, and imposed upon us in their names, or adopted by our
-own devices.
-
-He who will set up better rules than these, must not expect his word to
-be taken for them; he must prove them by the known declaration of the
-will of God, or by sufficient reasons, tried by the sure word of the
-_commandment_.
-
-There were not wanting, we may now remark, many who passed the season of
-attendance before the coming of the promised Mediator, with some profit
-to themselves and others. We have noticed this with respect to the
-patriarchal age and to the Israel of God; and it holds good, in some
-measure, with relation to the Gentile world. There were those even where
-the hideous darkness of idolatry prevailed, among whom truth found its
-seasonable culture. There were those who sustained in some sort the
-credit of the human race. They sought a refuge in their own reflections
-from false worship, and delusions gross, impious, and far below the
-character of man. They betook themselves accordingly to some sound
-principles of moral truth and moral wisdom. Thus the faculty of right
-discrimination, and the power of conscience, when not drowned in vice and
-superstition, exhibited some lines, and showed some traces of the great
-Creator’s image. They reduced the rule of life and of well-doing to some
-fixed points; prudence, justice, fortitude, the love of truth, the scorn
-of falsehood or deceit, self-government, with other noble qualities,
-exhibited plain characters of man’s first resemblance to the Author of
-his being. Thus things which are always true and always good, kept their
-place in some fair examples, and sustained the claim which such men had
-to be the teachers and the monitors of others, although without authority
-to teach or to direct—that want remained to be supplied, as the wisest of
-them fairly owned.
-
-Our blessed Lord, who came to bind the bruised reed, and to fan the least
-spark of the smoking flax, never turned with scorn from such tokens of
-good disposition and right judgment, or failed to give his word of
-commendation when they came before him. “I have not found so great
-faith, no not in Israel,” were words which embraced the qualities of mind
-which were always found to be most favourable to prepare the heart (the
-seat of every moral property) for any seed of truth which should be cast
-upon it. Such was the good ground of which our Lord made mention in his
-instructive parable of the Sower and the Seed. A rational
-acknowledgment, with a just esteem for what is good, is the soul of
-faith, of which the tenth leper left a memorable proof. Without such
-moral properties faith might be the hand for receiving any benefit, but
-where would be the mind to understand its value, and perceive the nature
-of its obligations? Let the nine lepers who were healed, but returned
-not to give thanks, supply the answer. But if the Gentile sages showed
-indeed sound judgment in reducing rules of ethics to fixed principles,
-our blessed Lord with the full warrant of divine authority formed the
-draft of faith and duty, sometimes compendiously, and sometimes with
-particular enumerations.
-
-But again, with these main principles and never-changing objects of
-regard, there is another word which has its special season—it is that of
-pastoral entreaty; and it remains for me to press it at this time—it
-results, indeed, from the whole view which has been taken.
-
-Never then, I beseech you, my beloved brethren, consent to yield the
-profession or the practice of the rule of faith and duty, for fear or
-favour; for any flattering bait or treacherous inducement, never lose
-sight of what is due to God, to your fellow-creatures, and
-yourselves;—only remember that if we neglect to take thought for others,
-that is not the care for ourselves which we are enjoined to extend to
-others. And here I cannot sufficiently commend the manifold attentions
-of the prudent and sincere, which have been paid to the needs of many in
-this vicinage. O! let that care continue for your poorer brethren—let it
-manifest itself in the religious instructions which your schools provide
-for their children, and in a thousand instances of kindness which the
-succours which the law requires cannot supply.
-
-And yet again, amidst all these incumbent obligations, there is still
-room for the words of Solomon, “to every thing there is a season;” and
-the present moment constrains me yet once more to conjure you to bear
-these things in mind, to keep them as the treasure of your hearts. If
-such shall be the purpose and endeavour, it matters less at what period
-the foot is stayed, provided it be found in the right path when the day
-of travel or of any special charge shall close. But in such case, when
-we can no longer walk together as companions, there must be the word of
-exhortation for those who have to go forward—let it then be the word of
-the apostle—to “walk worthy of your vocation wherewith ye are called,
-with all lowliness and meekness, with long suffering, forbearing one
-another in love, endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond
-of peace. There is . . . one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope
-of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of
-all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all.”
-
-To us who have walked long together, there is another cheering word on
-separation, when most happily the new guide, with every hopeful
-commendation, is at hand and ready to succeed.
-
-There is but one word more, one which cannot be amplified, for it
-contains the sum of every good wish, every grateful sense and
-recollection of past kindnesses—there remains but the little, yet
-significant and comprehensive word—farewell; “and this I pray, that your
-love may abound yet more and more, in knowledge and in all judgment; that
-ye may approve things that are excellent, that ye may be sincere, and
-without offence until the day of Christ.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE END
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON:
- GILBERT AND RIVINGTON, PRINTERS,
- ST. JOHN’S SQUARE.
