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who thinks himself an object of the love of the Great Supreme, and who knows that the Great Supreme will not render him perfectly happy in this life, but in the next, can afford much time for the amusements of this. I can never persuade myself that a man, who has such elevated notions, and such magnificent prospects, can make a very serious affair of having a great name in this world, of lodging in a palace, or of descending from an illustrious ancestry. These little passions, if we consider them in themselves, may seem almost indifferent, and I grant if ye will, that they are not always attended with very bad consequences, that, in some cases, they injure nobody, and in many, cause no trouble in society: but, if we consider the principle from which they proceed, they will appear very mortifying to us. We shall find that the zeal and fervour, the impatient breathings of some, 'to depart, and to be with Christ,' Phil. i.

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23; the aspiring of a soul after the chief good; the prayer, Come, Lord Jesus, come quickly,' Rev. xxii. 20; the eager wish, "When shall I come and appear before God,' Psal. xlii. 2. We shall find that these dispo sitions, which some of us treat as enthusiasm, and which others of us refer to saints of the first order, to whose perfections we have not the presumption to aspire; we shall find, I say, that these dispositions are more essential to Christianity than we may have hitherto imagined.

May God make us truly sensible of that noble and tender love which God has for us! May God kindle our love at the fire of his own! May God enable us to know religion by such pleasures as they experience who make love to God the foundation of all virtue! These are our petitions to God for you: to these may each of us say Amen!

SERMON VIII.

THE INCOMPREHENSIBILITY OF THE MERCY OF GOD.

ISAIAH IV. 8, 9.

For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.

LO, these are parts of his ways, but how little a portion is heard of him!' Job xxvi. 14. This is one of the most sententious sayings of Job, and it expresses, in a very lively and emphatical manner, the works of God. Such language would produce but very little effect indeed in the mouth of a careless, unthinking man: but Job, who uttered it, had a mind filled with the noblest ideas of the perfections of God. He had studied them in his prosperity, in order to enable him to render homage to God, from whom alone his prosperity came. His heart was conversant with them under his distressing adversities, and of them he had learnt to bow to the hand of Him who was no less the author of adversity than of prosperity, of darkness than of day. All this appears by the fine description which the holy man gives immediately before: God,' says he, stretcheth out the north over the empty place, and hangeth the earth upon nothing. He bindeth up his waters in his thick cloude; and the cloud is not rent under them. He hath compassed the waters with bounds. The pillars of heaven tremble, and are astonished at his reproof. He divideth the sea with his power, and by his understanding he miteth through the proud. By his spirit he bath garnished the heavens.' But are these the only production of the Creator? Have these emanations wholly exhausted his pow. er? No, replies Job, These are only parts of his ways, and how little a portion is heard of him!'

My brethren, what this holy man said of

the wonders of nature, we, with much more reason, say to you of the wonders of grace. Collect all that pagan philosophers have taught of the goodness of the Supreme Being. To the opinions of philosophers join the declarations of the prophets. To the declarations of the prophets, and to the opinions of philosophers, add the discoveries of the evangelists and apostles. Compose one body of doctrine of all that various authors have written on this comfortable subject. To the whole join your own experience; your ideas to their ideas, your meditations to their meditations, and then believe that ye are only floating on the surface of the goodness of God, that his love has dimensions, a 'breadth, and length, and depth, and height,' Eph. iii. 18; which the human mind can never attain: and, upon the brink of this ocean, say, 'Lo, these are only parts of his ways, and how little a portion is heard of him"

This incomprehensibility of the goodness of God, (and what attention, what sensibility, what gratitude, have we not a right to expect of you?) this inconceivableness of the goodness of God we intend to discuss to-day. The prophet, or rather God himself, says to us by the prophet, My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.'

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not belong, in the same sense, and in every respect, to beings so different as God and man, yet the holiness of God ought to be both a reason and a rule for the holiness of man. Ye shall be holy, for 1 the Lord your God am holy. This is our third part, and with this we shall conclude the discourse.

III. The holiness of God, we say, is both a rule and a reason for the holiness of man. The words of the text include both these ideas, and will bear either sense. They may be rendered, Be ye holy as I am holy and, according to this translation, the holiness of God is a rule or a model of ours. Or, they may be rendered, Ye shall be holy, because I am holy:' and, according to this, the holiness of God is a reason or a motive of our holiness. It is not necessary now to inquire which of these two interpretations is the best. Let us unite both. Let us make the holiness of God the pattern of our holiness: and let us also make it the motive of ours.