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Farewell Sermon, by Joseph Holden Pott
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: A Farewell Sermon
- delivered on Sunday, October 23, A.D. 1842, at the Parish Church of St. Mary Abbotts, Kensington
-
-
-Author: Joseph Holden Pott
-
-
-
-Release Date: March 6, 2021 [eBook #64716]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A FAREWELL SERMON***
-</pre>
-<p>Transcribed from the 1842 J. G. F. &amp; J. Rivington edition
-by David Price.</p>
-<h1><span class="GutSmall">A</span><br />
-FAREWELL SERMON,</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">DELIVERED</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">ON SUNDAY,
-OCTOBER 23, A.D. 1842,</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">AT THE
-PARISH CHURCH OF</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><b>ST. MARY ABBOTTS,
-KENSINGTON.</b></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">BY THE
-VEN.</span><br />
-ARCHDEACON POTT, M.A.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">PRINTED AT
-THE REQUEST OF THE PARISHIONERS.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:<br />
-PRINTED FOR J. G. F. &amp; J. RIVINGTON,<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">ST.&nbsp; PAUL&rsquo;S CHURCH
-YARD,</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">AND WATERLOO PLACE, PALL MALL.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">1842.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><a name="page5"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 5</span><span class="GutSmall">TO</span><br />
-<b>THE PARISHIONERS</b><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">OF</span><br />
-<b>THE PARISH OF KENSINGTON,</b></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">THE
-FOLLOWING DISCOURSE,</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">WITH EVERY
-FERVENT PRAYER FOR THEIR WELFARE,</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">IS
-INSCRIBED,</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">BY THEIR
-FAITHFUL</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">AND
-AFFECTIONATE SERVANT,</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: right">J. H. POTT.</p>
-<p><a name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span></p>
-<h1><a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 7</span>A
-FAREWELL SERMON, &amp;c.</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Eccles</span>.
-iii. 1.</p>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;To every thing
-there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the
-heaven.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> time draws on to a close with
-us, the last opportunities should be carefully regarded and
-applied to some such purpose as may show what has been the chief
-aim and the main design of past endeavours.</p>
-<p>A sad thing it would be, indeed, if the last portion of our
-time were to be reserved for some single effort: for who can
-accomplish at one step that which a daily progress only can
-effect?</p>
-<p>They who enjoyed long lives of old time, indulged, it must be
-owned, in some complaints which showed more of the weakness of
-our common nature, than of that proficiency for which the loan of
-life, whatever <a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-8</span>may be the term of its duration, is bestowed.&nbsp; The
-good king Hezekiah poured his lamentation, when it should seem he
-had much cause to be contented with what God had wrought for him
-in his day.&nbsp; He called that &ldquo;the cutting off his
-days,&rdquo; which it may be thought he might have met with more
-complacency of mind, from the contemplation of the benefits which
-God had enabled him to procure for Israel: but if there was any
-token of infirmity in this, it was coupled with a pious mind, and
-the suit was therefore heard and granted.&nbsp; If David, too,
-seems sometimes querulous in his pleas for the enlargement of his
-days, yet he added a good and becoming reason for it, that he
-might show the power of God to that generation in which his
-eventful lot was cast, and make it known to those who were to
-come.</p>
-<p>But we may remark in general, that we do not form a right
-judgment of the Providence of God, if at any time we speak with
-disparagement of the term of human life, as too short for the
-accomplishment of things which form its proper end.&nbsp; We
-should consider, rather, that in all cases the gift of life is
-made capable of some sufficient share of the mercies and
-salvation of the Lord.&nbsp; It becomes so for all who partake a
-common nature, where they put no impediment to the current and
-communication of Divine Grace.&nbsp; Let us weigh this point with
-care: it has a seasonable application at this moment, since it
-will prevent undue regrets when any portion of the loan of life
-may cease to serve the purposes to which <a
-name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>it may have
-been conducive whilst the season for its exercise endured.</p>
-<p>If, then, it is the child who is called hence to an early
-grave, he goes with the seal of grace upon him; and what was
-wanting here, the bud, the blossom, and the ripened cluster, will
-thrive in a happier soil, and flourish in a more propitious
-climate.&nbsp; The thread of life, which, in this case, was so
-soon severed from the parent&rsquo;s bosom, was fastened to the
-throne of heaven, and death has no power to dissolve it.&nbsp;
-The Conqueror of Satan, who brought life and immortality to
-light, will not exclude those little ones, whom He once called
-into his presence, from the rescued train of countless multitudes
-who shall hear that glad word of introduction, &ldquo;Behold, I
-and the children whom God hath given me.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
-privileges of the Gospel stood pledged to them in this life to
-render their change blessed to themselves, and to leave that
-consolation, in the day of sorrow, for surviving friends.</p>
-<p>If the call hence comes in somewhat of maturer years, though
-still in the days of youth, the young man will have lived long
-enough to have learned the rudiments of saving knowledge, and to
-have practised the first lessons of Christian faith and Christian
-duty; and thus the best end for which the loan of life was given,
-will have found that happy earnest of its future fulness.</p>
-<p>If, again, the thread of life shall have been continued to
-later periods of its course, no doubt the <a
-name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>opportunities
-for all those advantages to which life can minister, will render
-it at all times a blessing and a boon.&nbsp; Nor will you wonder,
-in comparing the longer with the shorter term of life, that the
-suit of supplicating parents in our Lord&rsquo;s days, whether
-for the child or for the youth, was so often granted by a
-restoration to a more protracted term of life.&nbsp; You will not
-wonder that our Blessed Lord should so mark the value of the life
-which now is, and its connexion, by a right improvement of it,
-with the life of glory.&nbsp; We are bound, indeed, to bless God
-for all the dispensations of his hand, for they all serve for
-good; but we must not reverse the language, not of natural
-feeling only, but of more just conceptions of the purposes for
-which life is given, or be led to think that death is the boon,
-and that a return to this life could be no blessing.&nbsp; When
-did our Lord make that answer to the mourner&rsquo;s suit? or
-when did He reprove the tears and sorrows of survivors with that
-cold reply?&nbsp; So little ground is there, among the
-singularities of dress and manners in which some have placed so
-much of their religion, for refusing to put on the mourning weed
-for the departed.&nbsp; There is but a single instance in the
-Sacred Volume of a prohibition so enjoined; and then it was
-designedly portentous, denoting the last extremity to which
-offences had grown up in Israel, and the punishments which were
-to follow.</p>
-<p>If now the term of life runs on, and the seasons <a
-name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>are
-prolonged, old age comes forward, and not without its burdens and
-privations.&nbsp; Will you plead here with old Barzillai, to whom
-David gave a gracious invitation, to mark the sense he
-entertained of the value of past services, proposing that he
-should return with him when he was restored from exile, and
-brought back in peace and honour to Jerusalem?&nbsp; The old
-man&rsquo;s answer was not entirely the most proper and becoming:
-&ldquo;and Barzillai said unto the king, Can thy servant taste
-what I eat, or what I drink? can I hear any more the voice of
-singing-men or singing-women?&nbsp; Wherefore, then, should thy
-servant be yet a burden unto my lord the king?&rdquo;&nbsp; But
-Barzillai, if this was ill spoken, showed a prudent spirit in
-what followed, for he puts in a prompt plea for his son:
-&ldquo;Behold,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;thy servant Chimham; let
-him go with my lord the king, and do with him what shall seem
-good unto thee.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now David might, no doubt, have
-replied, &ldquo;I want you for the council-board, where your sage
-experience may yield me better service than this youth can
-furnish.&rdquo;&nbsp; But David had a due regard to the
-privileges of descent, and to the preference to be shown to the
-children of deserving parents who may spend their lives in the
-service of their country, and frequently can find no reward in
-this life, but in the persons of surviving children.&nbsp; It is
-the plain stamp of barbarism which rests upon those governments
-which do not recognize this principle, and where the hand of
-power makes one only testament <a name="page12"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 12</span>for the frail possessor after all his
-services.&nbsp; David formed a different judgment; he accepted
-Barzillai&rsquo;s tender of his son; he followed the same course
-which he had pursued with poor Mephibosheth, the son of the
-princely, noble-minded Jonathan, who preferred the known will of
-God, and his love to David, to the crown of one who had incurred
-the forfeiture of what he had so ill-sustained.&nbsp; David
-placed Mephibosheth at his own board, although he could neither
-serve him in the field, nor attend him in his exile.&nbsp; The
-first order made upon the king&rsquo;s return, after receiving
-Mephibosheth&rsquo;s excuse, was to confirm to him the grant
-which had before been made in his behalf.</p>
-<p>Thus have we traced the several stages of the life of man, and
-in each of them we have found that life might be a blessing, and
-the ground of every blessing; and that God, ever gracious, ever
-merciful, might crown with some word of benediction the closing
-days of each such term or period of the life of man, just as He
-did the six glorious days of the creation.&nbsp; The morning and
-the evening (for so we reckon time) were followed by a solemn
-benediction, but with a special blessing for the Sabbath-day, the
-crown of all that stupendous work, the day sanctified by the
-Creator&rsquo;s rest; the day claimed for Himself, with a marked
-reserve, such as the true Proprietor of all that He had made, and
-of all the bounties which distinguished man&rsquo;s first abode
-in Paradise, was pleased to attach to one tree in the <a
-name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>garden, by
-which the first pair might be reminded of the homage due to God,
-and might fulfil it by a strict regard to his commandment.</p>
-<p>The Sabbath-day!&nbsp; With what joy must its regular returns
-have been hailed in the first scenes of an unblemished world; and
-how good and gracious was the Author of that first hallowed