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Be ye holy as God is holy. Let us not confine ourselves to one single virtue. Let us incorporate them all into our system. Let us have an assortment of Christian graces. Let us be, if I may express myself so, complete Christians. Let us add to our faith virtue, and to virtue knowledge, and to knowledge temperance, and to temperance patience, and to patience godliness, and to godliness brotherly kindness, and to brotherly kindness charity,' 2 Pet. i. 5-7.

2. The holiness of God is infinite in itself. Nothing can confine its activity. Let this be our model, as far as a finite creature can imitate an infinite Being. Let us not rest in a narrow sphere of virtue, but let us carry every virtue to its most eminent degree of attainment. Let us every day make some new progress. Let us reckon all that we have done nothing, while there remains any thing more to do. Let each of us say with St.Paul, 'I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark,' Phil. iii. 13.

3. The holiness of God is pure in its motives. He fears nothing, he hopes for nothing; yet he is holy. He knows, he loves, he pursues holiness. This is the whole system of his morality. Let this be our pattern. We do not mean to exclude the grand motives of hope and fear, which religion has sanctified, and which have such a mighty influence over beings capable of happiness or misery. But yet, let not our inclinations to virtue necessarily depend on a display of the horrors of hell, or the happiness of heaven. Disinterestedness of virtue is the character of true magnanimity, and Christian heroism. Let us esteem it a pleasure to obey the laws of order. Let us account it a pleasure to be generous, beneficent, and communicative. Let us lend,'

agreeably to the maxim of Jesus Christ, hoping for nothing again,' Luke vi. 35; and, in imitation of his example, let us lay down our lives for the brethren,' 1 John iii. 16.

4. The holiness of God is uniform in its action. No appearance deceives him, no temptation shakes him, nothing dazzles or diverts him. Let this be our example. Let us not be every day changing our religion and morality. Let not our ideas depend on the motion of our animal spirits, the circulation of our blood, or the irregular course of the humours of our bodies. Let us not be Christians at church only, on our solemn festivals alone, or at the approach of death. Let our conduct be uniform and firm, and let us say, with the prophet, even in our greatest trials, Yet God is good to Israel, Ps. lxiii. 1. However it be, I will endeavour to be as humble on the pinnacle of grandeur, as if Providence had placed me in the lowest and meanest post. I will be as moderate, when all the objects of my wishes are within my reach, as if I could not afford to procure them. I will be as ready to acquiesce in the supreme will of God, if he conduct me through various adversities, and through the valley of the shadow of death,' as if he led me through prosperities, and filled me with delights. Thus the holiness of God must be the model of ours: Be ye holy as I am holy.'

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But the holiness of God must also be the reason or motive of ours; and we must be holy because God is holy: Ye shall be holy, for I the Lord your God am holy.'

We groan under the disorders of our nature, we lament the loss of that blessed but short state of innocence, in which the first man was created, and which we wish to recover: We must be holy then, for the Lord our God is holy.' The beauty and blessedness of man in his primitive state consisted in his immediate creation by the hand of God, and in the bearing of his Creator's image, which was impressed, in a most lively manner, upon his mind. Sin has defaced that image, and our happiness consists in its res toration: that is, in our being 'renewed after the image of him who created us,' Col. iii. 10.

We wish to enjoy the favour of God: we must be holy then, 'because the Lord our God is holy. They are our iniquities that have separated between us and our God: Isa. lix. 2. And it is holiness that must conciliate a communion which our sins have interrupted.

We tremble to see all nature at war with us, and wish to be reconciled to all the exte rior objects that conspire to torment us; we must be holy then, because the Lord our God is holy. Sin is a hateful object to a holy God. Sin has armed every creature against man. Sin has thrown all nature into confusion. Sin, by disconcerting the mind, has destroyed the body. It is sin that has brought death into the world, and 'sin is the sting of death.'

We wish to be reconciled to ourselves, and to possess that inward peace and tranquillity, without which no exterior objects can make

us happy we must be holy then, 'because the Lord our God is holy. We have remarked in this discourse, that God, who is an independent Being, loves virtue for its own sake, independent of the rewards that accompany and follow it. Nevertheless, it is very certain that the felicity of God is inseparable from his holiness. God is the happy God, because he is the holy God. God, in the contemplation of his own excellencies, has an inexhaustible source of felicity. Were it possible for God not to be supremely holy, it would be possible for God not to be supremely happy. Yes, God, all glorious and su preme as he is, would be miserable, if he were subject, like unholy spirits, to the turbulent commotions of envy or hatred, treachery or deceit. From such passions would arise odious vapours, which would gather into thick clouds, and, by obscuring his glory, impair his felicity. Even heaven would afford but imperfect pleasure, if those infernal furies could there kindle their unhallowed flames. The same reasoning holds good on earth; for, it implies a contradiction, to affirm that we can be happy, while the operations of our minds clash with one another: and it is equally absurd, to suppose that the almighty God can terminate the fatal war, the tragical field of which is the human heart, without the re-establishment of the dominion of holiness.

We desire to experience the most close and tender communion with God, next Lord's day, in receiving the holy sacrament: Let us be holy then, because the Lord our God is holy. This august ceremony may be considered in several points of view: and one of them deserves a peculiar attention. The table of the Lord's Supper has been compared, by some, to that which was formerly set, by the command of God, in the holy place: I mean, the table of 'show-bread,' or 'bread of the presence, Ex. xxv. 30. God commanded Moses to set twelve loaves upon the table, to change them every sabbath, and to give those that were taken away to the priests, who were to eat them in the holy place,' Lev. xxiv. 6, &c. What was the end of these ceremonial institutions? The tabernacle at first was considered as the tent, and the temple afterward as the palace of the Deity, who dwelt among the Israelites. In the palace of God, it was natural to expect a table for the use of him and his attendants. This was one of the most glorious privileges that the Israelites enjoyed, and one of the most august symbols of the presence of God among them. God and all the people of Israel, in the persons of their ministers, were accounted to eat the same bread. The heathens, stricken with the beauty of these ideas, incorporated them into their theology. They adopted the thought, and set in their temples tables consecrated to their gods. The prophet Isaiah reproaches the Jews with forsaking the Lord, forgetting his holy mountain and preparing a table for the host of heaven, Isa. lxv. 2. And Ezekiel reckons among the virtues of a just man, that he had not eaten upon the mountains,' Ez. xviii. 6. It was upon tables of this kind that idolaters sometimes ate the remainder of those victims which they had sacrificed to their gods. This

they called eating with gods; and Homer introduces Alcinous saying, 'The gods visit us, when we sacrifice hecatombs, and sit down with us at the same table.'

This is one of the most beautiful notions, under which we can consider the sacrament of the Lord's Supper. There we eat with God. God sits down with us at the same table, and, so causes us to experience the meaning of this promise, Behold, I stand at the door, and knock; if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me,' Rev. iii. 20. But what do such close connexions with a holy God require of us? They require us to be holy. They cry to us, as the voice cried to Moses from the midst of the burning bush,' Draw not nigh hither; put off thy shoes from off thy feet; for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground," Ex.

iii. 5.

God is supremely holy: God supremely loves order. Order requires you to leave vengeance to God, to pardon your bitterest and most professed enemies; and, what is more difficult still, order requires you to pardon your most subtle and secret foes. Would ye approach the table of a holy God gnawn with a spirit of animosity, hatred, or vengeance?

God is supremely holy: God supremely loves order. Order requires you to dedicate a part of those blessings to charity, with which Providence has intrusted you; to retrench the superfluities of your tables, in order to enable you to assist the starving and dying poor. Would ye approach the table of a holy God with hearts hardened with indifference to that poor man whom God has commanded you to love as yourselves.

God is supremely holy: God supremely loves order. Order requires you to be affected with the tokens of divine love. All are displayed at the Lord's table. There the bloody history of your Redeemer's sufferings is again exhibited to view. There the blood, that Christ the victim shed for your crimes, flows afresh. There God recounts all the

mysteries of the cross. Would ye approach that table cold and languishing? Would ye approach that table without returning to Jesus Christ love for love, and tenderness for tenderness? Would ye approach that table void of every sentiment and emotion, which the venerable symbols of the love of God must needs produce in every honest heart? Ah! my brethren, were ye to approach the table of Jesus Christ without these dispositions, ye would come, not like St. John, or St. Peter, but like Judas. This would not be to receive an earnest of salvation, but to eat and drink your own damnation,' I Cor. xi. 29. This would not be to receive the body of Jesus Christ: this would be to surrender yourselves to Satan.