-institution, so that in the day of forfeiture, not only was the
-first pledge of salvation given, but the welcome respite from
-increasing labours by returning Sabbaths was continued.&nbsp; It
-had no limitation or exception in its first appointment, nor
-should we presume to put such; much less was there any intimation
-given in that hour that the appointment of this day, with its
-solemn benediction, was but an anticipated notice of the Jewish
-Sabbath, together with what was indeed peculiar to it, when,
-after long intermissions or neglects, it was revived.&nbsp; Can
-we think that when &ldquo;for every thing there is a
-season,&rdquo; there was to be none more especially provided, in
-all times, for religious observation? and that, too, when the
-Sovereign Lord had set his seal to such provision, without one
-word which could affect its perpetuity?&nbsp; Accordingly we find
-a set time for religious exercises mentioned in that new scene of
-discipline and trial to which man was removed; for, indeed, he
-was not cast out as an alien and an enemy, a wanderer and a
-wretch.</p>
-<p>In this hour of closure for my pastoral care among you, it may
-not be unseasonable to advert to things <a
-name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>which have
-found their turns in hours of teaching and persuasion.&nbsp; Let
-me then entreat you to remember those first acts of grace, the
-early grounds of good hope, which made life itself, with all its
-seasons, a blessing, and, if rightly husbanded, the seed-plot of
-all blessings to the sons of men.&nbsp; Nothing but a new
-apostasy could destroy that hope, when the term of life was
-continued where it might have been cut short, in which case the
-human race would have been extinguished, and that triumph would
-have been given to the common foe to God and man.&nbsp; Nothing
-but a new apostasy from God would render man, in his state of
-promised rescue and encouragement and in the new term of his
-probation, an enemy to God.&nbsp; Before that horrible desertion
-from his worship, the Most High made his visit to the patriarchal
-altar, and gave that memorable declaration of his will, &ldquo;If
-thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted?&rdquo;&nbsp; The
-ground was laid in purpose and effect for that acceptance; and
-surely the assurance thus added was not for one family.</p>
-<p>Thus there is a Sabbath still set apart for a welcome day of
-rest, and for religious exercises; a day, the joy of which I have
-so often shared with you in these happy seasons of religious
-worship and communion.&nbsp; Remember the well-timed distinctions
-which He who was Lord also of the Sabbath-day, as the partner of
-his Father&rsquo;s glory, prescribed for the right observance of
-the day, divesting it of its legal <a name="page15"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 15</span>strictness and peculiarities, and
-still more protecting it, by an open vindication of its essential
-objects, from Jewish scruples and from Jewish superstitions.</p>
-<p>O look well to the duties of the Christian Sabbath!&nbsp; We
-want no traditionary warrant for its transfer to the glad day of
-the Redeemer&rsquo;s resurrection.&nbsp; The Scriptures furnish
-plain and indubitable vestiges of that change.&nbsp; Look well to
-its salutary obligations, bound upon us by the twofold cogency of
-precept and example.</p>
-<p>Remember who it was, who, after the scene of his ministerial
-labours, kept his last Sabbath in the grave, and crowned with
-perpetual glory the day of his triumphant resurrection.&nbsp;
-Well might that day become not only the day of rest from labour,
-but a day of gladness and release from worldly cares and
-occupation, and, above all, the happy emblem of a rest from every
-evil work, a respite from a bondage worse than that of servile
-Egypt, a rest too from the galling yoke and ruling power of sin,
-which is the privilege of faith.</p>
-<p>Among such topics as may now claim a seasonable repetition, I
-may again remind you how much it behoves us, in consulting the
-written word, the rule of faith and duty, to avoid all partial
-views, by which restriction one truth would exclude another; or,
-what is worse, a wrong conclusion may be joined with what is only
-true in some respects, and both the truth and the fallacious
-inference may thus gain <a name="page16"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 16</span>currency together.&nbsp; The neglect
-of this rule has brought more strifes and divisions into the
-Christian world than almost any thing that can be named.&nbsp;
-Take an instance if you think fit; there is more joy when that
-which is lost is found again, than for that which was never
-lost.&nbsp; This is true in that respect; but will you strain the
-matter farther, and say that the recovered sheep is of more worth
-than the whole flock to which it is restored?&nbsp; Will you say
-that the piece of silver which was missing, and when found
-creates much joy on that account, outweighs all that the purse,
-from whence it dropped, contained?&nbsp; Will you say, that the
-pardoned son, who returns to the right path by a true repentance,
-and fills his father&rsquo;s heart with well placed and unwonted
-joy, is in all respects to be preferred to the son who never left
-the right path from an early day?&nbsp; The forgiving
-father&rsquo;s answer will convict that
-misconception:&mdash;&ldquo;Son, thou art ever with me, and all
-that I have is thine.&rdquo;&nbsp; If the elder brother may be
-thought to have lost his preference, it could only be because of
-his envious temper and his ill-timed remonstrance.&nbsp; In
-avoiding partial views and misapplications of what is true, the
-more numerous and more general and plainer testimonies, and those
-which admit but of one construction, will be the guiding light
-for reconcilement and consistency&mdash;not for preference, for
-that would still be but a partial view.</p>