I can hardly allow myself to entertain such melancholy thoughts. Come to the table of Jesus Christ, and enter into a closer communion with a holy God. Come and devote yourselves entirely to the service of a holy God. Come and arrange the operations of your minds by the perfections of a holy God. Come and diminish the grief that ye feel, because, in spite of all your endeavours to be

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Like as a father pilieth his children, so the Lord pilieth them that fear him.

AMONG many frivolous excuses, which mankind have invented to exculpate their barrenness under a gospel-ministry, there is one that deserves respect. Why, say they, do ye address men as if they were destitute of the sentiments of humanity? Why do ye treat Christians like slaves? Why do ye perpetually urge, in your preaching, motives of wrath, vengeance, 'the worm that never dies, the fire that is never quenched?" Isa. lxvi. 24. Motives of this kind fill the heart with rebellion instead of conciliating it by love. Mankind have a fund of sensibility and tenderness. Let the tender motives that our legislator has diffused throughout our Bibles, be pressed upon us; and then every sermon would produce some conversions, and your complaints of Christians would cease with the causes that produce them.

I call this excuse frivolous: for how little must we know of human nature, to suppose men so very sensible to the attractives of religion! Where is the minister of the gospel, who has not displayed the charms of religion a thousand, and a thousand times, and displayed them in vain? Some souls must be terrified, some sinners must be saved by fear, and pulled out of the fire,' Jude 23. There are some hearts that are sensible to only one object in religion, that is, hell; and, if any way remain to prevent their actual destruction hereafter, it is to overwhelm their souls with the present fear of it: knowing therefore the terrors of the Lord, we persuade

men.'

Yet, however frivolous this pretext may ap pear, there is a something in it that merits respect. I am pleased to see those men, who have not been ashamed to say, that the Lord's yoke is intolerable, driven to abjure so odious a system: I love to hear them acknowledge, that religion is supported by motives fitted to ingenuous minds; and that the God from whom it proceeds, has discovered so much benevolence and love in the gift, that it is impossible not to be affected with it, if we be capable of feeling.

I cannot tell, my brethren, whether among these Christians, whom the holiness of this day has assembled in this sacred place, there be many, who have availed themselves of the frivolous pretence just now mentioned; and who have sometimes wickedly determined to

despise eternal torments, under an extrava gant pretence that the ministers of the gospel too often preach, and too dismally describe them. But, without requiring your answer to so mortifying a question, without endeavouring to make you contradict yourselves, we invite you to behold those attractives today, to which ye boast of being so very sen sible. Come and see the supreme Legislator, to whom we would devote your services; be hold him, not as an avenging God, not as a consuming God, not, shaking the earth, and overturning the mountains' in his anger, Job ix. 4.5 not thundering in the heavens, shooting out lightnings, or giving his voice in hailstones and coals of fire," Ps. xviii. 13, 14; but putting on such tender emotions for you as ye feel for your children. In this light the prophet places him in the text, and in this light we are going to place him in this dis

course.

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O ye marble hearts! so often insensible to the terrors of our ministry; may God compe! you to-day to feel its attracting promises! O ye marble hearts! against which the edge of the sword of the Almighty's avenging justice has been so often blunted; the Lord grant that ye may be this day dissolved by the energy of his love! Amen.

Like as a father pitieth his children, so doth the Lord pity them that fear him.' Before we attempt to explain the text, we must premise one remark, which is generally granted, when it is proposed in a vague manner, and almost as generally denied in its consequences; that is, that the most complete notion which we can form of a divine attribute, is to suppose it in perfect harmony with every other divine attribute.

The most lovely idea that we can form of the Deity, and which, at the same time, is the most solid ground of our faith in his word, and of our confidence in the performance of his promises, is that which represents him as a uniform Being, whose attributes harmonize, and who is always consistent with himself. There is no greater character of imperfection in any intelligent being than the want of this harmony: when one of his attributes opposes another of his attributes; when the same at tribute opposes itself; when his wisdom is not supported by his power; or when his power is not directed by his wisdom.

This character of imperfection, essential to all creatures, is the ground of those prohibitions that we meet with in the Holy Scriptures, in regard to the objects of our trust. Put not your trust in princes, nor in the son of man, in whom there is no help. His breath goeth forth, he returneth to his earth, in that very day his thoughts perish,' Psalm cxlvi. 3, 4. Cursed be the man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm,' Jer. xvii. 5. Why? Because it is not safe to confide in man, unless he have such a harmony of attributes, as we have just now described; and because no man has such a harmony. His power may assist you, but, unless he have wisdom to direct his power, the very means that he would use to make you happy, would make you miserable. Even his power would not harmonize with itself in regard to you, if it were sufficient to supply your wants to-day, but not to-morrow. That man, that prince, that mortal, to whom thou givest the superb titles of Potentate, Monarch, Arbiter of peace, and Arbiter of war; that mortal, who is alive to-day, will die to-morrow; the breath that animates him will evaporate, he will return to his earth,' and all his kind regards for thee will vanish with him.