-<p>I may here add a necessary caution (oftentimes <a
-name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>suggested,
-for it frequently proves needful), to give heed to the native
-idioms or forms of speech, which were in use, and rightly
-understood, by those to whom the word of treaty and persuasion
-was first addressed.&nbsp; The use of learned pains will thus
-appear, as well as of every method of right reasoning in the
-study of the sacred Scriptures, the rule of faith and duty for
-which we have to bless God daily.</p>
-<p>I may now touch upon the best and only safe ground of trust
-which we have to take in any season of review, when past portions
-of our lives are recalled to our consideration.&nbsp; We may
-look, now, to the hope of pardon, and allowance for things done
-amiss, or things left undone; and blessed be God that ground has
-been laid, or who could stand in judgment in the last
-account?&nbsp; Certainly not the boastful and punctilious
-Pharisee; certainly not those who have keener eyes for the faults
-of others than for their own defects.&nbsp; Excellent are the
-words of our Lord&rsquo;s apostle, and now most seasonable in
-their application; thus he marks it for a ruling principle of
-charity, that it &ldquo;thinketh no evil,&rdquo; and is not,
-therefore, apt to censure or condemn.</p>
-<p>It is but in some respects, that we can speak well of those
-whom we are least inclined to censure, and most ready to regard
-with favour;&mdash;and with that remark I shall fairly take leave
-of what concerns myself in this day of valediction.</p>
-<p>But I am well aware that the season of departure from
-accustomed scenes of duty is a proper season <a
-name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>for advice,
-and to this last tribute of sincere affection and regard, I will
-now address myself.</p>
-<p>We stand much for authority, for rights of station, and the
-sacred warrant of the pastoral commission&mdash;and we do well,
-for without them there would be no order in the world, no joint
-progress in a common path; no peace, no security.&nbsp; When
-every man in Israel did what was right in his own eyes, and
-nothing by direction or consent, it was a day of trouble and
-disaster, of ruin and confusion.&nbsp; They who will own no guide
-in the way they have to tread, had need be well acquainted with
-the road.</p>
-<p>It would be well if such men, who despise all guides, would be
-content to go alone&mdash;but was it ever so seen in all the
-world?&nbsp; Are not such the men who strive most eagerly to
-press others into their train from all quarters where they can
-obtrude themselves and spread their pestilent opinions, and lay
-their destructive snares?</p>
-<p>But the rules of pastoral advice derive their obligation from
-the simplest forms of truth; were it otherwise, how would they
-meet the varied calls for choice and resolution which come
-forward in the course of human life?&nbsp; If the truth itself
-has no special period for the height and measure of its growth in
-human breasts, yet it has for its perpetual standard God&rsquo;s
-own eternal attributes.&nbsp; In those perfections of the Deity,
-the sure test of truth is established.&nbsp; Our Lord&rsquo;s
-apostle takes this ground; &ldquo;He that cometh to God, must
-believe that he is;&rdquo;&mdash;<a name="page19"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 19</span>and observe what follows, &ldquo;and
-that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek
-him;&rdquo;&mdash;in which two particulars, the existence of God,
-and the never-failing characters of truth, wisdom, equity, and
-goodness in such expressions of his favour, the sure foundations
-of his moral government are laid, as well as the sum of every
-moral and religious obligation.&nbsp; This appears in all the
-articles of faith, and in all the acts of duteous service; it
-appears in all that God hath done for us in the great work of our
-redemption more especially, and in all that he requires of us in
-order to a future recompense.</p>
-<p>Let no vicissitude in things by which men are tried, but with
-a sure refuge under all events for the dutiful, tempt you for a
-moment to forget that the &ldquo;ways of God are equal:&rdquo; it
-was his own challenge to backsliding Israel, and the last result
-will not fail to confirm it.&nbsp; Let no light conceit at any
-time induce you to suppose that the great truths, upon which the
-hope of our salvation is built, may be regarded as things
-indifferent, for which another season may be found; or that such
-things, with all their convincing proofs and trains of evidence,
-are placed beyond our reach.&nbsp; Can we think that our
-Lord&rsquo;s word is not verified, that, &ldquo;Wisdom should be
-justified of her children?&rdquo;&nbsp; And with respect more
-particularly to disingenuous pleas of difficulty, do we find the
-rules of faith and duty things so hard to be ascertained?&nbsp;
-Have we no sufficient traces of them in the light of conscience;
-<a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>in the
-bright tokens and communications of God&rsquo;s own grace and
-solemn declarations, in the powers of right discrimination,
-without which there could be no reasonable choice of any thing
-that best deserves our compliance?&nbsp; Have we not (blessed be
-God!) the sacred, never-erring Word, which has been written for
-our learning, and for our sure direction in all things needful to
-salvation?</p>
-<p>It is much to be observed, in such general statements, that
-the Apostles of our Lord never failed to add to their reasonings
-with Jew or Gentile, scribe or sophist, such comprehensive
-testimonies of the grounds of faith and the fruits of holiness in
-those who continue true to their engagement, as will leave no
-room for uncertain tests or bold opinions, for endless
-fluctuations in the mind and conduct, with doubts and
-difficulties of our own creating.&nbsp; It is true, that in the
-revelations of God&rsquo;s will there are things which no human
-faculties, or even those of the purest of created beings in the
-realms of light, could penetrate, until the Most High so
-graciously revealed them,&mdash;things which relate to his own
-Essence, with his purposes and counsels for the redemption of
-mankind; but is it so hard to understand that when all was
-forfeited, God should send a Saviour from the throne of glory to
-become the new Head of mankind, by taking flesh, and in that
-nature, which He by his Divine prerogative had power to assume,
-to fulfil all that wherein our common sire had failed?&nbsp; Was
-not this a nobler exercise of <a name="page21"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 21</span>Divine wisdom, than the creating a
-new race, and leaving that triumph to the common foe to God and
-man, that one such race was lost?&nbsp; Is it so hard to be
-understood, that to vindicate the credit of God&rsquo;s Holy Law,
-there should be one sufficient satisfactory atonement, one
-sacrifice never more to be repeated or renewed? or that, by the
-prevailing intercession of the same Divine Redeemer, the gates of
-Heaven should be set wide to a rescued race, whose own exertions
-should from thenceforth be well employed, in spite of all the
-force and all the artifices of the common adversary?&nbsp; The
-glory of Divine grace is thus exalted, when the first gifts of
-God are again directed to their proper ends.&nbsp; To raise
-children unto Abraham of the stones of the desert, had been, no
-doubt, an easy task to the Almighty; but would it have served so
-highly to his glory, as the preservation and recovery of the
-first formed race?&nbsp; Is it so hard to perceive how signally
-the conspiring attributes of God, his justice, truth, and mercy,
-were thus illustrated and made to meet together in that work of
-redemption, which was accomplished in Christ Jesus?&nbsp; Does it
-require much scope of argument or pains of study to enable us to
-see, that to redeem mankind was an object no less worthy of
-Divine interposition, than to create them from the first?</p>
-<p>Again, could we safely remain strangers (as some would gladly
-seem to do) to the several branches of all moral obligations,
-when they have been confirmed <a name="page22"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 22</span>anew, and drawn out into manifest
-example, and set before us so expressly for our imitation, in our
-Lord&rsquo;s own life?</p>
-<p>St. Paul&rsquo;s brief enumeration of faith, hope, and
-charity, forms the sum of what in other places he sets forth with
-a large detail of things required of us, all serving to the same
-end and intent: only, remember carefully what that end
-is,&mdash;it is not the same for which Christ wrought and
-suffered, and He only could sustain; yet is it the
-&ldquo;reasonable service,&rdquo; or &ldquo;living sacrifice of
-the whole man,&rdquo; which is required, in order not only to our
-own improvement, which could not thrive without it, but in order
-to a promised recompense, which, together with the freedom of the
-Gospel state, were procured for us at so rich a cost.&nbsp; The
-ransom paid, the heritage obtained, by one only righteous
-Mediator, how widely do they differ from the promised recompense
-for the faithful and sincere! and yet how consistent are these
-things in their whole effect!&nbsp; There is one judgment-seat
-for both, and one form of judicial sentence, though in different
-respects, is applied to both; but how different is the language
-in which the same Apostle speaks of each.&nbsp; There is no need
-to call in the suffrage of a fellow-witness to correct his view,
-for both he and his fellow-witness, when they speak of the same
-things, use the same language, and declare the same consistent
-judgment.</p>
-<p>And what, then, is our Lord&rsquo;s compendious draft <a
-name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>of things
-required of us in the days of our probation? it is &ldquo;to love
-the Lord our God with all the heart, and with all the soul, and
-with all the mind, and with all the strength; and our neighbour
-as ourselves.&rdquo;&nbsp; Will you strain a flight beyond this,
-and regard the care for yourselves as too low a pitch for your
-wishes to excel, or for the native worth of what is good?&nbsp;
-Do but consider that the welfare and the happiness of his
-reasonable creatures formed the first object and design of the
-Creator, and can never cease to be his purpose; consider, too,
-that any kind of moral goodness which should not be good for us,
-would want just so much of real goodness, and of its proper and
-essential excellency.&nbsp; It was one of the vilest errors of
-the heathen world, and one which prevailed much, as their
-earliest historian tells us, that there was envy towards man
-among the gods; and no wonder, if the rule of Providence could be
-placed in such hands as they feigned for its administration.</p>
-<p>Again, as the truth itself is always true, and virtue, which
-is its image, is no less uniform and constant, most groundless
-and injurious must be those restrictions which would shut out any
-one real virtue or its exercise from the Christian pattern; for
-in so doing we should detract just so much from its
-integrity.&nbsp; You may reverse the proposition if you think
-fit, and say, with truth, that every virtue puts on the Christian
-character, not from any date of their adoption, but as they are
-cherished and enhanced <a name="page24"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 24</span>by new motives and inducements, and
-strengthened by the bond of unity and concord in the Christian
-household.</p>
-<p>Can I forget at this moment, befriended as I have been in the
-past scene of my labours, that among the virtues which some would
-leave to the heathen, together with the patriot spirit and the