But the perfections of God are in perfect harmony. This truth shall guide us through this discourse, and shall arrange its parts: and this is the likeliest way that we can think of, to preserve the dignity of our subject, to avoid its numerous difficulties, to preclude such fatal inferences as our weak and wicked passions have been too well accustomed to draw from the subject, and to verify the prophet's proposition in its noblest meaning, Like as a father pitieth his children, so doth the Lord pity them that fear him.'

Would ye form a just notion of the goodness of God, (for the original term that our translators have rendered pity, is equivocal, and is used in this vague sense in the Holy Scriptures.) Would ye form a just notion of the goodness of God? Then, conceive a perfection that is always in harmony with,

I. The spirituality of his essence.

II. The inconceivableness of his nature.
III. The holiness of his designs.
IV. The independence of his principles.
V. The immutability of his will.

VI. The efficacy of his power. But, above all,

VII. With the veracity of his word.

I. The goodness of God must agree with the spirituality of his essence. Compassion, among men, is that mechanical emotion which is produced in them by the sight of distressed objects. I allow that the wisdom of the Creator is very much displayed in aniting us together in such a manner. Ideas of fitness seldom make much impression on the bulk of mankind; it was necessary, therefore, to make sensibility supply the want of reflection, and, by a counter-blow, with which the miseries of a neighbour strike our feelings, to produce a disposition in us to relieve him. Nature produces but few monsters who regale themselves on the sufferings of the wretched. Here or there has been a Phalaris, who has delighted his ears with the shrieks of a fellow-creature burning in a brazen bull;

and some, whose minds were filled with ideas of a religion more barbarous and inhuman than that of the Bacchanalians, have been pleased with tormenting those victims which they sacrificed, not to God the Father of mankind, but to him who is their murderer: but none, except people of these kinds, have been able to eradicate those emotions of pity with which a wise and compassionate God has formed them.

But this sensibility degenerates into folly, when it is not supported by ideas of order, and when mechanical emotions prevail over the rational dictates of the mind. It is a weakness, it is not a love worthy of an intelligent being, that inclines a tender mother to pull back the arm of him who is about to perform a violent, but a salutary operation on the child whom she loves. It is a weakness, it is not a love worthy of an intelligent being, that inclines a magistrate to pardon a criminal, whose preservation will be an inju ry to society, and the sparing of whose life will occasion a thousand tragical deaths.

This kind of weakness, that confounds a mechanical sensation with a rational and intelligent love, is the source of many of our misapprehensions about the manner in which God loves us, and in which we imagine he ought to love us. We cannot conceive the consistency of God's love in making us wise in a school of adversity, in exposing us to the vicissitudes and misfortunes of life, and in frequently abandoning his children to pains and regrets. It seems strange to us, that he should not be affected at hearing the groans of the damned, whose torments can only be assuaged by uttering blasphemies against him. Renounce these puerile ideas, and entertain more just notions of the Supreme Being. He has no body; he has no organs that can be shaken by the violence done to the organs of a malefactor; he has no fibres that can be stretched to form a unison with the fibres of your bodies, and which must be agitated by their motions. Love, in God, is in an intelligence, who sees what is, and who loves what may justly be accounted lovely; who judges by the nature of things, and not by sensations, of which he is gloriously incapable his love is in perfect harmony with the spirituality of his essence.

II. Our ideas of the goodness of God must agree with our notions of the inconceivableness of his nature. I oppose this reflection to the difficulties that have always been urged against the goodness of God. There are two sorts of these objections; one tends to limit the goodness of God, the other to carry it beyond its just bounds.

If God be supremely good, say some, how is it conceivable that he should suffer sin to enter the world, and with sin, all the evils that necessarily follow it? This is one difficulty which tends to carry the goodness of God beyond its just extent.

Is it conceivable, say others, that the great God, that God, who, according to the prophet, weighed the mountains in scales, and the hills in a balance,' Isa xl. 12; that God, who, measured the waters in the hollow of his hand, and meted out heaven with a span,' ver. 22; that God, who 'sitteth upon the

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