-courage to maintain it, Friendship has been made to share the
-sentence of exclusion?&nbsp; At this rate the noble-minded
-Jonathan could not be added to the list of worthies, to recount
-which St. Paul found the day too short.&nbsp; But the glowing pen
-of David has inscribed the name of his generous and ever-constant
-friend with the sons of faith, in characters which no time shall
-efface.&nbsp; And what then?&nbsp; Had our blessed Lord no family
-of friends which brought him even weeping to the grave of
-Lazarus?&nbsp; Was it for nothing that it was then said,
-&ldquo;Behold how he loved him?&rdquo;&nbsp; Had our Lord no
-disciple who was laid in his bosom at the paschal feast; to whom
-also He gave his last charge concerning her who should be blessed
-among women?&nbsp; Most gladly, therefore, shall I pay the debt
-of friendly obligation on my removal from among you, and cherish
-that good property of mind which has so many moral motives for
-exciting its first growth, and brings forth so many moral fruits
-in its maturity which may be stored in everlasting garners.</p>
-<p>But as strange as that distinction is which would cast out
-real virtues from the Christian code, I may <a
-name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>now warn you
-from an opposite extreme.&nbsp; Thus have words of <i>counsel</i>
-been exalted above the word of the <i>commandment</i>.&nbsp; Let
-us weigh this also for a moment; it has been, and continues still
-to be, the nurse of many fond conceits.</p>
-<p>If you strive to put more into a vessel which is already well
-replenished, will you not displace some of its contents?&nbsp;
-And if this be done where the hand of the Lord hath filled the
-vessel, that we may drink and thirst no more, but live for ever,
-the loss (not to name the sacrilege) will outweigh the gain a
-thousand-fold.&nbsp; The boastful young man, who would not accept
-the word of the commandment at our Lord&rsquo;s lips as a full
-reply to his inquiry, but said, &ldquo;All this have I kept from
-my youth up; what lack I yet?&rdquo; did not receive, in answer
-to this pretension, a word of counsel.&nbsp; Our Lord showed him
-plainly what the true breadth of the commandment was.&nbsp; Thus
-he required no more of him than that which became the bounden
-duty of many in the days of trouble which succeeded.&nbsp; Many
-were made to feel the force of that never-changing precept, which
-demands the sacrifice of all things sublunary, where the bond of
-Truth cannot otherwise be kept.&nbsp; There was no sacrifice,
-then, proposed to this aspiring youth, nothing counselled, beyond
-the verge of the commandment; and the test to which he was put
-was but the fruit of his overweening zeal.</p>
-<p>When some of the early Christians were not <a
-name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 26</span>contented to
-wait the coming of the fore-named obligation, but sought
-martyrdom of their own accord, although our Lord enjoined them
-when persecuted in one city to flee into another, the Church
-interposed, and set a mark of public censure upon such rash
-exposures of the lives of faithful men.&nbsp; Will you say, then,
-that St. Paul put forward words of counsel for which he
-acknowledged that, in advising what was best for those days of
-peril, he had no commandment?&nbsp; He did so; but as he had
-received no commandment, so did he impose none.&nbsp; He left his
-converts free to follow his advice according to their own
-discretion: he laid no bond upon them, no vow, no snare, no
-scruple; for, indeed, he was the steady foe to things
-unbidden.</p>
-<p>And what, then, are the general and never changing precepts
-which no flight of zeal can surpass?&nbsp; We have already taken
-one such comprehensive rule from our Lord&rsquo;s lips; but to
-enlarge a little on a theme so seasonable at all times, we may
-remark, that the word of precept requires us to weigh and esteem
-things according to their real worth; to seek the kingdom of God
-first, and his righteousness; to prize that pearl of price above
-all other things; to take readily, as St. Paul showed in his
-example, what God giveth, with a thankful and becoming use of the
-welcome gift, but with a just sense that what may be bitter and
-distasteful, if such be the cup, will serve for good to those who
-love God; we are thus enjoined to be content with such things as
-we <a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>have,
-to keep under and to combat every evil inclination, for there
-lies the place and proper exercise of self-denial; it will prove
-unfit and injurious when pressed beyond its uses.&nbsp; It was
-the aim of the apostle to set free to all things lawful and
-becoming, but not to be brought under the power of any; which
-shows at once the misery and inconvenience of an iron chain,
-whether forged by others, and imposed upon us in their names, or
-adopted by our own devices.</p>
-<p>He who will set up better rules than these, must not expect
-his word to be taken for them; he must prove them by the known
-declaration of the will of God, or by sufficient reasons, tried
-by the sure word of the <i>commandment</i>.</p>
-<p>There were not wanting, we may now remark, many who passed the
-season of attendance before the coming of the promised Mediator,
-with some profit to themselves and others.&nbsp; We have noticed
-this with respect to the patriarchal age and to the Israel of
-God; and it holds good, in some measure, with relation to the
-Gentile world.&nbsp; There were those even where the hideous
-darkness of idolatry prevailed, among whom truth found its
-seasonable culture.&nbsp; There were those who sustained in some
-sort the credit of the human race.&nbsp; They sought a refuge in
-their own reflections from false worship, and delusions gross,
-impious, and far below the character of man.&nbsp; They betook
-themselves accordingly to some sound principles of moral truth
-and moral <a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-28</span>wisdom.&nbsp; Thus the faculty of right discrimination,
-and the power of conscience, when not drowned in vice and
-superstition, exhibited some lines, and showed some traces of the
-great Creator&rsquo;s image.&nbsp; They reduced the rule of life
-and of well-doing to some fixed points; prudence, justice,
-fortitude, the love of truth, the scorn of falsehood or deceit,
-self-government, with other noble qualities, exhibited plain
-characters of man&rsquo;s first resemblance to the Author of his
-being.&nbsp; Thus things which are always true and always good,
-kept their place in some fair examples, and sustained the claim
-which such men had to be the teachers and the monitors of others,
-although without authority to teach or to direct&mdash;that want
-remained to be supplied, as the wisest of them fairly owned.</p>
-<p>Our blessed Lord, who came to bind the bruised reed, and to
-fan the least spark of the smoking flax, never turned with scorn
-from such tokens of good disposition and right judgment, or
-failed to give his word of commendation when they came before
-him.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have not found so great faith, no not in
-Israel,&rdquo; were words which embraced the qualities of mind
-which were always found to be most favourable to prepare the
-heart (the seat of every moral property) for any seed of truth
-which should be cast upon it.&nbsp; Such was the good ground of
-which our Lord made mention in his instructive parable of the
-Sower and the Seed.&nbsp; A rational acknowledgment, with a just
-esteem for what is good, is the soul of faith, of which <a
-name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>the tenth
-leper left a memorable proof.&nbsp; Without such moral properties
-faith might be the hand for receiving any benefit, but where
-would be the mind to understand its value, and perceive the
-nature of its obligations?&nbsp; Let the nine lepers who were
-healed, but returned not to give thanks, supply the answer.&nbsp;
-But if the Gentile sages showed indeed sound judgment in reducing
-rules of ethics to fixed principles, our blessed Lord with the
-full warrant of divine authority formed the draft of faith and
-duty, sometimes compendiously, and sometimes with particular
-enumerations.</p>
-<p>But again, with these main principles and never-changing
-objects of regard, there is another word which has its special
-season&mdash;it is that of pastoral entreaty; and it remains for
-me to press it at this time&mdash;it results, indeed, from the
-whole view which has been taken.</p>
-<p>Never then, I beseech you, my beloved brethren, consent to
-yield the profession or the practice of the rule of faith and
-duty, for fear or favour; for any flattering bait or treacherous
-inducement, never lose sight of what is due to God, to your
-fellow-creatures, and yourselves;&mdash;only remember that if we
-neglect to take thought for others, that is not the care for
-ourselves which we are enjoined to extend to others.&nbsp; And
-here I cannot sufficiently commend the manifold attentions of the
-prudent and sincere, which have been paid to the needs of many in
-this vicinage.&nbsp; O! let that care continue for your poorer
-brethren&mdash;<a name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-30</span>let it manifest itself in the religious instructions
-which your schools provide for their children, and in a thousand
-instances of kindness which the succours which the law requires
-cannot supply.</p>
-<p>And yet again, amidst all these incumbent obligations, there
-is still room for the words of Solomon, &ldquo;to every thing
-there is a season;&rdquo; and the present moment constrains me
-yet once more to conjure you to bear these things in mind, to
-keep them as the treasure of your hearts.&nbsp; If such shall be
-the purpose and endeavour, it matters less at what period the
-foot is stayed, provided it be found in the right path when the
-day of travel or of any special charge shall close.&nbsp; But in
-such case, when we can no longer walk together as companions,
-there must be the word of exhortation for those who have to go
-forward&mdash;let it then be the word of the apostle&mdash;to
-&ldquo;walk worthy of your vocation wherewith ye are called, with
-all lowliness and meekness, with long suffering, forbearing one
-another in love, endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in
-the bond of peace.&nbsp; There is . . . one Spirit, even as ye
-are called in one hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one
-baptism, one God and Father of all, who is above all, and through
-all, and in you all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To us who have walked long together, there is another cheering
-word on separation, when most happily the new guide, with every
-hopeful commendation, is at hand and ready to succeed.</p>
-<p>There is but one word more, one which cannot be <a
-name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>amplified,
-for it contains the sum of every good wish, every grateful sense
-and recollection of past kindnesses&mdash;there remains but the
-little, yet significant and comprehensive word&mdash;farewell;
-&ldquo;and this I pray, that your love may abound yet more and
-more, in knowledge and in all judgment; that ye may approve
-things that are excellent, that ye may be sincere, and without
-offence until the day of Christ.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">THE
-END</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center"><a name="page32"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 32</span><span
-class="GutSmall">LONDON:</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">GILBERT AND RIVINGTON, PRINTERS,</span><br
-/>
-<span class="GutSmall">ST. JOHN&rsquo;S SQUARE.</span></p>
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
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